Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosna

Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosna
Митрополија Дабробосанска
Headquarters of Metropolitanate
Location
Territory Central region of Bosnia and Hercegovina
Headquarters Zelenih beretki 3, Sarajevo
Information
Denomination Eastern Orthodox
Sui iuris church Serbian Orthodox Church
Patriarchate of Peć (Serbia)
Established 1219
Language Church Slavonic
Serbian
Current leadership
Bishop Hrizostom Jević
Map
Website
http://www.mitropolijadabrobosanska.org/
Serbian Orthodox Monastery of Banja, seat of medieval Bishops of Dabar
Serbian Orthodox Monastery of Dobrun, near Višegrad
Patrons of Dobrun Monastery, fresco painting from 14th century
Serbian Orthodox Cathedral of the Holy Mother of God in Sarajevo
Metropolitan Georgije Nikolajević (1885-1896)

The Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosnia (Serbian: Митрополија дабробосанска / Mitropolija dabrobosanska) is a metropolis of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Bosnia and Herzegovina, seated in Sarajevo. Since 2017, Metropolitan of Dabar and Bosnia is Hrizostom Jević.[1]

History

The medieval Eparchy of Dabar (Serbian: Дабарска епархија / Dabarska eparhija) was founded in 1219 by first Serbian Archbishop Saint Sava. The seat of bishops of Dabar was in the Banja Monastery near Priboj. Eparchy of Dabar had jurisdiction over the region of lower Lim and middle Drina on the borders with medieval Bosnia.[2]

In 1557, Serbian Patriarchate of Peć was restored and the Eparchy of Dabar and Bosnia was returned to its jurisdiction, with its bishops of holding the honorary title of metropolitan.[3] In 1766, when the autocephalous Serbian Patriarchate of Peć was abolished, Eparchy of Dabar-Bosnia and all other Serbian eparchies under Ottoman rule came under the jurisdiction of Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. Bishop of Dabar-Bosnia kept his honorary title of Metropolitan, as was also the custom in the Ecumenical Patriarchate. The seat of metropolitan was in Sarajevo.[4]

Since 1878, territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina was under the occupation of Austria-Hungary, but under the Convention of 1880 all Eastern Orthodox eparchies remained under ecclesiastical jurisdiction of Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. At the end of the First World War in 1918, all Eastern Orthodox bishops in Bosnia and Herzegovina reached a unanimous decision to join with other Serbian ecclesiastical provinces into united Serbian Orthodox Church. The process of unification was completed in 1920 and since then Eparchy of Dabar-Bosnia remains part of the united Serbian Orthodox Church.[5]

From 2015 to 2017, the Diocese was administered by Bishop Grigorije (Durić) of Zahumlje and Herzegovina.[6]

Bishops

  • Hristofor (13th c.)
  • Joanikije (before 1292)
  • Metodije (end of 13th c.)
  • Nikola I (1284–1292)
  • Jovan I (?)
  • Spiridon (between 1286–1292)
  • Isaija I (1281–1291)
  • Jovan II (after 1286)
  • Jovan III (after 1286)
  • Isaija II (after 1286)
  • Gavrilo (13th c.)[7]
  • Jovan IV (1301–1317)
  • Nikolaj II (after 1317–before 1328)
  • Nikolaj III (before 1328-c. 1330)
  • Marko (c. 1532)
  • Varlam (c. 1557)
  • Simeon (c. 1573)
  • Nikanor (?)
  • Josif (died 15 May 1575)[8]
  • Gavrilo Avramović (1578–1588)
  • Petronije (1578–1589)[9]
  • Aksentije (1589–1601)
  • Teodor (1601–1619)
  • Makarije (c. 1620)
  • Isaija (1627–1635)
  • Gavrilo Predojević (–1638)
  • Isaija II (1640–1655)
  • Longin (1656–1666)
  • Hristofor Pivljanin (1666–1681)
  • Atanasije Ljubojević (1681–1688)
  • Visarion II (1690–1708)
  • Isaija III (1708–1709)
  • Mojsije Petrović (1709–1713)
  • Meletije Umiljenović (1713–1740)
  • Gavrilo Mihailović (1741–1752)
  • Pajsije Lazarević (1752–1759)
  • Vasilije Jovanović Brkić (1760–1763)
  • Dionisije (1763?)
  • Serafim (1753-after 1790)
  • Danilo (c. 1769)
  • Kirilo (1776–1779)
  • Pajsije (before 1793–1802)
  • Kalinik (1808–1816)
  • Evgenije (1808?)
  • Venijamin (1816–1835)
  • Amvrosije Papa-Georgopoli (1835–1840)
  • Ignjatije (1841–1851)
  • Prokopije (1851–1856)
  • Dionisije (1856–1860)
  • Ignjatije II (1860–1868)
  • Dionisije II Ilijević (1868–1871)
  • Pajsije (1872–1874)
  • Antim (1874–1880)
  • Sava Kosanović (1881–1885)
  • Georgije Nikolajević (1885–1896)
  • Nikolaj Mandić (1896–1907)
  • Evgenije Letica (1908–1920)
  • Petar Zimonjić (1920–1941)
  • Nektarije Krulj (1951–1966)
  • Vladislav Mitrović (1967–1992)
  • Nikolaj Mrđa (1992–2015)
  • Grigorije Durić (2015–2017), administrator
  • Hrizostom Jević (2017-present)

Annotations

It is known in English as the Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosna[10] or Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosnia.[11][12] It is scarcely known as the Metropolitanate of Dabar and Bosnia.[13] It was formerly unofficially known as the Metropolitanate of Sarajevo (Сарајевска митрополија).[14]

See also

References

  1. Communique of the Holy Assembly of Bishops (2017)
  2. Јањић 2011, p. 133-148.
  3. Sotirović 2011, pp. 143-169.
  4. Kašić 1972, pp. 53-54.
  5. Kiminas 2009, pp. 22, 28.
  6. Bishop Grigorije of Zahumlje-Herzegovina appointed Administrator of the Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosnia
  7. Вуковић 1996, p. 97.
  8. Вуковић 1996, p. 252.
  9. Вуковић 1996, p. 406.
  10. Serbian Patriarch Irinej in the Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosna
  11. Metropolitan Nikolaj of Dabar-Bosnia reposes in the Lord
  12. Bishop Grigorije of Zahumlje-Herzegovina appointed Administrator of the Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosnia
  13. Slobodan Mileusnić (1994). Medieval monasteries of Serbia. Prometej. p. 130.
  14. Поповић 1912, p. 624, 627.

Sources

  • Поповић, Јевсевије (1912). Опћа црквена историја. 2. Сремски Карловци: Српска манастирска штампарија.
  • Kašić, Dušan, ed. (1972). Serbian Orthodox Church: Its past and present. 3. Belgrade: Serbian Orthodox Church.
  • Богдановић, Димитрије (1981). "Преображај српске цркве". Историја српског народа. књ. 1. Београд: Српска књижевна задруга. pp. 315–327.
  • Јанковић, Марија (1985). Епископије и митрополије Српске цркве у средњем веку (Bishoprics and Metropolitanates of Serbian Church in Middle Ages). Београд: Историјски институт САНУ.
  • Нилевић, Борис (1990). Српска православна црква у Босни и Херцеговини до обнове Пећке патријаршије 1557. године (Serbian Orthodox Church in Bosnia and Herzegovina before the renewal of the Patriarchate of Peć in 1557). Сарајево: Веселин Маслеша.
  • Вуковић, Сава (1996). Српски јерарси од деветог до двадесетог века (Serbian Hierarchs from the 9th to the 20th Century). Евро, Унирекс, Каленић.
  • Bataković, Dušan T. (1996). The Serbs of Bosnia & Herzegovina: History and Politics. Dialogue Association.
  • Mileusnić, Slobodan (1997). Spiritual Genocide: A survey of destroyed, damaged and desecrated churches, monasteries and other church buildings during the war 1991-1995 (1997). Belgrade: Museum of the Serbian Orthodox Church.
  • Popović, Svetlana (2002). "The Serbian Episcopal sees in the thirteenth century (Српска епископска седишта у XIII веку)". Старинар (51: 2001): 171–184.
  • Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing.
  • Радосављевић, Недељко (2007). Грађа за историју Сарајевске (Дабробосанске) митрополије 1836-1878 (Sources for the History of Sarajevo (Dabrobosanska) Archdiocese, 1836-1878). Београд: Историјски институт САНУ.
  • Радосављевић, Недељко (2009). Шест портрета православних митрополита 1766-1891 (Portraits of Six Orthodox Mitropolitans 1766-1891). Београд: Историјски институт САНУ.
  • Kiminas, Demetrius (2009). The Ecumenical Patriarchate: A History of Its Metropolitanates with Annotated Hierarch Catalogs. Wildside Press LLC.
  • Јањић, Драгана (2011). "Белешке о Дабарској епископији (Writings on the Dabar's Diocese)" (PDF). Баштина (31): 133–148.
  • Sotirović, Vladislav B. (2011). "The Serbian Patriarchate of Peć in the Ottoman Empire: The First Phase (1557–94)". Serbian Studies: Journal of the North American Society for Serbian Studies. 25 (2): 143–169.
  • "Митрополија Дабробосанска: Српска Православна Црква".
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