 | Kosovo, the newest independent republic in Europe, has had a very complicated and violent history, especially in the years leading to its independence. In ancient times it was in the lands of Thraco-Illyrian tribes, whose descendants are the Albanians: in the 4th to 1st centuries BCE, the Dardani inhabited the region which roughly corresponds to modern Kosovo. It then was part of the Roman, Byzantine, Bulgarian and Serbian empires. In the 13th century it became the secular and spiritual centre of the Serbian medieval state of the Nemanjić dynasty, with the Patriarchate of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Peć (Peja), and Prizren as the secular centre. In 1389 at Kosovo Polje (field of blackbirds), about 5 km northwest from present-day Prishtina, Ottoman forces defeated a coalition of Serbs, Albanians, and Bosnians led by Prince Lazar Hrebeljanović. Serbia was reduced to a vassal state with Serbian nobles paying tribute and supplying soldiers to the Ottomans; Prince Lazar's daughter was married to the Sultan to seal peace. By 1455 Kosovo was finally and fully absorbed by the Ottoman Empire. Although the Serbs were defeated, the Battle of Kosovo has become a symbol of Serbian patriotism. Its significance for Serbian nationalism returned to prominence during the break-up of Yugoslavia and the Kosovo War when the Serbian leader Slobodan Milošević invoked it during his speech in 1989, commemorating the 600th anniversary at Gazimestan, the monument to the battle, constructed in 1953. |