Gordoservon

Phrygia in yellow, the area Gordoservon was located in

In records from Bithynia in the year 680, the city of Gordoservon or Gordoserbon (Greek: Γορδόσερβον; Proto-Slavic: *Gordŭ Sĭrbŭ; Serbian: Гордосервон/Gordoservon, Гордосербон/Gordoserbon, Србоград/Srbograd, Град Срба/Grad Srba – "City of Serbs") was a Byzantine city inhabited by Serbs. The name is derived from the Serbs that resettled in Asia Minor (in ca 649[1] or 667[2]) by Byzantine Emperor Constans II (641–668), who came from the areas "around the river Vardar". A "Bishop of Gordoservon" named Isidore is mentioned in 680/681, and the fact that this town was an episcopal seat gives ground to the thesis that it had a large Serbian population. The Serbs were recruited in large numbers into the Byzantine army especially under Justinian II in the 680s, until the defection of a 30,000-strong Serbian contingent led to the disastrous loss of the Battle of Sebastopolis in 692/693.

Around the year 1200 AD this city is mentioned as Servochoria (Greek: Σερβοχώρια, "Serbian habitations"). The city was situated where the Phrygian kingdom once had been.

References

  1. North American Society for Serbian Studies (1995). Serbian Studies. North American Society for Serbian Studies. ISSN 0742-3330. Retrieved 2014-12-11.
  2. Kostelski, Z. (1952). The Yugoslavs: the history of the Yugoslavs and their states to the creation of Yugoslavia. Philosophical Library. Retrieved 2014-12-11.

Sources

  • Erdeljanovich. J. "O naseljavanju Slovena u Maloj Aziji i Siriji od VII do X veka" Glasnik geografskog drushtva vol. VI 1921 pp. 189
  • Lequien, M., "Oriens Christianus" I, 1740, pp. 659–660
  • Micotky, J., "Otiorum Chroate", Vol. I, Budapest, 1806, pp. 89–112
  • Lubor Niederle, "Slovanske starozhitnosti" Dilu II, Svazek pp. 389–399; pp. 444–446
  • Ostrogorski, G. "Bizantisko-Juzhnoslovenski odnosi", Enciklopedija Jugoslavije 1, Zagreb 1955, pp. 591–599
  • Ramsay, W. M. "The Historical Geography Of Asia Minor", London, 1890, pp. 183, pp. 210

Further reading

  • T. Lewicki (1964). "Gordoserba (Gordoservon)". Slownik starozytn. slowiariskich II (1): 131.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.