Showing posts with label belgrade fortress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label belgrade fortress. Show all posts

Sunday, June 8, 2014

The Belgrade Fortress - Kalemegdan

Kalemegdan

When you step in Kalemegdan, especially in the summer, you will feel a peace and serenity. Although it is so close to the city center, with its parks, walking paths, shady benches, green lawns, art pavilion and birds. Kalemegdan takes you to a magical world. It's also the biggest and most beautiful park in Belgrade dates from the XIX century. On the edge of Kalemegdan 105 m above the sea level, overlooking the confluence of the Sava and the Danube rivers lies the Belgrade fortress.


Belgrade Fortress Eastern Gate II drawing, late XVIII century.
Annual of the City of Belgrade (XIX)

The Belgrade fortress is one of the most fascinating points of the sacral and secular geography of Eurasia. According to the current study of history, the Romans built the first fortress about one hundred years before Christ as a very significant defence point on the Danube border of the Roman Empire.
Since its construction, the Belgrade fortress has been constantly attacked and defended, destroyed and renovated. Chronicles trace a history of about 40 to 60 devastation of the fortress. It is evident that celebrated heroes fought on both sides of the walls or they become famous in the battles they led on behalf of the fortress.


Fortress of Belgrade as it looked in the middle ages. Lower and upper town with the palace are visible, Belgrade 16th century.


" The orders to attack the fortress of Belgrade or to defend it until the last men dies were given by Licinius Attila, the Avarian Kagan, by Byzantine emperors Justinian, Emmanuel Comnenus, Isaak Angelus, The Hungarian Kings Solomon, Stephan II, Turkish sultans Murat II, Mehmed II the Conqueror, and Suleiman The Magnificent, German King Conrad III and French King Louis VII, Norwegian Prince Sigurd, Princess Guillaume and Villiam, and Godfrey De Bouillon, who was the Duke of Lower Lorraine and the later King of Jerusalem, were all remembered as the leaders of the crusaders or pilgrims, many of them were welcomed in peace or remembered as destroyers..."


 Zindan kapija is a Middle eve gate in Belgrade fortress on Kalemegdan, Belgrade, Serbia

In the time of the great migration of peoples, the Huns, Avars, Goths, Gepids and Bulgarians kept the Belgrade fortress under many sieges. It is claimed that in the 7th century the Slavs came and settled in the deserted and ruined Byzantine fortress. Later on, the Hungarians and Byzantines, Austrians and Turks, constantly fought over the city above the confluence of the Danube and Sava rivers.
In the 12th century an almost unbelievable event took place, when the Belgrade fortress were reportedly transferred by boat over the river twice. First in 1127, Hungarians withdrawing in front of the Byzantines, relocated the fortress and built Zemun. In 1151 the Byzantine Emperor Emmanuel Comnenus conquered Zemun and brought back the fortress of Belgrade, using boats as well.
In its long and turbulent history, the Belgrade fortress, named " the vestibule of the Christianity" by the west Europeans and " the gate of the wars" by the Turks, was surely the prettiest at the beginning of the 15th century, in the time when it was Renaissance and governed by a despot, and also once again at the beginning of the 18th century when it was baroque and governed by the Austrians.


Kalemegdan, Stambol kapija, Belgrade (Serbia)

Over hundred engravings, made from 16th to the 19th century, preserved the images of the seven summit city and the memory about it. The scenes that not only describe the battles, sieges, conquests and defeats of the city, but also the scenes of the rare periods of peaceful gaps. Still, the most impressive are engravings with scenes of baroque Belgrade, which were made under Austrian rule of 1718-1739.


The Victor statue and view from Kalemegdan terrace. 

Among the paradoxes of Belgrade is certainly the fact that the creator of the Austrian fortress on who's remains we walk today, the Swiss General Nicolas Doscat De Morez was killed, later on, by Austrians under the walls of the fortress, because he allegedly ":surrendered the town of Nis to the Turks" in 1738.
The present remains of the Belgrade fortress were not a fortification in many years. Nowadays, we identify Kalemegdan with the rose of winds, the lovers rendezvous, Sahat (clock) Tower, churches Ruzica and St Petka, the Military Museum, Planetarium, the statue of Belgrade Victor, the Roman Well, sports terrains where Serbian basketball was born, with one of the prettiest parks in the city, with the Art Pavillion, the zoo, great restaurants, and view that is incomparable with any other.


Ruzica church, Kalemegdan


                                                            
                                                               Kalemegdan, aerial view.

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Sunday, May 18, 2014

Before visiting Belgrade, it is good to know something about his history.



http://dis-cover.hubpages.com/_bloggerttdib/hub/Historic-Flooding-In-Serbia-Emergency-Help-Needed

Before visiting Belgrade, it is good to know something about his history.

Belgrade
Ancient Belgrade, or Singidunum as it was known then, was founded and built by the Celtic tribe Scordisci in 3th century BC. Their town was concentrated, most likely, in the area of present Zvezdara or in Visnjica.
At the beginning of the last century before Christ, the Romans built the first fortress on the same location where Kalemegdan stands today. In the 1st
Century AD, that castrum was to become the
The Victor, Kalemegdan, Belgrade
The Victor, Kalemegdan, Belgrade
seat of two well-known Roman legions, the 
Fourth (Scynthian) and the Fifth (Macedonian).
Between the walls of the lower city was the port of the Roman flotilla. A civilian settlement was to develop around the important frontier fortress with
a very powerful military unit. Chronicles recorded
a big settlement in the western parts of the town inhabited by tradesmen and artisans. A number of scripts prove evidence of the advancement, and even of a flourishing city that had been brought back to life. The roads brought to the city many celebrated people, including the Roman emperors Tiberius, Septimius, Severus, Valerian, Claudius II, Diocletian and others. 
In the middle of the 4th Century A.D., from the misty steppes of Pannonia, emerged warrior tribes who attacked the walls of Singidunum like turbulent waves. The city was destroyed and conquered successively by the Goths  (378) and Hunts (441). The ruined and besieged city was renovated in the 6th Century by the same Byzantine emperor who had built the church of St. Sofia in Constantinople (Istanbul), Emperor Justinian I. Belgrade regained something of its former splendor, but devastations continued, with the Avars in 584 and the Bulgarians in 829 causing the heaviest damage. Later records of the city, many of which are questionable, noted that in the course of the Avarian and Bulgarian attacks came "the Slovens in the 7th century, and entered the devastated Byzantine fortress".
The Slavic name Belgrade was mentioned in written documents for the first time in the papal bull signed by Pope John VIII in 878. In a special way, that would be the name day of the Serbian capital.
Belgrade became the Serbian capital for the first time not by means of the sword, nut the charter. In 1284, two years after Dragutin Nemanjic abdicated his throne to his brother Milutin and moved to the north, his father in law, the Hungarian King Bela IV, granted him Belgrade, Macva, Srem, Jadar and Usora in Bosnia.

Serbia during the rule of Prince Stefan Nemanja and his son Stefan II Prvovencani, cca 1150-1220
Serbia during the rule of Prince Stefan Nemanja and his son Stefan II Prvovencani, cca 1150-1220.
 Belgrade was demolished once again when the "Hungarian army took a revengeful attack, conquering and burning Belgrade to the ground". 
84 years passed until the fortress above confluence returned to Serbian hands. In 1404 Despot Stefan Lazarevic got Belgrade as a diplomatic award from the Hungarian King Sigismund of Luxembourg. Until Despot Stefan's death, Belgrade was the capital of the Serbian State and "a meeting place of the noble and honorable Europeans. After his death, Belgrade became the Hungarian property again.
Belgrade 16th century
Fortress of Belgrade as it looked in the middle ages. The lower and upper town with the palace are visible.
Peace only lasted for three decades, however, and then the history of conquest of Belgrade continued. In 1440 the Turkish Sultan Murat II attacked the city in a siege that lasted several months, but was without success. While retreating, as a reminder that the siege of Belgrade hadn't ended yet, Murat built the Turkish fortress Havala on Avala hill near Belgrade, where the Serbian fortress Zrnov once stood. Only four years later, Mehmed II, the conqueror of Constantinople, assembled an army of 150,000 soldiers and attacked Belgrade in a battle that didn't turn out as the sultan expected. The defenders of Belgrade, although much smaller in numbers than Turkish army won in a decisive and unanticipated counter attack. Mehmed II was injured  as his army withdraw, leaving thousands of dead Turkish soldiers behind. 

Despite all previous military and political calculations, the Turks only managed to conquer Belgrade in 1521, during a siege led by Suleiman The Magnificent. 
Belgrade Fortress Eastern Gate II drawing
Belgrade Fortress Eastern Gate II drawing, late XVIII century.  
At the end of the 17th century began a series of especially dramatic and far-reaching conquests of the city by the Austrians and Turks, in a century overflowing with wars. The most significant took place in 1717, when the famous Eugene of Savoy led an Austrian conquest of Belgrade. Under Austrian rule, over the next 22 years, Baroque Belgrade was built, including the Belgrade fortress that was designed and built by the Swiss General Nicolas Docsat de Morez. Once more, Belgrade became the spiritual and national center of Serbian life.
Unfortunately, that period didn't last long enough. The Turks took back Belgrade without a fight, after a siege that resulted in "The Belgrade pace agreement". Soon afterwards the Baroque Belgrade disappeared, taking with it places, churches and streets, its spirit, proportions and shapes.
Belgrade in 1821. Drawing by J. Alt, lithographing by Adolph Kunike
Lithography from 1821 shows, boat pulling in Belgrade.
A beginning of the end of Turkish rule in Belgrade was near though, starting with the Serbian siege led by Karadjordje in 1806. Actually, the Turks returned to Belgrade in 1813 after the failure of the First Serbian Uprising. But after the rebellion, nothing was to be the same again. Soon, in 1814, the rebellion of Hadzi-Prodan was organized, and in 1815 the Second Serbian Uprising occurred. This was marked by a series of victories for the insurgents and followed by successful  negotiations, prior to a Turkish counter-attack. Following this was fifteen years of a sensible peace and economic strengthening. In 1829, the Turkish Sultan signed the famous "hatiserif": "we obtained, in one day, the state, the capital and the dynasty".
Wiev on The Knez Mihajlova street, Belgrade
Wiev on The Knez Mihajlova street, Belgrade 1906
In March 1867 Prince Mihailo acquired an agreement in Istanbul that guaranteed a Turkish surrender of Serbian cities to Serbs. The symbolic handing over of keys to the city gates happened in Belgrade on April 6th, during a ceremony that was turned into a great national celebration. The last Turkish military units left the fortress of Belgrade on April 24th, while their military orchestra performed the famous "Nizam breakup".
From this day on, not including the years of occupation during two world wars, Belgrade has remained under Serbian rule.

Terazije in Beograd, 1934 postcard
Postcard from 1934 shows Belgrade main square Terazije