User:Zoupan/Contribution

Good articles

 * Bajo Pivljanin (c. 1630–1684) was a hajduk commander active in the Venetian–Ottoman Wars. Symbol question.svg


 * Boz ( 380) was the King of the Antes. Symbol question.svg


 * Dejan ( 1346–c. 1366) was a Serbian magnate who served Emperor Stefan Dušan (r. 1331–55) as despot, and Emperor Uroš V (r. 1355–71) as sevastokrator. Symbol question.svg


 * Klonimir ( 896) was a Serbian prince of the Vlastimirović dynasty, and pretender to the Serbian throne. Symbol question.svg


 * Lazar the Serb ( 1404) was a Serbian Orthodox monk who in 1404 invented and built the first known mechanical public clock in Russia. Symbol question.svg


 * Serb Uprising of 1596–97 was a rebellion organized by Serbian Patriarch Jovan Kantul (s. 1592–1614) and led by vojvoda Grdan against the Ottomans in the Sanjak of Herzegovina and Montenegro Vilayet. Symbol question.svg


 * Stefan Vladislav (c.  1198–after 1264) was the King of Serbia from 1234 to 1243. Symbol question.svg

<!--
 * Višeslav of Serbia ( c. 780) was the first Serbian ruler known by name. Symbol question.svg

B- and C-class articles

 * Battle of Tripolje


 * Bosnia (Early Middle Ages)


 * Borna (duke)


 * Braslav, Duke of Lower Pannonia (short)


 * Dejanović, or Dragaš was a medieval Serbian noble family that served the Serbian Empire of Dušan the Mighty (r. 1331-1355) and Uroš the Weak (r. 1355-1371), and during the fall of the Serbian Empire, after the Battle of Maritsa (1371), it became an Ottoman vassal. The family was one of the most prominent during these periods. The family held a region roughly centered where the borders of Serbia, Bulgaria and Macedonia meet. The last two Byzantine Emperors were maternal descendants of the house. Symbol question.svg


 * Dobrilovina Monastery Symbol question.svg


 * Đuraš Ilijić (short)


 * Gradislav Vojšić (short)


 * Gradislav Borilović (short)


 * Hadži-Ruvim


 * Jovan Radonjić


 * Karaljuk (short)


 * Kumanovo Uprising (1878)


 * Miloradović noble family


 * Narentines


 * Pecija's First Revolt (1858)


 * Radič, Grand Čelnik (fl. 1413–1441), Serbian nobleman with the title of Grand Čelnik (count palatine), the highest position after the Serbian monarch. He served Prince, later Despot, Stefan Lazarević (r. 1389–1427) as čelnik, then was elevated to Grand Čelnik during the rule of Despot Đurađ Branković (r. 1427–1456). He was very wealthy, and held the silver mines in Novo Brdo of the Serbian Despotate. Radič founded and renovated several churches and monasteries, including the notable Vraćevšnica and Kastamonitou, the latter in which he took monastic vows and spent his last years. Symbol question.svg


 * Saint Sava


 * Serbian civil war of 1331


 * Stephen, Duke of Bosnia (short)


 * Statuta Valachorum


 * Stojan Čupić


 * (GA1) Vlastimir (ca. 805 – 851), Serbian Prince ca. 830 until ca. 851. Defeated the Bulgar khan Presian I in a three-year-war, in which the Bulgar army was devastated and driven out. He is the eponymous founder of the Vlastimirović dynasty, the first Serbian dynasty.


 * Voisava (short)


 * Vukosav Nikolić (fl. 1395–d. 1403) Symbol question.svg

--> <!--

Start-class

 * Altoman Vojinović


 * Arcaragantes


 * Battle of Gallipoli (1312) (short)


 * Begaljica Symbol question.svg, a rural settlement in the Grocka municipality in eastern Belgrade. It is one of 15 settlements of Grocka, situated in its centre, with a population of 8,233 (2011). The village is located at the water source of the Begaljica river, a tributary of the Danube, thus in the southern half of Podunavlje, as well as in the fertile Šumadija region of central Serbia. Begaljica was first mentioned in 1528, seven years after the Ottoman conquest of Serbia, as having 5 families, and the Rajinovac monastery on the hill above the village. As the region was located on the Ottoman-Habsburg war frontier, there was constant destruction and desertion of the villages, in fact, the village derived its name from the events – Begaljica ("fleeing town"). A notable knez from the village, Stevan Andrejević Palalija, was executed alongside some 70 nobles by the janissaries in 1804, which sparked the First Serbian Uprising. The village is based on agriculture, namely fruits and viticulture, with 38,6% of the population being agrarian (1991).


 * Bulgar-Serb War (839–42)


 * Bulgar-Serb War (853)


 * Destinikon


 * Diocese of Moesia, one of the twelve dioceses in which Diocletian (r. 284–305) divided the Roman Empire during his administrative reforms


 * Mihailo Dožić


 * Dražen Bogopenec Symbol question.svg (fl. 1306–1307), county lord (župan) in Zagorje (modern Kalinovik), one of the three most powerful nobility of Hum in the beginning of the 14th century.


 * Dukagjin highlands


 * Duklja, Serbian polity in the Middle Ages with a territory in modern southern Montenegro.


 * Dulje Symbol question.svg, settlement in Suva Reka, Kosovo, first mentioned by Serbian Emperor Stephen Dušan in 1348, with ruins of two medieval Orthodox churches and a cemetary.


 * '''Dragoš (short)


 * Đuraš Ilijić.


 * Dvorane Symbol question.svg, settlement in Suva Reka, Kosovo, first mentioned in 1465, with ruins of three medieval Orthodox churches and a cemetary, it was also the site were the Dušan's Code was found.


 * Fall of the Serbian Empire


 * Genetic studies on Serbs Symbol question.svg (w/ VVVladimir)


 * Gligor Sokolović Symbol question.svg (1872–1910), one of the supreme commanders of the Serbian Chetnik Movement that fought the Ottoman Empire, Bulgarian, and Albanian armed bands during the Macedonian Struggle. He was one of the most famous Chetniks, and the foremost in Western Povardarje.


 * Gradislav Vojšić Symbol question.svg (fl. 1284-1327), was a Serbian nobleman who served under the Serbian Kings Stephen Uroš II Milutin (r. 1282–1321) and Stephen Uroš III (r. 1322–1331). He was the first known čelnik of the Serbian court, in the nearest circle of the King, mentioned serving the first time in 1284 and the second time in 1327. The čelnik was entrusted with the security of Church property from the nobility, and appeared in the role of a judge or executor of the King's decisions, in disputes between the Church and the nobility.


 * Grdeša


 * Habsburg-occupied Serbia (1686–91)


 * Habsburg-occupied Serbia (1788–92)


 * Serbian Grand Principality


 * Ivaniš (magnate) (short)


 * Janja Kantakouzenos Symbol question.svg (fl. 1461-1477), Lord of Novo Brdo, executed with his two younger brothers, his four sons and twelve grandsons, on the orders of Sultan Mehmed II.


 * Jovan Monasterlija Austrian Imperial officer, General of the Serbian Militia (w/ Antidiskriminator)


 * Kingdom of Serbia (medieval)


 * Konda Bimbaša


 * Magyar-Serb conflict (short)


 * Mezamir


 * Mladen (magnate) (short)


 * Naum Krnar (short)


 * Neboulos (fl. 690-693), South Slavic or Bulgar military commander in the service of the Byzantine emperor Justinian II (r. 685–695 and 705–711), who defected with many of his men to the Arabs during the crucial Battle of Sebastopolis. (blessed by Cplakidas)


 * Novak Grebostrek (short)


 * Niš


 * North Kosovo referendum, 2012 Symbol question.svg, with the question "Do you accept the institutions of the so-called Republic of Kosovo?", held in Serb-dominated North Kosovo on 14 and 15 February, 2012, with a result of 99.74% of voters rejecting the institutions of the Republic of Kosovo.


 * Pavlo Kurtik Symbol question.svg (fl. 1431-1432), Slavo-Albanian feudal lord in Ottoman service, eponymous to the Pavlo-Kurtik vilayet Symbol question.svg.


 * Pecija


 * Poljance Symbol question.svg, settlement in Srbica, Kosovo, first mentioned by Serbian King Stephen Uroš III in 1330.


 * Principality of Arbanon, the first sketch of an Albanian state, an autonomous polity under the Byzantine Empire, Despotate of Epirus and Serbian Grand Principality. It existed ca. 1190–1255.


 * Progon, Lord of Kruja


 * Rascians (w/ PANONIAN)


 * Şehsuvar Sultan


 * Serb Uprising of 1848–49


 * Serbian Militia (1718–39)


 * Serbian nobility


 * Serbian nobility in the Middle Ages


 * Serbian Free Corps


 * Shopi, a regional and ethnographical group of South Slavs speaking a transitional dialect, self-identifying as Bulgarians, Macedonians and Serbs.


 * Skenderbeg Crnojević (1457–1528) was a member of the Crnojević noble family that held the Lordship of Zeta; born as Staniša, he was the heir to Ivan I Crnojević, who ruled from 1465 to 1490. In 1485 his father sent him to the Ottoman sultan to guarantee his loyalty, as an Ottoman vassal, and Staniša converted into Islam and received the name Skender, and became the Ottoman sanjakbey of the Sanjak of Montenegro in 1514–1528. (w/ Antidiskriminator)


 * Stefan (honorific), a honorific name adopted by the monarchs of the Nemanjić dynasty.


 * Stevan Šupljikac (1786–1848), the Duke of Serbian Vojvodina in 1848.


 * Stracimir Balšić Symbol question.svg (fl. 1360 – 15 January 1373†) was a Lord of Zeta, alongside his two brothers Đurađ I and Balša II, in ca. 1362–1372. The Balšić family took over Zeta, a Serbian province, by 1362, during the fall of the Serbian Empire. Stracimir took monastic vows and died in 1373. He left three sons, one of whom later became the Lord of Zeta (Đurađ II).


 * Sporoi, collective name of Early Slavs, according to Procopius (500–560)


 * Teodora-Evdokija (1330–after 1381), Despotess of Kumanovo as the wife of despot and sevastokrator Dejan (fl. 1355). She was the daughter of King Stephen Uroš III Dečanski of Serbia and her eldest half-brother was Serbian Emperor Stephen Dušan. She had two sons, Constantine Dragaš and Jovan Dragaš, and a daughter.


 * Thrasco (fl. 795 – 808†), was the Prince (knyaz) of the Obotrite confederation from 795 until his death in 808. He succeeded his father, Witzlaus II, who had been ambushed and killed by the revolting Saxons. Thrasco defeated the Saxons in the battle on Swentana river in 798. He and his brother Godelaib were killed in a battle against Gudfred in Reric. Thrasco had a son, Cedragus, the Obotrite prince 819 – 826.


 * Thracian horseman


 * Vladislav Jonima (fl. 1303-19), nobleman in northern Albania in the service of the Serbian Kingdom under Stefan Milutin (r. 1282–1321), and the last mention of him in 1319 shows that he switched sides to the Principality of Taranto under Philip I (r. 1294–1332), as one of the Catholic barons in the Kingdom of Albania. He is an ancestor of the Jonima family. (w/ Antidiskriminator)


 * Vrana Konti Symbol question.svg (fl. 1442–58†), Napolitan nobleman, who received the title of conte (count) by King Alfonso the Magnanimous, and later became Skanderbeg's personal counselor and one of his best generals, serving him for 16 years.


 * Vukac Hranić


 * Unknown Archon

-->

<!-- Popovljane (1488) https://tools.wmflabs.org/xtools/pages/?user=Zoupan&lang=en&wiki=wikipedia&namespace=0&redirects=none#0 Dvorane, Suva Reka Jančić's Revolt Serbo-Turkish War (1876–78) Milutin Savić Arsenije Loma Archbishopric of Belgrade and Karlovci Dulje Mušutište Sirinićka župa Sevce, Štrpce Viča, Štrpce Berevce Gotovuša Sgouros Spata Monastery of St. Archangel Gabriel, Zemun History of Niš Zeta under the Crnojevići Zeta (crown land) Dragiša Lapčević Janko Katić Yugoslav World War II monuments and memorials Arsenije IV Jovanović Šakabenta Jovan Grković-Gapon Bajo Pivljanin Koći Jusuf Mašković Teodor of Vršac Lale Drekalov Doksim Mihailović List of Serbian centenarians 2008 Podgorica protest Mala Gospojina Church -->
 * List of tumuli in Serbia
 * Sima Nenadović
 * Tanasko Rajić
 * Vikentije Jovanović
 * Serb People's Party (Dalmatia)
 * Aleksandar Pejanović
 * Vujica Vulićević
 * Siege of Serres
 * Teodosije the Hilandarian
 * Vasa Čarapić
 * Bakić noble family
 * Mićo Ljubibratić
 * Musić noble family
 * Bagaš noble family
 * Gojko Bjedov
 * Via de Zenta
 * Sofronije Jugović-Marković
 * Anna of Serbia
 * Maria Palaiologina, Queen of Serbia
 * Vuk Isakovič
 * Vuk Vrčević
 * Vuk Mandušić
 * Serbian Autonomous Oblasts
 * Rade Andrović
 * Elder Grigorije
 * Jovan Avakumović (poet)
 * Radič Božić
 * Pavle Bakić
 * Stefan Vukanović Nemanjić
 * Gallipoli Serbs
 * Kosta Abrašević
 * Selimova-Želčeski
 * Jakša
 * Jakšić noble family
 * Principality of Zeta
 * Dalmatia (theme)
 * Gospel of Cividale
 * Ivaniš Berislavić
 * Karlovački Rodoslov
 * Milan Kalabić
 * Narentine rulers
 * Tihomir of Rascia
 * Peter of Diokleia
 * Vojihna
 * Saint Sava III
 * Jevstatije II
 * Jakov, Archbishop of Serbs
 * Sočanica basilica
 * Archbishopric of Split (early medieval)
 * Stephen, Duke of Bosnia
 * Grgur Golubić
 * Domanek
 * Radoslav of Zahumlje
 * Petar Mirosavljević
 * Vukoslavić noble family
 * Andrea Gropa
 * Paskač
 * Andrija Mirosavljević
 * Nikoulitzas Delphinas (w/ Cplakidas)
 * Kesar Novak
 * Brsjak Revolt
 * Diocese of Moesia
 * Žarko (nobleman)
 * Archbishopric of Justiniana Prima
 * Catepanate of Ras
 * Eparchy of Braničevo
 * Eparchy of Raška and Prizren
 * Eparchy of Žiča
 * Michael Dermokaites
 * Ninac Vukoslavić
 * Vukašin
 * Orahovica Monastery
 * Hramko
 * Đuraš Ilijić
 * Nikola Skobaljić
 * Akameros
 * Progonos Sgouros
 * Andronikos Palaiologos Angelos
 * Komnena Nemanjić
 * Raška architectural school
 * Neboulos
 * Old Serbian
 * List of medieval Serbian literature
 * Battle of Tara (1150)
 * Battle of Tara
 * Antonije Bagaš
 * Radoslav Hlapen
 * Asia Minor Slavs
 * Beloje of Trebinje
 * Dragoš
 * Vučina
 * List of wars involving Serbia
 * War of Hum (1326–29)
 * Toljen of Hum
 * Preljub
 * Battle of Drina (medieval)
 * Stracimir Zavidović
 * Jovan Dragaš
 * Nikola Musulin
 * Serbian titles
 * Hales (king)
 * Revolutionary Serbia
 * Rascian architecture
 * Doksim Mihailović, Chetnik
 * Jovan Grković-Gapon
 * Vasa Čarapić, Serbian revolutionary
 * Arsenije Loma, Serbian revolutionary
 * Sima Nenadović, Serbian revolutionary
 * Janko Katić
 * Slaughter of the knezes, Serbian revolution
 * Bogutović noble family, Middle Ages
 * Battle of Drina (medieval), Middle Ages
 * Rascia, Middle Ages
 * Gregory Kamonas, Middle Ages
 * Charter of Hilandar, Middle Ages
 * Charter of Ravanica, Middle Ages
 * Archbishopric of Split (early medieval), Christianity
 * Sredačka Župa, historical county in Kosovo
 * Vikentije Jovanović, Serbian Orthodox Archbishop of Belgrade 1732-1738
 * Arsenije IV Jovanović Šakabenta, Serbian Patriarch
 * Serb People's Party (Dalmatia), Serb political party in Dalmatia
 * List of tumuli in Serbia, list of tumuli (barrows) in Serbia, ranging from the prehistoric times to the Middle Ages.
 * List of Serbian centenarians
 * Mala Gospojina Church, a Serbian Orthodox Church in Obilić, central Kosovo.
 * Jusuf Mašković
 * Koći, in Montenegro
 * Bajo Pivljanin, hajduk
 * Teodor of Vršac, Serbian Orthodox Bishop of Vršac, leader of the Banat Uprising against Ottoman occupation amidst the Long War (1593-1606).
 * Dragiša Lapčević