The Nemanjić dynasty is depicted in a family tree composition in several specimen of Byzantine art frescoes in medieval Serbian Orthodox monasteries. The scheme is known as the Nemanjić family tree (loza Nemanjića).[1] Examples include those of Gračanica (1321), Peć (ca. 1335), Visoki Dečani (ca. 1350), and Matejić (ca. 1360).[2]
The Nemanjić family tree is also preserved from engravings, such as those of Studenica (1733), and Hristofor Žefarović (1741).[3]
References
edit- ^ Vizantološki institut 2007, p. 311.
- ^ Đurić 1978.
- ^ "Srpsko Nasledje".
Sources
edit- Đurić, Vojislav J. (1978). "Loza Nemanjića u starom srpskom slikarstvu". Zograf (8).
- Jevta Jevtović; Ante Sorić; Desanka Milošević; Anika Skovran (1985). Srednjovjekovna umjetnost Srba: iz muzeja, riznica, manastira i crkava. Muzejski Prostor.
- Radomir Ivančević; Mića Stojanović; Mirko Kambič (1967). Freske, ikone, mozaici: Frescoes, icons, mosaics. Spektar.
- Eva Haustein-Bartsch (1985). Der Nemanjidenstammbaum, Studien zur mittelalterlichen serbischen Herrscherikonographie. Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Bonn.
- Vizantološki institut (2007). Recueil de travaux de l'Institut des études byzantines. Vol. 44. Vizantološki institut.