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词条 Rovčani
释义

  1. History

  2. Politics

  3. Anthropology

     Brotherhoods 

  4. Notable people

  5. References

  6. Further reading

The Rovčani ({{lang-sr-cyr|Ровчани}}, {{IPA-sh|rǒ̞ːʋt͡ʃaːni|pron}}) are a historical tribe of Montenegro, one of seven highlander tribes (of the Brda region), alongside the Bjelopavlići, Piperi, Kuči, Bratonožići, Moračani (Lower and Upper), and Vasojevići. The historical region they occupied is called Rovca.

History

In 1768, the Rovčani helped the Bjelopavlići which were attacked by the Ottomans.[1] In 1774, Mehmet Bushatli, the pasha of Scutari, broke into Kuči and "destroyed" it; the Rovčani housed and protected some of the refugee families.[1] On the request of Russian Empress Catherine, the Montenegrins and Herzegovinians took arms against the Ottomans in 1788. The call was gladly accepted by the Rovčani and Moračani who equipped gunpowder and weapons for the upcoming events.[2] However, the Ottomans heard of the intentions, and preemptively struck Morača, the centre of preparation.[3] In 1794, the Kuči and Rovčani were devastated by the Ottomans.[1] In 1796, the Montenegrin army under Metropolitan Petar I Petrović-Njegoš with the assistance of Piperi defeated the Ottoman army at the Battle of Krusi.[1] The Montenegrin victory resulted in territorial expansion, with the tribes of Bjelopavlići and Piperi being joined into the Montenegrin state.[4] The Rovčani, as other highlander tribes, subsequently turned more and more towards the Prince-Bishopric of Montenegro.[5] Metropolitan Petar I sent letters in 1799 to the Moračani and Rovčani, advising them to live peacefully and in solidarity.[5]

During the First Serbian Uprising (1804–13), the Drobnjaci, Moračani, Rovčani, Uskoci and Pivljani rose against the Ottomans and burnt down villages in Herzegovina.[6] The Rovca and Lower and Upper Morača tribes were incorporated into Montenegro only in 1820, after the defeat of the Ottoman army at the Morača river, and Vasojevići even later, in 1858.

Rovčani was one of the tribes that supported the Montenegrin Greens, a faction that opposed what they saw was an annexation of Montenegro to Serbia and instead urged for a federation.[7]{{full citation needed|date=May 2014}} The Greens still declared themselves to be ethnic Serbs.[8] During the Christmas Uprising (January 7, 1919) two members of Bulatović family were flayed alive in Rovca by the Montenegrin Whites (the other political faction).[7]

Politics

The Rovčani tribe had historically viewed themselves as Serbs,[9] and in light of Montenegrin independence (2006), Rovca clan chief Nikola Minić said that "If Milo Djukanovic tried to divide Montenegro... we wouldn't live in his country... but remain united in a brotherhood with Serbia."[10]

Anthropology

According to local folklore, recalled by a Bulatović, the Rovca tribe ultimately descend from ban (duke) Ilijan, from Grbalj in the Bay of Kotor. This Ilijan allegedly married Jevrosima, the daughter of Grand Prince Vukan (r. 1202–04) and sister of Stefan Vukanović Nemanjić, who built the Morača monastery.[11] Ilijan had a son, Nikša, who was in conflict with ban Ugren of the Nikšić župa (county).[12] Nikša's son Gojak murdered Ugren, after which he was hid in the Morača monastery by his great-uncle (or uncle) Stefan, and then in the Lukavica mountain, where he is believed to have died.[11] Gojak had fours sons: Bulat (whose descendants are known as Bulatovići), Šćepan (whose descendants are known as Šćepanovići), Vlaho (whose descendants are known as Vlahovići) and Srezoje (whose descendants are known as Srezojevići).

The other part of Rovčani are descendants of knez (duke) Bogdan Lješnjanin, who fled from Čevo due to a blood feud, and firstly settled in the village of Liješnje in the Lješ nahiyah (subdistrict), and then after another blood feud there he settled in what would become Rovca, in the village of Brezno (which today is known as Liješnje). This happened in the first half of the 15th century, before the Ottoman conquest.

All of the Rovca tribe celebrate the Slava, St. Luke.

Brotherhoods

  • Rovca
    • Bulatovići
    • Šćepanovići
    • Vlahovići
    • Srezojevići
  • Bogdanovići

Notable people

by ancestry
  • Veljko Petrović, hero of the First Serbian Uprising
  • Momir Bulatović, former Yugoslav politician, President of Montenegro (1990-1998) and Prime Minister of FR Yugoslavia (1998–2000); by ancestry
  • Pavle Bulatović, former Yugoslav Minister of Interior; born in Kolašin, by ancestry
  • Predrag Bulatović, Montenegrin politician; by ancestry
  • Miodrag Bulatović, Serbian and Montenegrin novelist and playwright; by ancestry
  • Katarina Bulatović, Montenegrin handball player; by ancestry
  • Anđela Bulatović, Montenegrin handball player; by ancestry
  • Ivana Bulatović, Montenegrin alpine skier; by ancestry
  • Nikola Bulatović, retired Serbian and Montenegrin basketball player; by ancestry
  • Veljko Vlahović, Montenegrin communist politician; by ancestry
  • Miodrag Vlahović, Montenegrin politician and communist; by ancestry
  • Miodrag Vlahović (foreign minister), former Montenegrin ambassador to the U.S.; by ancestry
  • Veselin Vlahović, Montenegrin war criminal; by ancestry
  • Matija Bećković, famous Serbian writer and poet; by ancestry
  • Zoran Žižić, Montenegrin politician; by ancestry
  • Vlado Šćepanović, retired Montenegrin basketball player; born in Kolašin, by ancestry
  • Nebojša Bogavac, retired Montenegrin basketball player; by ancestry
  • Dragan Bogavac, Montenegrin football player; by ancestry{{citation needed|date=May 2014}}
  • Avdo Međedović, Montenegrin Muslim guslar and oral poet
  • Mato Pižurica, Serbian linguist and professor
  • Vojislav Šešelj, Bosnian Serb nationalist politician, writer and lawyer[13]

References

1. ^Barjaktarović 1984, p. 28
2. ^{{cite book|author=Marko A. Vujačić|title=Znameniti crnogorski junaci: po istoriskim podacima, tradiciji i narodnoj pjesmi|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qm0xAQAAIAAJ|year=1952|publisher=Narodna Knjiga|page=226|quote=На позив руске царице Катарине, Црногор- ци и Херцеговци устали су на оружје против Турака године 1788« Овај позив радо су прихватили Ровчани и Морачани и опремили су барут и оружје за насту- пајуће догађаје.}}
3. ^{{cite book|title=Glasnik Srpskog istorijsko-kulturnog društva "Njegoš".|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TtnlAAAAMAAJ|year=1994|publisher=Njegoš|page=32}}
4. ^{{cite book|author=Ferdo Čulinović|title=Državnopravna historija jugoslavenskih zemalja XIX i XX vijeka: knj. Srbija, Crna Gora, Makedonija, Jugoslavija, 1918-1945|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BzI5AQAAIAAJ|year=1954|publisher=Školska knjiga}}
5. ^Barjaktarović 1984, p. 29
6. ^{{cite book|author=Vojislav Korać|title=Trebinje: Istorijski pregled|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=l28cAAAAMAAJ|year=1971|publisher=Zavičajni muzej|page=304}}
7. ^{{cite book|last=Banač|first=Ivo|title=The national question in Yugoslavia: origins, history, politics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KfqbujXqQBkC&pg=PA285|accessdate=17 November 2011|date=March 1988|publisher=Cornell University Press|isbn=978-0-8014-9493-2|page=285}}
8. ^{{Citation |last=Banac |first=Ivo |authorlink= Ivo Banac |title=Protiv straha : članci, izjave i javni nastupi, 1987-1992 |url=https://books.google.rs/books?ei=c8_lToWQF4yrsgaejLTBCQ&ct=result&id=uJBpAAAAMAAJ&dq=zelena%C5%A1i+su+srbi&q=%22+Posebno+je+zanimljivo+da+su+se+i+%C2%BBzelena%C5%A1i%C2%AB%2C+kao+beskompromisna+opozicija%2C+nacionalno+smatrali+Srbima%22#search_anchor |accessdate= 12 December 2011|year=1992|publisher= Slon |location= Zagreb |language= Croatian |oclc=29027519 |page=14 |quote=Posebno je zanimljivo da su se i »zelenaši«,...., nacionalno smatrali Srbima" [it is especially interesting that Greens also ... declared themselves as Serbs]}}
9. ^{{cite book|author=Kenneth Morrison|title=Montenegro: A Modern History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fkMBAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA175|date=30 November 2008|publisher=I.B.Tauris|isbn=978-0-85771-487-9|pages=175–}}
10. ^http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/static/audio_video/programmes/correspondent/transcripts/861500.txt
11. ^{{cite book|title=Književnost|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tY3lAAAAMAAJ|year=2002|publisher=Prosveta|pages=594–597}}
12. ^{{cite book|author=Mirko Milojković|title=Legende iz naših krajeva|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WZ5LAAAAMAAJ|year=1985|publisher=Srpska književna zadruga|page=174}}
13. ^{{cite AV media |people= |year= |title=Vojislav Šešelj - "Ja sam Srbin iz Crne Gore, poreklom iz Rovaca!" |trans-title=/ Bio |medium= |language= Serbian|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MA1kaDEQYA |accessdate=4 October 2014 |archiveurl= |archivedate= |time= |publisher= |location= |id= |isbn= |oclc= |quote= |ref= }}

Further reading

  • {{cite book|author=Mirko R. Barjaktarović|title=Rovca: (etnološka monografija|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EKcMAAAAIAAJ|year=1984|publisher=Akad.}}
  • {{cite book|author1=Vojislav M. Bulatović|author2=Momir P. Bulatović|author3=Petar J. Marković |author4=Jovan V. Babović |author5=Branko M. Bulatović |author6=Marko V. Bulatović|title=Rovca: bratstvo Bulatovići : životni put roda mog|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bHJZAAAACAAJ|year=2004|publisher=M. V. Bulatović|isbn=978-86-905639-0-6}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rovcani}}

1 : Tribes of Montenegro

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