Serbian Chancellery in Dubrovnik


The Serbian Chancellery, sometimes known as the Slavic Chancellery, was a diplomatical and economical office of several states of Serbia in the Middle Ages in the Republic of Ragusa. It was established in the early 13th century.
It served for Cyrillic transcription by Romanophones in the city in correspondence with Serbia and Slavic lands in the interior; with the Orthodox and members of the Bosnian Church. The initial chancellors were Romans, or Slavophones, or Slavicized Romans who hailed from local patrician noble families. Only in the 14th century, there were scribes belonging to the lower classes, whose biographies are harder to determine.
The head scribe of the chancellery was titled dijak srpski. Three early names of chancellery scribes are known from between 1278 and 1336: Ozren, Stojan Ceprić, and Stefan Benčulić. During the rule of King and Emperor Stefan Dušan, Jaketa Krusić was a chancellery scribe, followed by Đivo Parmesan. The next known chancellery scribes were Maroje Niklić, Vidoš Bogdanić, Rusko Hristoforović, Nikša Zvijezdić and Marinko Cvijetković. Paskoje Primojević was the Serbian scribe in the 1482–1527 period, while his son Trajan Primojević was recorded in 1531.