Stefan Vladislav II

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Stefan Vladislav II (Template:Lang-sr-Cyrl; Template:Circa 1270–after 1326) was a King-pretender to the royal throne of the Kingdom of Serbia in 1316 and again in 1321, and Lord of Syrmia from 1316 to Template:Circa 1325. He was the eldest son of Serbian King Stefan Dragutin (ruled 1276–1282) and Catherine of Hungary. In 1282, Dragutin became ill and abdicated in favor of his younger brother Stefan Milutin, under the condition that Milutin would be succeeded by Dragutin's son Vladislav. Dragutin continued to rule the royal domain of Syrmia, which was later inherited by Vladislav (1316), who tried to secure Serbian royal crown, but failed, and later tried again after Milutin died in 1321, but also failed. He continued to rule in Syrmia until Template:Circa 1325.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Early life

Born around 1270, Vladislav was the eldest son of the Crown Prince of Serbia, Stefan Dragutin, and Catherine of Hungary.Template:Sfn Shortly before Vladislav's birth, Dragutin was awarded with the title of "junior king" in token of his right to succeed his father, Stefan Uroš I.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Vladislav became the new heir to the Serbian throne after Dragutin dethroned his father with Hungarian assistance in 1276.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn A riding accident forced Dragutin to abdicate in favor of his younger brother, Stefan Milutin, in the spring of 1282, but he could retain the northern regions of Serbia as a separate realm.Template:Sfn The Byzantine historian, George Pachymeres, recorded that the right of one of Dragutin's two sons (Vladislav or Urošica) to succeed Milutin was also confirmed.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

File:King Stefan Vladislav II.jpeg
The image of Vladislav on a coin.

Vladislav's maternal cousin, Charles Martel of Anjou, who had laid claim to Hungary, awarded Vladislav with Slavonia and granted him the title of duke, implying that Vladislav and his father supported Charles Martel against Andrew III of Hungary in the early 1290s.Template:Sfn Charles Martel's father, Charles II of Naples, confirmed the grant on 19 August 1292.Template:Sfn Dragutin and Vladislav sought reconciliation with Andrew III.Template:Sfn In 1293, Vladislav married Constanza Morosini who was a granddaughter of the king's maternal uncle, Albertino Morosini.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Milutin made steps to appoint his eldest son, Stefan Konstantin, as his heir from around 1306.Template:Sfn He even approached Pope Clement V and offered the union of the Serbian Orthodox Church with Rome in return for the confirmation of Stefan Konstantin's right to succeed him.Template:Sfn

Dragutin and Vladislav's support to Charles Martel ended in 1293 after Vladislav married Costanza Morosini, the niece of Andrew III. Andrew III died in 1301 and was succeeded by Charles Martel's son, Charles Robert.Template:Sfn

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After King Dragutin died in 1316, Vladislav succeeded him as ruler of the Kingdom of Syrmia, but the king of Serbia, Stefan Milutin, his uncle, defeated him and imprisoned him.Template:Sfn

When Milutin died in 1321, the newly freed Vladislav got to rule the lands of his father, with the help of the Hungarians, the Bulgarians, the Bosnian Ban and the Šubić family.Template:Citation needed The rule, according to law, was to be given to Vladislav.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Tsar Michael Asen III of Bulgaria, newly in conflict with Vladislav's cousin Stefan Dečanski, the successor of Milutin, started to support Vladislav as the rightful monarch of whole Serbia, but this support showed insufficient. After having been beaten again by supporters of Stefan Dečanski, he retreated to the Kingdom of Hungary in 1324. Vladislav's sororal nephew Stephen II, Ban of Bosnia, then started to rule Vladislav's lands in Bosnia (Soli and Usora), and around Lower Syrmia where long battles between Serbs and Hungarians were frequent.Template:Sfn

Vladislav was married to Constanza Morosini, maternal relative of Andrew III of Hungary.Template:Sfn

References

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Sources

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Further reading

  • Krstić, Aleksandar. "The Rival and the Vassal of Charles Robert of Anjou: King Vladislav II Nemanjić”." Banatica 26 (2016): 33-51.

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