Stevan Andrejià(, 1793âÂÂd. 1804), known as Palalija (), was a Serb village mayor (obor-knez) in Begaljica in the Grocka nahiya (district) of the Belgrade Pashalik. He was among the conspirators in 1803 to overthrow the tyrannical Dahije. He was murdered during Slaughter of the Knezes, being one of the first victims.
AndrejiÃÂ was born in the village of Begaljica in the Belgrade nahiya, close to Grocka. According to Rista T. NikoliÃÂ (1903), the PalaliÃÂ family in Begaljica originated from four brothers, but it is unknown when they settled and from where; Stevan belonged to this family. According to G. Desnica (1979), he married into the local PalaliÃÂ family, and was thus nicknamed Palalija. He was an influential merchant. Palalija sponsored the renovation of the Rajinovac monastery (and is thus regarded a ktetor), when the Studenica archimandrite Gerasim StudeniÃÂanin stayed here, returning the relics of King Stefan the First-Crowned from Syrmia to Serbia, and hiding them from the Turks. The original church was mentioned in 1528, but was destroyed, and later rebuilt and completed in 1793, with the help of archimandrite Gerasim, hieromonk Meletije, knez "Stefan" (Palalija), Dimitrije StefanoviÃÂ, with the blessing of Sultan Selim III and Belgrade Metropolitan Methodios.
Palalija was an obor-knez during the tenure of Belgrade Vizier Hadji Mustafa Pasha ( 1793âÂÂ1801). As such, he was one of the knezes that mustered Serbian militiamen against the renegade Janissaries and Vidin Pasha Osman Pazvantoglu. He was one of the most notable knezes throughout the Pashalik, alongside Aleksa NenadoviÃÂ, Ilija BirÃÂanin, Nikola Grboviàof the Valjevo nahiya, Ranko Lazareviàof the à  abac nahiya, Nikola of the Rudnik nahiya, Petar of the ÃÂuprija nahiya, and others. Hadji Mustafa Pasha was murdered by the Janissaries in 1801.
In 1803 there were conspiracies to throw off the tyrannical rule of the Dahije (the renegade Janissary leadership), Palalija supporting hajduk leader Stanoje Glavaà ¡'s band and KaraÃÂorÃÂe's call for uprising. He was to ready the Grocka nahija for war, and bought weapons which he instructed villagers on how to use. Palalija was part of an ammunition smuggling network from Austria, to be used in the fight against the Dahije. A German found a list of Serb conspirators, which he gave over to the Dahije in Belgrade; among those on the list were Palalija. Learning of the conspiracies, the Dahije decided to kill Serb leaders in order to thwart a rebellion against them, force the Serbs into total submission, and continue ruling the pashalik. According to epic poetry, Dahije leader Mehmed-aga FoÃÂiàdespised Palalija and wanted to murder him, as he acted like "he was the pasha, and I only the subaà ¡a". The Dahije leaders gave orders to their mütesellims and others, such as Dahije henchmen and innkeepers, to kill Serb leaders, but eventually the Dahije leaders themselves set out from Belgrade to carry out murders of selected people, thus, Mehmed-aga FoÃÂiàwent for Valjevo and à  abac nahiyas, KuÃÂuk-Alija went for Smederevo, ÃÂuprija and Jagodina nahiyas, Mula-Jusuf went to Belgrade and Grocka nahiyas, while Aganlija seems to have stayed in Belgrade. Palalija was among the first victims, along with knezes Marko J. ÃÂarapiàand Stanoje MihailoviÃÂ. The guslar (bard) Filip Vià ¡njià(1767âÂÂ1834) sang about Palalija as the first victim, being lured and cut down in Grocka. Among other Grocka nahiya notables killed were knez ÃÂarapiàand militia buljubaà ¡a (captain) Janko GagiÃÂ. The Slaughter of the Knezes led to the First Serbian Uprising and beginning of the Serbian Revolution.
Palalija was buried at the eastern side of the Rajinovac monastery, with the gravestone mentioning him as "obor-knez of Begaljica", erected by Mija Jankoviàin 1804. M. MiliÃÂevià(1831âÂÂ1908) said of him, "the simple earth that covers him, he redeemed with his blood". His son Rista was buried beside him. A commemorative plaque was set up by his grave on 4 July 1954 by the Institute for Cultural Heritage.