Diascevastes.
The learned, of Pisistrate’s epoch, [54]
Diocletian, Emperor.
References in Southern-Slavonic legends to, [27]
“Divan.”
Means, in Serbian, any State gathering. As used in the Serbian ballad “The Saints Divide the Treasures” it means the Supreme Judgment, [195]
Djelat (executioner).
Stephan Yakshitch threatened with the, [180]
Dobrivoy.
Servant of Theodore of Stalatch, [211]
“Doda or Dodola.”
The rite connected with the favourite goddess of Rain, [51], [52]
Don, The River.
Serbians lived on banks of, [1]
Dourmitor.
The mountain, [186]
Doushan the Powerful (Mighty).
Dethrones his father Stevan Detchanski, [5];
vampires and the Code of, [21], [22], [24];
Voukashin’s bad faith toward, [61];
attended by Archdeacon Nedelyko till death, [66];
the marriage of, [150]–169;
sends Theodor, Councillor of State, to King Michael of Ledyen, [150];
sues for the hand of Princess Roksanda, [150], [151];
the two Voïnovitchs, Voukashin and Petrashin, nephews of, [151];
Milosh-the-Shepherd joins the wedding procession of, [153], [154];
the four tests undertaken by Milosh-the-Shepherd on behalf of, in order to win the Princess Roksanda, [160]–166;
reference to the wresting of the Empire from the Turk by the Serb, until it is in extent almost equivalent to Empire under, [176]
Dragomir.
Djoupan of Trebinye, father of Stephen Voïslav, [3]