Stefan 'Lazar (Стефан Лазар), Prince Lazar Hrebeljanović' (
Serbian Cyrillic: Кнез Лазар Хребељановић) or ''Knez Lazar'' (
1329 –
June 28 1389), also known as "
Tsar Lazar", was a
Serbian noble who fought and perished at the
Battle of Kosovo, to which his name and life are inextricably tied. He is a heroic figure in
Serbia, and a saint of the
Serb Orthodox Church.
Life
Lazar was born in
Prilepac (close to
Novo Brdo) in 1329, the son of imperial chancellor Pribac Hrebeljanović. He was educated at
Emperor Dušan's court in
Prizren. He was later promoted to ''
knez'' by Dušan's successor
Emperor Stefan Uroš V. Despite his imperial title, Uroš was a weak and ineffectual leader, allowing local nobles to gain power and influence at the expense of the central authority.
Lazar left Prizren in the early
1370s, and devoted himself to the consolidation of his power in the northern Serbian regions around his court in
Kruševac. Although a pledged vassal to Stefan Uroš, in
1371 he refused to participate in the
Battle of Marica, at which the bulk of the imperial
Serbian army was destroyed by an
Ottoman force. Soon afterwards, Stefan Uroš died. He had been the last of the
Nemanjić emperors. Through a combination of diplomacy, military action, and family alliances, Lazar emerged from the resulting power vacuum as the most powerful Serbian noble not in the
Ottomans' service. He acquired dynastic legitimacy by marrying
Milica Nemanjić, and despite retaining only the minor title of
knez, he nevertheless used the imperial name of 'Stefan' as well as the designation "
autocrator". At the same time, he took no issue with Bosnian
ban Tvrtko (whose
Nemanjić lineage was in any case much stronger than Lazar's) proclaiming himself "King Stefan of Serbs and Bosnia". In this way Lazar could retain the de facto power, while ceding only a ceremonial title to Tvrtko, who never managed to revive the old Nemanjić institutions of central power.

Prince Lazar's Coat of Arms
Around
1380 Lazar founded the monastery of
Ravanica and around
1388 Ljubostinja. By
1387 he was raising a massive force to meet the invading forces of the Ottoman Empire, which would include every Serbian
knight in his
kingdom. The two large forces met in the 1389
battle of Kosovo, and Lazar was one of those killed during that battle, along with much of Serbia's political elite.
Aftermath and Myth
Following Lazar's death, his widow assumed control of
Serbia. Lacking in
military or economic strength, she pledged suzerainty to
Murad I's successor, his son
Bayezid, who had taken as his wife the daughter of Lazar. Meanwhile, Milica turned to internal matters, where she dealt with her few remaining political opponents. It was her propaganda campaign, via the epic poetry composed at her court, that resulted in Lazar's quick
resurrection, and the subsequent portrayal of their son-in-law
Vuk Branković as the traitor responsible for the Serbian defeat.
In the myth, Lazar is portrayed as having been visited by an angel of
God on the night before battle, and offered a choice between an earthly or a Heavenly kingdom, which choice would result in a victory or defeat, respectively, at the
Battle of Kosovo. Lazar, naturally, opts for the Heavenly kingdom, which will last "forever and ever" ("Perishable is earthly kingdom, but forever and ever is Kingdom of Heaven!" -
Serbian: "Земаљско је за малена царство, а Небеско увијек и довијека!"), but has to perish on the battlefield.
“We die with
Christ, to live forever”, tells he to his soldiers. That Kosovo’s destination and that Testament, it is a union which Serb people made with God – and sealed it with martyrs’ blood. On Kosovo Serbs voted with their souls for Kingdom of Heaven and that was and has been their right destination. Since then all Serbs truthful to that Testament are becoming people of God, Christ’s New Testament nation, heavenly Serbia, part of God’s New Israel.
This is why sometimes
Serbs refer to themselves as the people of Heaven ("Небески народ").
Serbian Orthodox Church canonised Lazar as 'Saint Lazar'. He is celebrated at
June 15 of the
Julian calendar, which is
June 28 (
Vidovdan) of the
Gregorian calendar. Several small Serbian Orthodox Church churches and missions throughout the world are named after him.
His alleged remains are kept in
Ravanica Monastery where miraculous cures have been attributed to them.
Marriage and Progeny
Lazar married
Milica (
Cyrillic: Милица) in around
1353 and issued at least seven children:
# Mara (Марa): died
April 12 1426, married
Vuk Brankovic in around
1371
#
Stefan Visoki (Стефан Високи) (around
1377 -
July 19 1427, buried in
Manasija monastery), prince (1389-1402) and
despot (1402-1427) , married in
1405 Jelena, daughter of
Francesco Gattilusio (1384-1404).
# Vuk, prince, executed on
July 6th
1410
# Mara or Dragana, died before July
1395, married
Bulgarian
tsar Ivan Shishman in around
1386
# Teodora, died before
1405, married
Nikola II Gorjanski (who died
1433) (Nikola II Gorjanski jr. (Никола II Горјански Млађи), son of Nikola I Gorjanski (Никола I Горјански),
ban of
Mačva since
1387, ban of
Croatia since
1394,
Hungarian Palatin since
1401)
# Jelena or Jela, died March
1443, married
## Đurađ Stracimirović (Ђурађ Страцимировић), one of Balsics
##
Sandalj Hranić[1] (Сандаљ Хранић)
Kosača (Косаче)
#
Olivera Despina (Оливера Деспина) born
1372 died after
1444, married
Ottoman Sultan Bayezid I in
1390
See also
★
House of Lazarević
★
List of Serbian monarchs
★
History of Serbia
★
Miloš Obilić
Notes
1. Sandalj Hranić (around 1370-March 15 1435) was a nephew of Vlatko Vuković, the aforementioned participant of the Battle of Kosovo. [Mrđenović (1987), p.108]
Sources
★ Age, marriage and progeny information from ''The geneaology and coats of arms of Serbian dynasties and feudals (Родословне таблице и грбови српских династија и властеле)''; editors Aleksa Ivić (1928), Dušan Spasić, Aleksandar Plavestra and Dušan Mrđenović (1987); Bata, Belgrade, ISBN 86-7685-007-0 (1928), ISBN 86-7335-050-6 (1987).
★
Croats and Serbs: Chapter V - History of the Serbs in the middle ages - The Dismemberment of Dusan’s empire
External links
★
Lazar's virtual grave