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Illyria

Before the arrival of the Slav peoples in the Balkans during the 6th century AD, the area now known as Montenegro was inhabited principally by the Illyrians. Along the seaboard of the Adriatic, the movement of peoples that was typical of the ancient Mediterranean world ensured the settlement of a mixture of colonists, traders, and those in search of territorial conquest. Substantial Greek colonies were established on the coast during the 6th and 7th centuries BC, and Celts are known to have settled there in the 4th century BC. During the 3rd century BC, an indigenous Illyrian kingdom emerged with its capital at Skadar. The Romans mounted several punitive expeditions against local pirates and finally conquered this Illyrian kingdom in AD 9, annexing it to the province of Illyricum.
The division of the Roman Empire between Roman and Byzantine rule—and subsequently between the Latin and Greek churches—was marked by a line that ran northward from Skadar through modern Montenegro, symbolizing the status of this region as a perpetual marginal zone between the economic, cultural, and political worlds of the Mediterranean peoples and the Slavs. As Roman power declined, this part of the Dalmatian coast suffered from intermittent ravages by various semi-nomadic invaders, especially the Goths in the late 5th century and the Avars during the 6th century. These soon were supplanted by the Slavs, who became widely established in Dalmatia by the middle of the 7th century. Because the terrain was extremely rugged and lacked any major sources of wealth such as mineral riches, the area that is now Montenegro became a haven for residual groups of earlier settlers, including some tribes who had escaped Romanization.

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Duklja
Slavs migrated from the Bay of Kotor to the River of Bojana in the first half of the 7th century, and formed a Principality there together with the White Serbs, Doclea from the land given to them by the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius. The population was a mixture of the dominant Slavic pagans and Latinized Romans along the Byzantine enclaves at the coastline, including some Illyrian descendants. Around 753, the population was first described as Red Croats. Although the people would enjoy factual independence, they would attract Serbian influence in the 9th century and the people was described as Serbs. Under the following missions of Cyril and Methodus, the population was Christianized. The tribes (Mixed slav-illyrians) organized into a semi-independent dukedom of Duklja by the 10th century. After facing subsequent Bulgarian domination, the people were split as the Doclean brother-archonts split the lands among each other after 900. Prince ?aslav Klominirovi? of the Serbian House of Vlastimirovi? dynasty extended his influence over Doclea in the 10th century. After the fall of the Serbian Realm in 960, the Docleans faced a renewed Bulgarian occupation through to the 11th century.
The local ruler, Jovan Vladimir, contributed to the Christian church and his cult still remains in the Serbian Orthodox Church, which proclaimed him a saint. Under Stefan Vojislav the people were freed of the Eastern Roman occupier in the first half of the 11th century. Vojislav is described as the ruler of Serbs and his people as Serbs, while he himself was either a Serb, a Travunian or a Doclean. After his failed uprisings, the population again fell under Byzantine domination, while Vosjiav managed to reclaim the Serb land by gathering the local Tribals and Serbs by the end of 1038. In the 1054 Great Schism, the Docleans fell on the side of the Catholic Church. Bar became a Bishopric in 1067. In 1077, Pope Gregory VII recognized Duklja as an independent state, acknowledging its King Mihailo, (Michael) (of the Vojisavljevi? dynasty founded by nobleman Stefan Vojislav) as rex Doclea (King of Duklja). The kingdom, however, paid tribute to the Byzantine Empire; Mihailo's people were referred to as the Serbs, however he himself specified that he was the ruler of Tribals and Serbs as well as the one who ruled the Croats. The best Serb squadrons from the Kingdom had left in 1072 to assist the uprising of Slavs in Macedonia. From the end of the 11th century King Constantin Bodin was also described as the Exarch of the Serbs and his subjects as Serbs.
In 1082, after numerous pleas the Bar Bishopric of Bar was upgraded to an Archbishopric. The expansions of the Kings of the House of Vojislavljevi? reunited all the former Serbian lands, including Zahumlje, Bosnia and Rascia. The might of the Doclei declined and they generally became again subjected to the Grand Princes of Rascia in the 12th century. Stefan Nemanja, the future uniter of the Serbs was born in 1117 in Ribnica. In 1168, as Serbian Duke, Stefan Nemanja launched an offensive against this Greek Land, besieging and raising numerious cities, except for Kotor which surrendered to him peacefully and where he constructed a Chatteu. Nemanja, after converting to Orthodoxy, introduced the nearly non-existent Orthodox Christianity to the population of Duklja. Latin cultural advancement was effectivly put to a halt by ceasing the production of Latin books. The heretic Bogumil sect's religious expansions in Duklja ceased. Nemanja asked the Citizens of Bar 800 perpers, but the Archbishop never gave up from the siege, asking for assistence from Duklja's ruling Prince Mihailo , who was also being chased by Nemanja's forces. Bar's Serbian Archbishop, Grgur, wrote a magnificent book in poor Latin in 1171-1196 as his personal diary describing the die-our of the realm of Duklja and a work to boost the morale of the people of Duklja that it's Latin cities will stand forever: The Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja. In the first half he concentrates on a source from 753, the anonimous De Regno Sclavorum containing an early history of the South Slavs, while the other half is a compilation of parts partly written by the Archbishop, partly by others describing the then modern world of Duklja. The work was used to propagate moral to the citizens of Duklja that glory would be restored. With the final fall of Duklja to the Serbs in 1189, the death of Prince Mihailo and the introduction of Vukan, Stefan Nemanja's oldest son, as Duklja's King, the Archbishop and the Princess Desislava fled, seeking exile in the Republic of Dubrovnik with her two ships and the loyal nobility in Duklja. From there, she finally emigrated to *Omis and met her death.

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Zeta
Throughout the 14th century, the Houses of Balši? and Crnojevi? contested for control over the Montenegrin territories until the Crnojevich attained supremacy in the 14th century. In 1496, the Ottomans conquered Montenegro. The independent principality of Zeta (which more closely corresponds to the early modern state of Montenegro) asserted itself towards 1360. The Balši? (1356 – 1435) and Crnojevi? (1435 – 1498) dynasties ruled Zeta; and though the Ottoman Empire controlled the lands to the south and east from the 15th century, it never subjected Zeta in any way.

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Montenegro
In 1516, the secular prince ?ura? Crnojevi? abdicated in favor of the Archbishop Vavil, who then formed Montenegro into a theocratic state under the rule of the prince-bishop (vladika) of Cetinje, a position held from 1697 by the Petrovi?-Njegoš family of the Ri?ani clan. Petar Petrovi? Njegoš perhaps the most influential vladika, reigned in the first half of the 19th century. In 1851 Danilo II Petrovi? Njegoš became vladika, but in 1852 he married, threw off his ecclesiastical character, assuming the title of knjaz (Prince), and transformed his land into a secular principality. Following the assassination of Danilo in 1860, the Montenegrins proclaimed Nicholas I as his successor on August 14 of that year. In 1861 – 1862, Nicholas engaged in an altogether successful war against Turkey; but in 1876 he joined Serbia and in 1877 – 1878 Russia against his hereditary foe, with the results that 1,900 square miles were added to his territory by the Treaty of Berlin; that the port of Antivari and all the waters of Montenegro were closed to the ships of war of all nations; and that the administration of the maritime and sanitary police on the coast was placed in the hands of Austria. The reign of Nicholas I(1860 – 1918) saw the doubling of Montenegro's territory and international recognition of her independence (1878), the country's first constitution (1905), the ruler's elevation to the rank of King (1910), and further territorial gains following the Balkan Wars (1913), though the newly-captured city of Skadar had to be given up to the new state of Albania at the insistence of the Great Powers despite the Montenegrins having invested 10,000 lives into the liberation of the town from the Ottoman (albanian) forces of Esad Pasha.

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First World War
Montenegro suffered severely in World War I. At the first invasion of Serbia by the Austrian armies, Montenegro lost no time in declaring war against the Central Powers. Although the army numbered only about 50,000 men, it mobilised at once. Austria despatched a separate army to invade Montenegro and to prevent a junction of the Serbian and Montenegrin armies. This force, however, was repulsed, and from the top of the strongly fortified Mount Lovcen, the Montenegrins carried on the bombardment of Cattaro held by the enemy. On August 10, 1914, the Montenegrin infantry delivered a strong attack against the Austrian garrisons, but they did not succeed in making good the advantage they first gained. They successfully resisted the Austrians in the second invasion of Serbia and almost succeeded in reaching Sarajevo in Bosnia. With the beginning of the third Austrian invasion, however, the Montenegrin army had to retire before greatly superior numbers, and Austro-German armies finally overran Serbia. Montenegro also suffered invasion (January 1916), and for the remainder of the war remained in the possession of the Central Powers. See Serbian Campaign (World War I) for details. King Nicholas fled to Italy and then to France; the government transferred its operations to Bordeaux. Eventually the forces of Serbia liberated Montenegro from the Austrians. A newly-convened National Assembly of Podgorica (Podgori?ka skupština), supervised by Serbian forces, accused the king of seeking a separate peace with the enemy and because of that deposed him, followed by a ban on his return. Serbia subsequently annexed or united with Montenegro on November 29, 1918. Montenegro thus became the only Allied nation to lose its independence after the war.

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Yugoslavia
In the period between the two World Wars, King Alexander dominated the Yugoslav government. Although a grandson of Montenegro's king Nicholas, he worked against the ideas of Montenegro as an independent state and of Montenegrins outside a wider Serb whole. The Communist Party of Yugoslavia, on the other hand, supported the equality of the Montenegrin nation (with Serbs, Croats and others), in recognition of the desire of the majority of Montenegrins who fought in World War II for liberation and emancipation. This fact made the Communist party popular in Montenegro, which Belgrade all but ignored as a backward province during the reign of the Karadjordjevic monarchy in the First Yugoslavia. Tito's Partisans won the war of liberation and acknowledged Montenegro's massive contribution to the war against the Axis Powers and its desire for a renewed status by establishing it as one of the six republics of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Montenegro became economically stronger than ever, since it gained help from federal funds as an under-developed republic, and it became a tourist destination as well.

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