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Banjska Monastery is located near the present day village of Banjska in Zvecan municipality, north of Kosovska Mitrovica. Banjska is the pious endowment of the Holy Serbian King Milutin, who had it built during the period from 1312 to 1316. After his death the King's holy relics were preserved in the church of Banjska Monastery. Because it was a royal sepulcher, this church was far more richly decorated than the other 40 odd pious endowments built by Milutin.
During the 17th century the Turks transformed the church of the already dilapidated Banjska Monastery into a mosque. The monastery suffered great destruction in 1689 when the Turkish and Austrian armies alternately used it as a fortress during the course of the Austrian-Turkish War. At the end of the 17th century the Turks dug up the marble floor of the church in quest of the gold of Archbishop Danilo. The first more serious investigations began immediately after the liberation of Kosovo and Metohija in 1912.
Festung in Smederevo an der Donau (15 Jahrhundert)
Smederevo Fortress, in Smederevo, Serbia, was a medieval fortified city and temporary capital of Serbia. It was built by Despot Đurađ Branković in the first half of the 15th century, during the era of the Serbian Despotate. Later that century, it received additional fortifications from the Turks.
Despite withstanding several sieges by Turks and Serbs, Smederevo Fortress survived relatively unscathed. It was not until World War II that it was heavily damaged, by explosions and bombing. Though it is now in the midst of extensive restoration and conservation work, the fortress remains "one of the rare preserved courts of medieval Serbian rulers.
Rajacke Pivnice – the group of wine cellars of the village Rajac is located in
eastern Serbia, near the Bulgarian border, between the towns of Negotin and
Zajecar. With those of Rogolj and Stubik they represent the best preserved
settlements of wine cellars from the 19th century and are unique to the Negotin
region.