Middle Ages The ritual of crowning a new ruler is attested in the 12th century. The coronation of Serbian monarchs took place in the most prominent of churches in the country.
Stefan (r. 1196–1228), the son of Grand Prince
Stefan Nemanja, was crowned with a crown sent by Pope
Honorius III in 1217. According to
Fine Jr., he was crowned by a papal legate. It is unknown where the coronation took place.
J. Kalić believes that it was
Peter's Church, Ras. It has been assumed that Stefan was crowned a second time by Archbishop
Sava, his brother. In the second charter to the
Žiča monastery dated to ca. 1224, King Stefan ordered for all future kings to be crowned at that monastery. His contemporaries and successors called him "the First-Crowned King".
Modern Serbia's last and only modern coronation was in 1904, when King
Peter I was crowned in an
Eastern Orthodox Christian ceremony at the
Cathedral of the Host of Holy Archangels in
Belgrade. Serbia became a part of the state of
Yugoslavia after World War I, but Peter did not hold a second coronation and neither of his two successors, the Yugoslav monarchs
Alexander and
Peter II, were crowned. This was due to the religious diversity of the new state. ==Regalia==