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Stećak (plural stećci ; Cyrillic стећак, стећци) is the name for monumental medieval tombstones , that lie scattered across Bosnia and Herzegovina , and the border parts of Croatia , Montenegro and Serbia . An estimated 60,000 are found within the borders of modern Bosnia and Herzegovina and the rest of 10,000 are found in what are today Croatia (4,400), Montenegro (3,500), and Serbia (2,100), at more than 3,300 odd sites with over 90% in poor condition. They are cut in a variety of recognizable stećak forms , with certain percentage being richly decorated and some individual stećci also containing inscriptions in form of epitaphs .

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87-474: Appearing in the mid 12th century, with the first phase in the 13th century, the custom of cutting and using stećci tombstones reached its peak in the 14th and 15th century, before being discontinued in the very early 16th century during the Ottoman conquest of Bosnia and Herzegovina . They were a common tradition amongst Bosnian , Catholic and Orthodox Church followers alike, and were used by both Slavic and

174-480: A Vlach from Cetina, Ostoja Bogović, who in 1377 paid the cost of a burial of a Vlach Priboja Papalić for 40 libra . At the time a burial in Split costed 4-8 libra, while for a sum of 40 libra a family grave in the church of Franciscan order in Šibenik could be bought. Benac concluded that the distribution of stećci in the lands at the right Cetina riverbank, in the parts of Dalmatian Zagora , while they are absent in

261-479: A common thesis, especially represented by Bešlagić, stećci are an original Bosnian-Herzegovinian cultural-artistic medieval phenomenon. Some scholars like Milovan Gavazzi (1978) examined a much broader context, and considered their connection to megalithic tradition of the region and Eurasia from the prehistoric and contemporary periods. Some scholars considered that the chest form could have been inspired by Romanesque and Gothic houses from coastal cities, while

348-493: A dread of death, more anxiety than peace. The most remarkable feature is their decorative motifs roughly divided into six groups which complement each other: social symbols, religious symbols, images of posthumous kolo , figural images, clear ornaments, and unclassified motifs (mostly symbolic, geometrical, or damaged). Many of them remain enigmatic to this day; spirals , arcades, rosettes , vine leaves and grapes , lilium , stars (often six-pointed) and crescent Moons are among

435-452: A man who is riding a deer. There scenes where deer calmly approach the hunter, or deer with enormous size and sparse horns. Most of the depictions of "deer hunting" are facing west , which had the symbolic meaning for death and the otherworld. In numerous hunting scenes, in only one deer is wounded (the stećak has some anomalies), indicating an unrealistic meaning. In Roman and Parthian - Sasanian art, hunted animals are mortally wounded, and

522-545: A member of the Hungarian parliament Janos von Asboth, in correlation to a similar thesis on the origin of Muslim inhabitants of Bosnia and Herzegovina as descendants of the Bogomils. Such distortion of history will later attract criticism by scholars like Wenzel, who stated that through this particular example Austria-Hungarian authority practically delivered stećci "as a gift to Muslims, emphasizing their inheritance rights to

609-521: A mythical perception full of superstitions and fantasy tales. This implies the occurred discontinuity of historical memory among all three ethnic groups, caused by ethnic migrations and religious conversions during the Ottoman occupation. It is considered that the first itinerary mention of stećci was by Benedikt Kuripešić from 1530. Evliya Çelebi in 1626 described them as tombstone monuments of some unknown heroes. The oldest local author to mention them

696-755: A selection of some 4,000 individual monoliths, grouped in necropolises at 28 locations, of which 20 in Bosnia and Herzegovina, two in Croatia, three in Montenegro, and three in Serbia. One of the best preserved collections of these tombstones is Radimlja , west of Stolac in Bosnia and Herzegovina, while the Zgošća Stećak is one of the most representative individual examples of stećak found, in terms of its size, artistic processing and ornamentation. The word itself

783-405: A stećak of Bogovac not later than 1477, and that most of the monuments of Herzegovinian Vlachs, and not only Herzegovinian and not only Vlachs, could be dated to the second half of the 15th century. Wenzel in one of her studies researched sixteen stećci with similar dating and historically known persons. She noted the possibility that initially the stone monuments as such could have been introduced by

870-783: A symbol of Bosnia and Herzegovina, being objects of South Slavic ideological ethno-national building myths and ownership, as well as different opinions on their archaeological, artistic and historical interpretation. The breakup of Yugoslavia and the Bosnian War (1992–1995) caused a resurgence of Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian nationalism, in which all three ethnic groups tried to appropriate them as part of their own culture exclusively. Paradoxically, none of these groups in Bosnia and Herzegovina, ( Bosniaks , Bosnian Serbs and Bosnian Croats ), originally remember stećci in their collective consciousness, leaving them to deteriorate in nature or to human carelessness and destruction which at least halved

957-594: A template, were compiled by dijak / pisar (pupil, scribe). Currently 33 personal names of masons are known, among whom the most notable is Grubač due to his skills and being both a mason and scribe. He made four stećci in Boljuni and four stećci in Opličići near Stolac . The most notable scribe was Semorad who also worked around Stolac. It is believed that the masons studied the craft in Dalmatia and Ragusa, and those from

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1044-632: A year. In the 1530s, the Kingdom of Hungary had remained in control of the forts on the south bank of the Sava and Jajce . Jajce Fortress was finally taken by the Ottomans in 1527. The House of Berislavić controlled the region of Usora in the north until it in turn succumbed in the 1530s. Parts of southwestern Bosnia were sectioned into the Sanjak of Klis , which was formed in 1537 subordinated to

1131-540: Is Andrija Kačić Miošić in the mid-18th century. Alberto Fortis in his work Travels into Dalmatia (1774) recorded them in the Romanticist spirit of that time, describing the tombstones in Cetina as warrior graves of giants. They also attracted attention by Aleksander Antoni Sapieha , Ami Boué , Otto Blau, John Gardner Wilkinson and Heinrich Sterneck. Since the second half of the 19th century, stećci are seen as

1218-599: Is a contracted form of the older word * stojećak , which is derived from the South Slavic verb stajati (engl. stand ). It literally means the "tall, standing thing". In Herzegovina they are also called as mašeti / mašete (Italian massetto meaning "big rock", or Turkish meşhet / mešhed meaning "tombstone of a fallen hero"), in Central and Western Bosnia as mramori / mramorje / mramorovi (marble), while in Serbia and Montenegro as usađenik (implantation). On

1305-754: Is a slur used mostly in the lands of the former Ottoman Empire for non-Muslims or, more particularly, Christians in the Balkans . The terms " kafir " , " gawur", and " rûm " (the last meaning " Rum millet ") were commonly used in defters (tax registries) for Orthodox Christians , usually without ethnic distinction. Christian ethnic groups in the Balkan lands of the Ottoman Empire included Greeks ( rûm ), Bulgarians ( bulgar ), Serbs ( sırp ), Albanians ( arnavut ) and Vlachs ( eflak ), among others. The 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica described

1392-427: Is danced by making the gate of the raised hand and the ringleader of these gates tries to pull all kolo dancers through them until the kolo is entangled, after that, playing in the opposite direction, until the kolo is unravelled. Its origin is in a mortuary ritual guiding the soul to another world and the meaning of the renewal of life. The vast regional, but scarce (usually only one) in-graveyard distribution mostly in

1479-672: Is in South Herzegovina (territory of Trebinje , Bileća , Ljubinj and Stolac ), where there had been a high concentration of Vlachs. Some of the stećci inscriptions (by anthroponyms) clearly relate them to some Vlach chieftains; Tarah Boljunović from Boljun-Stolac, Vukosav Vlaćević from Vlahovići -Lubinje, Hrabreni and Miloradović in Radimlja-Stolac, as well as other distinctive members from Vlach groups like Bobani, Pliščići, Predojevići, Drobnjaci and to such chieftains belong finest monuments. The occurrence of stećci in

1566-665: Is one of their most remarkable features, and indicates a high degree of Christianization of the medieval Bosnian community. However, it is believed that there is not enough basis to be perceived as exclusively Christian. Christian Gottlob Wilke sought origins of the symbolic motifs in old Mediterranean spiritual and religious concepts. Đuro Basler saw some parallels in the artistic expression of late Romanesque art, while symbolic motifs are divided into three components; pre-Christian, Christian and Manichaean (i.e. Bogomil). Bešlagić asserted that those who have raised and decorated them were not completely Christianized because they practiced

1653-541: Is part of the Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance and contains a large number of stećak tombs. Some other notable or studied individual stećci: Ottoman conquest of Bosnia and Herzegovina The Ottoman conquest of Bosnia and Herzegovina was a process that started roughly in 1386, when the first Ottoman attacks on the Kingdom of Bosnia took place. In 1451, more than 65 years after its initial attacks,

1740-498: Is uncommon in regional dialects and without etiological value, and semantically incorrect and contradicting as it derives from the verb "to stand", while the chest-type to which it refers predominantly is laid down, while another sub-type of pillars and crosses is the one predominantly upright; this upright or standing sub-type does not amount to even 5% of the overall number of stećci; in the original stećci inscriptions they are most often called as kami (meaning "stone" regardless of

1827-767: The Kosača noble family . It was in his interest to settle militant and well-organized Vlachs in the riskiest parts of his realm, to defend from Talovac forces in Cetina and Venetian forces in Poljica and the coast. Thus the Dalmatian type is found only to the west and south of the Kosača capital Imotski , and later also the north after the Fall of Bosnia . Archeologically, some Middle Age burials from Cetina county have local specifics by which Cetina county differs from other parts of Dalmatia. In

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1914-650: The Lašva Valley , the Ottomans won a major victory, upsetting the balance of power in the region. The first permanent presence of Ottoman armies in Bosnia was established in 1414, after the region near Donji Vakuf (known as Bosnian Skoplje in medieval times) was captured. In period between 1414 and 1418, the Ottoman Empire conquered Foča , Pljevlja , Čajniče and Nevesinje . During the same year Višegrad and Sokol were captured too. In 1415, Sandalj Hranić, who controlled today's eastern Herzegovina, became an Ottoman vassal. Isa-Beg Isaković organized in 1455 one of

2001-575: The Ottoman Empire officially established the Bosansko Krajište (Bosnian Frontier), an interim borderland military administrative unit , an Ottoman frontier, in parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina . In 1463, the Kingdom fell to the Ottomans, and this territory came under its firm control. Herzegovina gradually fell to the Ottomans by 1482. It took another century for the western parts of today's Bosnia to succumb to Ottoman attacks, ending with

2088-820: The Sanković noble family in the village of Biskup near Konjic , from the Miloradović-Stjepanović noble family (Hrabreni) in Radimlja near Stolac , from the Pavlović noble family near Sarajevo , and from an unknown family at Donja Zgošća near Kakanj . Today many Stećci are also displayed in the yard of the National Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Sarajevo. The medieval Mramorje necropolis in Serbia

2175-592: The Vlach populations. On the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina, all found individual and stećci grouped in necropolises are considered immovable heritage and most are already inscribed on one of the lists of the Commission to preserve National Monuments , whether on the List of National Monuments , Tentative List, or into List of Petitions. Stećci are also inscribed into World Heritage List by UNESCO since 2016, with

2262-445: The capture of Bihać in 1592. The entire territory that is today known as Bosnia and Herzegovina was not conquered by the Ottoman Empire at once in a single battle, but it took the Ottoman Empire several decades to conquer it. Military units of the Ottoman Empire made many raids into feudal principalities in the western Balkans at the end of the 14th century, some of them into territory of today's Bosnia and Herzegovina, long before

2349-400: The ridge form by medieval Christian sarcophagus or local Bosnian wooden houses. According to Lovrenović's synthesis it is part of a wider West Mediterranean origin and affiliation. It is established that they are mainly related to mountainous places which became deserted over a period of time because of migrations caused by new social events and the Ottoman occupation . Since the middle of

2436-448: The 1878 Austro-Hungarian occupation , rather than scientific reasons. It was already questioned in 1899 by Kosta Hörmann, the first director of National Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina . For almost a century it was a predominant theory in international historiography. Since the mid-20th century many scholars like Marian Wenzel , once the world's leading authority on the art and artifacts of medieval Bosnia and Herzegovina, concluded that

2523-533: The 19th century, specifically the 1875 thesis by Arthur Evans , many scholars including Alexander Soloviev , Kosta Hörmann and Ćiro Truhelka have initially argued that they were related to the origin of the Bosnian Church i.e. Bogomils or other dualist groups. Others have asserted that the church was actually founded by Franciscan friars from the Catholic Church . However, Benac noted that

2610-538: The Bogomils did not respect the symbol of the cross , yet on the stećci it is very common. Gradually it was "dismantled and discarded". Some other scholars proposed unconvincing theories; Ivo Pilar (1918) ideologically argued the Croatian origin of medieval Bosnia, later Dominik Mandić considered them to be part of the ritual of the burial by the pagan Croats from the Red Croatia , Ante Škobalj similarly argued

2697-805: The Bosnian sanjak. In 1480, the Sanjak of Zvornik was formed but subordinated to the Beglerbey of Budim . Even though the Bosnian Kingdom fell, there were several fortresses that resisted much longer – the last fortress in Herzegovina fell in 1481. The House of Kosača maintained the Duchy of Saint Sava as an Ottoman vassal state until 1482. In 1481, after the death of Mehmed II , Matthias Corvinus invaded Bosnia again and reached Vrhbosna ( Sarajevo ), but all of those gains were undone within

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2784-683: The Cetina county is related to the Nelipić noble family efforts to return economic and political power, who had Knin confiscated in 1345 by king Louis I of Hungary in exchange for Sinj and Cetina county. They thrived with the support from the Vlachs, who for their service were rewarded with benefits and common Vlach law . After many conflicts and the death of the last noble Nelipić, then Ivan Frankopan , Vlachs supported Stjepan Vukčić Kosača . The ridge stećci of Dalmatian type can be found only in regions of Dalmatia and Southwestern Bosnia, parts ruled by

2871-718: The Croatian theory. Non-monumentals around Cetina were identified as being Croats while monumental ones as being settled Vlachs. Vaso Glušac ideologically argued Serbian-Orthodox origin of both the Bosnian Church and stećci, while Vladislav Skarić considered they have represented the Old Slavic "eternal home", and that they initially were built from wood. Vladimir Ćorović pointed out that the "Old Slavs had not used monoliths or larger blocks of stone to make their dwellings, let alone for their graves, even less so for their writings or decorations". The "autochthonous" Vlach theory

2958-850: The Eyalet of Rumelia. The Eyalet of Bosnia was established in 1580. It took until 1592 and the fall of Bihać to reach the westernmost frontiers of what is modern Bosnia, and the modern western border of Bosnia to be established. After that, the territory of today's Bosnia and Herzegovina remained under largely undisturbed Ottoman rule until 1689 and the Great Turkish War . Giaour Giaour or Gawur or Gavour ( / ˈ dʒ aʊər / ; Turkish : gâvur , Turkish pronunciation: [ɟaˈvuɾ] ; from Persian : گور gâvor ; Romanian : ghiaur ; Albanian : kaur ; Greek : γκιαούρης , romanized :  gkiaoúris ; Bulgarian : гяур ; Bosnian ; kaur/đaur) meaning "infidel",

3045-620: The Kingdom by aligning themselves with competing branches of the House of Kotromanić . In 1413, a conflict escalated between Hrvoje and Sandalj while the latter was helping Stefan Lazarević fight the Ottomans in Serbia ; subsequently, Hrvoje allied himself with the Ottomans, who invaded Bosnia in May 1414, which prompted a subsequent invasion by the troops of the Kingdom of Hungary . In a major battle in August 1415 that took place either near Doboj or in

3132-399: The Kingdom of Bosnia in 1463, Mahmud Pasha also invaded Herzegovina and besieged Blagaj after which Herceg Stjepan conceded a truce that required ceding all of his lands north of Blagaj to the Ottomans. The Ottoman territory in Bosnia continued to be expanded into newly-established sanjaks: the Sanjak of Herzegovina was formed in the 1470, subordinated to the beglerbey of Rumelia like

3219-559: The Moon could represent "astral marriage", or even Mithraism which had and old Mazdakism belief that the dead body goes to the Moon and the soul goes to the Sun, while some considered a connection between astral symbols with the position of celestial bodies at the time of death. They were carved by a kovač / klesar (smith, mason; in Latin faber , "master"), while the inscriptions, probably as

3306-643: The Ottomans established the Skopsko Krajište after the capture of Skopje , the capital of the Serbian Empire between 1346-1371; the term krajište ( крајиште ) had originally served as an administrative unit of the Serbian Empire or Despotate to designate border regions where the emperor or despot had not established solid and firm control due to raids from hostile neighboring provinces. The militarized territories that would later receive

3393-462: The Vlachs until the 15th century. A study of inscriptions on the tombstones showed that individuals from Vlach tribes (like Vlahovići, Pliščići, Predojevići, Bobani, and Drobnjaci) were also buried beneath stećak graves. Hrabak was the first scholar to connect the historical documents and their relation to the persons mentioned on rare inscriptions on stećci. In 1953 he concluded that the smith-stonemason Grubač from Boljun necropolis near Stolac built

3480-655: The Y-DNA haplogroup I2a1b3 and one to R1a , showing continuity between medieval and modern Bosnian and Herzegovinian population. Two of the decorated skeletal remains could indicate identity of the Bosnian noblemen Mirko Radojević and his son Batić Mirković who served the Bosnian King Tvrtko I . One of their enigmas is the fact they were not mentioned in local or foreign medieval documents. Franciscan chronicles which recorded many unusual things, like Turkish cemeteries, did not mention them. Folk tradition preserved

3567-830: The accompanying prospectus of the Paris exhibition "Medieval Art of the People of Yugoslavia" (1950). The first regional public presentation was held in 2008 at Klovićevi Dvori Gallery , and represented an example of encouraging public dialogue between the four nations. Stećci have influenced different art forms and were an inspirational theme for sculptors, painters, poets, filmmakers, writers and photographers. Stećci are commonly concentrated in groups: in cemeteries of individual families with few specimens, in cemeteries of whole families with approximately 30 up to 50 specimens, big necropolises of rural districts occasionally with several hundred specimens. Examples of family necropolises are those from

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3654-609: The center being around Stolac , in the area of Trebinje and Bileća , Gacko and Nevesinje . The fourth workshop was in the area of Konjic , while the fifth around Lištica . The stonemasons center in Western Bosnia was between Kupres and Duvno , in Central Bosnia around Travnik , while in Eastern Bosnia there were four workshops, one between Kladanj , Olovo and Ilijaš , the second around Zvornik ,

3741-481: The center or some notable position of cross-type stećci ( križine ), and their almost exclusive ornament of the crescent Moon and stars, could indicate a cemetery label for specific (pagan) religious affiliation. The symbolism of the Moon and stars (Sun), which are often found on them, could be traced to a combination of pagan and Christian beliefs, six-pointed star represent Venus (in Slavic mythology called Danica) and

3828-587: The commoners from Zagvozd called them starovirsko ("of the old faith"), dictionary by Bogoslav Šulek from 1860 and so on, while academic dictionaries mention it only from 1956/58. It is believed that the term was usually used in East Herzegovina and in the area of Stari Vlah in Serbia. Until the very early 20th century there was wandering in terminology, and some scholars proposed general terms like nadgrobni biljezi (gravestone markers) and mramorje (marble) to be more appropriate. The term stećak

3915-452: The conquest of the Bosnian Kingdom. The first Ottoman raids led by Timurtash-Pasha happened in the eastern parts of Bosnia in 1384. The Battle of Bileća in 1388 was the first battle of the Ottoman army on the territory of today's Bosnia and Herzegovina . It soon won important victories against the regional feudal lords in the Battle of Marica (1371) and Battle of Kosovo (1389). In 1392,

4002-674: The continuation of the process of Dinarization and assimilation of Slavs, a characteristic which could be general and not ethnic. The Dinaric ethnic type is also common in other parts of Europe especially Ukraine and was perceived by some as a Slavic type besides the fact that such racial anthropology terminology and methodology is of scientifically highly dubious accuracy and relevancy today. Archaeological artifacts are even more inconclusive because they don't differenate them from graves without tombstones. In 2019 and 2021 studies of late medieval stećak archaeological necropolises Kopošići near Ilijaš and Divičani near Jajce , six samples belonged to

4089-649: The county, the burials were not done in the ground without additional stone architecture. Some scholars related this phenomenon to the specific ethnic identity; however, due to still groundbreaking research, for now, it is considered only a regional and narrow local occurrence. Anthropological research in 1982 on skeletons from 108 stećak graves (13th-14th century) from Raška Gora near Mostar , as well some from Grborezi near Livno , have shown homogeneity, with clean Dinaric anthropological type, without other admixtures, presumably indicating an autochthonous Vlach population of non-Slavic origin. The research of 11 skeletons from

4176-603: The death of King Stjepan Tomašević . The Siege of Jajce ensued shortly thereafter in which the Kingdom of Hungary retook the Jajce Fortress . The victory was hailed at Matthias Corvinus 's court as a restoration of the Kingdom of Bosnia, then under Hungarian sovereignty. The Hungarians formed the Banate of Jajce after that. Isa-beg became the first sanjakbey of the Bosnian Sanjak in 1464. After taking

4263-459: The deceased. Seemingly it was related to the Sun path and was of importance that the dead watch the rising Sun. Stećci in Bosnia and Herzegovina can be roughly divided into two stonemasonry schools: Herzegovian (sarcophagi with arcades, figurative scenes, a wealth of motifs) and East Bosnian (sarcophagi in the form of chalets, floral motives). The former had schools on the territory of Herzegovina, with

4350-412: The deer is only one of many, while on stećci it is the only hunted animal. The motifs of a kolo (in total 132) procession, along with deer, and its specific direction of dancing, although not always easily identifiable, show it is a mortal dance compared to a cheerful one. In Eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina so-called Ljeljenovo kolo , with ljeljen local name for jelen (deer) implying jelenovo kolo ,

4437-471: The drawback of this theory is the fact that the Bosnian Kingdom's existence was presumably too short for a change in folk tradition, the Bosnian Church existed later and ended sooner than stećci, the Bosnian Church's area of influence can not be explained in coastal and Serbian lands, other Bogomils did not build them, many necropolises are located around contemporary church ruins as well as some stećci were secondarily embedded around churches and mosques, and that

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4524-474: The emergence of stećci among Vlachs coincides with their social-economical rise, which had been confirmed in the region of Zachlumia where the most well known necropolis of Radimlja related to the Vlach family Miloradović-Stjepanović from genus Hrabreni is located. Financial possibilities of ordering such expensive ways of burials among Vlachs are supported and confirmed in historical documents, with an example of

4611-417: The end by Ikavian-Ijekavian yat reflex. The inscriptions can be roughly divided into those of: religious phrase, description of heroic death, information of the deceased, information of the deceased's relatives and circumstances of death, information with only a personal name (sometimes with smith-pupil name), and a moral (or religious) lesson. The last are mostly brazen reminders of wisdom and mortality, relay

4698-562: The ethnic and confessional differences between the Bogomil, Catholic and Orthodox populations. However, it did not make a significant influence on the scientific thinking nor the scholarship and comparative research in Bosnia and Herzegovina, nor elsewhere. Europe's first public presentation of stećci is attributed to the Polish-born Russian immigrant and Yugoslav diplomat, Alexander Soloviev (1890–1971). He wrote about them in

4785-560: The feudal nobility and only in later stages embraced by the Vlachs . The Vlach population was so small, were profane and isolated, that the Vlachs in the Late Middle Ages were mostly a social-professional rather than an ethnic class, and that the mythological symbols are related to Old Slavic rather than "Vlach" pagan beliefs. Bešlagić and others related them to the formation of the Bosnian Kingdom and especially Bogomils ; however,

4872-437: The feudal nobility in the mid-14th century, whose tradition was embraced by the Vlach tribes who introduced figural decoration. Wenzel related the end of stećak production to the Ottoman invasion and new social circumstances, with the transition of Vlachs and near Slavs to Islam resulting with the loss of tribal organization and characteristics of specific ethnic identity. Sima Ćirković (1964) and Marko Vego (1973) argued that

4959-423: The first Ottoman censuses in the western Balkans. By the end of this period, in the 1460s, the territory of the Kingdom of Bosnia was significantly reduced, with the Ottoman Empire controlling the entirety of today's eastern Bosnia, as far north as Šamac , and Herceg Stjepan under control of all of today's Herzegovina as far north as Glamoč . The Ottoman conquest of the Kingdom of Bosnia ended in 1463 with

5046-404: The form of a chest ( sanduk ) and ridge/saddle-roofed ( sljemenjak ) do not seem to have appeared before the middle or the end of the 14th century (1353-1477), while the remaining two basic forms – the upright pillar ( stup ) and cross ( krstača / križina ), no earlier than mid-15th century. In the case of the latter, upright or standing forms could be influenced by but also influence the nišan –

5133-616: The form), thus some scholars proposed the term kamik (pl. kamici ) for all forms of headstones, while stećak would mean only the upright sub-type. The term kamik is more close to the original meaning and sometimes used instead of stećak in professional literature. The stećci area or cemetery folk names show respect and admiration for their dimensions, age or representations: Divsko groblje (Giants’ cemetery), Mašete (big stones), Mramori/Mramorje (marble blocks), Grčko groblje (Orthodox cemetery), Tursko groblje (Muslim cemetery), Kaursko groblje ( Giaour ’s cemetery). They are characteristic of

5220-455: The hinterland learned from them. Stećci were mostly carved out of huge blocks, mostly of limestone . The location in the vicinity of a quarry was most significant for the cemetery. Some stećci weighed more than 29 tonnes , and it is supposed they were transported by horse or ox carriage and the heaviest with a combination of sledges and flat billets. They were placed directly above the pit, often in cardinal direction west–east, therefore so were

5307-433: The images that appear. Figural images include processions of deer , horse , dancing the kolo, hunting , chivalric tournaments, and, most famously, the image of a man with his right hand raised, perhaps in a gesture of fealty . A series of visual representations on the tombstones can not be simplistically interpreted as real scenes from the life, and symbolic explanations are still considered by scholarship. The shield on

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5394-491: The land and implying that the later Christians, comparatively, were the 'newcomers'". During the war of the 1990s this theory would again have its resurgence in media and public discourse, seeking the historical-political legitimacy in which Islamization of the local Bosnian and Herzegovinan populace was not only caused by the Ottoman occupation but also by ingrained religious idiosyncrasy, epitomized in Bogomilsm, thus affirming

5481-399: The lands left of the river (with graveyards along Early Middle Age churches), show these tombstones in those parts belonged to the Vlach communities. The triangle between Šibenik , Trogir and Knin , as well as the surroundings of Vrlika and Trilj , which were the main centers of Vlachs, have the most number of stećci in Dalmatia. In 1982, Benac noted that the highest concentration of them

5568-523: The name Bosansko Krajište (lit. Bosnian Frontierland ) were thus governed by the same Ottoman administration, based in Skopje. After the death of King Tvrtko I in 1391, the Bosnian Kingdom went into decline. In the 1410s, local noblemen Hrvoje Vukčić of the House of Hrvatinić , Sandalj Hranić of the House of Kosača and Pavle Radenović of the House of Pavlović controlled large swaths of territory once controlled by Tvrtko, and effectively controlled

5655-470: The necropolis at Pavlovac near Prača , often attributed to the Pavlović noble family , also have shown clean Dinaric type, indicating Vlach origin, although historical sources do not call Pavlovići as Vlachs. The anthropological research in 1991 on the 40 skeletons from 28 burials (dating back to 1440-1450s) beneath stećci at the Poljanice plateau near the village of Bisko showed that the vast majority of

5742-468: The number of stećci. This attitude alone implies how such appropriation is based on an ideological construct. According to Marian Wenzel one of the three pervasive ethno-national ideological constructs, specifically the thesis about the Bogomil origin of stećci, dates as far back as the last decade of the 19th century when it had been put forward by the Austria-Hungarian bureaucracy, namely by

5829-459: The old cult and belief in sacred deer. Wenzel considered that it led the deceased to the underworld . Historian Šefik Bešlagić synthesized the representations of deer: sometimes accompanied by a bird (often on the back or horns), cross or lilium, frequently are shown series of deer or doe, as well with a bow and arrow, dog and hunter(s) with a spear or sword (often on a horse). It is displayed in hunting scenes, as well as some kolo processions led by

5916-526: The old custom of putting accessories with the dead, and many artefacts made of metals, textiles, ceramics and skin, coins, earrings of silver, gilded silver and solid gold have been found in graves beneath stećci. The customs like placing a coin in the mouth ( Charon's obol ), and placing a drinking vessel near graves and heads, are from ancient times. Tomb pits were mostly used for one burial, but sometimes were also used for two or more burials. Based on one stećak inscription in Montenegro, Bešlagić argued that there

6003-408: The plate headstones , the oldest one dating back to 1220 (the first were probably erected sometime in the mid-12th century), the monumental ones emerged somewhere around 1360, those with visual representations around 1435–1477, and that total production ended circa 1505. However, some consider that it lasted until the late 16th century, with rare examples that continued until the 18th century. Stećci in

6090-475: The population belonged to the presumably autochthonous Dinaric type and are of non-Slavic origin. 21 skeletons belonged to children, while out of 19 adult skeletons, 13 belonged to males. The quarry for stećci was found in the Northwestern part of the plateau, with one ridge being semi-finished work without any ornament. Although autochthonous Vlach origin has been argued since Illyrian times it rather shows

6177-404: The soul of the deceased going to the otherworld, which representations resemble those found on Iapodian artefacts. The Illyrian god Medaurus is described as riding on horseback and carrying a lance. Of all the animals, the deer is the most represented, and mostly is found on stećci in Herzegovina. According to Dragoslav Srejović , the spread of Christianity did not cause the disappearance of

6264-407: The stećci inscriptions they are called as bilig (mark), kamen bilig (stone mark), kâm / kami / kamen (stone), hram (shrine), zlamen (sign), kuća (house), raka (pit), greb/grob (grave). In the 1495 lectionary they are recorded as kamy (stone). Although the name stećak is meant to represent high monolithic standing stones (i.e. sanduk and sljemenjak form), in the 20th century

6351-478: The stećci tombstones were a common tradition amongst Catholic, Orthodox and Bosnian Church followers alike. Wenzel's conclusion supported other historians' claims that they reflect a regional cultural phenomenon rather than belonging to a particular religious faith. Sometimes the inscriptions/motifs do reveal the confessional affiliation of the necropolis/deceased to one of the three Church organizations in medieval Bosnia and Zachlumia. This interconfessionality of stećci

6438-593: The stećci were not built in the First Bulgarian Empire and that in Central Bosnia, where the centers of the Kingdom of Bosnia and the Bosnian Church were, were built in smaller numbers, as well as a higher number of stećci in poor condition, but also of older date. The exclusive relation between stećci and Bogomils was propagated from the late 19th century due to political and ideological reasons, like by Béni Kállay and Austro-Hungarian authorities who promoted post-Ottoman and pan-Bosnian identity since

6525-407: The symbolic and religious character of the stećak scenes. All the "life scenes" are considered to be part of a ceremonial. Several scholars concluded that the motifs, as well the tradition of a posthumous cult, show mixing of Romanized Illyrians and Early Slavs traditions with Christianity. Alojz Benac noted that the displays of a sole horse with a snake, as well a sole deer with a bird, symbolize

6612-646: The term stećak (implying the chest and ridge form) is misleading for all tombstone forms. The slabs were typical for a kind of burial in the West Mediterranean world of the 14th and 15th centuries, which had a special method of production and ornamentation in the Balkans, customized according to the stonemasonry skills and microenvironment. They were initially made by the feudal nobility who wanted to affirm individual prestige and power, sometimes also decorated with their coat of arms, while later this tradition

6699-567: The term as follows: Giaour (a Turkish adaptation of the Persian gâwr or gōr , an infidel ), a word used by the Turks to describe all who are not Mohammedans, with especial reference to Christians. The word, first employed as a term of contempt and reproach, has become so general that in most cases no insult is intended in its use; for example in parts of China , the term foreign devil has become void of offence. A strict analogy to giaour

6786-465: The territory of present-day Herzegovina , central Bosnia and Podrinje in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Dalmatia in Croatia , and minor parts of Montenegro , Kosovo , Western Serbia , Northwestern Bosnia, and Croatia ( Lika and Slavonia ). Stećci are described as horizontal and vertical tombstones, made of stone, with a flat or gable-top surface, with or without a pedestal. The common classification

6873-604: The third in Ludmer , and the fourth around Rogatica . In Croatia there were supposedly two workshops, one in Cista Velika, and the other in Čepikuće. A local characteristic of stećci in the territory around Cetina river in Croatia is their rare ornateness, of which only 8-10% have simple decoration. Those from upper Cetina are smaller and by type and style relate to those from Knin and Livno , while those from mid Cetina are more monumental. Specific plate stećci were found in

6960-443: The tombstones, usually with the crossbar, crescent and star, cannot be a coat of arms, neither can the stylized lilium be used in the heraldic sense. On one stećak a tied lion is displayed and above him a winged dragon. In 1979, historian Hadžijahić noted that the horsemen are not riding with reins , yet (if they are not hunting) their hands are free and pointed to the sky, implying possible cult significance. In 1985, Maja Miletić noted

7047-449: The upright monolithic stones on top of Muslim (Turkish) graves–during stećak to nišan transition period, which had already emerged by the end of the 14th century in conquered parts of Macedonia and Serbia. This form is predominantly found in Serbia and Eastern Bosnia. The initial stage of their development, which included simple recumbent plates or slabs isn't specific to the region, but it is of broad West Mediterranean origin, and as such

7134-965: The village Bitelić which are decorated with an identical geometric ornament, not found in Dalmatia nor in Bosnia and Herzegovina, however by the nature of the ornament and surface treatment is considered a possible connection with several monuments near the Church of St. Peter in Nikšić , Montenegro . In Montenegro they could have existed around Nikšić and in Glisnica and Vaškovo in Pljevlja Municipality . According to Bešlagić, in Serbia there were seemingly no specific centers, while masons were arriving from Bosnia and Herzegovina. There are different and still inconclusive theories on their cultural-artistic, religious and ethnic affiliation. According to

7221-419: The word stećak was accepted in science as a general term, including for plate tombstones (i.e. ploče ). The original reference to the word stećak itself is uncertain and seems to be a modern invention as it can only be traced from the note by Ivan Kukuljević Sakcinski from 1851, dictionary by Vuk Karadžić from 1852 (in the first edition from 1812 the term did not exist), although he contradicted himself as

7308-434: Was a pre-Christian custom of re-burial, in which the bones were washed and returned to the pit. The ethnic identity of stećci has not yet been fully clarified. Until now the most dominant, but still not widely accepted, theory relates them with the Vlach community in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Criticism of the theory argues that the monuments in original form weren't specific to Bosnia and Herzegovina, and were initially made by

7395-825: Was embraced and adopted by other social classes like the Vlachs who experienced socioeconomic growth and almost exclusively built them from the mid-15th century on. "I have for long lain here, and for much longer shall I lie"; "I was born into a great joy and I died into a great sorrow"; "I was nothing then, I am nothing now"; "You will be like I, and I can not be like you"; "May he who topples this stone be cursed" — Some translated examples of inscriptions. A fraction of stećci (384) bear inscriptions, mostly in Cyrillic , some in Glagolitic and Latin script. The observed Shtokavian dialect of Serbo-Croatian has some archaic phrases, mainly characterized by Ikavian while toward

7482-929: Was established by Dmitrij Sergejevski in 1952, who divided them into recumbent stećci and standing stećci. The systematization of stećci is not currently complete. According to Šefik Bešlagić , there are seven main shapes: slab, chest, chest with pedestal, ridge/gable, ridge/gable with pedestal, pillar, and cross; while according to Dubravko Lovrenović , there are nine types in Radimlja : slab, slab with pedestal, chest, chest with pedestal, tall chest, tall chest with pedestal, sarcophagus (i.e. ridge/gable), sarcophagus with pedestal, cruciform. For instance, in Bosnia and Herzegovina, according to UNESCO, "about 40,000 chests, 13,000 slabs, 5,500 gabled tombstones, 2,500 pillars/obelisks, 300 cruciform tombstones and about 300 tombstones of indeterminate shape have been identified. Of these, more than 5,000 bear carved decorations". The chronology established by Marian Wenzel assumes they developed from

7569-523: Was proposed by Bogumil Hrabak (1956) and Marian Wenzel (1962). However, the theory is much older and was first proposed by Arthur Evans in his work Antiquarian Researches in Illyricum (1883). While doing research with Felix von Luschan on stećak graves around Konavle he estimated that a large number of skulls weren't of Slavic origin yet similar to older "Illyrian" peoples, as well noted that Dubrovnik memorials recorded those parts to be inhabited by

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