The Chronicle of the Priest of Dioclea or Duklj
a (; ) is the usual name given to a medieval
chronicle written in two versions between 1295 and 1301 by Rudger (or Rüdiger), who was an ecclesiastic from
Duklja and the
archbishop of Bar, as well as being a part of the
Cistercian Order and potentially being of
Czech origin. The disputed writer of the document was Bishop
Grgur Barski ("Gregory of Bar"). Two chapters of the chronicle are dedicated to Petrislav.After King Tuđemir died, he was succeeded as king by his son Hvalimir, who took a wife with whom he had three sons. The firstborn was named Petrislav, who ruled the Zeta region; the second
Dragimir, who ruled
Travunija and
Hum; the third Miroslav, who ruled the Podgorje region. Having left the land to his sons, he died in old age. —
Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja, Chapter XXXIV.Petrislav's youngest brother, Miroslav, while trying to visit his older brother, would later die in a storm that arose nearby after sailing through a place called Blato, which is presumed to be
Lake Skadar, a lake bisected by the modern borders between Montenegro and Albania. After Miroslav's death, Petrislav would end up inheriting the territory. Shortly after, Petrislav had a son, Saint
Jovan Vladimir, who would end up being his successor and the future ruler of
Duklja. The chronicle states that Petrislav was entombed in the church of St. Maria in Krajina; before correction, the place was dubbed as Gazeni. Once Miroslav, having come to see his older brother, got into a boat and while he was sailing through Balta, suddenly a storm arose in which he and those who were with him perished. His country was owned by his brother and he ruled it in his stead. Then King Petrislav sired a son whom he named
Vladimir, and died in peace. He was buried in the Church of St. Mary, in a place called Krajina. —
Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja, Chapter XXXV.It's necessary to mention that the
Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja is a notoriously unreliable historical document. It contains some semi-mythical material on the early history of the Western
South Slavs, alongside historical inaccuracies, unsupported claims, and inconsistent genealogies being found in the said chronicle. Petrislav, along with many other potentially mythologized royal historical figures of Duklja before his reign—who are dubiously considered as his ancestors—holds the title of a king rather than an
archon. ==Notes==