820
The remains of a large civil residential settlement were erased from the ground during military
conflict, leaving this ground on the outskirts of interest for even half a century during the flourishing
decades of the Serbian Kingdom. Only later, about mid fourteenth century, it became a site of an
ecclesiastical building. Architectonically it belongs to the group of churches densely concentrated
within the north half of the Republic of Macedonia and southern Serbia. It has a spatially united
extended cruciform ground plan composed of a naos with a high dome held by monolithic columns,
unseparated from the narthex apart from the massive pillars that once existed along the dividing
line, both spaces coherently articulated along a common longitudinal axis. Raised shortly before
forthcoming tumultuous historic events, it survived and extended its existence in several phases
well into the Ottoman times, when the church continuously converged Christian religious life
and rite inside the walls of the Upper Town. Its identity unconfirmed by a written source, and of
unpreserved trace of devotion to a particular saintly figure, demonstrates its significance through a
large multilayered necropolis developed in even three phases of urban organization.
Its prominence is best judged on its identification as a patrimony of a high dignitary of
the Serbian kingdom, almost completely preserved in an epitaph inscription found at the site. It
informs of the death of Vlatko in the days of Milosh in the year 1378, sixth indiction, and calls to
his memory. Within the narthex were unearthed the graves of the ktetorial family, which allow
their identification with a part of a recognised ktitorial family depicted on a fresco painting in
the St. Nicolas church at Psacha in Macedonia. A family of three generations of dignitaries, the
elders knez Paskach, after whom possibly the present day village was named, with his wife Ozra,
representatives of the landed aristocracy of modest status, accompanied by their son Sevastokrator
Vlatko following his promotion to the status, and his wife Vladislava, as well as their three sons:
Stephan, of questionable identification, Ugljesha, at the age of 7-9, the probable future ruler of
Vranje and the surrounding district, and an anonymous youngster. The fresco was painted around
1358-1360, and it may be presumed that about this date Vlatko probably had already raised his
khtetorial at Skopje. The new data clarify the khtetor’s local origin, a member of well-established
landed aristocracy, his relationship to Skopje, and finally the family’s place among the governing
aristocracy during the late fourteenth-early fifteenth century.
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