The name Stephen ( / áÃÂõÃÂðý, Stjepan / áÃÂÃÂõÿðý, Stipan / áÃÂøÿðý, and others), long popular among South Slavic monarchs, was used as an honorific or as a royal title. It was used by various rulers, like the Trpimiroviàkings of Croatia, Nemanjiàkings of Serbia and the Kotromaniàkings of Bosnia.
The name Stephen is derived from Greek Stephanos (ãÃÂÃÂÃÂñýÿÃÂ, <small>tr.</small> Stéphanos), meaning literally "crown". Early Slavs did not use the voice /f/, so the Greek Stephanos was adapted into Stjepan (áÃÂÃÂõÿðý) and Stipan (áÃÂøÿðý) in modern-day Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia, à  ÃÂepan (èÃÂõÿðý) in modern-day Montenegro, and Stevan (áÃÂõòðý) and Stepan (áÃÂõÿðý) in modern-day Serbia. The name has had hundreds of variants in Serbo-Croatian, most of which are hypocoristics that can now only be deduced from surnames. The Serbian Orthodox Church, however, retained the original pronunciation (minus the suffix -os) in its liturgy, leading to the form Stefan () being used to refer to the (mostly canonized) Serbian kings. The Swiss Slavist Robert Zett noted that the usage of Stefan indicated social hierarchy, being an honorific rather than a regnal name: while Uroà ¡ I ( 1243âÂÂ76) used Stefan, his son was christened Stepan. Uroà ¡ IV Duà ¡an (r. 1331âÂÂ55) signed as Stefan but humbly used Stepan in a prayer book. Some Serbian kings minted coins with St. Stephen called Stefan on the obverse and themselves called Stepan on the reverse.
The name Stephen enjoyed great popularity among medieval South Slavic rulers. With the Christianization of South Slavs, Christian names begin to appear in rulers; in the generation after Serbian ruler Mutimir (r. 850âÂÂ891), Stephen and Peter are found. Several members of the Trpimiroviàkings of Croatia had the name, such as Stephen Drà ¾islav (r. 969âÂÂ997), Stephen I (r. 1030âÂÂ58) and Stephen II (r. 1089âÂÂ91). It was also adopted as a second name upon accession, a Christian name in addition to the Slavic ("folk") name, as was the case with Stephen Drà ¾islav, and several Serbian rulers, Stefan Vojislav (r. 1018âÂÂ43), and the brothers Miroslav, Stracimir and Nemanja. Several bans of Bosnia also held it: Stephen Vojislavljevià(), Stephen Kulinià(r. 1204âÂÂ32) and the Kotromaniàbans Stephen I (r. 1287âÂÂ99) and Stephen II (r. 1322âÂÂ53).
The royal tradition of using the name Stefan as an honorific added to the original Slavic name began with the Serbian grand prince Nemanja (r. 1166âÂÂ96). His son Stephen (r. 1196âÂÂ1228) had himself crowned king, and all the subsequent Nemanjiàkings of Serbia took the honorific Stephen in addition to their Slavic name upon their accession. The popularity of the name in medieval Serbia stems from the influence of Byzantine culture and the status of Stephen the Protomartyr as both patron saint of Serbia and symbol of the Byzantine Empire. The veneration of Saint Stephen was so important that he was depicted on the reverse of the royal seals of the early Nemanjiàrulers and on their basic coins. Historians such as Duà ¡an J. Popoviàand John Van Antwerp Fine, Jr. maintain that to Serbian rulers, Stephen was more than "a mere name" and "came close to being part of a title". According to Sima ÃÂirkoviÃÂ, it had a special symbolical meaning to the Serbian state.
When the Nemanjiàline went extinct with the death of Stephen Uroà ¡ V (r. 1355âÂÂ71) in 1371, Serbia's throne became vacant and the country disintegrated. The Bosnian ban Tvrtko I (r. 1353âÂÂ91), a cognatic great-grandson of Stephen Dragutin (r. 1276âÂÂ1316), started advancing his own claim on the defunct kingdom and had himself crowned King of Serbia and Bosnia in 1377. In an effort to emulate the NemanjiÃÂ, Tvrtko added the name Stephen to his own and at times even omitted his real name, using only the royal honorific. Even though the Kotromaniàclaim to Serbia lost all practical significance already during Stephen Tvrtko I's reign, the subsequent kings of Bosnia followed his suit and adopted the name Stephen upon accession. The last of them, Stephen Tomaà ¡evià(r. 1461âÂÂ63), having been christened with the name, even called himself Stefan à  tipan (áÃÂõÃÂðý èÃÂøÿðý) or à  tefan Stipan (èÃÂõÃÂðý áÃÂøÿðý) after his accession (effectively being "Stephen Stephen").
The kings of Bosnia were not the only to claim the title Stephen. They were never accepted as suzerains by the lords of petty states that developed following the disintegration of the Serbian Empire. Lazar Hrebeljanovià(r. 1373âÂÂ89) and his son-in-law Vuk Brankovià(r. 1378âÂÂ89), who ruled two of these states, at times called themselves Stefan although they never claimed the kingship.