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Prizren Fortress

Coordinates: 42°12′34″N 20°44′44″E / 42.20944°N 20.74556°E / 42.20944; 20.74556
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Prizren Fortress
Prizren, Kosovo[a]
Site information
Controlled by Byzantine Empire
 Serbian Empire
 Ottoman Empire
 Republic of Kosovo
Open to
the public
yes
Site history
BuiltUnknown (Unknown)

Prizren Fortess, also known as Kaljaja (Template:Lang-sq, Serbian Cyrillic: Каљаја) is a fortress in Prizren, Kosovo,[a] which once served as the capital of the Serbian Empire. It was built on a hill above Prizrenska Bistrica, around which the modern city developed. The first fort, erected on this location by the Byzantines, was further expanded by Emperor Stefan Uroš IV Dušan. The fort then came under the control of the Ottomans for four centuries, giving it its modern shape.

Kaljaja was declared a Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance in 1948.[1]

History

Main Gate.

Prizren was developed in the 11th century on the ruins of ancient Theranda, and it was first mentioned in 1019 at the time of Basil II (976-1025) in the form of Prizdrijana. In 1072, Serbian ruler Constantine Bodin (1081–1101) was declared "Emperor of the Bulgarians" in Prizren during the large Slavic uprising against the Byzantine Empire which had broken out.

From the time of Stefan the First-Crowned (1196–1223) and onwards, Prizren's importance increased, particularly during the reigns of King Stefan Milutin (1282–1321) and Emperors Stefan Dušan (1331–1355) and Uroš V (1355–1371). The Prizren square and its stronghold developed the Via de Zenta trade route which passed through the Drin valley and connected the Adriatic Sea with the interior of the Balkan Peninsula. Dušan expanded the fortification and had his endowment, the Monastery of the Holy Archangels, built in its vicinity by the Višegrad fortress. Prizren served as the Serbian imperial capital for which it is called the Serbian Constantinople.

The remains of one of the towers.

During the fall of the Serbian Empire, up until the turn of the 14th century, the city was in the possession of several Serbian noble families, such as the Mrnjavčević family, the Balšić family, and the Branković family. With Ottoman expansion, it began to lose its commercial importance, so in 1433 it is mentioned as a deserted square. Prizren fell to the Ottomans on 21 June 1455, although some sources place it in 1459. The Ottomans expanded the fortress, and held it up until Prizren's capture by Serbia during the First Balkan War (1912).

See also

References

Sources

  • Deroko, Aleksandar (1950). Srednjevekovni gradovi u Srbiji. Prosveta.
  • Zdravković, Ivan M. (1970). Srednjovekovni gradovi i dvorci na Kosovu u Srbiji. Turistička štampa.

Annotations

a. ^ Template:Kosovo-note

Template:Cultural Heritage of Serbia

42°12′34″N 20°44′44″E / 42.20944°N 20.74556°E / 42.20944; 20.74556