Jovan Nenad (; or ; c. 1492 – 26 July 1527), known as "the Black", was a Serb military commander in the service of the Kingdom of Hungary who took advantage of a Hungarian military defeat at Mohács and subsequent struggle over the Hungarian throne to carve out his own state in the southern Pannonian Plain. He styled himself emperor (tsar).
Jovan Nenad is attributed by Serbian historians as the founder of Vojvodina and the leader of the last independent Serbian state before the Ottoman conquest.
Origin
An ethnic Serb, he was born c. 1492 in Lipova near the Mureș River in northern Banat (present-day Romania). Other facts about his origins are uncertain; he himself claimed to be "a descendant of Serbian and Byzantine rulers", although other contemporaries thought that he was a descendant of the Serbian despots or that he was a man of low rank. He was of medium height, slender, and highly moral and pious. His contemporaries called him "the Black Man" because of a strange birthmark which many considered a divine mark: "he had a dark stripe, one finger wide, starting at the right temple of his head and running in a straight line over his body down to his right foot". The statue is of Jovan Nenad on horseback holding up an impaled cat on his sword.
See also
- Starina Novak (1530s-1601), hajduk leader
- List of Serbian rulers
- List of rulers of Vojvodina
- Serbs of Vojvodina
- Rascians
Notes
References
Sources
External links
- Još jednom o caru Jovanu Nenadu
