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Georgije Nikolajević

Georgije Nikolajević, secular name Đorđe Nikolajević (Serbian: Георгије Николајевић; 20 April 1807 – 8 February 1896) was a Serbian cleric, theologian, writer, professor and later in life Metropolitan of Dabar-Bosna. He was a member of the Serbian Learned Society and the Serbian Royal Academy of Sciences.[1]

Georgije Nikolajević was also a teacher, priest, professor of the Theological Seminary in Zadar, a member of the Consistory of the Dalmatian Diocese, rector and professor of the Sarajevo-Reljevo Theological Seminary, and a member of the Consistory of the Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosna. In his later years, he was elected Metropolitan of Dabar-Bosna. He was the initiator and member of various charitable cooperatives and funds. He was also engaged in literary work and edited the Serbian Dalmatian magazine. He had two children, a son and a daughter, but they both died young.

Childhood and schooling edit

Georgije Nikolajević was born in the village of Jaško in Srem on 20 April 1807 as Đorđe Nikolajević. He was born in a priestly family to father Simeon and mother Vasilije. He finished primary school in his native village. After primary school, from 1817 to 1819, he went to a German school in Sremska Mitrovica, and after that, he enrolled in the grammar school in Sremski Karlovci. After high school, he enrolled in the seminary of Sremski Karlovci.

Teacher edit

He graduated from the seminary in 1828. After graduating from the seminary, he worked for a year as a teacher in Irig. Then, in the fall of 1829, he went to Pest and enrolled in philosophy studies, but stayed there for a short time because he responded to Metropolitan Stefan's invitation to be a teacher in Dubrovnik.

He came to Dubrovnik on 22 December 1829, and immediately began preparations for the opening of a Serbian school, which opened on New Year's Eve in 1830. A month later, the Austro-Hungarian authorities closed the school under the pretext that Nikolajević, as a priest, could not hold the school. When it was proven that he was not a priest, he was allowed to hold classes at home, but that permit was soon revoked.

He tried to found a school in Dubrovnik for 3 years, but he did not succeed. He later married Katarina (Ekaterina), the daughter of the Kotor merchant Marko Berberović and Marija Zloković. They were married on 16 April 1833, in Kotor.

As Priest and Author edit

On 6 May 1833, the Dalmatian bishop Josif Rajačić ordained him to the rank of deacon, and on 11 May to the rank of priest. On 1 June, Bishop Josif Rajačić issued him a sinjelija for the parish priest of Dubrovnik, and he was confirmed by the government on 16 October. Nikolajević became the first Serbian priest in Dubrovnik in 1833.[2] As a priest, he opened a Serbian school near the church, which was called "catechism." This school operated until 1848 when a public Serbian school was opened. The Austro-Hungarian government recognized the school, and the municipality brought another priest, who was a chaplain and teacher. On 8 January 1836, the Bishop of Dalmatia, Pantelejmon Živković, awarded him a red belt for his zeal in the field of education and as an exemplary priest.

Apart from the priestly vocation of Georgije Nikolajević, he inspired and cultivated the Serb-Catholic Circle[3] and also wrote and edited for Serbian publications in Dubrovnik. He succeeded Božidar Petranović who hired him as managing editor[4] of the "Serbian-Dalmatian Magazine" (Srbsko-dalmatinski magazin).[5] Nikolajević collaborated with Teodor Pavlović's "Serbian People's List" (1838). From 1842 to 1862 he edited 15 volumes of the Serbian Dalmatian magazine. His most important work is a collection entitled Srpski spomenici ili stare risovule, diplome, povela i snošenja bosanski, serbski, hercegovački, dalmatinski i dubrovački kraleva, careva, banova, despota, knezeva, voivode, i vlastelina ("Serbian Monuments or old Chrysobulls, diplomas, charters, and relations of Bosnian, Serbian, Herzegovinian, Dalmatian, and Dubrovnik kings, emperors, bans, despots, and lords").[6] In 1840, he published the moral-educational text "A Young Man How to Educate Himself".[7]

He also published his works in the Grlica calendar, the Chronicle of Matica Srpska, and other magazines. Due to his contribution in the field of literature, on 11 July 1842, he was elected a corresponding member of the Serbian Learned Society in Belgrade. On April 28, 1846, the Dalmatian bishop Jerotej (Mutibarić) made him archpriest. On 7 July 1850, the Austro-Hungarian Emperor Franz Joseph I awarded him the Golden Cross of Merit. Tsar Nicholas I of Russia gave him a diamond ring worth 500 rubles for editing the Srbsko-dalmatinski magazin, the Serbian Dalmatian magazine. At about the time same time (1850) Nikolajević was corresponding with Petar II Petrović-Njegoš a year before the great Serbian poet died.[8] On New Year's Eve in 1853 a ring was presented to him by the Russian consul Jeremija Gagić of Dubrovnik.

Georgije Nikolajević had a large number of friends among the celebrities of his day. Among his friends, Vuk Karadžić,[9] Pavle Tvrtković,[10] Božidar Petranović, Serafim Perović, the writer Archimandrite Nićifor Dučić, the metropolitans: Stefan Stratimirović, Josif Rajačić, Petar II Petrović Njegoš, bishops Pantelejmon Živković, Jerotej Mutibarić stand out. He also knew many Serbian and Russian writers.

In 1852 he went to Belgrade and met with Serbia's prime minister Ilija Garašanin and had an audience with Prince Aleksandar Karađorđević at his invitation.[11] Nikolajević was offered to tutor Prince Petar Karađorđević but after he delayed the decision, the prince took another tutor.

After 28 years of priestly service in Dubrovnik, Father Georgije Nikolajević was transferred to Zadar in 1858, where he was appointed professor at the seminary there. As early as 29 April 1860, he was appointed a consistory archpriest, but he continued to serve as a professor at the theological institute. The following year, Nikolajević and several priests in Zadar established a fund for priestly widows and orphans. He invested in that fund even after leaving Zadar.

Nikolajević was also known in Russia. On the occasion of the thousandth anniversary of the existence of Russia, the Tsar Aleksandar endowed him in 1862 with the Order of St. Anne of the III class. In 1862, he was elected to the board of 12 people for school and church books, and to the board of "Matica Dalmatinska", where he was the vice president of the Literary Board. In 1864, he was elected an honorary member of Matica Srpska in Novi Sad. The following year, 1865, the Dalmatian bishop Stefan Knezević decorated him with the right to wear thighs.

His wife Katarina died on 10 March 1866. His wife's death affected his health, but he continued with his social work.

He was appointed an honorary member of the "Society of Charity and Mutual Aid of the Slavs", founded in Constantinople in 1870. By the imperial decision of December 27, 1873, he was appointed a member of the Provincial School Council of Dalmatia for six years, but his mandate was renewed once again. From 1 September 1880, he was an honorary member of "Sloga", the Serbian Singing Society of Dubrovnik at the time.

In 1879, he published the work "Protopresbyter and His Dignity", in 1880 "Protopresbyter's Attack Rejects the Protopresbyter" and a work entitled "Biography and Charities of Božo Bošković" about a wealthy Serbian merchant (1815–1879) whom he knew personally.[12] In addition to writing literary works, he translated various works, wrote poems, articles, and newspaper articles that he rarely signed.

After more than two decades spent in Zadar, Georgije Nikolajević moved to Sarajevo in December 1881. There he drafted the statute for the Consistory, which began its work on 15 November 1882. He also compiled a rulebook for the seminary, approved on 19 October 1882.

Monasticism edit

It is not known the exact year when Đorđe Nikolajević became a monk and received the monastic name of Georgije Nikolajević, but it is known that Metropolitan Sava (Kosanović) wanted to make him an archimandrite immediately upon his arrival in Sarajevo, which Georgije did not want. It is known that Emperor Franz Joseph appointed him archimandrite and vice-president of the Metropolitan Consistory on 17 October 1882 and that Metropolitan Sava Kosanović (1881–1885) of the Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosna issued a decree on 20 October 1882, stating that on 19 November 1882, he would be promoted to the rank of Archimandrite.

As an archimandrite, he started the newspaper Dabrobosanski Istočnik, which was intended for the clergy. He also had great merits for the opening of the seminary in Sarajevo, which was opened on 30 October 1882. In the newly opened seminary, he performed the duty of rector and taught the Church Slavonic language. He performed this duty until he was elected metropolitan. At the Epiphany in 1883, Metropolitan Sava Kosanović gave him the archimandrite miter and gave him the blessing that the sea should always carry him.[13]

Proclamation of Metropolitan edit

Under the pressure of the Viennese court, Metropolitan Sava (Kosanović) had to resign, which was adopted on 10 September 1885, and the court declared Georgije Nikolajević the administrator of the Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosna.[14] In 1885, the Patriarchate of Constantinople elected him Metropolitan of Dabar-Bosna. He was ordained metropolitan on 2 February 1886. For the first year as a metropolitan, he visited every Orthodox house in Sarajevo. He often visited the people, and he was in all church communities. During his time as Metropolitan Georgije Nikolajević, he did a lot for the church: he ordained 7 deacons, 2 hierodeacons, 75 priests, and 4 hieromonks. He also produced 2 archdeacons, 2 sindjels, 1 abbot, 15 archpriests; 2 archimandrites, and 11 priests were decorated with a church belt. He participated in liturgies dedicated to three metropolitans. In 1888, he served the funeral service for Metropolitan Leontije Radulović. While he was metropolitan, he consecrated 35 newly built and renovated churches, and he opened another 17. In 10 years, as long as he was metropolitan, 52 new churches were renovated and opened. He also made a new division of parishes. He provided state aid for priests from about 50 parishes, who could not provide for them. He also provided state aid for poor churches. Every year, 5–6 parish homes were built, and that was also financed by the state.

Many churches in Bosnia, as well as in Herzegovina, did not have church books, which is why the liturgy was not served in many churches. Georgije Nikolajević solved this problem by reprinting Russian church books in Sarajevo at the expense of the state.

Metropolitan Nikolajević helped all activities that had a Serbian character. When a committee for the erection of a monument to the Serbian writer Sima Milutinović Sarajlija was established in Sarajevo, the Metropolitan invited the parish clergy to join in collecting donations for the erection of the monument.

He also founded the "Fund for Support of Widows and Orphans of Priests, Serbian-Orthodox Church in the Diocese of Dabar-Bosna", and on 22 February 1890, he called on the clergy to support the establishment of the fund and to help it come to life. The Metropolitan himself contributed 800 forints to the fund and bequeathed another 3,000 forints in his will. He also ordered that the priest who comes to the new parish give half of the income to the family of the previously deceased priest. He also called on priests to make donations for the construction of new churches. With his great gift of £15,000. The Metropolitan built a Serbian school in Blažuj in 1891.[15]

On the eve of the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in 1892, Metropolitan Nikolajević visited Bosanska Gradiška, where the parish clergy and the people prepared a magnificent welcome for him. Touched by this welcome, he gave the citizens of Gradiška a foundation of 9,000 forints, which they used to erect a new parochial school building in the churchyard.[16][17]

During the service of Georgije Nikolajević in 1887, the Dabar-Bosna metropolitanate had: 163, 5 monasteries, 2,159 villages, 248 parishes, 52,944 houses, 426,124 people, and already in 1894 it had: 193 churches, 5 monasteries, 2,148 villages, 227 parishes, 58,217 houses, 427,502 people,

By 1893, he had donated charitable contributions of about 70,000 forints from his savings. In his will, he also determined a lot of money for charitable donations, so that he gave a total of 135,523 forints to charity.

Death and burial edit

Metropolitan Georgije Nikolajević served his last hierarchical service on 21 November 1895, at the Introduction in the Old Church in Sarajevo. After that, he got sick and mostly lay down, and he rarely got out of bed. On 2 February 1896, he received several corporations and deputations that congratulated him on the tenth anniversary of his appointment as metropolitan. Shortly afterward, he passed away – on Thursday, 8 February 1896, at 10:30 AM. He lived a total of 89 years. The Sarajevo Consistory received 78 telegrams on the occasion of the death of Metropolitan Georgije Nikolajević. Among other telegrams sent by: Serbian Royal Academy of Sciences, Matica Srpska, Minister Kalaj, Dubrovnik Municipality, Patriarchs of Constantinople, and Karlovac.

A special program was prepared for his funeral. For two days, his remains were exhibited in the great hall of the Metropolitanate of Dabar-Bosna. He was transferred to the Old Church on the 23 of February and Metropolitan Nikolaj (Mandić) of Tuzla served the Liturgy and the memorial service there. A priest Đorđe Bjelanović gave a speech at the memorial service. The body remained in the Old Church until the next day. The next day, the body was transferred to the New Church in Sarajevo where a funeral service was held. Two metropolitans took part in the service: Serafim Perović from Herzegovina and Nikolaj Mandić (uncle of Nikola Tesla) of Tuzla, a couple of archimandrites and abbots, and more than 70 priests. After the funeral, he was temporarily buried in the Koševo cemetery, until the church in Blažuj was built, where his remains were then transferred. As the coffin was being carried to the cemetery, 24 priests followed it, and in addition to them, government officials, children from Serbian schools with teachers, theologians, Jewish children with their teachers, envoys from 40 Serbian church communities, and numerous people took part in the procession.

The church in Blažuj was completed in 1897, then on 21 September, the church was consecrated by Metropolitan Nikolaj (Mandić) of Dabar-Bosna. A year after the consecration, the remains of Metropolitan Georgije (Nikolajević]] were transferred to the church. The ceremony of transferring the remains began on Saturday, 19 September 1898. The next day, 20 September at 12 o'clock, the coffin was lowered into the new tomb of the church in Blažuj. A member of the Académie Française, Henri Jean Baptiste Anatole Leroy-Beaulieu, was also present at the transfer of the remains to the Serbian Orthodox Church of Blažuj.

About the Austro-Hungarian Emperor Franz Joseph, the old man Georgije Nikolajević received the Order of the Iron Crown with a star and a ribbon for his merits.

References edit

  • Translated and adapted from Георгије Николајевић in the Serbian language Wikipedia
  1. ^ "Nikolajevic Georgije Djordje".
  2. ^ "Сербскиј народниј лист", Будим 1838. године
  3. ^ Nationalists Who Feared the Nation: Adriatic Multi-Nationalism in Habsburg Dalmatia, Trieste, and Venice. Stanford University Press. February 2012. ISBN 9780804778497.
  4. ^ Europa orientalis. Istituto di linguistica, Università di Salerno. 2004.
  5. ^ name="Banac-1983"
  6. ^ Hrvatska historiografija do 1918. Nakladni zavod Matice hrvatske. 1992. ISBN 9788640101226.
  7. ^ Tolerance and Intolerance on the Triplex Confinium: Approaching the "other" on the Borderlands Eastern Adriatic and Beyond, 1500-1800. CLEUP. 2007. ISBN 9788861293007.
  8. ^ The Poetics of Slavdom: The Mythopoeic Foundations of Yugoslavia. Peter Lang. 2007. ISBN 9780820481180.
  9. ^ Sabrana dela Vuka Karadžica: Prepiska, VII, 1843-1847. Prosveta. 1965. ISBN 9788607000388.
  10. ^ Hrvatska historiografija do 1918. Nakladni zavod Matice hrvatske. 1992. ISBN 9788640101226.
  11. ^ Zadarska revija. Narodni list. 1987.
  12. ^ Зборник Матице српске за ликовне уметности. Matica. 2009.
  13. ^ "Босанска вила", Сарајево 1896.
  14. ^ Études balkaniques: Revue trimestrielle. Ed. de l'Académie Bulgare des Sciences. 2010.
  15. ^ "Босанска вила", Сарајево 1891.
  16. ^ Balkanistica. Slavica Publishers. 2000.
  17. ^ Дринић, Дарио (2018). Душан Суботић, прота страдалник : (1884–1941) : прота, народни посланик и мученик. Градишка: ЈУ Завичајни музеј. pp. 147–148. ISBN 978-99976-629-9-6.

georgije, nikolajević, secular, name, Đorđe, nikolajević, serbian, Георгије, Николајевић, april, 1807, february, 1896, serbian, cleric, theologian, writer, professor, later, life, metropolitan, dabar, bosna, member, serbian, learned, society, serbian, royal, a. Georgije Nikolajevic secular name Đorđe Nikolajevic Serbian Georgiјe Nikolaјeviћ 20 April 1807 8 February 1896 was a Serbian cleric theologian writer professor and later in life Metropolitan of Dabar Bosna He was a member of the Serbian Learned Society and the Serbian Royal Academy of Sciences 1 Georgije Nikolajevic was also a teacher priest professor of the Theological Seminary in Zadar a member of the Consistory of the Dalmatian Diocese rector and professor of the Sarajevo Reljevo Theological Seminary and a member of the Consistory of the Metropolitanate of Dabar Bosna In his later years he was elected Metropolitan of Dabar Bosna He was the initiator and member of various charitable cooperatives and funds He was also engaged in literary work and edited the Serbian Dalmatian magazine He had two children a son and a daughter but they both died young Contents 1 Childhood and schooling 2 Teacher 3 As Priest and Author 4 Monasticism 5 Proclamation of Metropolitan 6 Death and burial 7 ReferencesChildhood and schooling editGeorgije Nikolajevic was born in the village of Jasko in Srem on 20 April 1807 as Đorđe Nikolajevic He was born in a priestly family to father Simeon and mother Vasilije He finished primary school in his native village After primary school from 1817 to 1819 he went to a German school in Sremska Mitrovica and after that he enrolled in the grammar school in Sremski Karlovci After high school he enrolled in the seminary of Sremski Karlovci Teacher editHe graduated from the seminary in 1828 After graduating from the seminary he worked for a year as a teacher in Irig Then in the fall of 1829 he went to Pest and enrolled in philosophy studies but stayed there for a short time because he responded to Metropolitan Stefan s invitation to be a teacher in Dubrovnik He came to Dubrovnik on 22 December 1829 and immediately began preparations for the opening of a Serbian school which opened on New Year s Eve in 1830 A month later the Austro Hungarian authorities closed the school under the pretext that Nikolajevic as a priest could not hold the school When it was proven that he was not a priest he was allowed to hold classes at home but that permit was soon revoked He tried to found a school in Dubrovnik for 3 years but he did not succeed He later married Katarina Ekaterina the daughter of the Kotor merchant Marko Berberovic and Marija Zlokovic They were married on 16 April 1833 in Kotor As Priest and Author editOn 6 May 1833 the Dalmatian bishop Josif Rajacic ordained him to the rank of deacon and on 11 May to the rank of priest On 1 June Bishop Josif Rajacic issued him a sinjelija for the parish priest of Dubrovnik and he was confirmed by the government on 16 October Nikolajevic became the first Serbian priest in Dubrovnik in 1833 2 As a priest he opened a Serbian school near the church which was called catechism This school operated until 1848 when a public Serbian school was opened The Austro Hungarian government recognized the school and the municipality brought another priest who was a chaplain and teacher On 8 January 1836 the Bishop of Dalmatia Pantelejmon Zivkovic awarded him a red belt for his zeal in the field of education and as an exemplary priest Apart from the priestly vocation of Georgije Nikolajevic he inspired and cultivated the Serb Catholic Circle 3 and also wrote and edited for Serbian publications in Dubrovnik He succeeded Bozidar Petranovic who hired him as managing editor 4 of the Serbian Dalmatian Magazine Srbsko dalmatinski magazin 5 Nikolajevic collaborated with Teodor Pavlovic s Serbian People s List 1838 From 1842 to 1862 he edited 15 volumes of the Serbian Dalmatian magazine His most important work is a collection entitled Srpski spomenici ili stare risovule diplome povela i snosenja bosanski serbski hercegovacki dalmatinski i dubrovacki kraleva careva banova despota knezeva voivode i vlastelina Serbian Monuments or old Chrysobulls diplomas charters and relations of Bosnian Serbian Herzegovinian Dalmatian and Dubrovnik kings emperors bans despots and lords 6 In 1840 he published the moral educational text A Young Man How to Educate Himself 7 He also published his works in the Grlica calendar the Chronicle of Matica Srpska and other magazines Due to his contribution in the field of literature on 11 July 1842 he was elected a corresponding member of the Serbian Learned Society in Belgrade On April 28 1846 the Dalmatian bishop Jerotej Mutibaric made him archpriest On 7 July 1850 the Austro Hungarian Emperor Franz Joseph I awarded him the Golden Cross of Merit Tsar Nicholas I of Russia gave him a diamond ring worth 500 rubles for editing the Srbsko dalmatinski magazin the Serbian Dalmatian magazine At about the time same time 1850 Nikolajevic was corresponding with Petar II Petrovic Njegos a year before the great Serbian poet died 8 On New Year s Eve in 1853 a ring was presented to him by the Russian consul Jeremija Gagic of Dubrovnik Georgije Nikolajevic had a large number of friends among the celebrities of his day Among his friends Vuk Karadzic 9 Pavle Tvrtkovic 10 Bozidar Petranovic Serafim Perovic the writer Archimandrite Nicifor Ducic the metropolitans Stefan Stratimirovic Josif Rajacic Petar II Petrovic Njegos bishops Pantelejmon Zivkovic Jerotej Mutibaric stand out He also knew many Serbian and Russian writers In 1852 he went to Belgrade and met with Serbia s prime minister Ilija Garasanin and had an audience with Prince Aleksandar Karađorđevic at his invitation 11 Nikolajevic was offered to tutor Prince Petar Karađorđevic but after he delayed the decision the prince took another tutor After 28 years of priestly service in Dubrovnik Father Georgije Nikolajevic was transferred to Zadar in 1858 where he was appointed professor at the seminary there As early as 29 April 1860 he was appointed a consistory archpriest but he continued to serve as a professor at the theological institute The following year Nikolajevic and several priests in Zadar established a fund for priestly widows and orphans He invested in that fund even after leaving Zadar Nikolajevic was also known in Russia On the occasion of the thousandth anniversary of the existence of Russia the Tsar Aleksandar endowed him in 1862 with the Order of St Anne of the III class In 1862 he was elected to the board of 12 people for school and church books and to the board of Matica Dalmatinska where he was the vice president of the Literary Board In 1864 he was elected an honorary member of Matica Srpska in Novi Sad The following year 1865 the Dalmatian bishop Stefan Knezevic decorated him with the right to wear thighs His wife Katarina died on 10 March 1866 His wife s death affected his health but he continued with his social work He was appointed an honorary member of the Society of Charity and Mutual Aid of the Slavs founded in Constantinople in 1870 By the imperial decision of December 27 1873 he was appointed a member of the Provincial School Council of Dalmatia for six years but his mandate was renewed once again From 1 September 1880 he was an honorary member of Sloga the Serbian Singing Society of Dubrovnik at the time In 1879 he published the work Protopresbyter and His Dignity in 1880 Protopresbyter s Attack Rejects the Protopresbyter and a work entitled Biography and Charities of Bozo Boskovic about a wealthy Serbian merchant 1815 1879 whom he knew personally 12 In addition to writing literary works he translated various works wrote poems articles and newspaper articles that he rarely signed After more than two decades spent in Zadar Georgije Nikolajevic moved to Sarajevo in December 1881 There he drafted the statute for the Consistory which began its work on 15 November 1882 He also compiled a rulebook for the seminary approved on 19 October 1882 Monasticism editIt is not known the exact year when Đorđe Nikolajevic became a monk and received the monastic name of Georgije Nikolajevic but it is known that Metropolitan Sava Kosanovic wanted to make him an archimandrite immediately upon his arrival in Sarajevo which Georgije did not want It is known that Emperor Franz Joseph appointed him archimandrite and vice president of the Metropolitan Consistory on 17 October 1882 and that Metropolitan Sava Kosanovic 1881 1885 of the Metropolitanate of Dabar Bosna issued a decree on 20 October 1882 stating that on 19 November 1882 he would be promoted to the rank of Archimandrite As an archimandrite he started the newspaper Dabrobosanski Istocnik which was intended for the clergy He also had great merits for the opening of the seminary in Sarajevo which was opened on 30 October 1882 In the newly opened seminary he performed the duty of rector and taught the Church Slavonic language He performed this duty until he was elected metropolitan At the Epiphany in 1883 Metropolitan Sava Kosanovic gave him the archimandrite miter and gave him the blessing that the sea should always carry him 13 Proclamation of Metropolitan editUnder the pressure of the Viennese court Metropolitan Sava Kosanovic had to resign which was adopted on 10 September 1885 and the court declared Georgije Nikolajevic the administrator of the Metropolitanate of Dabar Bosna 14 In 1885 the Patriarchate of Constantinople elected him Metropolitan of Dabar Bosna He was ordained metropolitan on 2 February 1886 For the first year as a metropolitan he visited every Orthodox house in Sarajevo He often visited the people and he was in all church communities During his time as Metropolitan Georgije Nikolajevic he did a lot for the church he ordained 7 deacons 2 hierodeacons 75 priests and 4 hieromonks He also produced 2 archdeacons 2 sindjels 1 abbot 15 archpriests 2 archimandrites and 11 priests were decorated with a church belt He participated in liturgies dedicated to three metropolitans In 1888 he served the funeral service for Metropolitan Leontije Radulovic While he was metropolitan he consecrated 35 newly built and renovated churches and he opened another 17 In 10 years as long as he was metropolitan 52 new churches were renovated and opened He also made a new division of parishes He provided state aid for priests from about 50 parishes who could not provide for them He also provided state aid for poor churches Every year 5 6 parish homes were built and that was also financed by the state Many churches in Bosnia as well as in Herzegovina did not have church books which is why the liturgy was not served in many churches Georgije Nikolajevic solved this problem by reprinting Russian church books in Sarajevo at the expense of the state Metropolitan Nikolajevic helped all activities that had a Serbian character When a committee for the erection of a monument to the Serbian writer Sima Milutinovic Sarajlija was established in Sarajevo the Metropolitan invited the parish clergy to join in collecting donations for the erection of the monument He also founded the Fund for Support of Widows and Orphans of Priests Serbian Orthodox Church in the Diocese of Dabar Bosna and on 22 February 1890 he called on the clergy to support the establishment of the fund and to help it come to life The Metropolitan himself contributed 800 forints to the fund and bequeathed another 3 000 forints in his will He also ordered that the priest who comes to the new parish give half of the income to the family of the previously deceased priest He also called on priests to make donations for the construction of new churches With his great gift of 15 000 The Metropolitan built a Serbian school in Blazuj in 1891 15 On the eve of the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in 1892 Metropolitan Nikolajevic visited Bosanska Gradiska where the parish clergy and the people prepared a magnificent welcome for him Touched by this welcome he gave the citizens of Gradiska a foundation of 9 000 forints which they used to erect a new parochial school building in the churchyard 16 17 During the service of Georgije Nikolajevic in 1887 the Dabar Bosna metropolitanate had 163 5 monasteries 2 159 villages 248 parishes 52 944 houses 426 124 people and already in 1894 it had 193 churches 5 monasteries 2 148 villages 227 parishes 58 217 houses 427 502 people By 1893 he had donated charitable contributions of about 70 000 forints from his savings In his will he also determined a lot of money for charitable donations so that he gave a total of 135 523 forints to charity Death and burial editMetropolitan Georgije Nikolajevic served his last hierarchical service on 21 November 1895 at the Introduction in the Old Church in Sarajevo After that he got sick and mostly lay down and he rarely got out of bed On 2 February 1896 he received several corporations and deputations that congratulated him on the tenth anniversary of his appointment as metropolitan Shortly afterward he passed away on Thursday 8 February 1896 at 10 30 AM He lived a total of 89 years The Sarajevo Consistory received 78 telegrams on the occasion of the death of Metropolitan Georgije Nikolajevic Among other telegrams sent by Serbian Royal Academy of Sciences Matica Srpska Minister Kalaj Dubrovnik Municipality Patriarchs of Constantinople and Karlovac A special program was prepared for his funeral For two days his remains were exhibited in the great hall of the Metropolitanate of Dabar Bosna He was transferred to the Old Church on the 23 of February and Metropolitan Nikolaj Mandic of Tuzla served the Liturgy and the memorial service there A priest Đorđe Bjelanovic gave a speech at the memorial service The body remained in the Old Church until the next day The next day the body was transferred to the New Church in Sarajevo where a funeral service was held Two metropolitans took part in the service Serafim Perovic from Herzegovina and Nikolaj Mandic uncle of Nikola Tesla of Tuzla a couple of archimandrites and abbots and more than 70 priests After the funeral he was temporarily buried in the Kosevo cemetery until the church in Blazuj was built where his remains were then transferred As the coffin was being carried to the cemetery 24 priests followed it and in addition to them government officials children from Serbian schools with teachers theologians Jewish children with their teachers envoys from 40 Serbian church communities and numerous people took part in the procession The church in Blazuj was completed in 1897 then on 21 September the church was consecrated by Metropolitan Nikolaj Mandic of Dabar Bosna A year after the consecration the remains of Metropolitan Georgije Nikolajevic were transferred to the church The ceremony of transferring the remains began on Saturday 19 September 1898 The next day 20 September at 12 o clock the coffin was lowered into the new tomb of the church in Blazuj A member of the Academie Francaise Henri Jean Baptiste Anatole Leroy Beaulieu was also present at the transfer of the remains to the Serbian Orthodox Church of Blazuj About the Austro Hungarian Emperor Franz Joseph the old man Georgije Nikolajevic received the Order of the Iron Crown with a star and a ribbon for his merits References editTranslated and adapted from Georgiјe Nikolaјeviћ in the Serbian language Wikipedia Nikolajevic Georgije Djordje Serbskiј narodniј list Budim 1838 godine Nationalists Who Feared the Nation Adriatic Multi Nationalism in Habsburg Dalmatia Trieste and Venice Stanford University Press February 2012 ISBN 9780804778497 Europa orientalis Istituto di linguistica Universita di Salerno 2004 name Banac 1983 Hrvatska historiografija do 1918 Nakladni zavod Matice hrvatske 1992 ISBN 9788640101226 Tolerance and Intolerance on the Triplex Confinium Approaching the other on the Borderlands Eastern Adriatic and Beyond 1500 1800 CLEUP 2007 ISBN 9788861293007 The Poetics of Slavdom The Mythopoeic Foundations of Yugoslavia Peter Lang 2007 ISBN 9780820481180 Sabrana dela Vuka Karadzica Prepiska VII 1843 1847 Prosveta 1965 ISBN 9788607000388 Hrvatska historiografija do 1918 Nakladni zavod Matice hrvatske 1992 ISBN 9788640101226 Zadarska revija Narodni list 1987 Zbornik Matice srpske za likovne umetnosti Matica 2009 Bosanska vila Saraјevo 1896 Etudes balkaniques Revue trimestrielle Ed de l Academie Bulgare des Sciences 2010 Bosanska vila Saraјevo 1891 Balkanistica Slavica Publishers 2000 Driniћ Dario 2018 Dushan Subotiћ prota stradalnik 1884 1941 prota narodni poslanik i muchenik Gradishka ЈU Zavichaјni muzeј pp 147 148 ISBN 978 99976 629 9 6 This article needs additional or more specific categories Please help out by adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles July 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georgije Nikolajevic amp oldid 1175422040, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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