Destinikon (), rendered also as Destinik and in Serbian as Dostinik () or Dostinika (ÃÂþÃÂÃÂøýøúð), was one of eight inhabited cities (úñÃÂÃÂÃÂñ/kastra) of "baptized Serbia" (the hinterland of the Serbian Principality), mentioned in De Administrando Imperio (950s, abbr. DAI). The city's name probably derives from Greek or Latin (Ad Stenes).
The DAI mentions Destinikon as the first among the enumerated cities ("Destinikon, Tzernabouskeï, Megyretous, Dresneïk, Lesnik, Salines, Katera, Desnik") of "baptized Serbia". They were not mentioned afterwards, possibly because of remote location, lost importance or became desolated after Bulgarian Samuel's conquest in the end of the 10th century.
In chapter 32, the DAI tells of Klonimir, an exiled dynastical member in Bulgaria, who marched an army into Serbia, entering the city of Destinikon with the intent of seizing the throne, but was defeated by Prince Petar, in ca. 896.
It is considered that Destinikon was the ecclesiastical centre and capital of early medieval Serbia.
Studies
- Slovak historian P. J. Ã
 afárik (1795âÂÂ1861) believed it to be on the Lower Drina, near the villages of Disit and Desna.
- Czech historian K. J. JireÃÂek (1854âÂÂ1918) believed it to have been located west of Ras. This view was supported by Serbian historian S. Stanojevià(1874âÂÂ1937).
- Serbian historian S. Novakovià(1842âÂÂ1915) and K. Grot believed it to be DeÃ
¾eva, in RaÃ
¡ka.
- Croatian linguist P. Skok (1881âÂÂ1956) and Serbian historian V. Koraà(1924âÂÂ2010) believed it to be Drsnik, in Metohija.
- Serbian historian Vladimir ÃÂorovià(1885âÂÂ1941) deemed the location unknown.
- Aleksandar Deroko (1894âÂÂ1988) noted that it may have been early Sjenica.
- (1953) created a map for Mihailo DiniÃÂ's chapter section about early medieval Serbia, placing Destinikon's assumed location in the middle between Lim and Ibar rivers.
- A Serbian source from 1968 considered Metohija.
- (1981), studying fort ruins in the area of the early medieval Serbian state believed Ã
½drelo or GradiÃ
¡te GedÃ
¾e, in Orahovac in Western Kosovo, to have been the site. The site, ruins of a fortified city with towers, is located at a hill called GradiÃ
¡ or GradeÃ
¡, dated to the 9thâÂÂ10th centuries.
- P. PetroviÃÂ and P. VlahoviÃÂ (1984) considered that it was most likely southeast of Ras. This presumption was based on the fact that the DAI mentions Klonimir attacking Petar, coming from Bulgaria.
- Serbian historian S. ÃÂirkovià(1929âÂÂ2009) presumed it was on the road "from Ras towards the Lim valley".
- Serbian historian M. Blagojevià(1930âÂÂ2012) believed it to have been in the Ã
¾upa (county) of Hvosno.
- According to Florin Curta (2006), based on the events described, the forts were in what is today central-eastern Bosnia.
- Between 1997-2001 were found remains of a fortification thought to be that of Destinikon in the archaeological site of Vrsjenice, near Sjenica. It was built in the 5th century, abandoned in early 7th century, and renovated in the 9th century. It "shows complete absence of finds Bulgarian in origin" in comparison to Ras-PazariÃ
¡te and Ras-Postenje, indicating that the border between Serbs/Serbia and Bulgarians/Bulgaria was at PeÃ
¡ter.
- Vladeta PopoviÃÂ in 2013, citing also Aleksandar Loma and Tibor Ã
½ivkoviÃÂ, concluded that the location is still unknown, but Dejan Buliàmentioned possible identification with Vrsjenice.
References
Sources
Further reading