Akrobatski Performans by the people attending the 2011 BiH Acrobatics Festival This performance held outside Dom Omladine, Banja Luka on 19 August 2011 The video i...
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 06:50:38 08/21/11
Akrobatski Performans by the people attending the 2011 BiH Acrobatics Festival This performance held outside Dom Omladine, Banja Luka on 19 August 2011 The video is shot on a Zoom Q3
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 07:12:48 07/13/09
Morris Dancing has been performed in England for over 500 years, and in Oxfordshire since the 16th century
I look over Kosovo Polje (Kosovo Field) from my apartment balcony. When I go to and from work everyday I get to see amazing flocks of crows and ravens and it makes me think back to how it might have been around here in 1389.Kosovo 1389The battle of Kosovo Polje (Plain of Blackbirds) was fought between the Ottoman forces led by Sultan Murad and an allied army led by the Serbian Prince Lazar on 28 June 1389. This article gives an overview of the battle with photographs of the battlefield today courtesy of Peter Verduyn.There are few reliable contemporary records of the battle and this has been compounded by the religious and nationalistic significance the battle has been given by the Serbs. The battle has been eulogised in ballad and verse over the centuries, commemorated as St Vitus' Day and this goes some way to explain the political significance of the area today.Ironically the decisive battle of the Ottoman invasion occurred some years earlier on the banks of the River Maritsa on 26 September 1371. The Serbian army was heavily defeated and many nobles accepted Ottoman vassalage. According to Ottoman historians these included Prince Lazar making the 1389 campaign, to Ottoman eyes, one of justified retribution.The Ottoman forces were split into the usual three sections. The centre commanded by Murad himself with the foot; the right by his son Bayezit with the European Sipahi cavalry; the left by his other son Yakub with the Anatolian cavalry. The core of the Ottoman army consisted of Turkish troops although there would have been contributions from Greek, Bulgarian and Serbian vassals.Prince Lazar's army included a core of Serbian troops including his son-in-law Vuk Brankovich together with the Bosnian leader Ban Tvrtko and other contingents including Croats, Wallachians and Albanians. The Serbs occupied the right wing and the allies on the left with Vukovic commanding the reserves. (Serbian medieval army).The conduct of the battle is clouded by contrary claims. Ottoman historians claim the Serbian charge on the centre was disrupted by baggage camels while Bayezit's right wing broke the flank and rolled up the Serbian forces. Serbian historians claim Vuk Brankovich abandoned the field at a critical moment exposing Lazar's flank, leading to the Prince's capture. Sultan Murad died in or after the battle in any one of several claims including by another Serbian hero Milos Obilic who stabbed him whilst kneeling in submission. Lazar was beheaded along with other Serbian leaders.What is certain that although the battle was an Ottoman victory the Sultan's elder son Yakub also died in the battle and therefore Bayezit had to establish the succession by returning to Anatolia. Serbia lost more ground, most leaders becoming Ottoman vassals (including Lazar's son and Brankovich), but did not finally lose its independence until 1459.For the medieval world the battle signalled the might of the Ottoman Empire that was to dominate the Balkans for centuries to come. Kosovo also expresses the extremes of Serbian culture with fortitude and bravery - but also chauvinism and intolerance that has manifested itself in brutality. Either way the battle of Kosovo remains important today and this is reflected in the monument on the battlefield as set out below. The battlefield is situated near Pristina. The Kosovo plain lies at an altitude of 1300 to 1500 feet and is 9 miles wide and 52 miles long. It was an important crossroads in medieval times on the trade routes north-south (Belgrade to the Aegean) and east-west (Danube plain to the Adriatic ports). Today the monument to the battle is protected by KFOR troops.