Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Eastern Orthodox Christians From Montenegro, Montenegrin Christian Religious Leaders, Montenegrin Roman Catholics, ura Ii, Alexander I of Yugoslavia, ura I Bali, Ozana of Kotor, Leopold Mandi, Princess Anastasia of Montenegro, Andrija Zmajevi, Patriarch Gavrilo V of Serbia, Mihailo Ii of Duklja. Excerpt: ura II Stracimirovi (Serbian Cyrillic: II, anglicized Djuradj or George; archaic version ure or Djurdje, Serbian Cyrillic:, pronounced; Serb-Slavic:, Albanian: died April 1403) of the House of Bali (), was a ruler of several Serbian and Albanian lands from 1385 to 1403, most notably Zeta. He was the son of Stracimir, a brother of ura's predecessor Bala II, and his wife Milica rnjavevi (Jerina), daughter of fallen Serbian King Vukain Mrnjavevi. He reigned from 1386 up to 1389 in the still officially undissolved Serbian Empire in the form of a family alliance, then up to 1395 as an Ottoman vassal. He ruled until his death in 1403, when he was inherited by his only son, Bala III. He contributed greatly to secularization of Zeta and its modernization as a true tiny Medieval realm. Picture of coat of arm, which is on the silver coin Djuradj Stracimirovic Balsic (1385-1403).In 1372 ura had succeeded his father Stracimir as the fief lord of Upper Zeta, Serbian Empire, of the Bali family collective domain. ura, in the standards of collective family reign, issued together with his uncles Bala II and presiding ura I an edict in the Republic of Ragusa on 30 November 1373. The edict confirmed the laws of Tsar Stefan Uro from the Serbian Nemanji and gave privileges to Ragusian traders, including imposed taxes to the Adriatic City. It also included a unique clause, recognizing the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Serbian Empire ... More: http: //booksllc.net/?id=4523623