Gazimestan

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Coordinates: 42°41′26″N, 21°07′25″E

Kosovo Field, with disposition of Serbian and Ottoman troops before the Battle of Kosovo.
Kosovo Field, with disposition of Serbian and Ottoman troops before the Battle of Kosovo.
Gazimestan monument
Gazimestan monument

Gazimestan is the name a monument to the battle, situated a few km to the southeast of the Kosovo Polje field, situated on a hill rising some 50 m above the plain. It was built in 1953 under the authority of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, in the shape of medieval tower designed by Aleksandar Deroko. The Kosovo Field is traversed by the main road across Kosovo (Skopje-Kraljevo), the monument is some 500 m off the road to the east The name is from Turkish gazi "hero", ultimately from Arabic ghazi "warrior". The monument was the location of the Gazimestan speech delivered by Slobodan Milošević on the 600th anniversary of that battle.

Kosovo Field (Serbian: Косово Поље, Kosovo Polje, "field of blackbirds") is a field in Kosovo, some 5 km northwest from Priština, at the confluence of the rivers Lab and Sitnica, and which supposedly is the site of the Battle of Kosovo which took place in 1389. Eponymous of the field are the Ottoman Kosovo Province, and the town of Kosovo Polje (some 6 km to the southwest of the monument). The Yugoslav Kosovo District and more recently the Republic of Kosovo derive their name from that of the Ottoman province.

Inscribed on the monument is the "Kosovo curse" attributed to Lazar,

"Whoever is a Serb and of Serb birth / And of Serb blood and heritage / And comes not to fight at Kosovo / May he never have the progeny his heart desires! / Neither son nor daughter / May nothing grow that his hand sows! / Neither dark wine nor white wheat"

This form of the curse first appeared in the 1845 edition of the collection of Serbian folk songs by Vuk Karadžić. The earlier 1813 edition still had a version notably lacking in the appeal to Serb blood and heritage, reflecting the rise of Serbian nationalism over the first half of the 19th century.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Alexander Greenawalt, Kosovo Myths: Karadžić, Njegoš, and the Transformation of Serb Memory, Spaces of Identity 3 (2003) [1]

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[edit] External links