Chapter

Hellenistic, Roman & Byzantine Provincial Era

The Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine imperial thread shaped the Preševo Valley's deepest cultural layers — layers you can still read in the landscape today. At Kale-Krševica near Bujanovac, excavations have uncovered the northernmost Ancient Macedonian city yet found, a 5th-century BC urban settlement that thrived through the 4th and early 3rd centuries BC before declining. Roman provincial rule brought thermal bath culture to the valley's mineral springs — Bujanovac Spa's hot waters were used in the Roman age, and Sijarinska Banja in Medveđa municipality was known as a health resort in Roman times, its very name possibly linked to Emperor Justinian's sister-in-law. Byzantine administration layered Christianity over older ritual practices without erasing them: the thermal springs that Romans used for bathing likely carried pre-Christian water-cult associations that persist in local St. George's Day bathing customs. Medieval and Ottoman sources record both Albanian- and Slavic-speaking Christian populations in the Preshevë area; proportions and priority are debated. The pre-Christian Albanian spring rituals — Dita e Verës (March 14 Gregorian / March 1 Julian) with its bonfires (zjarri) and Verore bracelets, and the May 6 Shën Gjergji pastoral celebration — transmit ritual memory from this era through oral tradition, though specific local variants in the valley remain under-documented by formal ethnography.

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Places connected to this chapter

Places are linked through Research Center era-node mappings.

modern

Bujanovac Spa

The mineral hot springs at Bujanovačka banja have drawn people since the Roman age — the site featured hot water and medicinal mud in antiquity, was known as Karaman Spa under Ottoman rule, and was linked to King Milutin's medieval holiday house. The nearby village name Kraljeva kuća (King's House) preserves this royal connection. These thermal springs may carry a pre-Christian water-cult layer feeding into St. George's Day ritual bathing practices, though specific folk-healing ties remain undocumented by formal ethnography. The spa's modern wellness framing may mask older ritual associations. Anchor modes: material_layer; living_ritual | Search hooks: Bujanovac Spa; Bujanovačka banja; thermal mineral springs Bujanovac; Karaman spa Ottoman; ritual bathing St George; healing springs southern Serbia

Bathe in the thermal mineral pools fed by the same hot springs used since Roman times. The modern spa complex (operated by Heba) sits atop the ancient spring site, with the mud lake visible nearby. Look for the village of Kraljeva kuća (King's House) adjacent to the spa, named for King Milutin's medieval holiday house.

knowledge

Kale-Krševica

The northernmost Ancient Macedonian city yet discovered, dating to the 5th century BC with urban settlement through the 4th–3rd centuries BC, Kale-Krševica reveals the deepest cultural layer of the Preševo Valley — a Hellenistic outpost on the imperial frontier whose excavated foundations, walls, and artifacts make the ancient period legible on-site. The site anchors the valley's pre-Christian ritual landscape: nearby springs and hilltops that served the ancient settlement likely hosted the seasonal rites whose memory survives in Albanian Dita e Verës and Shën Gjergji celebrations. Anchor modes: material_layer; living_ritual | Search hooks: Kale-Krševica; archaeological excavation Bujanovac; Hellenistic fortress southern Serbia; ancient Macedonian city Krševica; spring bonfire site; ritual landscape Pčinja District

Walk the excavated foundations of the 5th-century BC Ancient Macedonian city — stone walls, urban layout, and artifact displays from the Institute of Archaeology's ongoing project. The surrounding Krševica landscape of springs and hills still hosts the seasonal rhythms that shaped pre-Christian ritual practice.

modern

Sijarinska Banja

Sijarinska Banja in Medveđa municipality is the valley's second major thermal spa complex, known as a health resort since Roman times — its name possibly derived from 'Sis Irina' (Emperor Justinian's sister-in-law Theodora's sister), a legend linking the springs to Byzantine imperial patronage. With 18 mineral springs of varying temperatures (32–72°C) and Europe's unique 8-meter geyser, the site hosts the annual Geyser Night folk gathering each late July, blending thermal bathing under torchlight with communal feasting and folk performance — a modern festival that may absorb older thermal-bathing ritual associations. Anchor modes: living_ritual; material_layer | Search hooks: Sijarinska Banja; geyser night Medveđa; thermal springs Justinian legend; mineral spa southern Serbia; folk performance thermal bathing; Geyser Night gathering

Watch the 8-meter geyser erupt — unique in Europe — and bathe in thermal pools of varying temperatures. Attend the Geyser Night folk gathering in late July/early August, when thermal bathing, torchlight, folk music, and communal feasting converge around the springs.

Celebrations and traditions

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Chapter

Ottoman Frontier & Islamization

1455 - 1878

Ottoman imperial expansion brought the Preševo Valley under Islamic governance by the mid-15th century — southern Serbia was incorporated into the Sanjak of Vučitrn and Sanjak of Prizren after 1455. Over the following centuries, a gradual Islamization transformed the valley's demographic and ritual landscape. Ottoman tahrir defters (tax registers) record both Slavic- and Albanian-speaking Christian communities; the registers classify by religion rather than ethnicity, which obscures exact proportions but confirms religious diversity. Many Albanian-speaking Christians converted to Islam, while others — later called Arnautash (Slavicized Christian Albanians) — maintained Orthodox practice under Serbian ecclesiastical authority, some eventually assimilating into the Serbian identity category. The Ibrahim Pasha Mosque, built in Preševo in 1805, stands as the most visible Ottoman-era monument, its complex including a medresa, fountain, and hammam. Village mosques in Veliki Trnovac and Mali Trnovac became institutional continuity vaults: the pre-Ottoman mehalleje (hamlet gathering) system merged with Islamic congregational structure, and mosques coordinated the communal calendar — scheduling spring celebrations, weddings, and pastoral transitions — preserving pre-Christian Albanian ritual practice (Dita e Verës bonfires, Shën Gjergji lamb roasts) within an Islamic framework. Serbian Orthodox families in Bujanovac town and Medveđa maintained krsna slava traditions, including Đurđevdan (St. George's feast on May 6 by Julian calendar reckoning), creating the three-community calendar convergence that defines the valley's spring festival landscape to this day.

Chapter

Nationalist State Formation & Muhaxhirë Migration

1878 - 1918

The Serbian–Ottoman Wars of 1876–1878 and the subsequent Treaty of Berlin redrew the Preševo Valley's cultural map with brutal suddenness. As the Serbian army captured the Sanjak of Niš (Toplica, Niš, Kuršumlija), an estimated 60,000–80,000 Albanians — predominantly Muslim — were expelled southward into the Preševo Valley and Kosovo. These muhaxhirë (refugee) communities carried their own local festival traditions from the Toplica and Niš areas, which now overlay or blend with older valley-indigenous practices; families in the valley still identify as muhaxhirë descendants, and a 'traditional' spring ritual may have two possible origins — indigenous to the valley, or imported by refugees after 1878. The magnitude and framing of this displacement remain contested: Serbian historiography treats it as liberation of national territory, while Albanian sources describe it as ethnic cleansing. Simultaneously, Christian Albanians (Arnautash) in the valley faced administrative reclassification as Serbs under the new Serbian state, blurring the ritual boundary between Albanian-language Orthodox practice and Serbian krsna slava. Bujanovac became an administrative center under Serbian rule, and the valley shifted from Ottoman frontier to Serbian-Kosovo borderland — a geopolitical repositioning that still shapes festival visibility today. The Balkan Wars of 1912–1913 further consolidated Serbian control, pushing the remaining Ottoman presence out of the region entirely.

Chapter

Yugoslav Integration & Cultural Suppression

1918 - 1990

Yugoslav state integration — first as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Bujanovac assigned to Vranje Oblast, then Vardar Banovina with Skopje as capital), then as socialist Yugoslavia — brought both institutional infrastructure and cultural pressure to the Preševo Valley. Albanian-language education existed but was constrained: the Sezai Suroi Gymnasium in Bujanovac served as the key Albanian-language secondary school, while the Dom kulture Vuk Karadžić housed the KUD Kolo folklore ensemble that organized the international folklore festival on Petrovdan (St. Peter's Day, July 12) — an event running for over two decades that brings Serbian, Albanian, and Roma performers together. Yet cultural suppression intensified: on August 25, 1981, Serbian authorities conducted a mass confiscation of Albanian-language books in Preševo, intimidating educators and banning Albanian literature — an act documented as a paradigmatic case of cultural cleansing. Village mosques and mehalleje in Veliki Trnovac and Mali Trnovac continued to serve as communal calendar-keepers for Albanian spring rituals (Dita e Verës, Shën Gjergji), but public expression of Albanian national-cultural identity was increasingly restricted. Roma Ederlezi celebrations (May 6 as Roma New Year) persisted in Bujanovac's Roma neighborhoods as a distinct ritual register alongside Albanian and Serbian spring practices.

Chapter

Yugoslav Breakup & Preševo Valley Insurgency

1991 - 2001

The Yugoslav breakup and 1999 Kosovo War fractured the Preševo Valley's already fragile intercommunal balance. After NATO's intervention, the Ground Safety Zone — a demilitarized buffer along the Kosovo-Serbia border — became a corridor for the UÇPMB (Liberation Army of Preševo, Medveđa and Bujanovac), which waged an insurgency from June 1999 to June 2001. Veliki Trnovac became a UÇPMB stronghold: its 11,000+ Albanian population and village mosque made it a self-governing enclave where Serbian police did not enter — an arrangement later formalized in the Končulj Agreement. NATO's 1999 bombing campaign left 161 depleted uranium projectiles in Reljan near Preševo, an environmental wound still being cleaned up with Serbian government funding. The Končulj Agreement, signed on May 20–23, 2001, in the village of Končulj (Bujanovac municipality), ended the insurgency through UÇPMB disarmament and a Serbian amnesty statement — but the conflict years suppressed public Albanian cultural expression, driving spring rituals and national celebrations underground. Roma and Serbian minority calendars were further obscured by the conflict's ethnic polarization. What you can read in the landscape today is a layer of war damage, abandoned checkpoints, and the slowly healing political architecture of the Končulj settlement.