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Stefan Vojislav (1035-1051)
Having reached its pinnacle during the long reign of emperor Basil II,
the Byzantine empire enters, following his death in 1025,
a steady decline that is shortly
to become evident - and specifically so in the Balkans. There, the
elimination of the perennial Bulgarian threat, combined with insensitive
taxation
policy reversals, helped spur liberation movements. Around
1035, Stefan Vojislav asserted full independence for Duklja. At first
defeated and taken prisoner to Constantinople, with his realm annexed,
he managed to escape, return and rekindle the struggle.
Taking advantage
of guerilla warfare and the distracting effects of other uprisings, he
staved off several punitive expeditions, asserting partial control over
the principalities of Travunija and Zahumlje in the process. Thus, by
1040 his state stretched in the coastal region from Ston in the north,
down to the Lake of Skadar, where he set up his capital, with other
courts in Trebinje, Kotor and Bar.
In 1042, the new emperor
Constantine IX decides to field a more serious army against Duklja,
aided by a coalition of three bribed neighboring Serbian principalities.
The ensuing battles ended in total victory for Vojislav, accompanied
with further expansion. Thus, Duklja becomes the leading Serbian state
organization which replaced - in terms of leadership - the onetime
"baptized" or "evangelized" Serbia, centered in Raska; it is to occupy
this position until the turn of the 11th century. Vojislav spent the
rest of his rule in peace, until his death in ca. 1051. He was succeded
by his widow and five sons - Gojislav, Predimir, Mihailo, Saganek and
Radoslav.
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