Patterns of martyrial sanctity in the royal ideology of medieval Serbia continuity and change

Especially important for the development of the holy king concept with the Serbs appears to be the early period of Serbian sovereignty, initially in Zeta, and subsequently in Raška under Stefan Nemanja and his descendants. During the eleventh century, cults of royal martyrs arise across the Slavic w...

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Main Author: Marjanović-Dušanić Smilja
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute for Balkan Studies SASA 2006-01-01
Series:Balcanica
Online Access:http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-7653/2006/0350-76530637069M.pdf
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spelling doaj-c4a3636188704920977e8b9b4f35d7462020-11-24T20:48:03ZengInstitute for Balkan Studies SASABalcanica0350-76532006-01-01200637697910.2298/BALC0637069MPatterns of martyrial sanctity in the royal ideology of medieval Serbia continuity and changeMarjanović-Dušanić SmiljaEspecially important for the development of the holy king concept with the Serbs appears to be the early period of Serbian sovereignty, initially in Zeta, and subsequently in Raška under Stefan Nemanja and his descendants. During the eleventh century, cults of royal martyrs arise across the Slavic world, receiving a most enthusiastic response connected with the spread of the martyrial and monastic ideals in Byzantium. The cult of St Vladimir is the earliest royal saint's cult with the Serbs, and it is rightfully set apart from the ideologically consistent whole encompassing the subsequent cults of the Nemanjić rulers. The cult of this royal saint undergoes a change in the twelfth century as regards the image of the exemplary ruler. The martyrial cults of holy kings emerge in medieval Serbia only in the fifteenth century, under the influence of completely different motives. The cults of national royal saints associate domestic dynasties with the Old Testament-based traditions of God-chosenness, which play a central role in the processes of securing political legitimation for ruling houses. At the turn of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, we can see both the national and universal relics being used for raising an awareness of chosen ness observable in expanding the sacred realm as the fatherland's prayerful shield. In that sense, all-Christian relics, especially those of Constantinopolitan provenance, become integrated into domestic traditions.http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-7653/2006/0350-76530637069M.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marjanović-Dušanić Smilja
spellingShingle Marjanović-Dušanić Smilja
Patterns of martyrial sanctity in the royal ideology of medieval Serbia continuity and change
Balcanica
author_facet Marjanović-Dušanić Smilja
author_sort Marjanović-Dušanić Smilja
title Patterns of martyrial sanctity in the royal ideology of medieval Serbia continuity and change
title_short Patterns of martyrial sanctity in the royal ideology of medieval Serbia continuity and change
title_full Patterns of martyrial sanctity in the royal ideology of medieval Serbia continuity and change
title_fullStr Patterns of martyrial sanctity in the royal ideology of medieval Serbia continuity and change
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of martyrial sanctity in the royal ideology of medieval Serbia continuity and change
title_sort patterns of martyrial sanctity in the royal ideology of medieval serbia continuity and change
publisher Institute for Balkan Studies SASA
series Balcanica
issn 0350-7653
publishDate 2006-01-01
description Especially important for the development of the holy king concept with the Serbs appears to be the early period of Serbian sovereignty, initially in Zeta, and subsequently in Raška under Stefan Nemanja and his descendants. During the eleventh century, cults of royal martyrs arise across the Slavic world, receiving a most enthusiastic response connected with the spread of the martyrial and monastic ideals in Byzantium. The cult of St Vladimir is the earliest royal saint's cult with the Serbs, and it is rightfully set apart from the ideologically consistent whole encompassing the subsequent cults of the Nemanjić rulers. The cult of this royal saint undergoes a change in the twelfth century as regards the image of the exemplary ruler. The martyrial cults of holy kings emerge in medieval Serbia only in the fifteenth century, under the influence of completely different motives. The cults of national royal saints associate domestic dynasties with the Old Testament-based traditions of God-chosenness, which play a central role in the processes of securing political legitimation for ruling houses. At the turn of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, we can see both the national and universal relics being used for raising an awareness of chosen ness observable in expanding the sacred realm as the fatherland's prayerful shield. In that sense, all-Christian relics, especially those of Constantinopolitan provenance, become integrated into domestic traditions.
url http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-7653/2006/0350-76530637069M.pdf
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