Irene, being a
Greek, and with her brothers also being very influential to the new
despot, people began to dislike her, attributing to her many vicious and evil characteristics including that building of
Smederevo was her caprice. In
folk poetry she has been dubbed
Prokleta Jerina (, the "Damned Jerina" or "Jerina the Cursed"). The
Maglič Fortress, nearby
Kraljevo in
Serbia is also known as the fortress of damned Jerina. It was built in the 13th century. Damned Jerina, who used to throw her lovers into the deep well inside the walls, built it, the legend reads. The
Užice Fortress has the legend similar to this. In local tradition she is described as a cruel queen who threw children from highest tower to dark river
Đetinja. The meaning of river's name can be translated as "of the children".
Vuk Stefanović Karadžić wrote several Serbian folk songs where she is mentioned: "Đurđeva Jerina", "Dva Despotovića", "Ženidba Đurđa Smederevca", "Kad je Janko vojvoda udarao Đurđa despota buzdohanom", "Oblak Radosav" and "Starina Novak i knez Bogosav". The
anthroponym Irina became Jerina and it can be seen from three aspects: (1) From the aspect of phonetic adaptation of the anthroponym: the Greek name
Irina became the Serbian name
Jerina; (2) from the aspect of derivation of the appellative
jerina (the ruins of an old town) from the anthroponym
Jerina, and (3) from the aspect of the change in the meaning of the name
Irina (meaning "peace" in Greek) into the name which bears a negative connotation in Serbia and the name that becomes a protective name: that is, the new-born female children, in the families which have no male children, are named
Jerina in order to stop the birth of further female children. Serbian writer Vidan Nikolić wrote a
novel Prokleta Jerina about her life. Some earlier versions of this novel had a title "The Shadow of the despotess" ==See also==