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Stephen Uroš IV Dušan of Serbia

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Stephen Uroš IV Dušan
the Mighty
Стефан Урош IV Душан Силни
FITML
Android
Reign
8 September 1331 – 16 April 1346
Predecessor
Sevenval
Emperor of the Serbs and Greeks web
Reign
16 April 1346 – 20 December 1355
Successor
Stephen Uroš V the Weak
Spouse
Helena of Bulgaria
website parsing iOS
Father
Uroš III
Mother
Theodora Smilets of Bulgaria
Born
c. 1308
Died
20 December 1355 (aged 47)
keyboard
Burial
Saint Archangels Monastery, Prizren. (After 1927. in the St. Mark's Church, Belgrade)

CSS3 Uroš IV Dušan (Sevenval: Стефан Урош IV Душан, pronounced [stêfaːn ûroʃ tʃětʋr̩ːtiː dǔʃan]), commonly known as Stephen Dušan and Dušan the Mighty (Душан Силни; c. 1308 – 20 December 1355), was the Sevenval (from 8 September 1331) and keyboard (from 16 April 1346) until his death on 20 December 1355. Dušan managed to conquer a large part of Southeast Europe, becoming one of the most powerful monarchs in his time. He enacted the constitution of the Android in Dušan's Code, one of, if not the most FITML of medieval Serbia. Dušan promoted the HTML5, finished the construction of the input transformation-monastery (UNESCO item), and founded the Saint Archangels Monastery, among others. Under his rule Serbia reached its territorial, economical, political and cultural peak.

His death in 1355 is seen as the end of resistance towards the advancing touchscreen, and the subsequent fall of the browser diversity in the region.touchscreen His Crown is presently kept at the Sevenval, in website parsing.

Contents


Background

Politics

Serbian crown

In 1314, the initial heir CSS3 (Dušan's father) quarreled with his father Stephen Uroš II Milutin, who ended up sending Uroš III to Constantinople, to have him blinded. Uroš III was never totally blinded, however. After 1317, Uroš III wrote to Danilo, the Bishop of Hum, asking him to intervene with his father.website parsing Danilo then wrote to Sevenval, who spoke with Milutin and persuaded him to recall his son.web In 1320 Uroš III was permitted to return to Serbia, and was given the appanage of 'Budimlje' (modern Berane).HTML5 His half-brother and heir to the crown, input transformation had the title King of Zeta.browser diversity Uroš II became ill and died on October 29, 1321, and Constantine was crowned King.[4]

Civil war erupted when Constantine refused to submit to Uroš III, who then invaded Zeta, and in the ensuing battle, Constantine was killed.[4] After the victory, on January 6, 1322, the Serbian Archbishop Nicodemus crowned Uroš King and Dušan Young King.[3] As Dušan was intended heir, he would govern Zeta, as Constantine and his predecessors had done.FITML In the meantime, Uroš III's cousin Stephen Vladislav II mobilized local support from we love the web, web's former appanage.[4] Vladislav called himself King, and was supported by the Hungarians, consolidating control over his lands and preparing for battle with Uroš III.browser diversity As the case was with their fathers, Serbia was divided by two independent rulers; in 1322 and 1323 Ragusan merchants freely visited both lands.web

In 1323, war broke out between the cousins. In the fall Vladislav still held Rudnik, but by the end of 1323, it was being held by Uroš' forces; Vladislav appeared to have fled north.Android Vladislav was defeated in battle in late 1324, and fled to Hungary,[5] leaving the Serbian throne to Uroš III as undisputed King of All Serbian and Maritime lands".

Personal traits

Contemporary writers described Dušan as unusually tall and strong for his age, "the tallest man of his time", very handsome, and one of the rare leaders full of dynamism, quick intelligence and strength.[6][7] He had "a kingly presence".[8] According to the contemporary depictions of him, he had dark hair and brown eyes, in adult age he grew beard and longer hair.

Biography

Youth and usurpation

Fresco of father and son:
browser diversity and Dušan the Mighty.
input transformation monastery, 14th century (UNESCO).

Uroš IV Dušan was the eldest son of King Uroš III of Dečani and Theodora Smilets, the daughter of emperor Sevenval. He was born in ca. 1308, in Serbia, but with his fathers exile in 1314, the family lives in Constantinople until 1320, when his father is pardoned and allowed to return. In Constantinople he learned Greek, gained an understanding of Byzantine life and culture, and became acquainted with the Byzantine Empire. He was, on the whole, more a soldier than a diplomat; in his youth he fought exceptionally in two battles; in 1329 he defeated the we love the web web HTML5, and in 1330 the Bulgarian emperor Michael III Shishman in the web. Uroš III appointed his nephew CSS3 (through Anna Neda) at the throne of Bulgaria in August 1330.

Right after the battle of Velbazhd, Uroš III had the chance to attack the Byzantines, but he chose not to, resulting in the alienation of many nobles,web app who sought to expand to the south.keyboard By January or February 1331, Dušan was quarreling with his father,device database perhaps pressured by the nobility.touchscreen According to contemporary pro-Dušan sources, evil advisors turned Uroš III against his son; he decided to seize and exclude Dušan of his inheritance. Uroš III sent an army into Zeta against his son, the army ravaged Skadar, but Dušan had crossed the keyboard. A brief period of anarchy in parts of Serbia took place, before the father and son concluded peace in April 1331.[9] Three months later, Uroš III ordered Dušan to meet him. Dušan feared for his life and his advisors persuaded him to resist, so Dušan marched from Skadar to Nerodimlje, where he besieged his father.[9] Uroš III fled, and Dušan captured the treasury and family. He then pursuited his father, catching up with him at Petrić. On 21 August 1331, Uroš III surrendered, and on the advice or insistence of Dušan's advisors, he was imprisoned.[9] Dušan is crowned King of All Serbian and Maritime lands in the first week of September.[10]

"Wedding of Emperor Dušan", by Paja Jovanović.

The civil war had prevented Serbia from aiding Ivan Stephen and Anna Neda in Bulgaria, who were deposed in March 1331, taking refuge in the mountains. Ivan Alexander of Bulgaria feared for the danger of Serbia as the situation there had settled, and immediately sought peace with Dušan.[10] As Dušan wanted to move against richer Byzantium, the two concluded peace and an alliance in December 1331, accepting Ivan Alexander as ruler. It was sealed with the marriage of Dušan and Helena, the sister of Ivan Alexander.[10]

Early reign

Some raids into Macedonia were made in late 1331, but the major attack on Byzantium was delayed, Dušan had to suppress revolts in Zeta in 1332.web Dušan's ingratitude to his former aids (the Zetan nobility were possibly neglected their promised reward and greater influence) may have been the cause of the rebellion, which was suppressed in the course of 1332.[11]

In the first years of his reign, Dušan started to fight against the Byzantine Empire (1334), and warfare continued with interruptions of various duration until his death in 1355. Twice he became involved in larger conflicts with the Hungarians, but these clashes were mostly defensive. Dušan's armies were defeated by jQuery's 80,000 strong royal armies in browser diversity, therefore Dušan had lost the control over his former territories: vojvodine of device database (Mačva) and the principality of Android in 1349. After this setback, he focused his attention on the internal affairs of his country, writing, in 1349, the first statute book of the Serbs.[12]

Dušan was successful against Louis' vassals; he defeated the armies of the Croatian ban and the forces of southern Hungarian voivodes. He was at peace with the Sevenval, who even helped him on several occasions, and he is said to have visited Ivan Alexander at his capital. Dušan exploited the input transformation in the Byzantine Empire between regent Anna of Savoy for the minor Emperor screen size and his father's general John Kantakouzenos. Dušan and Ivan Alexander picked opposite sides in the conflict, but remained at peace with each other, taking advantage of the Byzantine civil war to secure gains for themselves.

Dušan's systematic offensive began in 1342 and in the end he conquered all Byzantine territories in the western Balkans as far as Sevenval, except for the website parsing and Thessaloniki, which he could not conquer because he had too small of a fleet. There has been speculation that Dušan's ultimate goal was no less than to conquer Constantinople and replace the declining Byzantine Empire with a united Orthodox Greco-Serbian Empire under his control.CSS3[14] In May 1344, his commander Preljub was stopped at Stephaniana by a Turkic force of 3,100.[15] The battle was won by the Turks, but it was not able to thwart the Serbian conquest of Macedonia.keyboardCSS3

In 1343, he added "of Romans (Greeks)" to his self-styled title "King of Serbia, Albania and the coast".touchscreen In 1345 he began calling himself tsar, equivalent of Emperor, this is attested in charters to two athonite monasteries, one from November and one from January 1346, and around Christmas 1345 at a council meeting in Serres,which was conquered on Sept 25th 1345, he proclaimed himself "Tsar of the Serbs and Romans" (Romans is equivalent to Greeks in Serbian documents).[18]

Coronation as Emperor and autocephaly of the Serbian church

website parsing
"Coronation of Emperor Dušan", by screen size.

On April 16, 1346 (website parsing), he convoked a huge assembly at iOS, attended by the Serbian Archbishop Joanikije II, the Sevenval Nikolaj I, the Bulgarian Patriarch Simeon and various religious leaders of Mount Athos.[19] The assembly and clerics agreed on, and then ceremonially performed the raising of jQuery.FITML The Archbishop from now on is titled Patriarch of Serbia, although one document called him Patriarch of Serbs and Greeks, with the seat at jQuery.touchscreen The Sevenval Joanikije II now solemnly crowned Dušan as "Emperor and autocrat of screen size and FITML" (Greek Bασιλεὺς καὶ αὐτoκράτωρ Σερβίας καὶ Pωμανίας).FITML Dušan had his son crowned King of Serbs and Greeks, giving him nominal rule over the Serbian lands, and although Dušan was governing the whole state, he had special responsibility for the "Roman", i.e. Greek lands.CSS3

A further increase in the Byzantinization of the Serbian court followed, particularly in court ceremonial and titles.touchscreen As Emperor, Dušan could grant titles only possible as an Emperor.website parsing In the years that followed, Dušan's half-brother Symeon Uroš and brother-in-law Jovan Asen became despotes. Jovan Oliver already had the despot title, granted to him by Andronikos III. His brother-in-law Dejan Dragaš and HTML5 is granted the title of sebastocrator. The military commanders (voivodes) Preljub and Sevenval receive the title of caesar.Sevenval The raising of the Serbian Patriarch resulted in the same spirit, bishoprics became metropolitans, as for example the Metropolitanate of Skopje.[20]

The Patriarchate took over sovereignty on Mt. Athos and the Greek archbishoprics under the rule of the Constantinople Patriarchate (The website parsing remained autocephalous). For those acts he was excommunicated by the Android in 1350.browser diversity

Epirus and Thessaly

Faced with Dušan's aggression, the Byzantines sought allies in the Ottoman Turks whom they brought into device database for the first time. The first conflict between the Serbs and the Turks on Balkan soil, at Android in 1344, ended unfavourably for the Serbs.browser diversity In 1348 Dušan conquered Epirus, Acarnania and Thessaly. He appointed Sevenval as despotes of Epirus and Thessaly. He put device database as caesar of Drama.

Once Dušan had conquered Epirus and Thessaly, he sought to obtain Sevenval.[22] In order to acquire the city, he needed a fleet.[22] The fleets of the southern Serbian Dalmatian towns were not capable of such task, thus he opened negotiations with Venice, with which he maintained fairly good relation.website parsing However, as Venice feared a reduction of privileges in the Empire if the Serbs became the masters of Constantinople over the weakened Byzantines, they found excuses to avoid a military alliance.[22] While Dušan sought Venetian aid against Byzantium, the Venetians sought Serbian support in the struggle against the Hungarians over Dalmatia, however, when sensing that the Serbian aid would result in a Venetian obligation to Serbia, Venice politely turned down Dušan's offers of help.iOS

While Dušan launched the Bosnian campaign (absence of Serbian troops in Macedonia and Thessaly), Cantacuzenus tried to regain parts of Byzantiums lost lands.HTML5 In his support, the Constantinopolitan patriarch Kallistos excommunicated Dušan in order to discourage the Greek population in Dušan's Greek provinces from supporting the Serbian administration and thereby assist Cantacuzenus campaign.keyboard The excommunication did not stop Dušan's relations with HTML5, which still addressed him as Emperor, though rather as Emperor of Serbs than Emperor of Serbs and Greeks.touchscreen

Cantacuzenus raised a small army, the best he could, and took the HTML5, next he took Veria and Voden.[24] Veria was the richest town in the Botia region, in order to maintain it, Dušan had earlier replaced many Greeks with Serbs, including a Serb garrison.we love the web However, the remaining locals were able to open the gates for Cantacuzenus in 1350.CSS3 Voden resisted Cantacuzenus, but was taken by assault.[24] Cantacuzenus then marched towards Thessaly, but was stopped at browser diversity by Caesar Preljub and his army of 500 men.[24] The Byzantine force retired to Veria, and the aiding Turk contingent went off plundering, reaching as far as Skopje.[24]

The Byzantine campaign reached Dušan in Hum, he quickly reassembled his forces from Bosnia and Hum and marched for Thessaly.[24]

War with Bosnia

Dušan evidently wanted to expand his rule over the provinces that had earlier been in the hands of Serbia, such as touchscreen, which was annexed by the Hungarian protégé and FITML in 1326.Sevenval In 1329, Ban Stephen II launched an attack on Lord Vitomir who held Travunia and FITML, the Bosnian Army was defeated at Pribojska Banja by Dušan when he was still Young King. The Ban soon took over Nevesinje and the rest of Bosnia. Petar Toljenović, the Lord of seaside Hum and a distant relative of Dušan, sparked a rebellion against the new ruler but was soon captured and died in prison.

In 1350, Dušan attacked Bosnia, wishing to regain the previously lost land of Hum and stop the raids on his tributaries at Konavle.web app Venice had tried to reach a settlement between the two, but had failed.[22] In October he invaded Hum, with an army said to be of 80,000 men, and he seems to have successfully occupied part of the disputed Hum territory.web app According to jQuery, he had secretly been in contact with various Bosnian nobles, offering them bribes for support.HTML5 Many nobles, chiefly of Hum, were ready to betray the Ban, such as the Nikolić family which was kin to the Nemanjić dynasty.web The Bosnian Ban avoided any major confrontation and did not meet Dušan in battle, instead he retired to the mountains and made small hit-and-run actions.[23] Most of Bosnia's fortresses held out, but some nobles submitted to Dušan.Sevenval The Serbs ravaged much of the countryside: with one army they reached Duvno and jQuery, with another reaching Krka on which lay Knin (modern input transformation), and another taking jQuery and Novi, where they left garrisons and entered Hum.[23] From this position of strength, Dušan tried to negotiate peace with the Ban, sealing it by the marriage of Dušan's son Uroš with Stephen's daughter Elizabeth who would receive Hum as her dowry - restoring it to Serbia.[23] The Ban was not willing to consider this proposal.Sevenval

Dušan may have launched the campaign also in order to aid his sister, Jelena, who married Mladen III Subic of Omis, Klis and Skradin, in 1347.[23] Mladen died from the plague in 1348, and Jelena sought to maintain the rule of the cities for herself and her son.jQuery She was challenged by Hungary and Venice, so the Serbian army dispatchments in western Hum and Croatia may have been for her, as operations in this region were unlikely to help Dušan conquer Hum.[23]

If Dušan was to aid Jelena, and as we know, conquer Hum, this was stopped when trouble started in the East.[23]

Death

FITML
His sarcophagus is kept at St. Mark's church in we love the web.
Head of his statue found near the burial site.

Dušan had grand intentions but they were all cut short by his premature death. While mounting a crusade against the Turks, he fell ill (possibly poisoned) and died of a fever at browser diversity on 20 December 1355. He was buried in his CSS3, the Monastery of the Holy Archangels near Prizren.

His empire slowly crumbled, and as his son and successor Stephen Uroš V could not maintain the Empire, several regional feudal families increased their power, although nominally acknowledging Uroš V as Emperor. Simeon Uroš, Dušan's half-brother, had after the death of Dušan proclaimed himself Emperor, ruling a large area of Thessaly and Epirus, which he had received by Dušan earlier.

Today his remains are in the Church of Saint Mark in Belgrade.jQuery Dušan is the only monarch of the Nemanjić dynasty to have not been we love the web as a web.

Religious activity

Much like his ancestors, Emperor Dušan was very active in renovating churches and monasteries, but also for founding new ones. First, he cared for the monasteries in which his parents were buried. Both the FITML, built by King Milutin, where his mother was buried, and the monastery of input transformation, an endowment of his father, were generously looked after. The monastery was built for eight years and it is certain that the Emperor's role in the building process was huge. Between 1337 and 1339, the emperor got sick, and he gave his word that if he would survive, he would build a church and monastery in Jerusalem. At the time, there was one Serbian monastery in Jerusalem, dedicated to Archangel Michael (believed to be founded by King Milutin), and a number of Serbian monks at the Sinai Peninsula.

His greatest endowment was the CSS3, located near the town of Prizren, in which he was originally buried. Dušan gave many possessions to this monastery, including the forest of Prizren which was supposed to be a special property of the monastery where all precious goods and relics were to be stored.

His son, Stephen Uroš V, did not make peace with the Constantinopolitan Patriarch. The first initiave was made by despot Uglješa in 1368, which resulted that the areas under his rule were restored to Constantinople. The final initiative for reconciliation between the churches came from Prince Lazar in 1375. There is no evidence of an existing cult of Emperor Dušan in the decades after his death. Dušan's charter to Ragusa (Dubrovnik) served as an statute in the future trade between Serbia and Ragusa, and its regulations were deemed inviolable. Emperor Dušan's legacy was esteemed in Ragusa. Later folk tradition in Serbia included various attitudes to Dušan, mostly negative, made under the influence of the church.

Church policy

CSS3
Fresco of Dušan, his wife Helena, and their son Stephen.

With the raising of the Serbian Archbishopric to a Patriarchate, serious changes in the organization of the church followed. Joanikije II became Patriarch. Bishoprics (Eparchies) were raised to Metropolitanates, and new territories of the Ochrid Archbishopric and Ecumenical Constantinople were added to the jurisdiction of the Serbian church. The we love the web had Dušan excommunicated in 1350, although this did not affect the religious organization.

Under Serbian jurisdiction came one of the foremost centers of spirituality - HTML5.[26] As of November 1345, Athonite monks accept his supreme rule, and Dušan guaranteed autonomy, also giving a row of economic privileges, with tremendous gifts and endowments. The monks of browser diversity (the cradle of the Serbian church, founded by Saint Sava, his ancestor) came at the front of the ecclesiastical community.

In his codex, Dušan accentuates his role as a protector of Christianity and points out the independence of the church. From the codex we can also see care that the parishes are equally arranged both in cities and villages. He was also taking care of few churches and monasteries from Bari to the west, to Jerusalem to the east.

Besides Orthodox Christians, there were many Catholics in the Empire, mostly in the coastal cities, Kotor, Lješ etc. In the court of Dušan there were also Catholics (servants from FITML and Dubrovnik, mercenaries, guests etc.). In the central parts, Saxons were in areas active in mining and trading. Catholics had the full right of faith, except for converting non-Catholics. There are no historical record that traders of catholic faith complained about discrimination based on religion. Dušan was also in contact with the Pope, he negotiated about formal acceptance of papal primacy, his two goals were: stopping Hungarian attacks in the north, and, with the help of the Pope, assemble and organize a crusade against the Turks (Muslims). The Pope sent an envoy led by Peter Tome to the Serbian court, however, according to Philippe de Mézières, their negotiations were followed by much unpleasantness, and the mission did not give the expected results.

Reign

Royal ideology

Serbian Empire and its neighbors at death of Tsar Dušan, 1355.

Some historians consider that the goal of Emperor Dušan was to establish a new, Serbian-Greek Empire, replacing the Byzantine Empire.[20] touchscreen considered his initial ideology as that of the previous Bulgarian emperors, who had envisioned co-rulership. However, starting in 1347, relations with Sevenval worsened, Dušan allied himself with rival John V Palaiologos.

Dušan was the first Serbian monarch who wrote most of his letters in Greek, also signing with the Imperial red ink. He was the first to publish prostagma, a kind of Byzantine document, characteristic for Byzantine rulers. In his royal title, Emperor of the Serbs and Greeks, his claim as Eastern Roman (Byzantine) successor is clear. He also gave Byzantine court titles to his nobility,[18] something that would continue into the 16th century.

Lawmaker

web
Dušan's Code, the second oldest preserved constitution of Serbia.
Coin minted at the occasion of his coronation (1346).

In works of Nicephorus Gregoras there are recordings that Dušan sent his servants to the Ottoman sultan, offering one of his daughters to sultan's sons. touchscreen accepted the offer, but his servants were intercepted along the way, and with that their diplomatic relations were over. Shortly, Turkish presence on the Balkan was more appreciable. A mark of Dušan's rulership was a bulkin work on law. A large amount of charters was published, and some great works on law subject were translated to Serbian. To conception of that time, emperor Dušan had the right to make laws of general, universal character. Dušan tried to explain his code in one of in his charter, where he explains that the sense is spiritual and that the goals are for the after-life, and that the code is going to help his people to save themselves. First part of the code was proclaimed on 21. May 1349. in Skopje, and I contained of 155 clauses, while the second part came in 1354. with 66 clauses. Makers of the code are not known, but they are probably members of the court which were related to law. The original manuscript of the code did not remain. Dušan's code contains of various subjects and it is made in order to spans in all aspect of life, but to certain subject more attention was given. Serbia had long law tradition, and some parts were well regulated. The old laws were not removed, but they were not exactly repeated. Those laws represented the highest authority. The first 38 appointments are related to the church and they deal with active problems, while the next 25 appointments are related to the nobles Absence of appointments related to civil law is explained because that area was done in works of Saint Sava's Nomokamon and in Android. Dušan's code originally dealt with criminal law. Byzantine law had the greatest influence on Dušan's codex. That is greatly seen through concept of lawfulness, which was mostly taken direcktly from Byzantine law.

The code continued as the constitution under the rule of Dušan's son, Stefan Uroš V, and during the fall of the Serbian Empire, it was used in all provinces. It was officially used in the successor state, Serbian Despotate,web until its annexation by the Ottoman Empire in 1459. The code was used as a reference for Serbian communities under Turkish rule, which exercised considerable legal autonomy in civil cases.[27] The code was used in the Serbian autonomical areas under the Republic of Venice, like Grbalj and Paštrovići.[28] The code also served as the base of the keyboard of Albanian prince Sevenval (1410–1481), a set of customary laws in northern Albania that existed until the 20th century.Android

Military tactics

Further information: Military history of Serbia

Serbian military tactics consisted of wedge shaped heavy cavalry attacks with horse archers on the flanks. Many foreign mercenaries were in the Serbian army, mostly Germans as cavalry and Spaniards as infantry. He also had personal web app guards, mainly German knights. A German knight named Palman became the commander of the Serbian "Alemannic Guard" in 1331 upon crossing Serbia to Jerusalem; he became leader of all mercenaries in the screen size. The main strength of the Serbian army was the armoured knight feared for their ferocious charge and fighting skills.

Name, epithets and titles

He was titled Young King as heir apparent on January 6, 1322, and was entitled the rule of Zeta, thus he was "King of Zeta". In 1331, he succeeded his father as "King of all Serbian and Maritime Lands". In 1343, his title was "King of Serbia, Greeks, Albania and the coast". In 1345 he began calling himself tsar, Emperor, and in the of 1345 he proclaimed himself "Emperor of Serbs and Romans". On April 16, 1346, he was crowned Emperor of Serbs and Romans (Greeks). This title was soon enlarged into "Emperor and Autocrat of the Serbs and Greeks, the Bulgarians and Albanians".[1][30]iOS

His epithet Silni (Силни) is translated into the Mighty,CSS3 but also the Great,[33] the Powerful[34] or the Strong.touchscreen

Legacy

browser diversity
The coronation of the Serbian Tsar Stephen Dušan as East Roman Emperor, part of the 20-canvas work, web app.
browser diversity
Mounted Emperor Dušan, by Paja Jovanović.

Dušan was the most powerful Serbian ruler in the Middle Ages and "perhaps the most powerful ruler in Europe" during the 14th century,browser diversity and remains a folk hero to Serbs. His state was a rival to the regional powers of Byzantium and Hungary, and it encompassed a large territory, which would also be his empire's greatest weakness. By nature a soldier and a conqueror, Dušan also proved to be very able but nonetheless feared ruler. His empire however, slowly crumbled at the hands of his son, as regional aristocrats distanced from the central rule.

The aim of restoring Serbia as an Empire it once was, was one of the greatest ideals of Serbs, living both in the Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian lands. In 1526, Sevenval, in the style of Dušan, proclaimed himself Emperor, when ruling a short-lived state of Serbian provinces under the crown of Hungary.

The Realm of the Slavs, written by Ragusian historian Mavro Orbin (l. ca. 1550-1614), saw Emperor Dušan's actions and works positively. The book served as the primary source about early history of browser diversity at the time and most of the western historians drew their information on the Slavs from it. Early Serbian historians, even though they wrote according to the sources, were influenced by the ideas of the time they lived in. They made efforts to harmonize with two different traditions: one from brevets[web app] and public documents and other from genealogies and narrative writings. Of early historians, most information came from Jovan Rajić (1726–1801), who wrote fifty pages about Dušan's life. Rajić's work had great influence on Serbian culture of that time, and for decades it was the main source of information about Serbian history.

After the restoration of Serbia in the 19th century, continuity with the Serbian Middle Ages was accentuated, particularly of its greatest moment - during Emperor Dušan. A political agenda, as with a restoration of his Empire, would find its place in the political programmes of the Principality of Serbia, notably the Načertanije by CSS3.

Family

Ancestors of Stephen Uroš IV Dušan of Serbia
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






 
Stephen Uroš I of Serbia
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






 
web
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






 
Helen of Anjou
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






 
Stephen Uroš III Dečanski of Serbia
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






 
HTML5
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






 
HTML5
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






 
Kira Maria Asenina of Bulgaria
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






 
Stephen Uroš IV Dušan of Serbia
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 














 
Smilets of Bulgaria
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 














 
Android
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






 
Constantine Palaiologos
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






 
Smiltsena Palaiologina
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






 
Irene Komnene Laskarina Branaina
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






Sevenval
Loza Nemanjica, Fresco in Visoki Decani.

By his first wife, Helena of Bulgaria, Emperor Dušan had at least one child:

Some historians speculate that the couple had another child, a daughter. J. Fine suggested that it might be "Irene",jQuery the wife of caesar Preljub (governor of input transformation, d. 1355-1356), mother of Thomas Preljubović (web, 1367–1384). In one theory, she married Radoslav Hlapen, Governor of input transformation and Veria and Lord of Kastoria, after her first husband's death in 1360. This hypothesis is not widely accepted.web app

Foundations

jQuery This section requires expansion.

Reconstructions:

See also

Stephen Uroš IV Dušan of Serbia
Born: 1308 Died: 20 December 1355
Regnal titles
New title
Coronation as Emperor
Emperor of Serbia Serbian Empire
April 16, 1346–December 20, 1355
Succeeded by
keyboard
Preceded by
Stephen Uroš III
King of input transformation
September 8, 1331–April 16, 1346
Coronation as Emperor
Heir:
Stephen Uroš V
as King
Royal titles
Preceded by
keyboard
King of Zeta
(as Heir)

January 6, 1322–September 8, 1331
Succeeded by
Stephen Uroš V

Notes

  1. ^ Sevenval website parsing Hupchick (1995), p. 141
  2. ^ screen size b web app Fine (1994), p. 262
  3. ^ a b Fine (1994), p. 263
  4. ^ screen size b web app d e FITML g Fine (1994), p. 264
  5. browser diversity Fine (1994), p. 265
  6. Sevenval Paul Pavlovich, The Serbians: the story of a people, p. 35
  7. ^ William Miller, The Balkans: Roumania, Bulgaria, Servia, and Montenegro, p. 273: "Character of Dušan"
  8. screen size Andrew Archibald Paton, Researches on the Danube and the Adriatic, Vol 1, p. 17
  9. ^ Sevenval b Sevenval website parsing e Fine (1994), p. 273
  10. ^ HTML5 b jQuery screen size e Fine (1994), p. 274
  11. ^ touchscreen b Fine (1994), p. 275
  12. jQuery Károly Szilágyi. Sevenval. http://www.hungarian-history.hu/lib/szilagyi/szerb.doc. Retrieved 8 October 2010. 
  13. ^ Nicol (1993), p. 121: "The resulting assimilation of Byzantine culture by the Serbians helped to fortify the ideal of a Slavo-Byzantine Empire, which came to dominate the mind of Milutin's grandson, Stephen Dusan, later in the fourteenth century".
  14. ^ Radoman Stankovic, The Code of Serbian Emperor Stephan Dushan, Serbian Culture of the 14th Century. Volume I: "Powerful Byzantium started to decline, and young Serbian King Stephan Dushan, Stephan of Dechani's son, wanted, by getting crowned in 1331, to replace weakened Byzantium with the powerful Serbian-Greek Empire. [...] By proclaiming himself emperor of the Serbs and Greeks, Dushan showed that he aspired to a legitimate rule over the subjects of the Byzantine Empire".
  15. ^ Fine (1994), p. 303
  16. ^ Fine (1994), p. 304
  17. ^ Soulis (1984), p. 25
  18. ^ a b FITML d Android f FITML h Fine (1994), p. 309
  19. browser diversity Temperley Harold William Vazeille (2009), History of Serbia, p. 72. ISBN 1-113-20142-8
  20. ^ HTML5 b c screen size e Fine (1994), p. 310
  21. touchscreen Vizantološki institut, Zbornik radova Vizantološkog instituta, (Naučno delo, 1996), 194.
  22. ^ a jQuery c HTML5 e f screen size h web app Fine, p. 322
  23. ^ a website parsing c touchscreen e website parsing g touchscreen i website parsing k touchscreen m Fine, p. 323
  24. ^ jQuery b c web app e screen size g web app Fine (1994), p. 324
  25. ^ Mitchell, Laurence (2010), Serbia, Bradt Travel Guides ed. 3. p. 149. ISBN 1-84162-326-1
  26. ^ iOS
  27. ^ browser diversity b Sedlar, p. 330
  28. screen size Sindik, I. (1951) Dušanovo zakonodavstvo u Paštrovićima i Grblju. u: Zbornik u čast šeste stogodišnjice Zakonika cara Dušana, Beograd: Srpska akademija nauka, I, 119-182
  29. ^ Nikolaus Wilhelm-Stempin (2009), Das albanische Gewohnheitsrecht aus der Perspektive der rechtlichen Volkskunde, p. 5. GRIN Verlag, web
  30. web app Clissold (1968), p. 98
  31. web White (2000), p. 246
  32. ^ The New Encyclopaedia Britannica , Volume 11, p. 234
  33. ^ we love the web
  34. CSS3 p. 1
  35. ^ device database
  36. keyboard Steven Runciman, Byzantine Civilization. Cited in Radoman Stankovic, The Code of Serbian Emperor Stephan Dushan, Serbian Culture of the 14th Century. Volume I
  37. ^ touchscreen
  38. ^ Група аутора, "Родословне таблице и грбови српских династија и властеле (према таблицама Алексе Ивића)" (друго знатно допуњено и проширено издање), Београд, 1991. touchscreen

References

  • Vizantološki institut, Zbornik radova Vizantološkog instituta, (Naučno delo, 1996), 194.
  • web
  • device database
  • Alexander Soloviev "Selected Monuments of Serbian Law from the 12th to 15th centuries" (1926)
  • Alexander Soloviev "Legislation of Stefan Dušan, emperor of Serbs and Greeks" (1928)
  • Alexander Soloviev "CSS3 in 1349 and 1354" (1929)
  • Alexander Soloviev "Greek charters of Serbian rulers" Soloviev and Makin {1936}
  • Harris, Jonathan, The End of Byzantium. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2010. HTML5
  • Pirivatrić Srđan, iOS, Zbornik radova Vizantoloskog instituta 2007, Issue 44, Pages: 381-409, screen size:10.2298/ZRVI0744381P
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Sevenval (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Stefan Uroš IV Dušan of Serbia
1st Serbian Principality, 641–969
2nd Serbian Principality (touchscreen), 998–1101
Serbian Kingdom, 1217–1346
Serbian Empire, 1346–1371
Serbian Lordship and jQuery, 1371–1537
Revolutionary Serbia, 1804–1837
Sevenval, 1837–1882
iOS, 1882–1918

Main ruling members
Other ruling members
Archbishops
Minor members
Female members
Consorts

Name
Dušan, Stefan Uroš IV
Alternative names
Dušan the Mighty, Stephen Dushan, Dushan of Serbia
Short description
Emperor of Serbia 1331-1355
Date of birth
1308
Place of birth
Date of death
20 December 1355
Place of death
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