Ancient site reveals evidence of pre-Nemanjic era Serb state

Recent archaeological discoveries in western Serbia paint a surprising new picture of the pre-12th century Serbian state in the Balkans

Boris SubasicSource: novosti.rs
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(Rendering, vaza.co.rs)
(Rendering, vaza.co.rs)

New archaeological exploration in western Serbia has revealed a new, surprising picture of the pre-Nemanjic Dynasty era Serbia as a well organized and densely populated state, with fortifications set up to protect roads used to transport cargo containing precious ore, say experts from the Valjevo Institute for the Protection of Monuments of Culture.

"The discovery that the large fortress on Branig Hill, above the Gradac River Canyon (just outside Valjevo, a town in western Serbia) was in use as a Serb fortress for at least two centuries before the Nemanjic Dynasty - along with the discovery of minor fortifications along the ancient road connecting the Drina River valley with that of Kolubara, shows that this was an organized state territory," says Radivoje Arsic, one of the Institute's archaeologists.

Beside the mysterious Jerina's Town, the Gradac River Canyon also holds evidence of the spread of Christianity in Serbia. In addition to early Christian shrines in the Byzantine Settlement, there are also many caves, monastic cells, in the tall, gray rocks above the fortification, where medieval anchorites practiced hesychasm, looking at the canyon and the Valjevo mountains below as an image of heaven on Earth. Scientists believe that the nearby Serbian Orthodox Monastery Celije ("cells") owes its name to these anchorites

"The results of the exploration point to a pre-Nemanjic Serbian state spreading between the (rivers) Sava and Drina. We expect more surprises from the dig, considering that traces of fortifications and settlements of an early medieval Serbian state have been discovered in western Serbia and in eastern Bosnia."

The remains of walls and towers on a steep hill in the Gradac Canyon, in the village of Brangovic, seven kilometers from Valjevo, are known as "Jerina's Town (fortress)." Another name for the ruins is Bezane (from the Serbian verb "to flee" - "bezati"), because those running away from Ottoman Turk atrocities used to find refuge inside the tall walls, up on inaccessible peaks, and in the area's numerous caves.

Archaeologists say they have not yet discovered any written accounts about this large and expertly built "town" - but have determined, based on other findings, that its origins date back to prehistory - about 1,600 years before the time of Prokleta ("cursed") Jerina, the wife of Serbian Despot Djuradj Brankovic - she who, according to popular belief, built the fortification.

"At the start of the exploration in 2004 we thought this was a 5th century Byzantine fortress, from the era of Justinian's Restoration," says Arsic. "We determined through subsequent excavations that the Romans used it for military purposes from the 3rd century, and that the more luxurious civilian part and the episcopal church - the religious seat of this entire part of Serbia, which speaks to the importance of this mysterious town - had merely been added later. Then, we reached the oldest layer which goes down to prehistory, to the Iron Age, when a settlement fortified with stone walls was located here."

The apse of the church remnants inside Jerina's Town (vaza.co.rs)
The apse of the church remnants inside Jerina's Town (vaza.co.rs)

Soon, archaeologists realized that there had been a more pronounced tradition of settling the area of the fortress and the village than they could have imagined. The greatest surprise awaited them in the youngest archaeological layer.

"Although it has been damaged, above all by erosion and excavations done by unlicensed archaeologists, the findings show unequivocally that Serbs have lived here continuously since the time of their settlement, from the 7th until the 10th century. It seems that the town was abandoned during Prince Caslav's wars against the Magyars," Arsic says.

The remnants of this multi-layered fortification spread on a three-hectare area.

"A civilian settlement was located in the lower part of the town, whereas the purpose of the upper part, that had a big tower, was exclusively military," says Arsic. "Geodesic recordings and excavations point to the civilian settlement developing alongside an ancient road that ran through the Gradac River Canyon, connecting the Kolubara valley with the Valjevo mountains and Podrinje (Drina basin), rich in deposits of silver, copper, lead, and gold."

Jerina's Town is an engineering marvel whose tall and thick walls descend steeply for the length of about 200 meters, to reach just above the river below. The builders used natural rock as fortification wherever they could, connecting it with the walls that are difficult to discern from a distance. For defense purposes, they cut paths and stairs into the steep rock, the traces of which are clearly visible to this day.

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