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Encyclopedia > Church of Serbia

Early history

The Serbs migrated to the Balkans during the reign of Byzantine emperor Heraclius (610-641). Unknown to them at the time, the Serbs had settled on both sides of the line of Roman emperor Theodosius I. The region they had settled had for centuries been alternatively under the religious jurisdictions of Rome and Constantinople. The Serbs were converted in several waves of, the last major one taking place between 867 and 874 AD.


Finally, most of the Serbs fell under the authority of the Church of Constantinople and had by 1219 acquired a Church of autocephalous status.


Following the arrival of the Ottomans and mass migrations of Serbs to lands under the Catholic Hapsburgs of Austria, a portion of the Eastern Orthodox Serbs were uniatized under pressure, that is converted to Roman Catholicism while maintaining the Eastern Rite. The descendants of some these Serbs, living mostly in Žumberak are under a separate jurisdiction, the Eparchy of Krizevci.


In the 20th century, the Church was favored by the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, but the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia nationalized a large amount of its belongings.


Recent history

The Yugoslav wars gravely impacted several branches of the Serb Orthodox Church.


Many churches in Croatia were damaged or destroyed since the beginning of the war in that country in 1991. The bishops and priests and most faithful of the eparchies of Zagreb, of Karlovac, of Slavonia and of Dalmatia became refugees. The latter three were almost completely abandoned after the exodus of the Serbs from Croatia in 1995. The eparchy of Dalmatia also had its see temporarily moved to Knin after Republic of Serbian Krajina was established. The eparchy of Slavonia had its see moved from Pakrac to Daruvar.


The eparchies of Bihać-Petrovac and of Dabar-Bosnia were also dislocated due to the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The latter eparchy's see was temporarily moved to Sokolac. Many monasteries and churches in the Zahumlje eparchy were destroyed. Many faithful from these eparchies also became refugees.


By 1998, the situation stabilized in both countries. Most of the property of the Serb Orthodox Church was again put in normal use, the bishops and priests returned, and that which was destroyed, damaged or vandalized was restored. The return of the SOC faithful also started, but they are not nearly close to their pre-war numbers, as of 2004.


Structure

Serbian Orthodox Church is divided into 40 dioceses each headed by its own bishop:


In the Balkans:

Abroad:

Dioceses are further divided into Episcopal Deaneries, each consisting of several Church Congregations and Parishes. Church Congregations consist of one or more Parishes. Parish is the smallest Church unit - a communion of Orthodox faithful congregating at the Holy Eucharist with the parish priest at their head.


External links

  • Official website (http://www.serbian-church.net/) (in Serbian and English)
  • Office of the External Affairs of the SOC in the US and Canada (http://www.oea.serbian-church.net/)
  • List of Serb Orthodox shrines abroad (http://www.serbianorthodoxchurch.com/pages/listing/country/index.html)
  • www.svetosavlje.org "Saint Savahood" (in Serbian)
    • List of eparchies (http://www.svetosavlje.org/biblioteka/Istorija/SPC05.htm)
    • List of saints (http://www.svetosavlje.org/biblioteka/Istorija/SPC06.htm)
    • List of church leaders (http://www.svetosavlje.org/biblioteka/Istorija/SPC04.htm)
  • Dioceses:
    • Diocese of Raška and Prizren (Kosovo) (http://www.kosovo.com/default1.html)
    • Middle European Diocese for Germany, Austria and Switzerland (in German and Serbian) (http://www.serbische-diozese.org/)
    • Metropolitanate of Montenegro and Littoral (http://www.mitropolija.cg.yu/aktuelno/index_eng.html)



  Results from FactBites:
 
Serbian Orthodox Church - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2515 words)
Sava persuaded the patriarch of the Eastern Orthodox Church to establish the Church in Serbia as an autocephalous body, with Sava himself as its archbishop, consecrated in 1219.
This church was known as the Metropolitanate of Belgrade, thus in the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th century, two separate Serbian Orthodox churches existed - the Patriarchate of Karlovci in the Habsburg Monarchy and the Metropolitanate of Belgrade in the Kingdom of Serbia.
Eparchies of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Serbia
Serbia (1363 words)
Serbia is bounded by Croatia (northwest), Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro (west), Albania (southwest), Macedonia (south), Bulgaria and Romania (east), and Hungary (north).
Serbia is mostly mountainous, being ringed by the Dinaric Alps on the west, the Sar Mountains and the North Albanian Alps (Prokletije) on the south, and the Balkan and Carpathian mountains on the east.
In central Serbia are the hills of the Sumadija ("forested area"), and in the north are the low-lying plains of Vojvodina, where the Danube River is joined by two of its major tributaries, the Sava and Tisa rivers.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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