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List of Serbian monarchs
None
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| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| royal_title | Monarchy |
| realm | Serbia |
| coatofarms | Royal coat of arms of the Kingdom of Serbia reconstruction.svg |
| coatofarmssize | 120px |
| coatofarmscaption | Royal Coat of arms |
| image | Peter I Karageorgevich, King of Serbia, 1844-1921, head-and-shoulders portrait, facing left.jpg |
| caption | Last monarch of Serbia |
| **Peter I | |
| ** – 16 August 1921 | |
| first_monarch | Višeslav (as first Prince known by name) |
| last_monarch | Peter I (as King of Serbia)Peter II (as King of Yugoslavia) |
| style | His Majesty |
| residence | Stari Dvor, Belgrade, Serbia |
| appointer | Hereditary |
| began | 7th century |
| ended | 1 December 1918 (unification of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes into a kingdom)29 November 1945 (proclamation of the socialist one-party dictatorship) |
| pretender | Crown Prince Alexander |
**Peter I ** – 16 August 1921

This is an archontological list of Serbian monarchs, containing monarchs of the medieval principalities, to heads of state of modern Serbia. The Serbian monarchy dates back to the Early Middle Ages. The Serbian royal titles used include Knyaz (Prince), Grand Župan (Grand Prince), King, Tsar (Emperor), and Despot.
Early medieval Serbian states (7th century–1166)
Vlastimirović dynasty (7th century–960)
Main article: Vlastimirović dynasty, Principality of Serbia (early medieval)
| Vlastimirović |
|---|
The Vlastimirović dynasty was the first royal dynasty of the Serb people. Byzantine emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus (r. 913–959) mentions that the Serbian throne is inherited by the son, i.e. the first-born, though in his enumeration of Serbian monarchs, on one occasion there was a triumvirate. The Serbs established several polities by the 10th century: Serbia or Zagorje (hinterlands) which consisted of Serbia and small land of Bosnia; and Pomorje (maritime) which consisted of Dioclea, Zachlumia, Pagania, Travunia (including Kanalitai). The Serbian ruler was titled knyaz or archon by the Byzantines, "prince".
The history of the dynasty starts with the eponymous founder Vlastimir. This era is marked by the Christianization of Serbs, the many internal and external wars (Bulgars, Magyars), and the power struggle between the First Bulgarian Empire and the Byzantine Empire in which Serbia found itself in the middle. The history of this dynasty ends with the annexation of Serbia in 969.
| Ruler | Reign | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 610–641 | One of the two sons of an unnamed "king" of White Serbia (assumed to be Dervan), he led "half of his folk" to the Balkans and was given land by Byzantine emperor Heraclius (r. 610–641), upon receiving his protection (most likely before 626). He is said to have died long before the Bulgar invasion (681). | |
| For two or three generations, no information was recorded or preserved. | ||
| 780 | A descendant of the Unknown Archon, he lived during the rule of Frankish King Charlemagne, and ruled the hereditary lands, župe ("counties, districts") around Tara, Piva, and Lim. He united some Slavic tribes, forming the first Serbian principality. | |
| Son of Višeslav, he or his son Prosigoj are believed to have ruled during the time in which the Royal Frankish Annals speak of Ljudevit Posavski revolting against the Franks (ca. 819–822), during which time is said that the Serbs held a great part of Dalmatia. At this time, there was peace with the Bulgaria. | ||
| 830–850 | Son of Prosigoj. He is the eponymous founder of the Vlastimirović dynasty. He defeated the Bulgars in a three-year war against Khan Presian. Vlastimir had three sons (Mutimir, Strojimir and Gojnik) and one daughter. His daughter married Krajina, who received the fief of Travunia. | |
| 850–891 | Eldest son of Vlastimir. Mutimir was the supreme ruler, with his two younger brothers (Gojnik and Strojimir) being subordinate to him. They successfully fought off an attack by Bulgarian Prince Vladimir-Rasate sent by Vladimir's father knyaz Boris I of Bulgaria (r. 852–889) during the Bulgar-Serb war of 853. Gojnik and Strojimir later revolted against Mutimir, who exiled them to Boris in Bulgaria in 855–856, securing brief peace between the two nations. Byzantine emperor Basil I the Macedonian sent missionaries to Serbia by 869. The Eparchy of Ras was established by 871, as the bishopric of Serbs. | |
| 891–892 | He was the eldest son of Mutimir. Pribislav ruled briefly until 892 when Petar Gojniković, his cousin, returned and defeated him in battle. Pribislav fled with his two brothers (Bran and Stefan) and son, Zaharije, to Croatia. | |
| 892–917 | Son of Gojnik, born in ca. 870. His name (Peter) symbolizes Christianization of the Serbs. He returned from exile and deposed Pribislav in 892. He later caught Bran in 895 under an attempted coup and blinded him, and then in 897 he killed Klonimir, the son of Strojimir, in yet another attempted coup. Petar re-gained Bosnia and annexed Pagania. He was in conflict with Mihailo Višević, the ruler of Zahumlje (917–935), who would warn Simeon I of Bulgaria of a possible alliance between Serbia and the Byzantines. Petar defeated Pavle, the son of Bran, who was sent by Simeon I of Bulgaria. In 917, Simeon's generals tricked and captured Peter, sending him to prison in First Bulgarian Empire, where he died within a year. | |
| 917–921 | Son of Bran Mutimirović, born in ca. 870–874. He was sent with an army to Serbia in 917, but was defeated by Petar. After Petar was deposed, Pavle took the throne. He defeats Zaharija, the son of Pribislav, sent by the Byzantines in 920. He was initially vassal to Simeon I of Bulgaria, later he switched to the Byzantine Empire. Zaharija, now sent by the Bulgarians, defeats him in 921. | |
| 921–924 | Son of Pribislav. Zaharije was sent in 920 by the Byzantines to retake the throne, but was captured by Pavle and handed over to Simeon I of Bulgaria who held him hostage for future tactics. In the meantime, Pavle switched sides to the Byzantines; Simeon dispatched Zaharija who managed to defeat Pavle and then betrayed Simeon by supporting the Byzantines. Zaharija defeated the Bulgarian army in 923, when he sent two heads and weapons of Bulgarian generals as trophies to Constantinople. In 924, a much larger army was sent by the Bulgarians, led by Časlav Klonimirović, Zaharija's second cousin. Časlav won the battle and Zaharija fled to Croatia. Simeon gathered all Serbian counts, and instead of instating Časlav, he arrested them and sent them as captives to Bulgaria, annexing Serbia. | |
| 933–943/960 | Born to Klonimir. Defeated Zaharija in 924, after which he was attacked by Simeon I of Bulgaria who annexed the Serbian tribes. He returned and liberated and united the tribes from Bulgaria. According to the semi-mythical account from the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja, certain Ciaslavus defeated the Magyars, but was later captured and drowned by them. His son-in-law Tihomir, who had held the Drina county, succeeded him as ruler of Serbia (the relation with Ciaslavus and those events remains disputable). The state is believed to have disintegrated, and becoming annexed by the Byzantines and Bulgaria. | |
| 960–969 | ||
| Serbia was annexed by the Byzantines (Catepanate of Ras fl. 969–976), and ruled by strategoi. | ||
| The Serbian principality was succeeded by the principality of Duklja. |
Vojislavljević dynasty (1018–1186)
Main article: Vojislavljević dynasty, Duklja
With the partial annexation of Serbia, the county around the city of Doclea emerges into a Principality, where the leaders adopt the title archon of Serbs, signifying supreme leadership among Serbs, alongside their given offices under Byzantine overlordship. The first office-holder was Peter of Diokleia, of which we only have a seal found in the 19th century. The next known is Jovan Vladimir, who became a Bulgarian vassal. Stefan Vojislav succeeds in giving the realm independence, he is the eponymous founder of the Vojislavljevići that ruled Duklja from the early 11th century up to the 1180s.
| Picture | TitleName | Reign | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:Peter of Diokleia.jpg | 80px]] | Archon | |
| Peter | 10th century | Peter was an archon of Duklja in the 10th or 11th century. The only information on him is from a seal found in the 19th century, which is decorated on the obverse with a bust of the Virgin Mary holding a medallion of Christ and flanked by two cruciform invocative monograms. The text is in Greek letters, saying "Petrou, Archontos Diokleias, Amin" (ΠΕΤΡ(Ο)Υ ΑΡΧΟΝΤΟΣ ΔΙΟΚΛ(Ε)ΙΑ(Σ) ΑΜΗΝ) - Peter, archon of Dioklea, Amen. The seal shows that although Duklja underwent turmoil in the 9th century, the region still continued under Byzantine rule, or if not authority, influence. | |
| [[File:JovanVladimirSlika.jpg | 80px]] | Prince | |
| Jovan Vladimir | 1000–1016 | Jovan fought to protect Duklja from Bulgarian expansion, making an alliance with Byzantium; Bulgaria however conquered Doclea in 997 and took Jovan Vladimir prisoner. Jovan ruled Duklja as a vassal of the Bulgarian empire until his murder in 1016. | |
| Ruler | |||
| Dragimir of Travunia and Zachlumia | 1000–1018 | Ruler of Travunia and Zachlumia, medieval Serbian principalities located in present-day regions of Herzegovina and south Dalmatia. | |
| Prince | |||
| Stefan Vojislav | 1018–1043 | Overthrew the Byzantine supremacy over Serbs in Duklja; founder of the Vojislavljević dynasty; in 1035 rebelled against the Byzantine Empire, but forced to sign an armistice; went to war again in 1040, which would be continued by his heir and son, Mihailo. Except Doclea, his realm included Travunia with Konavle and Zachumlia. | |
| Princess | |||
| Neda | 1043–1046 | As queen, she co-ruled with her sons, the princes. | |
| [[File:Srpski kralj Mihajlo lik.jpg | 80px]] | King | |
| ↑Prince | |||
| Mihailo Vojislavljević | 1046–1081 | Initially as a Byzantine vassal holding the title of protospatharios, then after 1077 as nominally serving Pope Gregory VII, addressed as "King of the Slavs". He had alienated himself from the Byzantines when he supported a Byzantine Slavic revolt in 1071–72, after which he then sought to gain support in the West. In 1077 he received a royal insignia by Gregory VII in the aftermath of the Church schism of 1054. | |
| King (titular) | |||
| Constantine Bodin | 1081–1101 | Son of Michael. He was crowned 'Tsar of Bulgaria' as Peter III in 1072, after being chosen by Bulgarian nobles through his Cometopuli lineage, he was sent off with an army that would conquer parts of southern Serbia and Macedonia. He was captured and sent to Constantinople, where he spent several years. He was rescued in 1078 by Venetian sailors, and in 1081 he succeeds his father as King. He enlarged his influence, installing his nephews and other family in Bosnia and Serbia. He is captured by the Byzantines in the 1090s, and continues as a mere Byzantine vassal. | |
| King (titular) | |||
| Dobroslav II | 1101–1102 | Overthrown by Vukan and Kočapar. | |
| Kočapar | 1102–1103 | Brought to power by Vukan of Serbia. Killed in battle against Zachlumia. | |
| Vladimir II | 1103–1113 | Married daughter of Vukan of Serbia. He was poisoned by his cousin Đorđe I. | |
| Đorđe I | 1113–1118 | Son of Constantine Bodin. Đorđe was overthrown by Uroš I in 1118. | |
| Grubeša | 1118–1125 | Overthrew Đorđe with the help of the Byzantines. | |
| Đorđe I | 1125–1131 | Second rule. | |
| Prince | |||
| Gradinja | 1131–1146 | Appointed to Doclean throne by Byzantines after Đorđe's defeat in the second war against Byzantines. | |
| Prince | |||
| Radoslav | 1146–1148 | Byzantine vassal. Only dynastic member to be mentioned as Prince of Doclea. | |
| Prince | |||
| Mihailo III | 1148–1186 | Byzantine vassal. |
Vukanović dynasty (1091–1166)
Main article: Vukanović dynasty, Grand Principality of Serbia
In the mid-11th century, Mihailo I had liberated Serbia from Byzantine rule, and appointed his son Petrislav to rule as Prince, independently. In 1083, Constantine Bodin appoints brothers Vukan and Marko, sons of Petrislav, as rulers of Serbia. In 1089, the Byzantines capture Bodin, and Vukan retains independence, founding the Vukanović dynasty. The Vukanovići quickly claim the following Serbian domains in the following decades, and by 1148, the maritime possessions are united with the inland. The Byzantine Empire at times intervened in the political scene, and at times Serbia had Hungary as its main ally. The dynasty ruled until 1166, when a dynastic branch is instated by the Byzantines.
| Ruler | Reign | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Grand Prince | ||
| Vukan | 1091–1112 | Vukan was the son of Petrislav, the Prince of Serbia and son of Mihailo I, that held the office from ca 1060. In 1083, Constantine Bodin appoints Vukan to the supreme rule of Serbia, while Vukan's brother Marko administrated a part of the land, most likely the frontier region in the north. After the Byzantine campaign against Duklja in 1089, and the subsequent civil war, Vukan asserted independence, ruling as Grand Prince, becoming the most powerful Serb ruler as of ca 1091. He began raiding Byzantine territories in 1090, taking Kosovo, and defeated a Byzantine army in 1092. Vukan made peace with Alexios I Komnenos, after the Emperor had threatened with a larger army. However, Vukan immediately broke the treaty as the Byzantines marched onto the dangerous Cumans in Adrianople. Vukan conquers the cities along the Vardar. In 1095, the Emperor meets Vukan and renews the treaty. Vukan again raided Macedonia, as the First Crusade began. In 1106 he nominally recognized Alexios I. |
| Note: Serbia is elevated to an independent Grand Principality. | ||
| Grand Prince | ||
| Uroš I | 1112–1145 | Uroš I was the son of either Vukan or Marko. In the treaty concluded between Vukan and Alexios I in 1095, Uroš I and Vukan became "guarantors of peace", as hostages to the Byzantines. Uroš succeeds the throne when Vukan dies. In ca 1130, he married his daughter, Jelena, to King Béla II of Hungary. Béla II, being blind, relied entirely on Jelena who acted as a co-ruler. In 1137, Ladislaus II, the son of Béla II and Jelena (the grandson of Uroš), becomes the Ban of Bosnia. |
| Grand Prince | ||
| Uroš II | 1145–1162 | Replaced his father at 1131 or around 1140 and ruled until 1155. |
| Grand Prince | ||
| Beloš | 1162 | Instated by Manuel I Komnenos. |
| Grand Prince | ||
| Desa | 1150–1155 | |
| 1162–1166 | Desa took Zeta (Duklja) and Travunia from Radoslav of Duklja and unified the coastal Serbian Principalities under his firm grip. | |
| Grand Prince | ||
| Tihomir | 1166 | First son of Zavida, exiled Župan of Zahumlje. |
After Desa's revolt, in 1165 the Byzantium divided the Serb lands between the four sons of Zavida: Tihomir in Raška, Stracimir in Duklja, Miroslav in Zahumlje and Travunia, and Stefan Nemanja in Toplica (in today's central Serbia). Stefan Nemanja rebelled against his eldest brother Tihomir in 1166, who fled with his brothers Stracimir and Miroslav to Byzantium to seek help. But later on, Stefan Nemanja defeated his Greek army of mercenaries in the same year near the town of Pantino on Kosovo in which poor Tihomir drowned in the River of Sitnica. Nemanja captured his other brothers and made peace with them by giving them rule in their former parts of the land to recognise him as the only ruler of Rashka or Serbia. The Nemanjić dynasty was named after Stefan Nemanja and ruled over Serbia until 1371.
Late medieval Serbian state (1166–1371)
Nemanjić dynasty (1166–1373)
| Nemanjić |
|---|
The Nemanjić dynasty ruled the Serb lands between ca. 1166 up to 1371.
| [[File:Maria Paleolog.JPG | 80px]] | Basilissa of Epirus |
|---|---|---|
| Maria Angelina Doukaina Palaiologina | 1384–1385 | Daughter of Simeon Uroš. |
|-- |[[File:Megala4.png|80px]] || Emperor of Serbs and Greeks Jovan Uroš|| 1370–1373 || Son of Simeon Uroš. Succeeded his father as titular "Emperor of Serbs and Greeks" and ruled an area of Epirus and Thessaly 1370–1373 before taking monastic vows. In 1384–1385 he helped his sister Empress Maria Angelina Doukaina Palaiologina govern Epirus (she was the widow of Thomas II Preljubović, the Despot of Epirus 1367–1384). |}
Fall of the medieval Serbian state (1371–1496)
Magnate provinces
| Lazarević | Mrnjavčević | Dejanović | Branković | Vojinović | Balšić | Crnojević |
|---|
The crumbling Serbian Empire under Stefan Uroš V (called "the Weak") was to be of little resistance to the powerful Ottoman Empire. In light of conflicts and decentralization of the realm, the Ottomans defeated the Serbs at the Battle of Maritsa in 1371, making vassals of the southern governors, soon thereafter, the Emperor died. As Uroš was childless and the nobility could not agree on the rightful heir, the Empire was ruled by semi-independent provincial lords, who often were in feuds with each other. The most powerful of these, Tsar Lazar, a Duke of present-day central Serbia (which had not yet come under the Ottoman yoke), stood against the Ottomans at the Battle of Kosovo in 1389. The result was indecisive, but it resulted in the subsequent fall of Serbia.
The administration was divided in the following:
- Moravian Serbia: Lazar, a nobleman and close friend of the Nemanjić, would govern modern Central Serbia. He married Milica, a descendant of Stefan Nemanja's eldest son Vukan. He held the title of Lord during the Empire, and Prince after the death of Uroš V. He had a son, Stefan, who would succeed as Prince, and in 1402 he was given the title despot (hence "Serbian Despotate").
- District of Branković: Vuk Branković, the son of Ohrid deputy Branko, would govern Sjenica, Kosovo and Skopje under the suzerainty of Lazar. He had a son, Đurađ Branković, who would succeed Despot Stefan. Their province continues as part of the Serbian Despotate.
- District of Altomanović: Nikola Altomanović ruled the areas from Rudnik, over Polimlje, Podrinje, east Herzegovina with Trebinje, reaching as far as Konavle and Dračevica, neighboring the Republic of Dubrovnik. He was defeated and blinded in Užice (fortress Užice) in 1373 by a coalition of his Serbian and Bosnian royals neighbors supported by the king of Hungary.
- Lordship of Zeta: Balša, a nobleman and distant relative of the Nemanjić, held only one town during Dušan, and during Uroš V, he is recognized as "provincial lord" holding Zeta region. He is succeeded by Đurađ, who ruled independently and was in rivalry with Marko. Đurađ II recognizes the overlordship of Lazar in 1386. The Balšić continue ruling Lower Zeta, while in Upper Zeta, Radič Crnojević take the rule, and by 1421 Crnojević held all Zeta under the Serbian Despotate. (see List of rulers of Zeta)
- Lordship of Prilep: King Vukašin, a nobleman and close friend of Uroš V, would govern most of the Macedonia region. He held the title of Lord during Dušan, and under Uroš V, he was crowned King as [subordinate] co-ruler in 1365. Vukašin ruled as "Lord of the Serbian and Greek lands, and of the western provinces." He was succeeded by Prince Marko, who became an Ottoman vassal. Their province is annexed by 1395.
- Domain of the Dejanović family: Dejan, a sebastokrator and brother-in-law of Dušan, would govern eastern regions from Kumanovo to Kyustendil. His sons, despot Jovan Dragaš and lord Constantine Dragaš inherited his domain and become Ottoman vassals in 1371. Their domain was annexed in 1395.
| Lady | ||
|---|---|---|
| Ruđina Balšić | 1414–1417 | Daughter of Balša II. |
|-- ||| Lord Đurađ II || 1385–1403 || || |-- | || Lord Balša III || 1403–1421 || || |-- !style=background:#FFDEAD; | Picture !style=background:#FFDEAD; | TitleName !style=background:#FFDEAD; | Reign !style=background:#FFDEAD; | Overlordship !style=background:#FFDEAD; | Notes |-- !style=background:lightblue; colspan=5 | Lordship of Zeta under the Crnojević family (Crnojević) |-- | || Lord Stefan Stefanica || 1451–1465 || || |-- | || Lord Ivan Ivan the Black || 1465–1490 || || |-- |[[File:The Miracle of St. Tryphon, ca. 1506, tempera with oil paint on softwood panel, 113 x 263 cm (cropped).jpg|80px]]|| Lord Đurađ || 1490–1496 || ||
| -- |
|---|
| } |
District of Branković / Serbian Despotate
| Branković |
|---|
The Branković family descends from the Nemanjići and the Lazarevići via female line. The family rises to prominence during the time of disintegration of the Serbian Empire under the last Nemanjić. The original family domains were centred around Kosovo region, one of the heartlands of medieval Serbian state. Later members of the house extended their rule over all remaining independent regions of Serbia making them the last suzerain rulers of medieval Serbia. The dynasty ruled the Serbian Despotate from 1427 to 1459.
| Picture | TitleName | Reign | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:Vuk Branković.jpg | 80px]] | Lord | ||
| Vuk Branković | 1371 – 1396 | Imprisoned and died in an Ottoman prison. | ||
| [[File:Đurađ Branković, Esphigmenou charter (1429).jpg | 80px]] | Despot | ||
| ↑Lord | ||||
| Đurađ I Branković | 1396 – 1412 | |||
| 1427 – 26 December 1456 | Grandson of Lazar I | |||
| [[File:Lazar Branković, Esphigmenou charter (1429).jpg | 80px]] | Despot | ||
| Lazar Branković | December 1456 – 20 January 1458 | Son of Đurađ I | ||
| [[File:Stefan Branković, Esphigmenou charter (1429).jpg | 80px]] | Despot | ||
| Stefan Branković | ||||
| Stefan the Blind | 1458 – April 8, 1459 | Son of Đurađ I, regent for niece. Serbia proper was annexed by the Ottoman Empire in 1459. | ||
| [[File:Stjepan Tomašević cropped.jpg | 80px]] | Despot | ||
| Stephen Tomašević | 1 April 1459 – 20 June 1459 | He married Helena Branković, the eldest daughter of Lazar Branković and Helena Palaiologina. | ||
| Serbian Despotate is conquered by the Ottoman Empire. The Serbian nobility enters the service of Hungary. The regnal title of despot is given by the Hungarians and Habsburgs (titular despot of Serbia). | ||||
| [[File:Змај_Вук_Бранковић,_деспот_српски.jpg | 80px]] | Vuk Grgurević Branković | ||
| Vuk the Fiery Dragon | 1471–1485 | Grandson of Đurađ I. In 1471 a dependent Serbian state was established by the Hungarians mostly on the territory of Vojvodina and Syrmia. | ||
| [[File:Krušedol monastery 50.JPG | 80px]] | Đorđe Branković | 1486–1497 | Son of Stefan Branković, abdicated |
| [[File:Jovan Branković, by Andreja Raičević.jpg | 80px]] | Jovan Branković | 1493–1502 | Son of Stefan Branković |
| Ivaniš Berislavić | 1504–1514 | Married widow of Jovan Branković. | ||
| Stjepan Berislavić | 1520–1535 | Son of Ivaniš and Jelena. Deposed | ||
| Radič Božić | 1527–1528 | Vassal of John Zapolya. | ||
| Pavle Bakić | 1537 | Vassal of Ferdinand I. The last titular Despot of Serbia. |
Second Serbian Empire and Duchy of Srem (1526–1532)
| Picture | TitleName | Reign | Territory | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emperor of the Serbs | ||||
| (self-proclaimed) | ||||
| Jovan Nenad | ||||
| Jovan the Black | 1526 – July 26, 1527 | southern Pannonian Plain | Many Serbian historians consider him the founder of contemporary Vojvodina | |
| Duke | ||||
| Radoslav Čelnik | 1527 – 1532 | Syrmia | He was general commander of Emperor Jovan Nenad's army. |
Habsburg-occupied Serbia
| Picture | TitleName | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Born - Died | Reign | Territory | Notes |
| [[File:Jovan_Monasterlija.jpg | 80px]] | Vice Duke of Serbian Vojvodina | |
| Jovan Monasterlija | |||
| 1660s–1706 | 1691–1706 | Habsburg-occupied Serbia | "Chief of the Serbian Nation" under Leopold I |
| [[File:Martin van Meytens (attrib.) - Porträt Kaiser Karl VI.jpg | 80px]] | King of Serbia | |
| Charles III | |||
| October 1, 1685 – October 20, 1740 | 1718–1739 | Habsburg Kingdom of Serbia | The Kingdom of Serbia was a crown land of the Habsburg monarchy |
| [[File:Stefan Supljikac color.jpg | 80px]] | Duke of Serbian Vojvodina | |
| Stevan Šupljikac | |||
| 1786 – December 15, 1848 | May 1, 1848 – December 15, 1848 | Serbian Vojvodina | The Serbian Vojvodina was a short-lived self-proclaimed Serb autonomous province during the revolutions of 1848 in the Austrian Empire |
| [[File: Franz Joseph of Austria young.jpg | 80px]] | Grand Voivode of the Voivodeship of Serbia | |
| Franz Joseph I | |||
| August 18, 1830 – November 21, 1916 | November 18, 1849 – December 27, 1860 | Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar | The Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar was a crown land of the Austrian Empire |
Modern Serbia (1804–1918)
[[Revolutionary Serbia]] (1804–1813)
| Picture | TitleName | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| (Birth–Death) | Reign | Territory | Notes |
| [[File:Karađorđe Petrović, by Vladimir Borovikovsky, 1816.jpg | 80px]] | Grand Vožd of Serbia | |
| Karađorđe Petrović | |||
| Black George | |||
| (November 3, 1768 – July 24, 1817) | February 15, 1804 – September 21, 1813 | Revolutionary Serbia | Leader of the First Serbian Uprising |
| Founder of Revolutionary Serbia and Karađorđević dynasty | |||
| Deposed and exiled to Austria. | |||
| Collapse of the First Serbian Uprising. |
[[Principality of Serbia]] (1815–1882)
[[House of Obrenović|Obrenović dynasty]] (1815–1842)
| Picture | TitleName | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| (Birth–Death) | Reign | Territory | Notes |
| [[File:Knez Miloš Obrenović.jpg | 80px]] | Grand Vožd of Serbia | |
| ↑Prince of Serbia | |||
| Miloš Obrenović I | |||
| Miloš the Great | |||
| (March 18, 1780 – September 26, 1860) | First reign | ||
| April 23, 1815 – June 25, 1839 | Principality of Serbia | Leader of the Second Serbian Uprising | |
| Founder of Principality of Serbia and Obrenović dynasty | |||
| Elevated to the status of Prince on November 6, 1817. Abdicated. | |||
| [[File:Milan Obrenović II, Prince of Serbia.jpg | 80px]] | Prince of Serbia | |
| Milan Obrenović II | |||
| (October 21, 1819 – July 8, 1839) | June 25, 1839 – July 8, 1839 | Principality of Serbia | Elder adult son of Miloš; ruled for only 13 days. |
| [[File:Mihailo Obrenović III.jpg | 80px]] | Prince of Serbia | |
| Mihailo Obrenović III | |||
| (September 16, 1823 – June 10, 1868) | First reign | ||
| July 8, 1839 – September 14, 1842 | Principality of Serbia | Younger adult son of Miloš; deposed by the Defenders of the Constitution. |
[[House of Karađorđević|Karađorđević dynasty]] (1842–1858)
| Picture | TitleName | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| (Birth–Death) | Reign | Territory | Notes |
| [[File:PrinceAlexander I w.jpg | 80px]] | Prince of Serbia | |
| Aleksandar Karađorđević | |||
| (October 11, 1806 – May 3, 1885) | September 14, 1842 – December 23, 1858 | Principality of Serbia | Abdicated. |
| Return of Obrenović dynasty to power. |
[[House of Obrenović|Obrenović dynasty]] (1858–1882)
| Picture | TitleName | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| (Birth–Death) | Reign | Territory | Notes |
| [[File:Miloš Obrenović 1848.jpg | 80px]] | Prince of Serbia | |
| Miloš Obrenović I | |||
| Miloš the Great | |||
| (March 18, 1780 – September 26, 1860) | Second reign | ||
| December 23, 1858 – September 26, 1860 | Principality of Serbia | Died due to old age. | |
| [[File:Knez Mihailo III Obrenović.jpg | 80px]] | Prince of Serbia | |
| Mihailo Obrenović III | |||
| (September 16, 1823 – June 10, 1868) | Second reign | ||
| September 26, 1860 – June 10, 1868 | Principality of Serbia | Younger adult son of Miloš; assassinated in Košutnjak. | |
| [[File:Milan Obrenović 1.jpg | 80px]] | King of Serbia | |
| ↑Prince of Serbia | |||
| Milan Obrenović IV | |||
| (August 22, 1854 – February 11, 1901) | June 10, 1868 – March 6, 1882 | Principality of Serbia | Grandnephew of Miloš |
| In 1878, Serbia gained full international recognition at the Congress of Berlin. In 1882, the country was elevated to the status of kingdom. |
[[Kingdom of Serbia]] (1882–1918)
[[House of Obrenović|Obrenović dynasty]] (1882–1903)
| Picture | TitleName | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| (Birth–Death) | Reign | Territory | Notes |
| [[File:KraljMilanObrenović.jpg | 80px]] | King of Serbia | |
| Milan Obrenović IV | |||
| (August 22, 1854 – February 11, 1901) | March 6, 1882 – March 6, 1889 | Kingdom of Serbia | Abdicated. |
| [[File:AleksandarObrenović.jpg | 80px]] | King of Serbia | |
| Alexander I Obrenović | |||
| (August 14, 1876 – June 11, 1903) | March 6, 1889 – June 11, 1903 | Kingdom of Serbia | Assassinated together with Queen Draga in the May Coup. |
| The end of Obrenović dynasty. |
[[House of Karađorđević|Karađorđević dynasty]] (1903–1918)
| Picture | TitleName | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Birth–Death) | Reign | Territory | Notes | |
| [[File:Petar I Karađorđević.jpg | 80px]] | King of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes | ||
| ↑King of Serbia | ||||
| Peter I Karađorđević | ||||
| King Peter the Liberator; Old King | ||||
| (June 29, 1844 – August 16, 1921) | June 15, 1903 – December 1, 1918 | Kingdom of Serbia | Elder adult son of Aleksandar; in exile from November 1915 due to the Serbian campaign. | |
| Proclaimed King of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes on December 1, 1918. |
[[Kingdom of Yugoslavia]] (1918–1941)
Peter II 6 September 1923 – 3 November 1970
[[House of Karađorđević|Karađorđević dynasty]] (1918–1945)
In 1918, Serbia became part of the newly formed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. Later that state changed name to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (i.e. Kingdom of South Slavs) in 1929. During that interwar period the country was a parliamentary monarchy (except during the period of royal dictatorship 1929–1931), ruled by the house of Karađorđević.
| Portrait | Name | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Birth–Death) | Rule start | Rule end | Marriages | Succession right | Notes |
| [[File:Peter I of Serbia (Rotary Photo 7119 A).jpg | 100px | Peter I of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes]] | Peter I Karađorđević | ||
| King Peter the Liberator | |||||
| (1844–1921) | |||||
| 1 December 1918 | 16 August 1921 | Princess Zorka of Montenegro in 1883 | |||
| (5 children) | Previously King of Serbia, | ||||
| proclaimed King by representatives of South Slav states | Held the title "King of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes". Prince Alexander served as regent in his final years. | ||||
| [[File:Kralj aleksandar1.jpg | 100px | Alexander I of Yugoslavia]] | Alexander I Karađorđević | ||
| Alexander the Unifier | |||||
| (1888–1934) | 16 August 1921 | 9 October 1934 | Maria of Yugoslavia on 8 June 1922 | ||
| (3 children) | Son of the preceding | Changed title to "King of Yugoslavia" in 1929. | |||
| Assassinated in Marseille. | |||||
| [[File:Prince Paul of Yugoslavia.jpg | 100px | Prince Paul of Yugoslavia]] | Paul Karađorđević | ||
| (1893–1976) | 9 October 1934 | 27 March 1941 | Olga of Greece and Denmark on 22 October 1923 | ||
| (3 children) | Cousin of the preceding | Prince Paul with Radenko Stanković, Ivo Perović as the regent for King Peter II. | |||
| [[File:Petar II Karađorđević.jpg | 100px | Peter II of Yugoslavia]] | Peter II Karađorđević | ||
| (1923–1970) | 9 October 1934 | 29 November 1945 | Alexandra of Greece and Denmark on 20 March 1944 | ||
| (1 child) | Son of the preceding | Prince Paul acted as regent until ousted on 27 March 1941; exiled on 17 April 1941 and deposed on 29 November 1945. |
After World War II and the civil war Yugoslavia became a communist state known as the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, ruled by Josip Broz Tito and the League of Communists of Yugoslavia. After Tito's death in 1980, the federation started a process of dissolution which finished in a series of civil wars in the early 1990s. Through the 1990s, constituent republics Serbia and Montenegro comprised the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, which was restructured in 2003 into a confederation called Serbia and Montenegro. The state union ended with Montenegro's independence following the 2006 independence referendum. Currently Serbia is a parliamentary republic. There was no referendum of restoration of parliamentary monarchy, although political organizations and a certain public in favor of it do exist.
References
Sources
References
- {{harvnb. Živković. 2006
- {{harvnb. Živković. 2006. Fine. 1991
- Sava S. Vujić, Bogdan M. Basarić. (1998). "Severni Srbi (ne)zaboravljeni narod".
- ''Eginhartus de vita et gestis Caroli Magni'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=kDrP2Y1lH-sC&pg=PA192 p. 192]: footnote J10
- (1982). "Serbian Studies". North American Society for Serbian Studies.
- Dutton, Paul Edward. (1993). "Carolingian Civilization: A Reader". [[Broadview Press]].
- Djokić, Dejan. (2023). "A Concise History of Serbia". [[Cambridge University Press]].
- {{Catalogue of Byzantine Seals at Dumbarton Oaks and in the Fogg Museum of Art
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