Sima Nenadović
Sima Sima Nenadović Сима Ненадовић | |
---|---|
Portrait of Nenadović by Uroš Knežević, 1850 | |
Nickname(s) | Sima |
Born | 1793 Brankovina (modern Serbia) |
Died | 26 July 1815 (22 years old) Dublje |
Allegiance | Serbian revolutionaries |
Years of service | 1813–1815 |
Rank | Vojvoda |
Unit | Valjevo nahija |
Battles/wars |
|
Simeon "Sima" Nenadović (Serbian Cyrillic: Сима Ненадовић; 1793 – 1815) was a Serbian voivode (military commander) in the Second Serbian Uprising of the Serbian revolution. He was part of the Nenadović family, among which was his brother Prota Mateja, the first Serbian Prime Minister, his father Aleksa Nenadović (1749–1804), his nephew Ljubomir Nenadović, and his uncle Jakov Nenadović.
Life
Simeon Nenadović "Sima" was born in 1793, in Brankovina. His father was knez Aleksa Nenadović, and his mother's name was Jovanka. The renegade janissaries, known as dahia, took control of the Smederevan Sanjak in 1802, after murdering Vizier Hadži Mustafa Pasha. The four leaders divided the Sanjak, ruling as dictators, also removing the rights granted by Sultan Selim III. In 1804, the janissaries executed more than 70 prominent Serb nobles, among which were Aleksa (Sima's father), and Ilija Birčanin. Sima finished Velika škola Ivana Jugovića -- the Grandes écoles-- in Belgrade, and military school in Vienna.
The slaughter of the dukes triggered the First Serbian Uprising.[1] Karadjordje was elected as leader. Sima's uncle, Jakov Nenadović, was one of the most distinguished revolutionary commanders, and the first Serbian Minister of Interior (1811–1813). His older brother, Mateja, known as Prota Mateja, was an Orthodox archpriest and the first Serbian Prime Minister.
Sima did only participate in the last year of the Uprising, in the battles on the Drina (1813). With the suppression of the revolt by the Ottomans, Sima fled Serbia and helped his brother Mateja in his diplomatic missions (1814–15). He returned to Serbia, immediately with the outbreak of the Second Serbian Uprising (1815). He became a voivode of the Valjevo nahija. He died in combat against the Ottomans at Dublje, during the Battle of Dublje [sr] on 26 July 1815, at the age of 22.
See also
Citations
- ^ Leopold von Ranke, "History of Servia and the Servian Revolution", p. 119-120
General sources
- Milićević, Milan (1888). Поменик знаменитих људи у српскога народа новијега доба. Srpska kraljevska štamparija. pp. 412–414. (Public Domain)
- Velibor Berko Savić, Nenadovići, Valjevo 2004
- v
- t
- e
- Đorđe Petrović-Karađorđe
- Uzun-Mirko Apostolović
- Ilija Barjaktarović
- Anta Bogićević
- Mina Bimbaša
- Đura Brničanin
- Pavle Cukić
- Vasa Čarapić
- Ilija Čarapić
- Stojan Čupić
- Sava Dedobarac
- Aćim Doljanac
- Dimitrije Đorđević
- Todor-Toša Đorđević
- Stanoje Glavaš
- Jovan Gligorijević-Zeka Buljubaša
- Hadži-Prodan Gligorijević
- Nikola Grbović
- Petar Ičko
- Jovan Jančić-Sarajlija
- Jakov Jakšić
- Stojan Karadžić
- Janko Katić
- Ivan-Ivo Knežević
- Vreta Kolarac
- Cincar-Marko Kostić
- Naum Krnar
- Marko Krstić
- Dimitrije Kujundžić
- Jovan Kursula
- Milosav Lapovac
- Luka Lazarević
- Raka Levajac
- Arsenije Loma
- Paulj Matejić
- Sima Marković
- Tomo Milinović
- Mladen Milovanović
- Mateja Nenadović
- Sima Nenadović
- Jakov Nenadović
- Petar Nikolajević-Moler
- Dositej Novaković
- Petar Novaković-Čardaklija
- Đorđe Obradović-Ćurčija
- Jovan Obrenović
- Miloš Obrenović
- Dragan Papazoglu
- Dimitrije Parezan
- Pavle Popović
- Milutin-Era Petrović
- Ilija Strelja
- Hajduk-Veljko Petrović
- Radič Petrović
- Cincar-Janko Popović
- Mihailo Radović
- Tanasko Rajić
- Old Rashko
- Antonije Ristić-Pljakić
- Milutin Savić-Garašanin
- Čolak-Anta Simeonović
- Jovan Simić Bobovac
- Stevan Sinđelić
- Nikola Smiljanić
- Miloš Stojićević Pocerac
- Milenko Stojković
- Đorđe Šagić
- Petar Teodorović-Dobrnjac
- Miloje Todorović
- Milosav Zdravković-Resavac
- Vuča Žikić
- Nikola Ziković
- Kara-Marko Vasić
- Konda Bimbaša
- Toma Vučić Perišić
- Vujica Vulićević