“Pepelyouga” (Cinderella).
A Serbian legend, [226]–230;
alternative name of, Marra, [226]–229
Peroon.
The Russian God of Thunder, [15];
name preserved in village “Peroon,” and in plant “Peroonika,” [15]
Peter I, King. Son of Alexandre Karageorgevitch;
his glorious rule, [11];
George Petrovitch grandfather of, [175];
Empire lost by Tsar Lazarus regained under, [176]
Peter II.
Archbishop of Montenegro, and belief in vampires, [22]
Peter, St.
Mention of, in Serbian ballad “The Saints Divide the Treasures,” [195];
wine, wheat and the Keys of the Heavenly Empire chosen by, [196];
“St. Peter and the Sand,” a Serbian popular anecdote, [362]
Petrovitch, George. Turkish designation Karageorge (‘Black George’).
A gifted Serbian who led a successful insurrection against the Turks in 1804, [9], [175];
cruelly assassinated by order of Milosh, [10]
Petrovitch, Nicholas I.
See Nicholas
Petrovitch, Peter. The popular Serbian poet;
reference to his masterpiece on Gorsky Viyenatz (“The Mountain Wreath”), [56]
Petrovitch, Vladika Danilo. Uncle of present king of Montenegro;
first assumed the title of Prince as a hereditary one, [184]
Pirlitor. Alternative, Piritor.
The white city opposite the mountain Dourmitor, the walls of the castle of which it is said still exist in Herzegovina, [186];
Vidossava punished by the castle, [193]