Vuk Lazarević
Vuk Lazarević | |
---|---|
Fresco of Vuk | |
Born | Vuk Lazarević |
Died | July 6, 1410 |
Cause of death | Execution |
Religion | Serbian Orthodox Christianity |
Parent(s) |
Tsar Lazar Milica of Serbia |
Vuk Lazarević (Serbian: Вук Лазаревић) (c. 1380 – July 6, 1410) was a Serbian prince and the younger son of Tsar Lazar. He was executed on July 6, 1410.
He was born sometime around 1380. His older brother Stefan was born in 1377. His other siblings were Mara, Dragan, Teodora, Jelena, and Olivera. After the Battle of Kosovo in 1389, Vuk, Stefan, their mother Milica, and Jefimija began to take part in the control of Serbia. In the Battle of Ankara, Vuk was part of the Ottoman vassal army of his brother, together with the sons of Vuk Branković, Đurađ and Grgur, against the Mongol Empire under Tamerlan.
Death
After defecting from the army of Musa Çelebi to that of his brother Süleyman Çelebi during the Battle of Kosmidion, a part of the Ottoman Interregnum, Vuk was sent to Serbia by Süleyman to seize the lands of his brother Stefan. However, on his way there, he was captured in the city of Philippopolis by a vassal of Musa Çelebi. Vuk was sent to Musa and was summarily executed for his betrayal at Kosmidion.[1]
Notes
- ↑ Kastritsis, Dimitris J., The sons of Bayezid: Empire building and representation in the Ottoman civil war, (BRILL NV, 2007), 152.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vuk Lazarević. |