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  1. Byzantine-Serbian wars

    Event

    The Byzantine–Serbian wars were a series of wars between the Byzantine Empire and the medieval Serbian states. Starting with the Sclaveni and Antae migrations into the Balkans, the succession of medieval Serbian states went through several periods of warfare with the Eastern Roman Empire. Wikipedia

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  3. en.wikipedia.org

    Byzantine provinces on the territory of modern Serbia during the 6th century. During the 6th century, at the beginning of the early medieval period, territory of later Serbia was controlled mainly by the Byzantine Empire (southern and central regions), and also by Byzantine neighboring rivals, the Gepid Kingdom and the Ostrogothic Kingdom (northern regions).
  4. mappingeasterneurope.princeton.edu

    The eight decades that passed until the final fall of Constantinople and Byzantium to the hands of sultan Mehmed II the Conqueror (r. 1451-81) in 1453, witnessed the gradual but seemingly inevitable expansion of the Ottomans over the Balkans, completed by the conquests of Serbia in 1459, Peloponnesos (Byzantine Morea) in 1460, Wallachia to ...
  5. royalfamily.org

    After the unsuccessful Slavic siege of Thessaloniki in 611 and the siege of Constantinople in 626, the Serbs migrated to the Balkans and present-day Serbia. According to the Byzantine emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus (913-959), with the permission of Heraclius, they settled in the areas between the rivers Cetina and Vrbas in the west, Bojana ...
  6. academia.edu

    This book presents a detailed exploration of the interactions and influences between Byzantine and Serbian political relations throughout the medieval period and beyond. It evaluates how Byzantine models were creatively adapted to meet Serbian cultural needs, emphasizing the synthesis of Byzantine and indigenous traditions.
  7. academia.edu

    Serbia s reactions to defining changes within Byzantine World from 1204 to 1299 in that sense represent an indicative cycle of surprises to the dogmatic scholarly preconceptions that do not take into account the structure and the mechanisms of the functioning of the highly organized imperial diplomacy and bureaucracy that were one of the ...
  8. en.wikipedia.org

    The Code was based on Roman-Byzantine law and the first Serbian constitution, St. Sava's Nomocanon (1219). It was a Civil and Canon law system, based on the Ecumenical Councils, for the functioning of the state and the Serbian Orthodox Church. In 1355, Dušan began military preparations for new campaigns in the south and east, but suddenly died ...
  9. historyvista.com

    Mar 14, 2024The Byzantine Empire, also known as the Eastern Roman Empire, was a vast and powerful state that spanned over a millennium. But what countries were part of ... Serbia, and Romania, was an integral part of the Byzantine Empire. The Byzantines maintained control over the region, using it as a base for projecting their power and exerting influence ...

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