Right-believing (Ruler) 14th century

Venerable Dragutin of Serbia

c. 1244 – 12 March 1316

Also known as Theoctistus · Stefan Dragutin

Brother of Stephen Milutin who abdicated the throne and lived in repentance and hidden asceticism as the monk Theoctistus.

Feast Day
October 30
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Dragutin (Theoctistus in monasticism), Right-believing King of Serbia

Life

Dragutin of Serbia was a thirteenth- and fourteenth-century Serbian monarch who abdicated his throne and ended his life in monastic repentance and hidden asceticism under the name Theoctistus. The brother of King Stephen Milutin, he is venerated as a saint in the Serbian Orthodox Church.

Born around 1244 as the son of King Stefan Uroš I and Helen of Anjou, he reigned as King of Serbia from 1276 to 1282 before ceding the crown to his brother. He continued to rule the northern Serbian territories independently for decades before becoming a monk shortly before his death.

He is commemorated on October 30 (New Style) together with his brother Saint Stephen Milutin and Queen Saint Helen of Serbia, the three Serbian royal saints sharing a common feast.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1244 Birth Born as the son of King Stefan Uroš I of Serbia and Helen of Anjou; the date is estimated by historian Miodrag Purković from a 1264 monastic record.
  2. c. 1268 Marriage to Catherine of Hungary Married Catherine of Hungary, a union likely arranged after his father's 1268 peace treaty with her grandfather, Béla IV. They had three children: Vladislav, Elizabeth, and Urošica.
  3. 1276 Accession to the throne After rebelling with Hungarian assistance and the Battle of Gacko, forced his father Uroš I to abdicate and became King of Serbia.
  4. 1282 Abdication Broke his leg in a fall from his horse and abdicated in favor of his brother Milutin, retaining the northern Serbian territories.
  5. 1284 Receives Hungarian banates Received the banates of Mačva, Usora, and Soli from his brother-in-law Ladislaus IV, becoming the first Serbian monarch to rule Belgrade.
  6. 1301–c. 1312 War with Milutin Open warfare with his brother Milutin lasted over a decade; after a decisive defeat in 1311 or 1312, prelates mediated a peace treaty, most probably in 1312.
  7. 12 March 1316 Death as the monk Theoctistus Having become a monk under the name Teoctist shortly before his death, he died and was buried at Đurđevi Stupovi Monastery, of which he is regarded as the second founder.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Reign and Abdication

Dragutin was the son of King Stefan Uroš I of Serbia and Helen of Anjou. He married Catherine of Hungary, a union likely arranged after his father's 1268 peace treaty with her grandfather, Béla IV of Hungary. The couple had three children: Vladislav, who became King of Syrmia; Elizabeth; and Urošica.

With Hungarian military assistance, Dragutin rebelled against his father and, following the Battle of Gacko, forced Uroš I to abdicate in autumn 1276, beginning his own reign as King of Serbia. Shortly after ascending the throne, he ceded large Serbian territories — Zeta, Trebinje, and coastal areas — to his mother as an appanage.

In early 1282 Dragutin fell from his horse and broke his leg, an injury that led him to abdicate in favor of his brother Milutin. He retained the northern Serbian territories and, in 1284, received three Hungarian banates — Mačva, Usora, and Soli — from his brother-in-law Ladislaus IV. He became the first Serbian monarch to rule Belgrade, and from the 1290s administered his realm in practice as an independent ruler.

Conflict with Milutin and Later Years

Tensions between Dragutin and his brother Milutin escalated after Milutin concluded a peace with the Byzantine Empire in 1299. Open warfare erupted in 1301 and continued for more than a decade. After Milutin inflicted a decisive defeat on Dragutin in late 1311 or 1312, prelates mediated a peace treaty, most probably concluded in 1312.

Shortly before his death Dragutin became a monk, taking the monastic name Teoctist (Theoctistus), after a fifth-century Byzantine saint. He died on 12 March 1316 and was buried in the Đurđevi Stupovi Monastery, founded around 1170 by his great-grandfather Stefan Nemanja; Dragutin is regarded as its second founder.

Archbishop Danilo II of Serbia, who wrote a biography of Dragutin, records that while he was dying Dragutin stated he could not be venerated as a saint. Despite this, he attained canonical status in the Serbian Orthodox Church. The OCA Synaxarion relates that, a true Christian, after a short reign he abdicated in favor of his brother and withdrew to Srem, secretly living as an ascetic.

Ecclesiastical Patronage

Dragutin supported Franciscan missions in Bosnia and established a Catholic see in Belgrade. He endowed the Church of Saint Achillius near Arilje, where a founder's portrait fresco depicting him was painted around 1296, during his lifetime.

He also supported the charitable and ecclesiastical works of his mother, Helen of Anjou, herself venerated as a saint.

Relics & Shrines

Dragutin's grave is at the Đurđevi Stupovi Monastery, the foundation of his great-grandfather Stefan Nemanja, of which he is considered the second founder.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints