Gordoservon or Gordoserbon or Gordoserba (Greek: Γορδόσερβον; Serbian: Гордосервон, Гордосербон) was an early medieval Byzantine city, and a bishopric...
13 KB (1,359 words) - 05:42, 27 October 2024
bigger fortified wooden settlement used by ancient Celts and Germanics. Gordoservon in Asia Minor, 680 AD Garðaríki – Varangian name for Kievan Rus, interpreted...
16 KB (1,518 words) - 15:46, 16 December 2024
(Vardar region) to Asia Minor. There these migrants founded the city of Gordoservon, the name of which gives grounds for supposing that among its founders...
18 KB (1,993 words) - 23:23, 1 January 2025
Asia Minor, in 688–689, and there they founded the town/district of Gordoservon. Among the participants of the Trullan Council, held in Constantinople...
240 KB (30,447 words) - 23:24, 1 January 2025
resettled Slavs from the Vardar area to Asia Minor, to a city named Gordoservon (Greek: Γορδοσερβα, City of Serbs). The "Sclaviniae of Macedonia" (Sclavenias...
57 KB (6,326 words) - 22:53, 28 November 2024
Benevento Godfrey of Bouillon Godfrey of Esch Godilas Golden Horn Gordas Gordoservon Göreme, Churches of Gothia, Metropolitanate of Gothic War (535–554) Gothograecia...
153 KB (12,921 words) - 23:03, 1 January 2025
Abdulreman ibn Khalid in 664–665. There was a town in Bithynia known as Gordoservon, mentioned in 680–81, whose name possibly derived from the Serbs resettled...
7 KB (849 words) - 10:01, 2 September 2024
toponyms that are supposedly related to endonyms and exonyms for Serbs. Gordoservon/Servochoria, in Phrygia of Anatolia (modern central Turkey) (early Middle...
41 KB (4,445 words) - 00:28, 7 December 2024