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Topic: Stefan Vladislav I


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In the News (Wed 25 Nov 09)

  
  Stefan Vladislav II of Syrmia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stefan Vladislav II (Стефан Владислав II, Stephen Ladislaus II) was a Serb monarch, king of Syrmia (1316-1325) and claimant to the whole Serbia.
He was son of king Stefan Dragutin of the House of Nemanjić and Hungarian princess Katarina.
Vladislav II's sororal nephew Ban Stefan II of Bosnia then started to rule Vladislav's lands in Bosnia (Soli and Usora), and around Lower Syrmia there were long battles between Serbs and Hungarians.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Stefan_Vladislav_II   (312 words)

  
 Stefan Vladislav I of Serbia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stefan Vladislav I (Serbian: Стефан Владислав I) (died after 1264) was Serbian king from 1233/4 to 1243, a son of Stefan Prvovenčani and a grandson of King Stefan I Prvovenčani and Anna, the daughter of Enrico Dandolo, Doge of Venice.
After the death of his father-in-law Ivan Asen II, during the invasion of Batu Khan in Central Europe Stefan Vladislav was overthrown by his younger brother Stefan Uroš I.
The new king may have allowed Stefan Vladislav to rule Zeta as governor, and in any case did not completely remove him from an active role in government.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Stefan_Vladislav_I   (230 words)

  
 Nemanjic Dinasty   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
The seat of the Archbishopric was in the monastery Zhicha, the endowment of Stefan the First-crowned.
Milutin was the younger son of Stefan Urosh I. He was, after St. Symeon and St. Sava, the biggest donor of Chilandar and the biggest donor in general among all members of the sacrosanct Nemanyich dynasty.
Stefan Urosh III was the son of King Milutin.
www.rs.risjak.net /chilandar/Nemanjic.html   (1802 words)

  
 Vladislav Evseev - What They Don't Know Can Hurt You (12/15/2002) (RussianProspects.com - Best Source for Russian ...
Vladislav Evseev’s drop in the rankings occurred not because of the lack of potential, but instead largely due to his lack of exposure because of a recurring shoulder injury that forced him to sit out most of the season.
Vladislav did not speak to CSKA’s assistant coach in the polite and reserved manner expected from a young player and the harsh exchange increased the rift between him and the team to a new height.
Granted, Vladislav missed a lot of the 2001-02 season and was unable to participate in the pre-draft fitness tests, he still holds the potential of a first round caliber prospect and Boston likely got away with a highway robbery.
www.russianprospects.com /public/article.php?article_id=67   (1273 words)

  
 Serbia Info / History of Serbia:Medieval Serbia (7th - 14th century)
Stefan Nemanja was succeeded by his middle son Stefan, whilst his first-born Vukan was given the rule of the Zeta region (present-day Montenegro).
Stefan Nemanja's youngest son Rastko became a monk and took the name of Sava, turning all his efforts to spreading religiousness among his people.
The next generation of Serbian rulers - the sons of Stefan Prvovencani - Radoslav, Vladislav and Uros I, marked a period of stagnation of the state structure.
www.serbia-info.com /enc/history/medieval.html   (932 words)

  
 Kosovo and Metohija
Stefan Nemanja abdicated the throne, appointing his middle son, Stefan, to replace him; Stefan was the son-in-law of the Byzantine imperial family.
Due to the activities of the king's brother, Sava, the position of the church changed significantly within the Serbian state, having a bifurcated tradition: it was Roman Catholic in the towns on the Adriatic coast and in their vicinity, and it was Byzantine-Orthodox in the territory of the archbishopric of Ohrid.
After Stefan Prvovencani, his sons Stefan Radoslav (1227-1234) and Stefan Vladislav (1234-1243) played a subordinated role in the complexities of Balkan politics, but they managed to preserve their state intact.
www.kosovo.net /cirkovic.html   (4848 words)

  
 Serbian Church in History
Stefan Nemanja was a devoutly religious person and from the very beginnings unreservedly keen on Eastern Orthodoxy, which had, without any doubt, already set firm roots in his lands and among his people centuries before.
His nephew, King Vladislav, managed to move his body back to Serbia and to have it entombed on the on the 6th/19th of May 1237 in the church that he (King Vladislav) intended to be his own mausoleum — that of monastery Mileseva (Milesheva).
Stefan received title of despot after the successful outcome of his participation at the battle of Angora in 1402.
www.kosovo.net /socheng2.html   (13823 words)

  
 Illustrated History of the Serbs
Serbia's grand zupan Stefan Nemanja, founder of the Nemanjic dynasty, died in 1199.
The transfer of Stefan Nemanja's relics from Chilandar to the Studenica monastery brought reconciliation between the two brothers.
Rising against Vladislav, they toppled him and brought the third son of Stevan the First Crowned, Uros I, to the throne.
www.snaga.org.yu /Ilustrovana_istorija_srba/tekst/engleski/02/02-uvod.html   (1620 words)

  
 The Sacrosanct Nemanyich Dynasty
Stefan Nemanya is the founder of the Nemanyich Dynasty and unifier of all Serbian lands.
Stefan Nemanya died in the narthex of the Chilandar church, before the icon of the Virgin Hodegetria.
Dragutin was the older son of Stefan Urosh I. He abdicated the throne to his younger brother Milutin, at the Dezhevo Assembly, in 1282.
www.njegos.org /medieval/nemanjic.htm   (2582 words)

  
 The Life Of St. Savva
Stefan called Savva to come and bring their father's body, which was shown to be holy soon after his death.
Stefan's successors - Radoslav and Vladislav - frequently fell under the influence of their wives, who were foreigners.
Savva's nephew, Vladislav, sought from his father in law, King Asen, permission to take Savv'a body, but the Bulgarians were not willing to surrender so easily the body of the great, well-pleasing servant of God and new Saint, who was a great blessing from God.
www.serfes.org /lives/stsavva.htm   (3649 words)

  
 RULERS OF SERBIA (SRBIJA) AND YUGOSLAVIA (JUGOSLAVIJA)
Son of Stefan Uroš I; co-ruler 1268; abdicated, died 1316
STEFAN VLADISLAV II Son of Stefan II; expelled by cousin Stefan Uroš III
Son of Stefan Tomaš of Bosnia; husband of Jelena (Marija) daughter of Lazar II; deposed, executed by the Ottomans 1463
www-personal.umich.edu /~imladjov/SerbianRulers.htm   (1116 words)

  
 The Ultimate Serbia Dog Breeds Information Guide and Reference
After a struggle for the throne with his brothers, Stefan Nemanja, the founder of the Nemanjić dynasty, rose to power in 1170 and started renewing the Serbian state in the Raska region.
Stefan Nemanja was succeeded by his middle son Stefan II, whilst his first-born Vukan was given the rule of the Zeta region (present-day Montenegro).
This was an unstable period marked by the rule of Prince Lazar's son — despot Stefan Lazarevic — a true European-style knight a military leader and even poet, and his cousin Đurađ Branković, who moved the capital north — to the newly built fortified town of Smederevo.
www.dogluvers.com /dog_breeds/Serbia   (5068 words)

  
 Nemanjic   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Stefan Nemanja (Cyrillic), Stefan I (ca 1113-February 13, 1199 or 1200) was the Grand Zupan of Raška (Rascia), located in the central west region of the Balkans from 1166 to 1199.
Stefan (youngest brother of Pribislav and Bran, son of Mutimir), born ca.
Stefan Vojislav — founder of the House of Vojislavljevic; in 1035 rebelled against the Byzantine Empire, but forced to sign an armistice; went to war again in 1040, which would be continued by his heir and son, Mihajlo.
koz.vianet.ca /boshis49.htm   (1425 words)

  
 My Lines - Name Index 45
Stefan Uros II Milutin (King of Raska) b.
Stefan Uros III Dechanski (King of Raska) b.
Stefan Uros IV Dushan (Emperor of the Serbs and Greeks) b.
homepages.rootsweb.com /~cousin/html/i45.htm   (247 words)

  
 My Lines - Person Page 354
King of Raska Stefan Vladislav I Nemanjic was born circa 1210?.
King of Raska Stefan Uros III Dechanski Nemanjic was the Son, heir and rebel to Milutin.
She married Emperor of the Serbs and Greeks Stefan Uros IV Dushan Nemanjic, son of King of Raska Stefan Uros III Dechanski Nemanjic, after 1331.
homepages.rootsweb.com /~cousin/html/p354.htm   (4654 words)

  
 Monastery Mileseva, Description   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
The monastery of Mileseva was founded by Vladislav, King of Serbia, son of Stefan the First-Crowned and grandson of Stefan Nemanja, founder of the Serbian medieval dynasty.
It was in Mileseva in 1377 that Stefan Tvrtko was crowned King Bosnia and Serbia, since Monastery Mileseva was within the territory of his state.
In the year of 1446 Stefan Vukcic Kosaca, ruler of Zahomlje, added to his titles that of "Herzeg (Duke) of St. Sava", and hence, his dominion, which extended even to the Monastery of Mileseva, got the name "Herzegovina".
www.srpskoblago.org /Archives/Mileseva/mileseva_description.html   (742 words)

  
 CROATS & SERBS: CHAPTER FIVE
Vladislav thereupon acceded to the throne of Duklja (Zeta and Travunja) after wrestling it from Djuro, son of Vukan.
Ethnic Serbia, enlarged by the conquests of Stefan Nemanja, which he handed over to his son Uros IV as "king of the Serbs." In it "Serbian customs and laws" were to prevail.
The most valuable of these are the biographies of St. Simeon Nemanja written by his sons the archbishop Sava and St. Stefan the First-crowned, the life of St. Sava written by Theodosius and Domentian, and the lives of the Serbian kings and archbishops written by the archbishop Danilo.
www.magma.ca /~rendic/chapter5.htm   (6337 words)

  
 [Projekat Rastko-Boka] Nenad Serovic: Stefan Tvrtko I Kotromanic (1353–1391) [English, 2002]
Tvrtko I Kotromanić was the Bosnian ban from 1353 until 1377., the king of Serbs, Bosnia, Seaside and the West Sides from 1377 until 1390 and the king of Raška, Bosnia, Dalmatia, Croatia and Seaside from 1390 until 1391.
Tvrtko the First was the son of the duke Vladislav Kotromanić and Jelena Šubić.
The crowning of Tvrtko was accepted by all prominent Serbian rulers as well as by Dubrovnik and Venice and he rising himself to the level of ruler and adopting titles and ceremonial of Serbian Court he tightened his power in Bosnia.
rastko.org.yu /rastko-bo/istorija/srednjivek/nserovic-tvrtko_eng.html   (1435 words)

  
 A Thing Or Two About Serbia
After fighting his brothers, Stefan Nemanja, the founder of Nemanjic dynasty, came on the throne in 1170.
Stefan Nemanja's successor was his middle son Stefan, while his youngest son Rastko became a monk, taking the name Sava, and dedicated his like to spreading religion among his people.
In 1217, Stefan asked the crown from the Pope and became the firs Serbian king.
www.astro.uiuc.edu /~prodanvc/serbia.htm   (2491 words)

  
 Prolog: November 15
Following the death of his father King Milutin, Stefan removed the bandage from his eyes and was joyfully proclaimed as king both by the nobles and by the people.
Stefan then wrote him in the following manner: ``You have heard what has happened to me (that is, how I received my sight) by God's providence, that works in all for the good.
Stefan wrote to him: ``Reflect on the meaning of Christian love, calm your wrath, let there be love between us as there was between our parents.
www.westsrbdio.org /prolog/my.html?day=15&month=November   (1489 words)

  
 Stefan|Roosevelt & Stalin (2)
Pozdeva has also noted that the "irritable tone" of Molotov's message to Gusev on this issue "squares with the strong Soviet démarche on coincident conversations in Switzerland on the possible surrender of German forces in Italy to the Anglo-American armies there."
For an interesting insight into the importance Stalin placed on his relations with FDR after the Tehran Summit, see Vladislav Zubok and Constantine Pleshakov, Inside The Kremlin's Cold War: From Stalin to Khrushchev (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 1996), 39.
For the opinion of a member of the UK delegation at Yalta on Stalin's reaction to Churchill's statement, see Ibid., 1179.
www.unc.edu /depts/diplomat/AD_Issues/amdipl_6/stefan2.html   (3836 words)

  
 Serbian Church in History
He was treacherously murdered in Prespa in 1016 by Samuilo’s nephew Vladislav.
Stefan Nemanja (Stephan Nemanya) / Sveti Simeon Mirotocivi (St. Symeon the Myrovlyte) – Grand Zupan of Raska 1168-1196 – preserved independence of Raska.
Stefan Nemanja abdicated in 1196 and took monastic vows as monk Simeon on Mount Athos.
www.orthodoxresearchinstitute.org /articles/church_history/popovic_serbian_church.htm   (14864 words)

  
 Incursion.org > Features > Vladislav Delay   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
I met Vladislav Delay in Montreal while he was in town for the MUTEK festival in June.
He describes his jazz music as being "different with a capital D" (I suppose we'd have to hear it ourselves to know what he means).
He will also be producing a jazz album next year, as well as collaborating with Stefan Betke (aka Pole) on a 12" for the ~scape label.
www.incursion.org /features/delay.html   (898 words)

  
 Mileseva Monastery
In 1236, Vladislav moved the relics of his uncle Saint Sava from Trnovo in Bulgaria, where he died, to Mileseva.
Below the resurrection composition on the south wall of the west bay, King Vladislav is depicted as being led to Christ by the Mother of God.
The Nemanjic family is portrayed in the northeastern part of the narthex: Stefan Nemanja as the monk Simon, Sava as the first archbishop, Stefan the First-Crowned as king, and his sons Radoslav and Vladislav.
www.suc.org /culture/history/Serb_History/Monasteries/Mileseva   (607 words)

  
 CROATS & SERBS: CHAPTER FOUR
Finally Stefan Nemanja, great-grandson of grand prince Marko, completely dispensed with the royal family in 1189 and rules over this ancient Croatian land himself.
Stefan Nemanja and his brothers Stracimir and Miroslav, when they became rulers in Red Croatia, acknowledged the sovereignty of Rome.
Following the death of emperor Emmanuel in 1180 the grand prince of Serbia Stefan Nemanja wished to extend the limits of his state to the sea and to subjugate all the cities from the Neretva to the Drim in Albania.
www.magma.ca /~rendic/chapter4.htm   (21102 words)

  
 About St. Sava
The son of Stefan Nemanja, the great Serbian national leader, he was born in 1169.
As a young man he yearned for the spiritual life, which led him to flee to the Holy Mountain, where he became a monk and with rare zeal followed all the ascetic practices.
King Vladislav took his body to Mileseva, whence Sinan Pasha removed it, burning it at Vracar in Belgrade on April 27th, 1594.
www.stsavanyc.org /english/e11/stsava.html   (259 words)

  
 Byzantine Studies Conference: 1999 Abstracts
Stefan Dusan of Serbia conquered Eastern Macedonia in 1344-1345.
Without their support Stefan Dusan could not have annexed large portions of Byzantine territories without having fought a single battle.
Having annexed Byzantine territories, Stefan Dusan acted as one of the sides in the incessant Byzantine civil wars: he was obviously accepted as such by many of the local magnates exhausted by decades of civil strife and tired of ever shifting political alliances.
www.byzconf.org /1999abstracts.html   (16256 words)

  
 Subspecies   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
The king also had another son, Stefan, played by Michael Watson, who was born to a human woman, making Radu and Stefan half-brothers.
King Vladislav is at the end of his years, and summons Stefan to take control of the bloodstone.
The bloodstone is an ancient relic said to drip the blood of saints, given to the vampires in exhange for letting the villagers live in peace.
fullmoon.technomancer.com /Fullmoon/Subspecies   (416 words)

  
 vladislav delay / agf / craig armstrong, the dolls
VLADISLAV DELAY / AGF / CRAIG ARMSTRONG - The Dolls
With a back story that borders on the realms of 'Ulysses' in terms of length and meandering predilection, we'll circumvent the extensive travails which brought these three luminaries together and instead focus on what they've conjured into being; 'The Dolls'.
As if this union weren't tantalising enough, we are then given an overt glimpse of humanity in the form of AGF (Finland's Abtye Greie), whose hushed vocals drift through the great musical halls of Armstrong and Delay and coax the muted embers of their union into vivid life.
www.boomkat.com /item.cfm?id=19391   (442 words)

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