The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century

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University of Michigan Press, 1991 - 336 pages
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Discusses the development of ethnic nationalism among Bulgars, Croatians, Serbians, and Macedonians
 

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Table des matières

Stefan Vojislav and Duklja in the Early 1040s
206
Raiders from the North 1046 to the 1070s
208
The Balkans 10431100
211
Civil War in Duklja
228
Hungary Byzantium and Serbia Raška 11001180
234
Stefan Nemanja Establishes a New Dynasty in the Serbian Lands
243
Byzantiums Position in the Balkans in the 1170s
244
Postscript to This Section
245
Notes
247
Croatia and Dalmatia
248
Croatia from the Seventh Century to 969
251
The Church in Dalmatia in the Tenth Century
266
Croatia 9691075
274
The Slavonic Liturgy Becomes an Issue in the 1060s
280
Norman Balkan Activities in the Late Eleventh Century
281
Croatia 10751102
283
The Hungarian Annexation of Croatia 1102 and Its Aftermath
284
Summary
290
Notes
291
Medieval Rulers
293
Bulgarian Rulers
295
Rulers of Croatia
296
Serbian Rulers
297
Hungarian Rulers Discussed in Text
298
Glossaries
299
Peoples
304
Sources and Authors of Sources Referred to in the Text
309
Selected Bibliography
315
Index
319
Map 6
338
Droits d'auteur

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Fréquemment cités

Page 59 - ... columns and temples, even the name of the people itself, have disappeared from the Greek continent. A double layer of ruins and the mire of two new and different races cover the graves of the ancient Greeks. The immortal works of the spirit of Hellas and some ancient ruins on native Greek soil are now the only evidence of the fact that long ago there was such a people as the Hellenes. And were it not for these ruins, grave-hills and mausoleums, were it not for the site and the wretched fate of...
Page 307 - Be,chan," ranging from the end of the ninth to the end of the eleventh centuries are equally dumb. If we duly consider the matter, I think we can understand why Scottish and Irish kings, and Scottish and Irish churchmen, ignored the popular Fionn Saga, and wished to kill it. In its true historical form it favoured the pretensions of the kings of England to Imperial supremacy, and...
Page 131 - Kjudem (Court Law for the People). Michigan Slavic Materials No. 14 (Ann Arbor, 1977), pp.
Page xiii - Science and Director of the Center for Russian and East European Studies at the University of California at Los Angeles.
Page 50 - Croats] are now. From them split off a family of five brothers, Kloukas and Lobelos and Kosentzis and Mouchlo and Chrobatos, and two sisters, Touga and Bouga, who came with their folk to Dalmatia and found the Avars in possession of that land.
Page 93 - J. Ferluga, Sur la date de la création du thème de Dyrrachium, Actes du XIIe Congrès Inter.
Page 51 - Croats' in the Slav tongue means 'those who occupy much territory.' [?] These same Croats arrived to claim the protection of the emperor of the Romans Heraclius before the Serbs claimed the protection of the same emperor Heraclius.
Page 59 - Dalmatian; and Moscovites — those are the people whom we call Greeks at present and whose genealogy, to their own surprise, we have traced back to Pericles and Philopoemen A population with Slavonic facial features and with bow-shaped eyelashes and sharp features of Albanian mountain shepherds, of course, did not come from the blood of Narcissus, Alcibiades, and Antinous; and only a romantic eager imagination can still dream of a revival in our days of the ancient Hellenes with their Sophocleses...
Page 293 - Theodosius II 450-57 Marcian 457-74 Leo I 474 Leo II 474-75 Zeno 475-76 Basiliscus 476-91 Zeno (again) 491-518 Anastasius I 518-27 Justin I 527-65 Justinian I 565-78 Justin II 578-82 Tiberius I Constantine 582-602 Maurice 602-10 Phocas 610-41 Heraclius 641 Constantine III and Heraclonas 641 Heraclonas...

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À propos de l'auteur (1991)

John V. A. Fine was Emeritus Professor of Classics at Princeton University.

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