Ceklin Explained

Ceklin (Montenegrin/Serbian Cyrillic: Цеклин; pronounced as /tsɛ̌kliːn/ Albanian: Çeklinë) is a historical tribe (pleme) and region in Montenegro. Originally, the tribe is Gheg Albanian, and it is divided into two clans: Gornjaci (the Upper) and Donjaci (the Lower). The Gornjaci are descendants of Leka, who came from the Albanian Kelmendi tribe (fis), while the Donjaci are descended from Leka's son.[1]

Ceklin is a tribal community whose folk tradition maintains that was formed through matrilineal descent as its matriarch was married and had offspring with a man from the area of later Piperi and then her second husband came from the area of Kelmendi. The brotherhoods which claim descent from them, the Gornjaci (via the second marriage) and Donjaci (via the first) are the core of Old Ceklin. Many brotherhoods of different origins were eventually incorporated in the community and came to consider themselves to be part of the same lineages. In the 17th and 18th centuries the tribe expanded its region and numerous other villages and families fell within its territory. Ceklin is one of the very few tribes in the Western Balkans that was created through matrilineality, instead of patriarchal bonds.

Name

It has been linguistically connected to Albanian ceklinë or cektinë which means shallow ground. A. Jovićević recorded in the oral tradition of the local brotherhood of Mihaljevići that Ceklin derives from Tekla (St. Thecla), to whom a church is dedicated to. [2]

In the Ottoman defters of 1521 and 1523, Ceklin (Cjetlin) and Donje Dobro are mentioned parallelly, and according to order, Donje Dobro was used for Donji Ceklin (Mihaljeviće and Strugare). Its people are called Ceklinjani Цеклињани)

Geography

The tribe seat is at the village of Ceklin, which comprises thirteen clans. Other villages in the tribal region are: Strugari, Ulići, Bokovo, Jankovići, Đalci, Drušići, Rvaši, Zagora, Bobija, Vranjina, Dujeva (with smaller hamlets: Mihaljevići, Trnovi Do and Riječani), town of Žabljak Crnojevića and at the end of the territory known as Riječka Okolina and Varošica Rijeka in which there are other tribes present.

Origins

The brotherhoods of Ceklin proper (pravi Ceklin) are divided in the Gornjaci and Donjaci brotherhoods. The Gornjaci are most numerous brotherhood of Ceklin today. They share the same matrilineal origin from Piperi, but have different patrilineal descent from Kelmendi (Gornjaci) and Piperi (Donjaci). Thus, Ceklin became a tribe (pleme) on the basis of matrilineal descent, although it follows patrilineal inheritance customs. It follows taboos of endogamy in the same way as a community based on patrilineal descent and no intermarriage takes place between the Donjaci and the Gornjaci.

The Gornjaci brotherhoods, according to their folklore, trace their origin to a Leka, who migrated from Kelmendi (in northern Albania) first in Piperi and then in Ceklin at the end of 15th century.[3] Leka had married the widow of chieftain Radivoj Liješević in Piperi, with whom he had a son, Krstić, whose two sons Lješ and Vulić are the direct ancestors of Gornjaci today. The widow's son from her first marriage, Vukosav, was adopted by Leka and given part of Ceklin. A possibly related oral tradition exists in Kelmendi itself. There, a Leka is considered the fifth son of the progenitor of Kelmendi who first settled in their home territory. According to the story he left from Kelmendi towards an unknown destination - likely Piperi - possibly because of a blood feud. He was already married and had a son when he left. His descendants in Kelmendi are the brotherhoods of Vrataj and Gjonaj.[4] Like the Kelmendi of Selcë, the Gornjaci have St. Nicholas as their patron saint.[4]

According to Donjaci folklore, Liješ, ancestor of Radivoj Liješević was from Drobnjaci. He settled in Piperi in ca. 1385 because of a murder he had committed in his home region. The Donjaci clans originate from two of Vukosav's sons, Bajo and Grujica and they have St. George (Đurđevdan) as their patron saint (slava).

The "old" Ceklinjani (Gornjaci and Donjaci) did not allow the immigrant families in Ceklin to take part in the settlement of new territory. As the Gornjaci were the bigger brotherhood they took most of the new territory as their property. In the brotherhoods of the expanded territory of Ceklin in the 18th as new families came, more than 50 families and brotherhoods traced their origin outside of pravi Ceklin or the brotherhoods of Bokovo and Ulji.

History

In the area of modern Ceklin the settlement of Arbanas is mentioned in 1296 in a letter by King Milutin.[5] During the reign of the Crnojević family in Zeta, old Ceklin was named Donje Dobro, while neighbouring Gornje Dobro later received the name Dobrsko Selo. These names are attested in Ottoman defters from the beginning of the 16th century and in Mariano Bolizza's 1614 report. At the time of Ivan Crnojević, Ceklin was only the name of one single settlement. In the charters of Ivan Crnojević from 1485 and 1489, the village of Ceklin is named Cvetlin (Цвѣтлин) and Cetlin (Цѣтлин), which are the first mentions of the village with this name. The 1489 charters mentions the "nobility of Cetlin", Radič Rašković, Radelja Mirujević, Sćepan Nikolić and Vuk Piperović.

Ceklin belonged to Riječka nahija (River district), one of the four areas that comprised Old Montenegro. The pravi (proper) Ceklinjani inhabited old (stari) Ceklin, a small area beneath the Ceklinštak mountain, divided into Gornji kraj (Upper area) and Donji kraj (Lower area), after which the main communities of Ceklin take their names: Gornjaci and Donjaci. All older clans of the tribe were formed in this area. The tribe expanded its borders in the 17th century, pushing the Bjelice tribe out from what is now Ceklin.[6] Some communities like Bokovo and Ulji became part of Ceklin on the basis of a defense pact between them. The region expanded in the 18th and early 19th centuries. Ceklin was involved in one of the most long-standing blood feuds in Montenegro against the tribe of Njeguši to which the later ruling dynasty of Montenegro the Petrović-Njegoš belonged. The feud lasted for 32 years and ended in 1797 in a joint meeting of all tribes of Old Montenegro under vladika Petar I Petrović-Njegoš. The pacification of the feud between two of strongest tribes of the region is considered as an important step in Petar Petrović's strategy of uniting Old Montenegro.[7]

The vojvodas and serdars of the tribe were up to mid-19th century members of the Đurašković clan. During the reign of Prince Danilo, the title of vojvoda was passed to the Strugari clan, and the title of serdar to the Jovićević clan.

Brotherhoods

Families

Gornjaci
Donjaci
Bokovljani
Later immigrants

There are also many families in other tribes that emigrated from Ceklin.

Notable people

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Zlatar, Zdenko . The Poetics of Slavdom: The Mythopoeic Foundations of Yugoslavia . 2007 . Peter Lang . 978-0-8204-8118-0 . en. Ceklin tribe consisted of two clans, Gornjaci and Donjaci [the Upper and Lower ], All Upper clansmen are descended from Leka who originated in the Klimenti tribe (Albanian), while the Lower kinsmen are descended from Leka's son.
  2. Book: Zbornik Matice srpske za filologiju i lingvistiku. 6 May 2013. 1994. Matica. 498.
  3. Book: Zdenko . Zlatar . The poetic of Slavdom: the mythopoeic foundations of Yugoslavia . 2007 . University of California Press . 978-0820481180 . 58 . 27 March 2020 . Zdenko . All Upper clansmen are descended from Leka who originated in the Klimenti tribe (Albanian), while the Lower kinsmen are descended from Leka's son-in-law Vukosav whose mother, after the death of her husband, married Leka..
  4. Web site: Ulaj . Idriz . Andrija . Jovićević . Kelmendi në kapërcejt e shekujve . Zani i Malsisë . 26 March 2020 . 2018.
  5. Book: Pavlović . Srdja . Balkan Anschluss: The Annexation of Montenegro and the Creation of the Common South Slavic State . 2008 . Purdue University Press . 978-1557534651 . 30 . 27 March 2020.
  6. Book: Vojislav Đurić. Naučnici. 7 May 2013. 1972. Matica srpska. 125. На исти начин су истерани... из Цеклина Бјелице.
  7. Book: Boehm . Christopher . Blood Revenge: The Enactment and Management of Conflict in Montenegro and Other Tribal Societies . 1987 . University of Pennsylvania Press . 081221241X . 138 . 27 March 2020 . Boehm.