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Stefan Prvovencani (First-Crowned), (1196-1227)
As the founder of the Nemanjic dynasty retired to a life
of spirituality and reflection, the challenging task of continuing his
work fell on his hand-picked successor and middle son, Stefan Nemanjic.
Navigating through the often troubled political waters of early 13th century
southeastern Europe, Stefan managed during his reign of over 30 years
to claim considerable accomplishments, having elevated the state to an
internationally recognized and independent kingdom, and the church to
an autocephalous archbishopric. However, the reign and deeds of Stefan
are also intextricably tied to the name of St. Sava; indeed, the twin
state-church achievements of this period the result of complementary statesmanship
of the two brothers.
Early during Stefan's rule, the international context
appeared favorable, as relations with the hitherto main threat - the Byzantine
state - were cordial. Solidified by the grand zupan's marriage to emperor
Alexios III's daughter, the former's prestige was further boosted by an
unprecedented granting to a foreigner of the high Byzantine title of sebastocrator.
But the venerable splendor of the Constantinopolitan court could not mask
its decay, and this became painfully evident following its sack by Venetian-sponsored
Latin Crusaders (1204). Stefan's problems began even earlier, emanating
mainly from Hungary's expansionism, and its overt support for a rebellion
by his seemingly disgruntled elder brother Vukan (1202). Having dislodged
Stefan as legitimate zupan, Vukan ruled under Hungarian suzerainty for
a couple of years, but by 1205, with Bulgarian help, Stefan managed to
regain the throne, relegating his brother to his traditional Zeta appanage.
It is at this point that the remarkable figure of their
third brother, Sava Nemanjic, enters the broader picture. Sava returned
to Raska from Mt. Athos in 1207, bringing with him the relics of the holy
dynasty's founder, St. Simeon. The relics served as the basis of a lasting
peace Sava officiated between the two brothers, and having been laid to
rest in the newly expanded and illuminated Studenica monastery, became
the center of healing miracles and broad veneration. This phase of Sava's
work in Serbia continued for the next 10 years.
POLITICS AND THE SUBLIME, St. Sava's inscription
in Studenica.
The political climate having changed, Stefan was forced
to look westward for the kinds of political support and recognition that
his realm reqauired at that point. He remarried, this time to the granddaughter
of the old Venetian doge Enrico Dandolo, Ana. Infamous as her grandfather
was in connection with the shameful sack of Constantinople, Ana played
a respectable role on her new court; the mourning of her death by her
son, king Uros I, has been immortalized
in one of the more famous frescoes at the Sopocani monastery. Futhermore,
Stefan looked to the Pope to get that elusive state sybmol - the royal
crown. Following customary diplomacy and associated promises of ecclesiastic
union with Rome, the coronation did finally take place in 1217, and he
is thus referred to as Prvovencani (First-Crowned).
Disgruntled by this dangerous leaning to the West - or
perhaps just inspired to match it with necessary new steps in Church organization
- Sava at this point leaves Serbia, only to come back two years later.
But this time - having negotiated details with the Constantinopolitan
patriarch in Nicean exile - hed does so as the head of the newly autocephalous
Serbian archbishopric, with its first seat at the famous Zica
monastery, erected by Stefan. Sava set up a number of new bishoprics
and trained a domestic clergy and church hierarchy, drawing support from
the already well-established Serbian monastic communities on Mt. Athos
and elsewhere. Sava served in this position until his 1233 retirement
in favor of his disciple Arsenije I, upon which he embarked on his second
series of travels to the Holy Lands of the East. But just as he strived
to unite this medieval Church and State, he harmoniously blended statesmanship
with piousness: it remains a puzzle what was it - his skillful diplomacy
or the halo and authoirity of a walking saint - that miraculously averted
imminent attacks by Hungarians and Bulgarians during the mid-1210s.
Stefan retired peacefully in 1227, shortly before his
death as monk Simeon. His deeds as a statesman were matched by his church-building,
and his literary achievements, of which the hagiographic narative of his
father's time - "The Life of St. Simeon" takes key place.
Though hard to summarize, St. Sava's far-reaching legacy
nevertheless stems from his ability, at a time of moral and political
dissaray following the Latin sack of Constantimople, to lay the ground
for transforming a limited but important medieval ethnicum into a civilized
and self-aware race, adherent to true, universal Christian morality and
norms. And although his practical focus was on vigorously implementing
this spiritual enlightenment on a national level - his reputation, message,
and achievemnents were to transcend the boundaries of his homeland far
and wide.
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