ДУБРАВЕ У СРЕДЊОВЕКОВНОЈ СРБИЈИ
DUBRAVAS IN THE MEDIEVAL SERBIA
Author(s): Siniša MišićSubject(s): Middle Ages, The Ottoman Empire
Published by: Филозофски факултет, Универзитет у Београду
Keywords: dubrava (oak woods); župa; Middle Ages; Serbia; toponymy; žirovnina; tithe
Summary/Abstract: The acorn oak woods were largely spread in the early Middle Ages, which has been proved by toponyms registered in our medieval charters, as well as by the presence of župas bearing this name in Hum, Toplica and Pomoravlje regions. The term was mainly used to notify the various types of the oak woods, which were called, in the Middle Ages, in some Slavonic languages, dub. During the late Middle Ages, the people tried to avoid to cut the oak woods, because they had its economic value in the cattle breeding and were the source of the fiscal income for their owners. In dubravas the pigs, as well as the other domestic animals, were fed with the acorn. Th e majority of dubravas became, in due time, the property of the ruler or the feudal lords, who imposed the tax called “žirovina”, or the tenth of the pig production (also as a tax), for usage of the acorn in their woods. This tax had been preserved during the Ottoman rule and presented the relevant income for the ruler or the feudal lord.
Journal: БЕОГРАДСКИ ИСТОРИЈСКИ ГЛАСНИК
- Issue Year: 2012
- Issue No: 3
- Page Range: 95-103
- Page Count: 9
- Language: Serbian