10th century in Serbia

10th century in Serbia
Key events:
Chronology:
Part of a series on the
History of Serbia
Map of Balkans, Byzantine Empire and Anatolia, 1355. -- Velhagen & Klasing atlas of history, Berlin 1931 (english version)
By century
  • Illyrians
  • Autariatae
  • Dardani
  • Triballi
  • Moesi
  • Scordisci
  • Dacians
White Serbia around 600 AD
Principality of Serbia
Duklja, Travunia, Zachlumia, Narentines, Raška, Bosnia
7th–10th century
Catepanate of Ras around 969–976
Duklja (Zeta) 11th–12th century
Theme of Sirmium 1018–1071
Grand Principality 1071–1217
Kingdom of Serbia 1217–1346
King Dragutin's realm 1282–1325
1346–1371
Lordship of Prilep 1371–1395
Prince Lazar's Serbia 1371–1402
Vuk's Land 1371–1412
Despotate of Serbia 1402–1537
Ottoman-ruled Serbia 1459–1804
Jovan Nenad / Radoslav Čelnik 1526–1530
Banate of Lugoj and Caransebeș 16th–17th
Habsburg occupation 1686–1699
Great Serb Migrations 1690 and
1737–1739
Military Frontier 1702–1882
Habsburg-ruled Serbia 1718–1739
Koča's frontier 1788–1791
Kingdom of Yugoslavia 1918–1941
Axis occupation 1941–1944
Federal unit of Socialist Yugoslavia 1944–1992
Constituent state with Montenegro 1992–2006
Republic of Serbia 2006–present
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Events from the 10th century in, or regarding, Historic Serbia or Serbs.

Monarchs

The following, of the Vlastimirović dynasty, ruled Serbia:

Events

  • 914–917
    • Byzantines sends envoys to Serbs and Magyars regarding an alliance against the Bulgarians.
    • Prince Petar of Serbia annexes Bosnia and Pagania.
    • Prince Petar comes into conflict with Michael of Zahumlje.
    • Michael warns the Bulgarians about the Serbian-Byzantine alliance.
  • 917
    • End of 20-year-peace between Serbia and Bulgaria;
    • Prince Petar defends an attack by his cousin and Bulgarian ally Pavle.
    • Prince Petar is captured by Bulgarian generals, sent to jail in Bulgaria, and dies within a year.
    • Pavle becomes the Serbian Prince.
  • 920
    • Prince Pavle defends an attack by his cousin and Byzantine ally Zaharija.
    • Zaharija is handed over to Symeon of Bulgaria.
    • Prince Pavle switches to Byzantine support.
  • 921–922
    • Zaharija is dispatched with Bulgarian troops and there is no more mention of Pavle.
    • Zaharija becomes the Serbian Prince.
    • Zaharija reavows his loyalty to the Byzantine Empire.
  • 923
    • Zaharija united several Slav tribes along the common border to revolt against Bulgaria. Symeon sent an insufficient number of troops to quell the rebels; several Bulgarian generals were killed, their heads and weapons were sent to Constantinople by Zaharija as gifts and signs of loyalty
  • 924
    • Časlav is dispatched with Bulgarian troops, forcing Zaharija into exile in Croatia.
    • Symeon summons the Serbian nobility, to pay homage to their new Prince, Časlav, but instead of instating him, Symeon takes them captive, annexing Serbia.
  • 925
  • 893–927
  • 927
  • 927 or 933
    • Časlav returns to Serbia.
    • Časlav reorganized and repopulated the principality with the Byzantine help.
  • before 960
    • The Magyars invade Bosnia.
    • Časlav and his army defeats the Magyars. Kisa, the Magyar Duke, is killed by Tihomir. (see Battle of Drina)
    • Tihomir receives the Drina župania and marries the daughter of Časlav.
  • after 960
    • Kisa's widow returns with an army. Časlav is captured and killed.
    • Tihomir becomes the Serbian Prince.
  • 961–962
    • Saqaliba (Slavs) in the mountainous regions of Central Balkans, "west of the Bulgarians and east from the other Slavs (Croats)", have the reputation of being "the most courageous and violent".
  • 968–971
  • 969–971
    • Serbia is conquered by the Byzantines.
  • 971–976
  • ca. 990
  • 992
    • A Serbian diplomatic mission, possibly sent from Duklja, arrives in the Byzantine capital of Constantinople and was recorded in a charter of the Great Lavra Monastery, written in 993.[1]
  • 998
    • Rascia and Bosnia is annexed by Bulgaria.
  • early 10th century
  • 968–1018
  • 10th- or 11th century
    • "Peter" was the archon of Duklja.
    • Emperor Basil II (976–1025) installed a garrison in Belgrade.[2]

References

  1. ^ Ostrogorsky 1956, pp. 273–5.
  2. ^ Byzantium in the year 1000, p. 121.