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Hvosno (Хвосно, "thick wood") was a medieval Serbian county () located in the northern part of the region, in what is today . It roughly encompassed the areas of the modern and municipalities. It was surrounded by the counties of Jelci to the north; Budimlja and Plav to the west; Zatrnava to the south; Drškovina and Podrimlje to the east and southeast.


Name
The name of Hvosno is derived from the Old word hvost, meaning 'thick wood', probably due to dense forests that grow on the slopes of surrounding mountains. Several of the oldest toponyms in the area have parallels as far away as in the (Trebovitić–Třebovětice, Ljutoglav– and Drsnik–Drsník), showing that it was inhabited by Slavs.
(2025). 9783631603239, Peter Lang. .


History
Hvosno, as Hosnos () was mentioned in three charters of Byzantine emperor (r. 976–1025), issued in 1018-1020, as being under the jurisdiction of the Eparchy of Prizren. H.Gelzer, Ungedruckte und wenig bekannte Bistumerverzeichnisse der orientalischen Kirche II, Byzantinische zeitschrift, Leipzig 1893, p. 54 From that time and up to 1219, the Eparchy of Prizren (including Hvosno) was under jurisdiction of the Eastern Orthodox Archbishopric of Ohrid. In 1072, during the South Slavic uprising (1071-1073) against the rule, the region was temporarily captured by the rebels, who proclaimed prince Constantine Bodin as emperor in , but the uprising was soon crushed and Byzantine control over the region restored.

Serbian Grand Prince (r. 1169–1196) managed to gain full independence from the Byzantines and started to expand his domains, capturing Hvosno among other territories. Hvosno was mentioned in the Life of Saint Simeon, written between 1201 and 1208 by his son and first Serbian archbishop , as one of the districts that Serbian Grand župan Stefan Nemanja (Saint Simeon) conquered from the between 1180 and 1190. Besides Hvosno, those regions were: , Podrimlje, Kostrc, Drškovina, Prizren, Lab, Lipljan and Sitnica.

It appears that beside the župa (county) of Hvosno there was also a larger territory called zemlja (lit. "land") of Hvosno which encompassed the župa of Hvosno and some of the surrounding ones: Kujavča, , and . The zemlja of Hvosno later corresponded to the territorial spread of the bishopric of Hvosno. Nemanja gave the rule of Hvosno to his elder son Vukan, who in 1195 is titled as "King of , , , and Hvosno" ( Velcani, regis Diokle, Dalmatie, Tripunie, Toplize et Cosne).

In 1219, the Serbian Orthodox Archbishopric of Žiča was created in the medieval Kingdom of Serbia, and northern parts of the Eparchy of Prizren were reorganized as the new Eparchy of Hvosno, centered in the Monastery of the Mother of God in Hvosno. In the same time, the archiepiscopal monastery of Žiča gained a (complex of monastic properties) in the region of Hvosno, centered around Peć and encompassing eight villages in the Bistrica valley. During the tenure of the second Serbian archbishop Arsenije I (1233-1263), that metochion was transformed into the Peć monastery, and by the end of the 13th century, the seat of Serbian archbishops was moved from Žiča to Peć, thus placing the region of Hvosno in the very center of Serbian ecclesiastical life. Since 1346, when the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć was established, the Eparchy of Hvosno remained under its jurisdiction up to the abolition of the Patriarchate in 1766.

After the Fragmentation of the Serbian Empire (1371), the region was ruled within feudal domains of the Branković dynasty, the last ruling house of the Serbian Despotate. By the middle of the 15th century, the entire region of , including Hvosno, was conquered by the Ottomans and initially included into the Sanjak of Prizren, and later into the newly created Sanjak of Peć. The region was briefly liberated in 1689-1690, during the Habsburg-Ottoman War (1683-1699), that initiated the Great Migration of the Serbs.

The region remained under Ottoman rule until the First Balkan War (1912), when it was divided between the Kingdom of Montenegro (major part) and the Kingdom of Serbia (minor part). In 1918, the region became part of the newly proclaimed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, known since 1929 as . In 1941, during the Second World War in Yugoslavia, the region was occupied by the and included into the . After the liberation in 1944-1945, it became part of the Autonomous Region of Kosovo and Metohija, within the Peoples Republic of Serbia, a federal unit of the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. In 1992, the administrative Peć District was established, corresponding approximately to the historical region of Hvosno. Since 2008, the entire region is claimed both by and .

In memory of the former eparchy and the historical region of Hvosno, several auxiliary bishops of the Serbian Orthodox Church have been granted the title bishop of Hvosno since 1947, first of them being Varnava Nastić.


See also
  • Monastery of the Mother of God in Hvosno
  • Eparchy of Raška and Prizren


Annotations

Sources
  • (1993). 9788675830153, Nova, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Institute for Balkan Studies. .

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