Досељавање Словена на Балкан и њихови односи са Византијом: паралелна анализа грчких и српских школских уџбеника

History textbooks are always of great importance for every nation state. Both Serbia and Greece, nowadays as well as in the past, have shown great effort in making history text¬books policies fit for their needs. Greece is a state that emphasises greatly on its instruction of humanities and has a st...

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Veröffentlicht in:Godišnjak za društvenu istoriju 2022 (1), p.67-92
1. Verfasser: Samčević, Vuk R
Format: Artikel
Sprache:srp
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Zusammenfassung:History textbooks are always of great importance for every nation state. Both Serbia and Greece, nowadays as well as in the past, have shown great effort in making history text¬books policies fit for their needs. Greece is a state that emphasises greatly on its instruction of humanities and has a strict and uniformed school program, while Serbia has more than one state approved textbook unlike Greece. That being said, the early Middle Ages are a period of European history that is essential for the foundation of contemporary nations, and the immigration of Slavs to the Byzantine Balkans and their principal affairs bring up many questions that have been concerning the two since the XIX century. How Slav the Greeks became and how much do the Balkan Slavs owe to the Byzantine Civilisation? In an attempt to answer that question through the perspective of present-day history textbooks in Greece and Serbia (used in elementary, middle and high school), the article deals with the narratives of the textbooks in regard to how they depict Byzantium and Slavs, their first encounters, the settlement of Slavs in the Balkans and their integration with the Byzantines, as well as the first few centuries of common history during which the Slavs were baptised and founded their own states, up until the XI century when Byzantium took possession almost of the whole peninsula. The research showed that even though the content of the textbooks is similar, some themes are treated differently. Firstly, both acknowledge the Greek aspect of Byzantium and view it as predominantly Greek, although the Greek textbooks take monopoly on the Greek element of Byzantium, neglecting other ethnicities or communities that had lived there as well, which is mentioned greatly in the Serbian ones. Serbian textbooks depict Slavs in a finer manner than the Greek ones do, even though they often both use the same Byzantine sources. Their focus is different, whereas Serbian textbooks focus on the beginning of Serbian history, the Greek textbooks cover the complex process of assimilation of Slavs in continental Greece. Even though both sides claim great importance to the mission of Cyril and Methodius, the Greek books insist on its Byzantine role and portray the result being strong ties between Greeks and Slavs, where the Serbian ones see it as a more inner Slavic matter. In Serbian textbooks Serbian and Byzantine history is very important, but there is no place for Bulgarian history of the same period in s
ISSN:0354-5318