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:“It came to pass that Samuel’s daughter, Cossara, was animated and inspired by a beatific soul. She approached her father and begged that she might go down with her maids and wash the head and feet of the chained captives. Her father granted her wish, so she descended and carried out her good work. Noticing Vladimir among the prisoners, she was struck by his handsome appearance, his humility, gentleness and modesty, and the fact that he was full of wisdom and knowledge of the {{Smallcaps|Lord}}. She stopped to talk to him, and to her his speech seemed sweeter than honey and the honeycomb.”
:“It came to pass that Samuel’s daughter, Cossara, was animated and inspired by a beatific soul. She approached her father and begged that she might go down with her maids and wash the head and feet of the chained captives. Her father granted her wish, so she descended and carried out her good work. Noticing Vladimir among the prisoners, she was struck by his handsome appearance, his humility, gentleness and modesty, and the fact that he was full of wisdom and knowledge of the {{Smallcaps|Lord}}. She stopped to talk to him, and to her his speech seemed sweeter than honey and the honeycomb.”


So Kosara fell in love with the handsome captive, and begged her father for his hand. Samuil not only allowed the marriage, but he also returned Duklja to his new son-in-law, and besides gave him the whole territory of Dyrrachium, to rule them as his vassal. Samuil wanted to bind his new subjects to himself in a more cordial way, not only with the sheer force. He likewise sent to Vladimir’s uncle Dragimir to come down from a mountain where he retreated with his people, and resume ruling Travunia.<ref name=Stephenson/><ref name=CorovicII/> Thereafter, as recorded in the Chronicle, “Vladimir lived with his wife Cossara in all sanctity and chastity, worshipping God and serving him night and day, and he ruled the people entrusted to him in a Godfearing and just manner.”<ref name=Stephenson/> During that time, [[Old Church Slavonic|Church Slavonic]] literacy and other ecclesiastic influences of the [[Bulgarian Archbishopric of Ohrid|Ohrid patriarchate]] spread through his realm. He apparently ruled in peace, evading involvement in the major conflict, which culminated with [[Battle of Kleidion|Samuil’s disastrous defeat]] by the Byzantines in 1014, shortly after which the Tsar died of heart attack.<ref name=KSU/><ref name=Ostrogorski295>Ostrogorsky (page 295)</ref>
So Kosara fell in love with the handsome captive, and begged her father for his hand. Samuil not only allowed the marriage, but he also returned Duklja to his new son-in-law, and besides gave him the whole territory of Dyrrachium, to rule them as his [[Vassal state|vassal]]. Samuil wanted to bind his new subjects to himself in a more cordial way, not only with the sheer force. He likewise sent to Vladimir’s uncle Dragimir to come down from a mountain where he retreated with his people, and resume ruling Travunia.<ref name=Stephenson/><ref name=CorovicII/> Thereafter, as recorded in the Chronicle, “Vladimir lived with his wife Cossara in all sanctity and chastity, worshipping God and serving him night and day, and he ruled the people entrusted to him in a Godfearing and just manner.”<ref name=Stephenson/> During that time, [[Old Church Slavonic|Church Slavonic]] literacy and other ecclesiastic influences of the [[Bulgarian Archbishopric of Ohrid|Ohrid patriarchate]] spread through his realm. He apparently ruled in peace, evading involvement in the major conflict, which culminated with [[Battle of Kleidion|Samuil’s disastrous defeat]] by the Byzantines in 1014, shortly after which the Tsar died of heart attack.<ref name=KSU/><ref name=Ostrogorski295>Ostrogorsky (page 295)</ref>


Tsar Samuil was succeeded by his son [[Gavril Radomir of Bulgaria|Gavril Radomir]], but his reign was short: his cousin Ivan Vladislav killed him in 1015, and ruled in his stead.<ref name=Ostrogorski295/> Vladislav held that he would make his position stronger if he exterminated the whole family of Samuil, for which reason he plotted the murder of Jovan Vladimir.<ref name=CorovicII/> The new Tsar thus sent messengers to him to demand his attendance in Prespa, but Vladimir did not want to go out his land; not even after many subsequent Vladislav’s promises and pledges that he meant no harm to him. Finally, Vladimir promised that he would go to Prespa if Vladislav sent him a wooden cross in the hands of religious men, who would confirm that the Tsar had made the pledge on that cross. Two bishops and a hermit indeed came to Vladimir, and gave him the oath and cross sent by Vladislav. Vladimir kissed the cross, collected a few followers, and set off to Prespa. As soon as he arrived there, he went into a church for a prayer. When he came out of the church, he was struck down by Vladislav’s soldiers and beheaded, all the time holding the cross in his hands; it was [[May 22]] [[1016]].<ref name=Stephenson/><ref name=Milovic55>Milović (page 55)</ref>
Tsar Samuil was succeeded by his son [[Gavril Radomir of Bulgaria|Gavril Radomir]], but his reign was short: his cousin Ivan Vladislav killed him in 1015, and ruled in his stead.<ref name=Ostrogorski295/> Vladislav held that he would make his position stronger if he exterminated the whole family of Samuil, for which reason he plotted the murder of Jovan Vladimir.<ref name=CorovicII/> The new Tsar thus sent messengers to him to demand his attendance in Prespa, but Vladimir did not want to go out his land; not even after many subsequent Vladislav’s promises and pledges that he meant no harm to him. Finally, Vladimir promised that he would go to Prespa if Vladislav sent him a wooden cross in the hands of religious men, who would confirm that the Tsar had made the pledge on that cross. Two bishops and a hermit indeed came to Vladimir, and gave him the oath and cross sent by Vladislav. Vladimir kissed the cross, collected a few followers, and set off to Prespa. As soon as he arrived there, he went into a church for a prayer. When he came out of the church, he was struck down by Vladislav’s soldiers and beheaded, all the time holding the cross in his hands; it was [[May 22]] [[1016]].<ref name=Stephenson/><ref name=Milovic55>Milović (page 55)</ref>


Ivan Vladislav was killed in less than two years after Jovan Vladimir’s assassination: he was stabbed in the back with spears while he besieged Dyrrachium, in February 1018.<ref name=Milovic56>Milović (page 56)</ref> The Chronicle, though, states that Vladimir appeared before him as an armed soldier, and struck him dead.<ref name=Stephenson/> In any way, the First Bulgarian Empire was terminated the same year, and fully incorporated into the Byzantine Empire.<ref name=Ostrogorski295/> Duklja is not mentioned for the next twenty or so years, presumably remaining a vassal principality of Byzantium. Shortly after his death, Jovan Vladimir was to be recognized as a martyr and saint, with a [[Veneration|cult]] that persists to this day, being honored on June 4, which is May 22 in the [[Julian calendar]]. While limited in scope, this canonizing of the deceased ruler was to set a precedent, later to be expanded in the appearance of the Holy [[House of Nemanjić|Nemanjić dynasty]] in [[Raška]].<ref name=KSU/>
Ivan Vladislav was killed in less than two years after Jovan Vladimir’s assassination: he was stabbed in the back with spears while he besieged Dyrrachium, in February 1018.<ref name=Milovic56>Milović (page 56)</ref> The Chronicle, though, states that Vladimir appeared before him as an armed soldier, and struck him dead.<ref name=Stephenson/> In any way, the First Bulgarian Empire was terminated the same year, and fully incorporated into the Byzantine Empire.<ref name=Ostrogorski295/> Duklja is not mentioned for the next twenty or so years, presumably remaining a vassal principality of Byzantium. Shortly after his death, Jovan Vladimir was to be recognized as a martyr and saint, with a [[Veneration|cult]] that persists to this day, being honored on June 4, which is May 22 in the [[Julian calendar]]. While limited in scope, this canonizing of the deceased ruler was to set a precedent, later to be expanded in the appearance of the Holy [[House of Nemanjić|Nemanjić dynasty]] in [[Raška (state)|Raška]].<ref name=KSU/>


== Relics and cult ==
== Relics and cult ==
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Jovan Vladimir was buried in [[Prespa]], in the same church in front of which he was martyred, and his [[Relic#Christian relics|relics]] very soon became famous as miraculously healing, attracting many people to his tomb. Two or three years later, Kosara transported the remains of her husband to Duklja, and interred him near his court in [[Krajina, Montenegro|Krajina]], in the church of the Monastery of the Holy Virgin Mary. By her will, Kosara was interred in the same church, at the feet of her husband.<ref name=Stephenson/><ref name=Milovic56/>
Jovan Vladimir was buried in [[Prespa]], in the same church in front of which he was martyred, and his [[Relic#Christian relics|relics]] very soon became famous as miraculously healing, attracting many people to his tomb. Two or three years later, Kosara transported the remains of her husband to Duklja, and interred him near his court in [[Krajina, Montenegro|Krajina]], in the church of the Monastery of the Holy Virgin Mary. By her will, Kosara was interred in the same church, at the feet of her husband.<ref name=Stephenson/><ref name=Milovic56/>


In ca.&nbsp;1215, Krajina was taken from [[History of Medieval Serbia#The reign of the Nemanjic|Serbia]] by [[Michael I Komnenos Doukas|Michael I]], the Despot of [[Despotate of Epirus|Epirus]]. During his brief reign over this territory, Michael I ordered that the Serbian saint’s relics be transported to [[Durrës|Dyrrachium]]. This city was taken in 1368 by an [[Albania]]n ruler [[Karlo Thopia]], who in 1381 rebuilt in Byzantine style a ruined monastery near [[Elbasan]], and had the relics transferred into the monastery’s church. He made an inscription above the church’s door, describing these deeds of his in Greek, Serbian and Latin. The rebuilt monastery was accordingly dedicated to St. Jovan Vladimir, ''Shën Jon Vlladimirit'' in [[Albanian language|Albanian]], and it soon developed into a great destination of [[pilgrimage]]. In the 18th century, it became the see of the [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Orthodox]] archdiocese of Dyrrachium. Gregory, the Archbishop of Dyrrachium (1768-1772), wrote in it the [[Elbasan Gospel Manuscript]], the oldest work of Albanian Orthodox literature.<ref name=Elsie>{{cite web
In ca.&nbsp;1215, Krajina was taken from [[History of Medieval Serbia#The reign of the Nemanjic|Serbia]] by [[Michael I Komnenos Doukas|Michael I]], the Despot of [[Despotate of Epirus|Epirus]]. During his brief reign over this territory, Michael I ordered that the Serbian saint’s relics be transported to [[Durrës|Dyrrachium]]. This city was taken in 1368 by an Albanian ruler [[Karlo Thopia]], who in 1381 rebuilt in Byzantine style a ruined monastery near [[Elbasan]], and had the relics transferred into the monastery’s church. He made an inscription above the church’s door, describing these deeds of his in Greek, Serbian and Latin. The rebuilt monastery was accordingly dedicated to St. Jovan Vladimir, ''Shën Jon Vlladimirit'' in [[Albanian language|Albanian]], and it soon developed into a great destination of [[pilgrimage]]. In the 18th century, it became the see of the [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Orthodox]] archdiocese of Dyrrachium. Gregory, the Archbishop of Dyrrachium (1768-1772), wrote in it the [[Elbasan Gospel Manuscript]], the oldest work of Albanian Orthodox literature.<ref name=Elsie>{{cite web
| last = Elsie
| last = Elsie
| first = Robert
| first = Robert
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| accessdate = 2007-12-14}}</ref>
| accessdate = 2007-12-14}}</ref>


The wooden cross which by tradition is the one that Jovan Vladimir held in his hands when he was murdered by Ivan Vladislav’s men, is a highly valued relic. For centuries, it has been under the care of the Andrović family of the [[Serb clans|Serb clan]] [[Mrkojevići]]. At the end of the 16th century it was plated with silver; with the plating, it is 45 cm high, 38 cm wide, and 2.5 cm thick. The cross, followed by a religious procession, is carried every year on the Feast of [[Pentecost]] from the village Velji Mikulići in the Municipality of [[Bar, Montenegro|Bar]] to the summit of Mount [[Rumija]]. Traditionally, many Catholics and Muslims of the region also participate in the procession. The event is preceded by and followed with various religious and folk festivities. A tradition has it that there was a church dedicated to the Holy Trinity at the Mount Rumija’s summit, built by Jovan Vladimir, and razed by Ottoman Turks.<ref name=Milovic57>Milović (pages 57-58)</ref><ref>{{cite web
The wooden cross which by tradition is the one that Jovan Vladimir held in his hands when he was murdered by Ivan Vladislav’s men, is a highly valued relic. For centuries, it has been under the care of the Andrović family of the [[Serb clans|Serb clan]] [[Mrkojevići]]. At the end of the 16th century it was plated with silver; with the plating, it is 45 cm high, 38 cm wide, and 2.5 cm thick. The cross, followed by a religious procession, is carried every year on the Feast of [[Pentecost]] from the village Velji Mikulići in the Municipality of [[Bar, Montenegro|Bar]] to the summit of Mount [[Rumija]]. Traditionally, many Catholics and Muslims of the region also participate in the procession. The event is preceded by and followed with various religious and folk festivities. A tradition has it that at the Mount Rumija’s summit a church dedicated to the Holy Trinity stood, built by Jovan Vladimir, and razed by [[Ottoman Empire|Ottomans]].<ref name=Milovic57>Milović (pages 57-58)</ref><ref>{{cite web
| last = Mila
| last = Mila
| first = V.
| first = V.
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| first = Paul
| first = Paul
| title = Partial Translation of Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja
| title = Partial Translation of Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja
| publisher = .Mac
| date = November 2006
| date = November 2006
| url = http://homepage.mac.com/paulstephenson/trans/lpd2.html
| url = http://homepage.mac.com/paulstephenson/trans/lpd2.html
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| title = Jovan Vladimir
| title = Jovan Vladimir
| url = http://www.serbianunity.net/culture/history/Serb_History/Rulers/Jovan_Vladimir.html
| url = http://www.serbianunity.net/culture/history/Serb_History/Rulers/Jovan_Vladimir.html
| accessdate = [[2007-12-03]]}}. Published by Serbian Unity Congress
| publisher = Serbian Unity Congress
| accessdate = [[2007-12-03]]}}
* [http://www.expeditio.org/srp/reference2.php?v=52 Expedito article on Saint Jovan Vladimir] Translated by [[user:Mladenrox69|Mladenrox69]]





Revision as of 18:11, 17 December 2007

An icon of Saint Jovan Vladimir

Jovan Vladimir (Serbian Cyrillic: Јован Владимир) (died May 22 1016) was the ruler of Duklja between the years ca. 990 and 1016, during the protracted war between Byzantium and the First Bulgarian Empire. He tried to protect Duklja from the expansionist Tsar Samuil of Bulgaria by making alliance with Byzantium; Samuil, however, conquered Duklja in 997 and took Jovan Vladimir prisoner. Samuil’s daughter Theodora Kosara fell in love with the captive, and begged her father for his hand. He obliged, returning Duklja to his new son-in-law, and giving him the territory of Dyrrachium besides. Vladimir was acknowledged as a godly, just, and compassionate ruler. He ruled in peace, evading involvement in the major conflict that culminated with Samuil’s defeat by the Byzantines in 1014, shortly after which the Tsar died. Jovan Vladimir finally fell victim in 1016 to a plot by Ivan Vladislav, the last ruler of the First Bulgarian empire. He is recognized as a saint by the Serbian Orthodox Church under the name Saint Jovan Vladimir (Свети Јован Владимир / Sveti Jovan Vladimir), being honored on June 4 (May 22 in the Julian calendar). Since the fourteenth century his relics have been preserved at the Monastery of St. Jovan Vladimir near Elbasan.

Life and martyrdom

Until about thirty years prior to Jovan Vladimir’s reign, Duklja was a part of the first unified Serbian state, called Serblia (Σερβλια) in Constantine VII’s book De Administrando Imperio.[1] The state disintegrated after death of its ruler Prince Časlav around the year 960,[1] which precipitated the rise of other Serbian principalities, most notably that of Duklja.[2] Around 990, Vladimir, still a youth, succeeded in the authority his father Petrislav, who is the oldest Duklja’s ruler for whose existence a material evidence has been found. Petrislav’s lead stamp was discovered by Gustave Schlumberger, a prominent historian of the Byzantine Empire, who published his drawing of it in 1884; the stamp has the inscription in Greek:[3]

+ΠΕΤΡ(Ο)Υ ΑΡΧΟΝΤΟΣ ΔΙΟΚΛ(Ε)ΙΑ(Σ) ΑΜΗΝ

+Of Petros,[4] the archon of Duklja. Amen.

The stamp of Vladimir’s father Petrislav, the oldest material evidence of a ruler of Duklja.[3]

Vladimir’s uncle, Petrislav’s younger brother Dragimir (died in 1018) ruled Travunia and Zahumlje; the two brothers divided in this way the lands ruled by their father Hvalimir. When Vladimir began to rule, Duklja comprised approximately the present-day Montenegro, north-eastern Herzegovina, and Koplik in Albania, and consisted of two provinces: Zenta in the south, and Podgoria in the north. His court was situated at the locality called today Kraljič, in the Krajina region of the Municipality of Bar, southern Montenegro.[3][5]

Prince Jovan Vladimir, the ruler of Duklja between the years ca. 990 and 1016.

Jovan (John) Vladimir appears during the protracted war between Byzantium and Tsar Samuil – the heir to the First Bulgarian Empire. In a situation reminiscent of earlier Serbian rulers, he was pressed by Bulgarian expansion, while being courted by the Byzantine Emperor.[2] Basil II sought the support of other Balkan rulers for his fight against the mighty Samuil, and with this intention he contacted Jovan Vladimir. The Serbian diplomatic mission whose arrival in Constantinople in the year 992 is mentioned in a charter of the Great Lavra Monastery written in 993, was most likely a mission sent by Jovan Vladimir, who was likewise interested in thwarting Samuil.[6]

The alliance with Byzantium, however, did not help the Prince. In 997 Samuil attacked Duklja, and after several weeks of fighting, Vladimir having seen that the Tsar’s huge force cannot be resisted, retreated with his army and many of his people onto the hill Kosorog (Obliquus).[7] According to the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja, Vladimir performed a miracle there: the hill was infested with venomous snakes, but when he offered up a prayer to the Lord, their bite became harmless.[5] Samuil left a part of his army to lay siege to the hill, and carried on conquering other places.[8] After a while, Vladimir surrendered to deliver his people from famine and the sword, and was sent to a prison in Prespa.[5][8]

While he languished in the prison, offering supplication day and night, an angel of the Lord appeared to him and foretold that he would shortly be freed, but that he would die a martyr’s death.[5] His fate in captivity is the subject of one of the most romantic tales of early Serbian literature – the story of Vladimir and Theodora Kosara, Samuil’s daughter.[2] An oral tradition of the story was recorded in the 12th century in the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja; this is the Chronicle’s description of how Vladimir and Kosara met:[5]

“It came to pass that Samuel’s daughter, Cossara, was animated and inspired by a beatific soul. She approached her father and begged that she might go down with her maids and wash the head and feet of the chained captives. Her father granted her wish, so she descended and carried out her good work. Noticing Vladimir among the prisoners, she was struck by his handsome appearance, his humility, gentleness and modesty, and the fact that he was full of wisdom and knowledge of the Lord. She stopped to talk to him, and to her his speech seemed sweeter than honey and the honeycomb.”

So Kosara fell in love with the handsome captive, and begged her father for his hand. Samuil not only allowed the marriage, but he also returned Duklja to his new son-in-law, and besides gave him the whole territory of Dyrrachium, to rule them as his vassal. Samuil wanted to bind his new subjects to himself in a more cordial way, not only with the sheer force. He likewise sent to Vladimir’s uncle Dragimir to come down from a mountain where he retreated with his people, and resume ruling Travunia.[5][8] Thereafter, as recorded in the Chronicle, “Vladimir lived with his wife Cossara in all sanctity and chastity, worshipping God and serving him night and day, and he ruled the people entrusted to him in a Godfearing and just manner.”[5] During that time, Church Slavonic literacy and other ecclesiastic influences of the Ohrid patriarchate spread through his realm. He apparently ruled in peace, evading involvement in the major conflict, which culminated with Samuil’s disastrous defeat by the Byzantines in 1014, shortly after which the Tsar died of heart attack.[2][9]

Tsar Samuil was succeeded by his son Gavril Radomir, but his reign was short: his cousin Ivan Vladislav killed him in 1015, and ruled in his stead.[9] Vladislav held that he would make his position stronger if he exterminated the whole family of Samuil, for which reason he plotted the murder of Jovan Vladimir.[8] The new Tsar thus sent messengers to him to demand his attendance in Prespa, but Vladimir did not want to go out his land; not even after many subsequent Vladislav’s promises and pledges that he meant no harm to him. Finally, Vladimir promised that he would go to Prespa if Vladislav sent him a wooden cross in the hands of religious men, who would confirm that the Tsar had made the pledge on that cross. Two bishops and a hermit indeed came to Vladimir, and gave him the oath and cross sent by Vladislav. Vladimir kissed the cross, collected a few followers, and set off to Prespa. As soon as he arrived there, he went into a church for a prayer. When he came out of the church, he was struck down by Vladislav’s soldiers and beheaded, all the time holding the cross in his hands; it was May 22 1016.[5][10]

Ivan Vladislav was killed in less than two years after Jovan Vladimir’s assassination: he was stabbed in the back with spears while he besieged Dyrrachium, in February 1018.[11] The Chronicle, though, states that Vladimir appeared before him as an armed soldier, and struck him dead.[5] In any way, the First Bulgarian Empire was terminated the same year, and fully incorporated into the Byzantine Empire.[9] Duklja is not mentioned for the next twenty or so years, presumably remaining a vassal principality of Byzantium. Shortly after his death, Jovan Vladimir was to be recognized as a martyr and saint, with a cult that persists to this day, being honored on June 4, which is May 22 in the Julian calendar. While limited in scope, this canonizing of the deceased ruler was to set a precedent, later to be expanded in the appearance of the Holy Nemanjić dynasty in Raška.[2]

Relics and cult

Saint Jovan Vladimir

Jovan Vladimir was buried in Prespa, in the same church in front of which he was martyred, and his relics very soon became famous as miraculously healing, attracting many people to his tomb. Two or three years later, Kosara transported the remains of her husband to Duklja, and interred him near his court in Krajina, in the church of the Monastery of the Holy Virgin Mary. By her will, Kosara was interred in the same church, at the feet of her husband.[5][11]

In ca. 1215, Krajina was taken from Serbia by Michael I, the Despot of Epirus. During his brief reign over this territory, Michael I ordered that the Serbian saint’s relics be transported to Dyrrachium. This city was taken in 1368 by an Albanian ruler Karlo Thopia, who in 1381 rebuilt in Byzantine style a ruined monastery near Elbasan, and had the relics transferred into the monastery’s church. He made an inscription above the church’s door, describing these deeds of his in Greek, Serbian and Latin. The rebuilt monastery was accordingly dedicated to St. Jovan Vladimir, Shën Jon Vlladimirit in Albanian, and it soon developed into a great destination of pilgrimage. In the 18th century, it became the see of the Orthodox archdiocese of Dyrrachium. Gregory, the Archbishop of Dyrrachium (1768-1772), wrote in it the Elbasan Gospel Manuscript, the oldest work of Albanian Orthodox literature.[12]

A tradition in Macedonia has it that the Church of St. Athanasius near the village Pesočani in the Municipality of Debarca, was founded by Jovan Vladimir. The church is now half-ruined, but people from the region gather there every year on June 3, the eve of the Feast of St. Jovan Vladimir. They light candles on the remains of the church’s walls, and pray to the saint. It is believed that a stream flowing nearby swells and fills with fish that day after the sunset, and many of the devotees having prayed go to the stream and catch fish.[13]

The wooden cross which by tradition is the one that Jovan Vladimir held in his hands when he was murdered by Ivan Vladislav’s men, is a highly valued relic. For centuries, it has been under the care of the Andrović family of the Serb clan Mrkojevići. At the end of the 16th century it was plated with silver; with the plating, it is 45 cm high, 38 cm wide, and 2.5 cm thick. The cross, followed by a religious procession, is carried every year on the Feast of Pentecost from the village Velji Mikulići in the Municipality of Bar to the summit of Mount Rumija. Traditionally, many Catholics and Muslims of the region also participate in the procession. The event is preceded by and followed with various religious and folk festivities. A tradition has it that at the Mount Rumija’s summit a church dedicated to the Holy Trinity stood, built by Jovan Vladimir, and razed by Ottomans.[14][15] A church building stands there again since 2005, erected and consecrated by the Serbian Orthodox Church.[16][17]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Ćorović (chapter “Срби између Византије, Хрватске и Бугарске”)
  2. ^ a b c d e "Jovan Vladimir". Serbian medieval history. Serbian Unity Congress. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
  3. ^ a b c Milović (page 53)
  4. ^ Petros (Peter) is Greek for Petrislav, which is in fact one of the Slavicized forms of the name Petros.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Stephenson, Paul (November 2006). "Partial Translation of Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja". .Mac. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
  6. ^ Ostrogorsky (pages 292-293)
  7. ^ Milović (page 54)
  8. ^ a b c d Ćorović (chapter “Држава маћедонских Словена”)
  9. ^ a b c Ostrogorsky (page 295)
  10. ^ Milović (page 55)
  11. ^ a b Milović (page 56)
  12. ^ Elsie, Robert. "The Elbasan Gospel Manuscript" (PDF). Robert Elsie. Retrieved 2007-12-09. (Pages 6-10)
  13. ^ Velimirović, Bishop Nikolaj (January 2000). "Читанка о Светоме краљу Јовану Владимиру" (in Serbian). Project Rastko. Retrieved 2007-12-14.
  14. ^ Milović (pages 57-58)
  15. ^ Mila, V. (26 June 2003). "Tekst o Svetom Jovanu Vladimiru" (in Serbian). SrpskaDijaspora.info: Internet Novine Serbske. Retrieved 2007-11-19. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) (Includes a report of the procession to the summit, and accompanying festivities.)
  16. ^ On the same day when the church was consecrated, July 31 2005, a Frenchman was baptized in it embracing Orthodox Christianity. He chose that his christened name be Jean Vladimir.
  17. ^ "Митрополит Амфилохије освештао Цркву Свете Тројице на Румији" (in Serbian). The Information Service of the Serbian Orthodox Church. August 1 2005. Retrieved 2007-12-16. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

References