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Revolutionary Serbia
Устаничка Србија
Ustanička Srbija
1804–1813
Anthem: Vostani Serbije (Востани Сербије)a
"Arise, Serbia!"
Revolutionary Serbia in 1809
Revolutionary Serbia in 1809
CapitalTopola
Official languagesSerbian
GovernmentMon/rchy
Grand Vožd 
• 1804–13
Karađorđe Petrović
President of the Serbian Governing Council 
• 1805–07
Matija Nenadović (first)
• 1811–13
Karađorđe Petrović (last)
History 
• Start of the Uprising
February 14 1804
• ////
February 15, 1835c
• Fall of Serbia
October 7 1813
ISO 3166 codeRS
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Pashaluk of Belgrade
Pashaluk of Belgrade
Principality of Serbia
Today part of Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Bulgaria
 Montenegro
 Serbia
a: unofficial
b: ////

[1] [2] [3] [4] [5]

Background[edit]

First period of the Uprising[edit]

Declaration of Independence[edit]

Second period[edit]

Fall of the Uprising[edit]

The Serbian Governing Council[edit]

Created in August 27, 1804, the Serbian Governing Council (Правителствующи совѣт сербскій, written in the modern Serbian alphabet as Правитељствујушчи совјет сербски, Praviteljstvujušči sovjet serbski) was one of the central ruling bodies in Serbia during the Uprising. Lawyer Teodor Filipović and insurgent commander Mateja Nenadović were its chief architects. The Council's headquarters were first in Voljavča Monastery, then in Bogovađa, before moving to Smederevo in November 1805 and Belgrade in the summer of 1807.[5]

Initially, the Council fulfilled the role of the government, the supreme judicial and legislative authority in liberated Serbian territories. The role and position of the council was formally defined on an Assembly in Smederevo on December 7, 1805.[5] The Council was to be comprised of a President and 12 representatives from the 12 regions held by Serbian rebels at the time. Mateja Nenadović was confirmed as the first President of the Council, while Karađorđe was symbolically named its "High President" to signify his authority. The Assembly also formally defined a new judicial structure for Serbia - courts were to be organized in four degrees: village courts, municipal courts, regional courts and the Great Court of the People, which was actually the Serbian Governing Council itself.

Rulers[edit]

The state was ruled by Karađorđe Petrović as Grand Vožd and the Serbian Governing Council.

The Serbian Governing Council[edit]

Created in August 27, 1804, the Serbian Governing Council (Правителствующи совѣт сербскій, written in the modern Serbian alphabet as Правитељствујушчи совјет сербски, Praviteljstvujušči sovjet serbski) was one of the central ruling bodies in Serbia during the Uprising. Lawyer Teodor Filipović and insurgent commander Mateja Nenadović were its chief architects. The Council's headquarters were first in Voljavča Monastery, then in Bogovađa, before moving to Smederevo in November 1805 and Belgrade in the summer of 1807.[5]

Initially, the Council fulfilled the role of the government, the supreme judicial and legislative authority in liberated Serbian territories. The role and position of the council was formally defined on an Assembly in Smederevo on December 7, 1805.[5] The Council was to be comprised of a President and 12 representatives from the 12 regions held by Serbian rebels at the time. Mateja Nenadović was confirmed as the first President of the Council, while Karađorđe was symbolically named its "High President" to signify his authority. The Assembly also formally defined a new judicial structure for Serbia - courts were to be organized in four degrees: village courts, municipal courts, regional courts and the Great Court of the People, which was actually the Serbian Governing Council itself.

Constitutional Acts[edit]

Foreign Relations[edit]

Demographics[edit]

Gallery[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Sima M. Ćirković (2004), The Serbs, Blackwell Publishing, ISBN 0-631-20471-7
  2. ^ Vladimir Ćorović, Istorija srpskog naroda, Beograd, 2001.
  3. ^ John R. Lampe (2000), Yugoslavia as History: Twice there was a country, Cambridge University Press
  4. ^ Dušan Bataković, A Balkan-style French Revolution? The 1804 Serbian Uprising in European Perspective.
  5. ^ a b c d e Dejan Mikavica, Ustavno pitanje u Karađorđevoj Srbiji (1804-1813).