A katun consisted of a community of several families or households gathered around one leader who directed the organizational, political and economic goals of his group. The main occupation in the katun was always cattle breeding, almost exclusively sheep and to some extent goats, so the community used to be quite mobile. Earlier, nomadic pastoralism was characterized with the construction of temporary camps under tents. Erection of tents in the 14th and 15th centuries could be interpreted as the gradual expansion of the katun into new territories, or the first step towards building more permanent settlements, most often villages. The shape and scope of the katuns varied, and their warrior companies were important. These companies used to serve under local
Slavic noblemen, who often bore the title of
voivode. They sometimes served under foreign militaries, such as the
Venetians and the
Ottomans. In the end, some katuns managed to expand into larger territories, where there was a lack of influence from the regional or central government and social relations. In the second half of the 14th and 15th centuries, some of these katuns built permanent villages, outside or in the
župas themselves. They inhabited Church estates and city districts and
townships, which were already subordinated to a city municipality or to local lords. By settling themselves, those katuns brought some elements of self-governance and gathered more scattered villages around them. Other, usually smaller,
katuns joined them, the resulting groups being called "municipalities". Such groups (municipalities and katuns) could encompass a large number of villages and hamlets, and numerous population of different ethnic and/or cultural background.
Stefan Uroš II mentions Albanian katuns in the region of
Drenica between 1246-1255. Albanian and Vlach katuns are mentioned as being gifted to the
Visoki Dečani monastery in 1330, and in
Stefan Dušan's chrystobull of 1348 a total of 9 Albanian katuns are mentioned around the vicinity
Prizren. == Chieftains ==