The theme of Serbia was a Byzantine théma, a military-civil province (main administrative division), that existed in the first half of the 11th century (roughly 1018âÂÂ1039) in what is today Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. Although a military district was established, the local Slavic power structure was never compromised.
The information on Serbia as a political entity in the 10th century ends with De Administrando Imperio and Serbian ruler ÃÂaslav. The Byzantine empire conquered the Ras fortress during the reign of John I Tzimiskes (969âÂÂ976), during the ByzantineâÂÂRussian war in the Balkan interior over Bulgaria. Bulgaria was conquered in 971 and the Byzantine empire stretched to the Danube. Although no strategos of Morava is mentioned in the Escorial Taktikon (971âÂÂ975), the seal of Adralestos Diogenes, protospatharios and strategos of Morava has been preserved. The Byzantines established control over Ras, evident in the seal of protospatharios and katepano John of Ras ().
The fate of the Ras fortress is unknown in the reigns of Samuel and his successors (976âÂÂ1018), but it surely became part of the Bulgarian state. The Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja claims that after the death of Tzimiskes (976), there was a rebellion instigated by the ruler of Duklja, after which "all of Rascia" (Serbia) came under his rule. There was a Bulgarian uprising in the following decade led by the Kometopouloi brothers that led to the control of vast territory of the former Bulgarian empire, spreading to the Danube banks, including the region of Morava and BraniÃÂevo. It is probable that after the Kometopouloi rebellion, the ruler of Duklja took the opportunity to expand into Serbia in the hinterland.
Serbian deputies to the Byzantine emperor () are mentioned in an Athonite charter dated 993. The seal of Peter, komistes (guardian) and archon of Serbia dating to the beginning of the 11th century, speaks of an hitherto unknown Byzantine vassal and Serbian ruler, prior to the officials (patrikios, vestarches, protospatharios, strategos) of the theme of Serbia in the 11th century. Until 1016, Duklja and parts of the Serbian hinterland were ruled by Jovan Vladimir, as Skylitzes mentions him "governing Triballia and neighbouring regions of Serbia" ("").
Basil II recaptured Ras in 1016âÂÂ1018, and the region became part of the thema of Serbia. This is confirmed by Basil's reorganization seen in the second sigillion to the Archbishopric of Ohrid (1020). The devaluation of the military commander in Serbia from katepan to strategos is a result of decades of discontinuity of Byzantine rule in the region and also new circumstances in which Basil II built his power and placed Serbia. There was a prevailing view that the theme of Serbia was in fact the Theme of Sirmium and surrounding areas, however, Constantine Diogenes's "newly conquered areas" from Sermon were likely the area between the Danube and Sava, and the thema of Serbia was in the "Serbian hinterland" (so-called Rascia and Bosnia). Skylitzes speaks of Diogenes as being "archon of those regions" prior to the conquest of Sirmium (1019), likely meaning he was strategos of Serbia, the neighbouring province from where he set out to take Sirmium, in 1018/1019. Two seals belonging to the strategos of Serbia has been found at Ras. Although a military district was established, local Slavic power structure was never compromised.
Between 1018 and 1034 there was continuity of Byzantine rule in Serbia. Constantine Diogenes served as strategos of Serbia in 1018/1019, after which he became the military commander at Sirmium and some other official governed Serbia. There was a Serbian rebellion following the death of emperor Romanos III Argyros (1034), after which Serbia was subdued in 1036. In the 1034âÂÂ1036 rebellion in Serbia, Stefan Vojislav participated and was captured and sent to Constantinople. The idea of developing a thema of Serbia was abandoned and the title of strategos passed to local aristocracy. In a charted dated July 1039 the ruler of Zahumlje, Ljutovid, styled himself strategos of Serbia and Zahumlje, which suggests he was awarded nominal rights over neighbouring lands.
Some time before 1040, Stefan Vojislav fled imprisonment at Constantinople and took over "the land of the Serbs" and expelled Theophilos Erotikos. Vojislav's rebellion began in continental Serbia (later called "Raà ¡ka"); Vojislav then took over the "Illyrian mountains", the "Tribals" (Duklja), and the "Illyrian coasts" (southern Dalmatia), where he seized "Imperial gold". After refusing to hand over the gold, the emperor sent a punitive expedition under George Probatas which failed. Vojislav then attacked and looted neighbouring Byzantine vassal territories which led to Constantine IX sending a second punitive expedition under archon Michael of Dyrrachion in 1042, which also failed. Judging by the LPD, by 1042, none of the Serbian lands were under Byzantine control.
Serbia and Duklja constituted one state since Stefan Vojislav's rebellion in 1039/1040âÂÂ1042. Ioannes Skylitzes calls Stefan Vojislav "archon of the Serbs" (), and describes how Mihailo "after his father became archegos of the Tribals and Serbs" and that he signed peace with Constantine IX ( 1042âÂÂ1055). Anna Komnene (1083âÂÂ1153) called Mihailo and Constantine Bodin ( 1081âÂÂ1101) the "Exarchs of Dalmats [i.e. Serbs]" (). The prevalent opinion in historiography is that Serbia remained under Byzantine rule until the 1080s when Constantine Bodin conquered and appointed Vukan and Marko (the founders of the Vukanoviàdynasty) to rule in Serbia, as per the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja. This is dated to between the Norman invasion which began in 1081, and the death of Robert Guiscard (1085), however, the newly found seal of Constantine Bodin which dates to the beginning of his reign (1081) clearly shows that he already held rule also over Serbia.
From the late 11th- to late 12th century the area of Belgrade, BraniÃÂevo and Nià ¡ constituted a single Byzantine administrative unit.