Pavle Branovic (
Serbian: Павле Брановић,
Greek: Παῦλος[a];
c. 870–921) was the
Prince of the Serbs from 917 to 921. He was put on the throne by the Bulgarian Tsar
Symeon I of Bulgaria, who had imprisoned the previous prince, Petar after he had become a Byzantine ally. Pavle ruled for four years, before being defeated by
Zaharija Pribislavljević, his cousin. Pavle was the son of
Bran, the middle son of
Mutimir (r. 851–891) of the
Vlastimirović dynasty.[1]
Pavle was born in the 870s,[2] between 870 and 874[3] to
Bran Mutimirović, the middle son of
Mutimir. His Christian name, in relation to the previous generation of pagan names, shows the spread Christianization of the Serbs.[4] After Mutimir, his grandfather, died in 891,
Pribislav succeeded as prince. Pribislav ruled briefly for a year when
Petar returned and defeated him. Pribislav fled to Croatia with his brothers Bran (Pavle's father) and
Stefan.[5] Bran later returned and led an unsuccessful rebellion against Petar in 894.[6] Bran was defeated, captured and blinded (as per
Byzantine tradition).[7]
In 917, a Byzantine army led by
Leo Phokas invaded Bulgaria but was decisively defeated at the
Battle of Achelous on 20 August 917.[8] After the Achelous,[6] Symeon sent an army to Serbia led by Pavle (after he had heard of a Byzantine–Serbian alliance), to take the Serbian throne, however, unsuccessfully as Petar proved a good opponent. Symeon then sent generals
Marmais and
Theodore Sigritsa, persuading Petar (through an
oath) to come out and meet them, then captured and took him to Bulgaria where he was put in prison, dying within a year.[6] Symeon put Pavle on the Serbian throne.[6]
In 920,
Zaharija, the exiled son of Pribislav (the eldest of Mutimir's sons), was sent by
Romanos I Lekapenos (r. 920–944) to seize the throne. Pavle defeated and captured him, handing him over to Symeon, who held him for future use. In the meantime, Pavle switched his allegiance back to the Byzantines, prompting Symeon to dispatch Zaharija against him at the head of a Bulgarian army in 921. Zaharija won the battle but soon reaffirmed his Byzantine alliance. There are no more mentions of Pavle.
Ferjančić, Božidar (1966). Vizantija i Južni Sloveni [Byzantium and the South Slavs] (in Serbo-Croatian). Belgrade: Zavod za izdavanje udžbenika Socijalističke Republike Srbije.
Novaković, Relja (1981). Gde se Nalazila Srbija od VII do X Veka [Where Serbia was situated from the 7th to 10th centuries]. Serbia, Belgrade: Narodna knjiga. pp. 61–63.