Serbs of the Republic of Macedonia
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Serbs are one of the constitutional peoples of the Republic of Macedonia. The territory of today's Republic of Macedonia was part of the medieval Serbian Empire. Today, about 36,000 Serbs live in the country (according to the 2002 census), largely in the north. A fine example of medieval Serbian ecclesiastical architecture is found in the church of Staro Nagoričane.
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[edit] History
[edit] The Serbian presence in the Republic of Macedonia
Serbs have existed on the territory of Vardar Macedonia/today's Republic of Macedonia for about the last fourteen centuries. They are mentioned in the historical records as an ethnic group living around the river Vardar, later to be resettled in Asia Minor. While remains of these Serbs probably left socio-cultural and anthropological traces in the lands of geographic Macedonia which alternated between Byzantine and Bulgarian domination, it may be assumed they slowly disappeared in the mass of local Slavs, which intermingled with Bulgars.
The permanent ethnic establishment of Serbs south of the Shara mountain chain, on the plains of Polog, and in Byzantine dominated places like Skoplje and later Serres (slavic: Ser) began with the expansion of Serbian King Milutin in 1282. With the victory over the Bulgarian army near Velbazhd (today's Kyustendil, Republic of Bulgaria) in 1331, the Morava and upper Vardar basins were secured for the Serbian state.
The advantage of the formation of ethnic consciousness within the Slavs in the upper Vardar region, which included the elimination of vestiges of Bulgarian consciousness and their replacement with a Serbian one were undoubtedly supported due to the more compact character of the newly altered Serbian political space[citation needed]. General similarity of ethnographic character and vigorous settlement of Serbs from more northern areas into the main centers of late medieval Serbia as well as rural areas characterized by arable land were also a contributing factor. Artistic activity and ecclesiastical unity were made concrete by the construction or re-construction of hundreds of Christian temples and monasteries in newly conquered Vardar Macedonia.
Serbian sources from the period of 1282 to 1392, including the elaborate Dušan's Code do not make mention of the Macedonian ethnos, just like Bulgarian, Byzantine and other documents. It would appear that in the eyes of the Serbian colonists from the North, the Slavic population of the Vardar region was accepted as Serbian, although undoubtedly many of them, especially in Eastern Geographic Macedonia had all the characteristics of the Bulgarian Slavs.
[edit] De-serbisation of Geographic Macedonia during the Turkocracy
The Ottoman invasion of Serbia was challenged at the river Marica in 1371 by Serbian Macedonia-stationed noblemen Vukašin and Uglješa, both of whom led armies from their statelets, at the river Maritsa (southeastern part of the Republic of Bulgaria) which ended in Serbian defeat (the place was named Sirf-Sindughi-"Serbian Defeat" by the invading Turks).
This defeat, which culminated with the fall of Skoplje (Skopje) in 1392, in combination with the consequences of Serbian defeat at Kosovo Polje in 1389 led to the migration of part of upper strata of the population, accompanied by ordinary people who sought refuge in the north.
[edit] Serbs in Geographic Macedonia under Turkocracy
Serbs in Macedonia maintained a separate ethnic existence. Often under repression by the Ottoman regime, they managed to preserve their ethnic name, customs (e.g. Krsna Slava) and most of their language which was in some aspects transitory in relationship to the language of Bulgarians situated in Central, Southern and Eastern parts of Macedonia. There is much evidence of the continuity of Serbs in Western and Northern parts of Macedonia, including the regions of Skoplje and the plains of Polog.
The great movement of Serbs in the 17th century after the collapse of Austrian-led campaign also de-populated parts of Northern Vardar Macedonia (today's Republic of Macedonia). The refuges took part and adapted themselves as an integral part of Serbians in Vojvodina, Hungary and Austria.
The educational patronage and propagandistic activity of the newly-founded Serbian state, in whose formation many prominent individuals from Macedonia gave their contribution, reversed some acculturisation[citation needed] processes in mostly Bulgarian and to a lesser effect Greek direction, but as the Macedonia became a Macciavelian ground for propaganda, various absurd forms of ethic conversion, helped by the propaganda of all former Yugoslav south Balkan states soon made a the situation largely chaotic, promoting Serbian geographer Jovan Cvijić to exclaim that "nationality for the Macedonian Slavs is understood like a political party affiliation".
This prompted the appearance of the feeble and over-estimated in the later historiography of Communist Yugoslavia Macedonian nationalism. The most characteristic hallmark of the period after the Balkan Congress in 1878 until the 1941 was the development of a strong and elaborate national liberation struggle of Macedonian Bulgars, bitterly opposed to any Serb and Greek influence in the wider Macedonian region, which was to be based as ethnically Bulgarian area in the borders of Bulgarian Exarchate (established 1870). Serbian answer was start of a guerrilla campaign, led by local men and Serbs from other areas-the so-called "Chetnik" movement. Men like Jovan Stojković Babunski, Micko Krstić, Jovan Dolgač, Gligor Sokolović, Vasilije Trbić confronted Turkish, Albanian and Bulgarian (VMRO-led) military formations together with their squads called "Četa"-mobile volunteer units strongly armed with personal weapons.
The Young Turks Revolution of 1908 created slightly better conditions for the expression of Serbian cultural life in Geographic Macedonia. Serbian publishing of books, religious calendars, newspapers briefly flourished. The "Assembly of Ottoman Serbs" was held in Skoplje and Serbs had their deputies in the Ottoman parliament.
[edit] Liberation of Old Serbia and Vardar Macedonia
During the Balkan Wars (1912-1913) Serbia liberated all of the southern Serbs by occupying Vardar Macedonia, much at the grievances of well-structured exponents of the Greater Bulgarian idea present among native inhabitants of Macedonia. The period from 1913-1914 is a period of turmoil and the central government in Belgrade implemented plenty of unpopular measures, most of which were found to be oppressive to the Bulgarian majority in Vardar Macedonia.
[edit] Since World War II
Tito's Yugoslavia, having emerged victorious after World War II, established a rigid, well-supported policy of Macedonisation, a process based on the proclamation of the entire Bulgarian (but not Serbian, which faded into disuse) vernacular of history, including postmortem and retroactive ethnic Macedonization of well-known Bulgarian leaders, warriors, poets, writers, as obligatory. The policy was supported by propaganda.
The population of Serbs in Macedonia which did not lend itself to Macedonization, representing compact population in the region of Skopska Crna Gora and having significant presence in Kumanovo, Skoplje, Tetovo, and surroundings was artificially separated from Yugoslav Serbia. The post-war years were characterized by the loss of national institutions like the proclamation of the Macedonian Orthodox Church in 1958-1967 period and loss of several educational institutions in the Serbian language.
Today's number of Serbs, according to the 2002 census in the Republic of Macedonia, is 35,939.
[edit] Documented presence of Serbs in Macedonia
- See also: Demographics of Republic of Macedonia
During the medieval Serbian Empire and Serbian rule of Macedonia, the notable people were Serbs, Greeks, Vlachs (Aromanians), Arvanites (Albanians) and Bulgarians.
in the 19th century, several German and Austrian ethnografists showed a cluster of Serb people in the areas surrounding Bitola towards Albania. Serbian ethnografists claimed a larger Serb presence in north of Ohrid and Prilep. Bulgarians researches show a major Serb presence in Ohrid. American researches show clusters of Serbs, ranging from Serbian border down to the Greek border.
Ottoman census in 1906 show a minority of Serbs spread over Macedonia, forming 1.39% or 13,150 of the population. Greek census shows a Macedonia divided over three ethnicities;
- Bulgarians, 656,300
- Serbs, 576,600
- Greeks, 454,700
[edit] Notable individuals
- Jovan Babunski
- Jovan Dovezenski
- Gligor Sokolović
- Đorđe Skopljanče
- Petar Dimitrijević
- Stojan Marković
- Serafim Krstić
- Janićije Đurić
- Jovan Č. Tomić
- Stojan Ristić
- Jovan Ćirković
- Rista Cvetković
- Gligorije Božović
- Rista Stavrić
- Đorđe Stamenković
- Isailo Hadžijevski
- Jovan K. Grošević
- Matija Šumenković
- Petar Novaković-Čardaklija
- Janko Popović
- Marko Krstić
- Vuča Živić
- Dositej Novaković
- Gedeon Jurišić
- Kraljević Marko
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- The Serbs and the Macedonian Question
- Centuries of Serbian presence in Vardar Macedonia-History
- Међу Србима у Македонији
- Срби више не живе у гету
- Church in Staro Nagoričane
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