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Eparchy of Marča

The Eparchy of Marča (Serbian Cyrillic: Марчанска епархија) was an Eastern Christian ecclesiastical entity taking two forms in the 17th century: an Eastern Orthodox eparchy and an Eastern Catholic vicariate. The term was derived from the name of the monastery at Marča (today Stara Marča) near Ivanić-Grad, Habsburg monarchy (present-day Zagreb County, Republic of Croatia).

Eparchy of Marča

Марчанска епархија[1]
The Marcha Monastery (1775)
Location
CountryHabsburg monarchy
Coordinates45°45′48″N 16°29′33″E / 45.76333°N 16.49250°E / 45.76333; 16.49250
Statistics
Members60,000–72,000
Information
RiteByzantine
Established21 November 1611
Dissolved1753
Turkish conquests, and remains of Hungarian Kingdom by 1572, including upper Slavonia and Croatia

Although Serbian Orthodox bishop Simeon Vratanja traveled to Rome in 1611 and formally accepted jurisdiction of the Pope over this bishopric, until 1670 Serb bishops continued to recognize the jurisdiction of the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć and struggled against conversion attempts by Roman Catholic bishops from Zagreb. This semi-union existed until the 1670 appointment of Pavle Zorčić as bishop. All Serb Orthodox clergy who objected to the union were arrested and sentenced to life in prison in Malta, where they died. The bishopric eventually became the Eastern Catholic Eparchy of Križevci.[2]

Name edit

The name Marča was derived from the name of the nearby hill, Marča. Other names used for this bishopric include Svidnik (Svidnička eparhija), Vretanija (Vretanijska eparhija), and the "Uskok" bishopric.[3]

History edit

Background edit

After the Ottoman capture of Smederevo fortress in 1459 and fall of Bosnia 1463 different populations of Orthodox Christians moved into Syrmia and by 1483 perhaps 200,000 Orthodox Christians moved into central Slavonia and Syrmia[4][5] At the beginning of the 16th century settlements of Orthodox Christians were also established in western Croatia.[6] In the first half of the 16th century Serbs settled Ottoman part of Slavonia while in the second part of the 16th century they moved to Austrian part of Slavonia.[7] In 1550 they established the Lepavina Monastery.[8] Orthodox Christians which settled Military Frontier from area of the Ottoman Empire were most often called Vlachs, while most documents state that the Vlachs coming "from Bosnia" or "from Turkey" ie from the Bosnian pashaluk, also they were of different ethnic origin and from 1611 under the Greek Catholic bishops of Marča.[9] At the end of the 16th century a group of Serb Orthodox priests built a monastery dedicated to Saint Archangel Gabriel (Serbian: Манастир Светог Арханђела Гаврила) on the foundations (or near them)[10] of the deserted and destroyed Catholic Monastery of All Saints.[11]

Eparchy of Vretanija edit

Some scholars promoted the view that Marča, as a diocese of the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć, was established in the late 16th century (1578 or 1597).[12] This theory was used as evidence[clarification needed] of the long-time presence of the Serb population on the northern bank of river Sava.[12]

In 1609 Serb Orthodox priests established Marča Monastery in Marča near Ivanić-Grad. In the same year the Marča Monastery became a seat of the Eparchy of Vretanija. This bishopric was the westernmost eparchy of the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć. Its name was derived from Vretanija (Serbian: Вретанијски остров) which was a part of the title of the Serbian Patriarch.[13] Its first bishop was Simeon Vratanja, appointed in 1609 by the Serbian Orthodox patriarch Jovan to the position of bishop of all Orthodox Serbs who settled to Croatia.[14] This appointment marked establishment of the Eparchy of Vretanja in 1609 according to historian Aleksa Ivić.[15]

Establishment as Eastern Catholic church edit

Being under strong pressure from Croatian clergy and state officials to recognize the jurisdiction of the Pope, and to convert the population of his bishopric to Eastern Catholicism, Simeon Vratanja visited Pope Paul V in 1611 and recognized his jurisdiction and maybe the Union of Florence as well.[16] The strongest influence to his decision had Martin Dobrović, who convinced Simeon to recognize papal jurisdiction and to accept the Eastern Catholicism.[17][18]

In November 1611, the Pope appointed Simeon as bishop of Serbs of Slavonia, Croatia and Hungary. He also granted all estates that once belonged to the Catholic Monastery of All Saints to the Marča Monastery.[19] Pope Paul V granted to Bishop Simeon, Greek Catholic episcopal authority in Croatia, Hungary, Slavonia and Žumberak, which was also confirmed by Archduke Ferdinand and Bishop of Zagreb Petar Petretić. From "Vlach" Bishop Simeon as he was called by authorities from Vienna it was expected to implement unification of Orthodox Vlachs with the Catholic Church in area of Croatian Military Frontier and Slavonian Military Frontier.[20] On 21 November 1611 Marča was established as an eparchy (bishopric) of the Eastern Catholic Church,[21] having around 60,000 believers.[1]

Period of semi-union (1611–1670) edit

Simeon continued to use Slavic language, Julian calendar and maintained connection with Serbian Patriarchate of Peć.[22]

In 1642 Benedikt Vinković wrote a letter to emperor Ferdinand III to write a report about "Vlachs" (Orthodox Serbs).[23] Vinković's activities were aimed against Serb bishop of Marča, Maksim Predojević, whom he reported to the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith when Predojević refused to support the conversion of the population of his bishopric to Catholicism.[24] Vinković had intention to depose Predojević and appoint Rafael Levaković instead.[25]

In 1648 the king appointed Sava Stanislavić as bishop of the Bishopric of Marča, as wished by the Slavonian Serbs, although Petar Petretić, bishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Zagreb proposed another candidate.[26]

This kind of semi-union attitude of Serb bishops of the Bishopric of Marča remained until 1670 and appointment of Pavle Zorčić on the position of bishop.[27] All priests of the Bishopric of Marča who objected to the union were arrested and imprisoned in Malta where they all died.[28]

Period of union (1670–1753) edit

Until 19 November 1735, the Marča monastery was the seat of the Greek Catholic bishops when the Orthodox Grenzers expelled the last three Greek Catholic monks. Following the verdict of Vienna authorities and decision that monastery belongs to the Greek Catholics, the Orthodox Grenzers burned Marča monastery on 28 June 1739.[29] In 1754 around 17,000 Serb Uskoks rebelled in support of the Marča monastery, the seat of Uskok bishopric. The monastery was abandoned, as ordered by Empress Maria Theresa, and its treasury was looted.[30]

Bishops edit

The bishops of the Eparchy of Marča were:

  • Simeon Vratanja (1607–1629)
  • Maxim Predojević (1630–1642)
  • Gabrijel Predojević (1642–1644)
  • Vasilije Predojević (1644–1648)
  • Sava Stanislavić (1648–1661)
  • Gabrijel Mijakić (1663–1670)
  • Pavao Zorčić (1671–1685)
  • Marko Zorčić (1685–1688)
  • Isaija Popović (1689–1699)
  • Gabrijel Turčinović (1700–1707)
  • Grgur Jugović (1707–1709)
  • Rafael Marković (1710–1726)
  • Georg Vučinić (1727–1733)
  • Silvester Ivanović (1734–1735)
  • Teofil Pašić (1738–1746)
  • Gabrijel Palković (1751–1758)
  • Vasilije Božičković (1759–1777)

References edit

  1. ^ a b Foundation 2001, p. 97.
  2. ^ Letopis matice srpske. U Srpskoj narodnoj zadružnoj štampariji. 1926. p. 319. Тако је на рушевинама српске православие епископије у Марчи створена крижевачка унијатска бискупија, која и данас постоји.
  3. ^ Љушић, Радош (2008). Српска државност 19. века. Српска књижевна задруга. p. 449. ISBN 9788637910282. Насељавањем и подизањем цркава и манастира створени су предуслови за црквену организацију Срба, која је настала у манастиру Марчи - марчанска, ускочка или вретанщска епископија, почетком 17. века.
  4. ^ (Frucht 2005, p. 535): "Population movements began in earnest after the Battle of Smederevo in 1459, and by 1483, up to two hundred thousand Orthodox Christians had moved into central Slavonia and Srijem (eastern Croatia)."
  5. ^ Miller, Nicholas J.; Miller, Nick (1997). Between Nation and State: Serbian Politics in Croatia Before the First World War. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-0-8229-3989-4.
  6. ^ (Frucht 2005, p. 535): "In the early sixteenth century Orthodox populations had also been established in western Croatia."
  7. ^ sinod, Srpska pravoslavna crkva. Sveti arhijerejski (1972). Službeni list Srpske pravoslavne crkve. p. 55. Тридесетих година XVI в. многи Срби из Босне су се населили у Крањској, Штајерској и Жумберку. ... Сеобе Срба у Славонију и Хрватску трајале су кроз цео XVI, XVII и XVIII в. У првој половини XVI в. су се најпре засељавали у турском делу Славоније, а у другој половини истог века су се пресељавали из турског у аустријски део Славони- је.
  8. ^ sinod, Srpska pravoslavna crkva. Sveti arhijerejski (2007). Glasnik. Vol. 89. p. 290. МАНАСТИР ЛЕПАВИНА, посвећен Ваведењу Пресвете Богородице, подигнут 1550.
  9. ^ Zlatko Kudelić; (2010) Čaplovičeva povijest Marčanske biskupije p. 138; [1]
  10. ^ Kudelić 2002, p. 145.
  11. ^ Kolarić 2002, p. 77.
  12. ^ a b Kudelić 2002, p. 147.
  13. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 137.
  14. ^ Damjanović, Roksandić & Maković 2005, p. 12.
  15. ^ Kudelić 2002, p. 148.
  16. ^ Milutin Miltojević, Serbian Historiography of Union of Serbs in the 17th century, Niš University, p. 225
  17. ^ Ivić 1909, p. 45.
  18. ^ arhiv 1916, p. 89.
  19. ^ . Metropolitanate of Zagreb and Ljubljana. Archived from the original on 19 May 2015. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  20. ^ Zlatko Kudelić; (2010) Čaplovičeva povijest Marčanske biskupije p. 136-138; [2]
  21. ^ Z. Kudelić, Isusovačko izvješće o krajiškim nemirima 1658. i 1666. godine, Hrvatski institut za povijest, 2007, page 121
  22. ^ Milutin Miltojević, Serbian Historiography of Union of Serbs in the 17th century, Niš University, p. 225
  23. ^ tisak 1917, p. 37.
  24. ^ Kašić 1967, p. 49.
  25. ^ Kašić 1988, p. 144.
  26. ^ Spomenica 1996, p. 74.
  27. ^ Milutin Miltojević, Serbian Historiography of Union of Serbs in the 17th century, Niš University, p. 225
  28. ^ Milutin Miltojević, Serbian Historiography of Union of Serbs in the 17th century, Niš University, p. 225
  29. ^ Zlatko Kudelić; (2010) Čaplovičeva povijest Marčanske biskupije p. 139; [3]
  30. ^ Medaković 1971, p. 236.

Sources edit

  • Dept, Central European University. History; Foundation, European Science (2001). Frontiers of faith: religious exchange and the constitution of religious identities 1400–1750. Central European University.
  • Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915.
  • Kolarić, Juraj (2002). Povijest kršćanstva u Hrvata: Katolička crkva. Hrvatski studiji Sveučilišta u Zagrebu. ISBN 978-953-6682-45-4.
  • tisak (1917). Djela Jugoslavenske akademije znanosti i umjetnosti. Tisak Dioničke tiskare.
  • Kašić, Dušan Lj (1967). Srbi i pravoslavlje u Slavoniji i sjevernoj Hrvatskoj. Savez udruženja pravosl. sveštenstva SR Hrvatske.
  • Damjanović, Dragan; Roksandić, Drago; Maković, Zvonko (2005). Saborna crkva Vavedenja Presvete Bogorodice u Plaškom: povijest episkopalnog kompleksa. Srpsko Kulturno Društvo Prosvjeta. ISBN 978-953-6627-77-6.
  • Medaković, Dejan (1971). Putevi srpskog baroka. Nolit.
  • Spomenica (1996). Spomeniža o srpskom pravoslavnom vladiǎnstvu pakračkom. Muzej Srpske Pravoslavne Črkve.
  • Kašić, Dušan Lj (1988). Srpska naselja i crkve u sjevernoj Hrvatskoj i Slavoniji. Savez udruženja pravoslavnih sveštenika SR Hrvatske.
  • Ivić, Aleksa (1909). Seoba srba u hrvatsku i slavoniju: prilog ispitivanju srpske prošlodti tokom 16. i 17. veka. Sremski karlovci.
  • arhiv, Croatia. Drzavni (1916). Vjesnik.
  • Kudelić, Zlatko (2002). Prvi marčanski grkokatolički biskup Simeon (1611–1630). Hrvatski institut za povijest, Zagreb, Republika Hrvatska.
  • Frucht, Richard C. (2005). Eastern Europe: An Introduction to the People, Lands, and Culture. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-800-6.

Further reading edit

  • Вуковић, Сава (1996). Српски јерарси од деветог до двадесетог века (Serbian Hierarchs from the 9th to the 20th Century). Евро, Унирекс, Каленић.
  • Ivić, Pavle, ed. (1995). The History of Serbian Culture. Edgware: Porthill Publishers. ISBN 9781870732314.
  • Kudelić, Zlatko (2007). Marčanska biskupija: Habsburgovci, pravoslavlje i crkvena unija u Hrvatsko-slavonskoj vojnoj krajini (1611. – 1755). Hrvatski Inst. za Povijest. ISBN 978-953-6324-62-0.
  • Kudelić, Zlatko (2007). Isusovačko izvješće o krajiškim nemirima 1658. i 1666. godine i o marčanskom biskupu Gabrijelu Mijakiću (1663.-1670.). Hrvatski institut za povijest.
  • Kudelić, Zlatko (2004). "Katoličko-pravoslavni prijepori o crkvenoj uniji i grkokatoličkoj Marčanskoj biskupiji tijekom 1737. i 1738. godine". Povijesni Prilozi. 27: 101–131.

eparchy, marča, serbian, cyrillic, Марчанска, епархија, eastern, christian, ecclesiastical, entity, taking, forms, 17th, century, eastern, orthodox, eparchy, eastern, catholic, vicariate, term, derived, from, name, monastery, marča, today, stara, marča, near, . The Eparchy of Marca Serbian Cyrillic Marchanska eparhiјa was an Eastern Christian ecclesiastical entity taking two forms in the 17th century an Eastern Orthodox eparchy and an Eastern Catholic vicariate The term was derived from the name of the monastery at Marca today Stara Marca near Ivanic Grad Habsburg monarchy present day Zagreb County Republic of Croatia Eparchy of MarcaMarchanska eparhiјa 1 The Marcha Monastery 1775 LocationCountryHabsburg monarchyCoordinates45 45 48 N 16 29 33 E 45 76333 N 16 49250 E 45 76333 16 49250StatisticsMembers60 000 72 000InformationRiteByzantineEstablished21 November 1611Dissolved1753Turkish conquests and remains of Hungarian Kingdom by 1572 including upper Slavonia and CroatiaAlthough Serbian Orthodox bishop Simeon Vratanja traveled to Rome in 1611 and formally accepted jurisdiction of the Pope over this bishopric until 1670 Serb bishops continued to recognize the jurisdiction of the Serbian Patriarchate of Pec and struggled against conversion attempts by Roman Catholic bishops from Zagreb This semi union existed until the 1670 appointment of Pavle Zorcic as bishop All Serb Orthodox clergy who objected to the union were arrested and sentenced to life in prison in Malta where they died The bishopric eventually became the Eastern Catholic Eparchy of Krizevci 2 Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Background 2 1 1 Eparchy of Vretanija 2 2 Establishment as Eastern Catholic church 2 3 Period of semi union 1611 1670 2 4 Period of union 1670 1753 3 Bishops 4 References 5 Sources 6 Further readingName editThe name Marca was derived from the name of the nearby hill Marca Other names used for this bishopric include Svidnik Svidnicka eparhija Vretanija Vretanijska eparhija and the Uskok bishopric 3 History editBackground edit After the Ottoman capture of Smederevo fortress in 1459 and fall of Bosnia 1463 different populations of Orthodox Christians moved into Syrmia and by 1483 perhaps 200 000 Orthodox Christians moved into central Slavonia and Syrmia 4 5 At the beginning of the 16th century settlements of Orthodox Christians were also established in western Croatia 6 In the first half of the 16th century Serbs settled Ottoman part of Slavonia while in the second part of the 16th century they moved to Austrian part of Slavonia 7 In 1550 they established the Lepavina Monastery 8 Orthodox Christians which settled Military Frontier from area of the Ottoman Empire were most often called Vlachs while most documents state that the Vlachs coming from Bosnia or from Turkey ie from the Bosnian pashaluk also they were of different ethnic origin and from 1611 under the Greek Catholic bishops of Marca 9 At the end of the 16th century a group of Serb Orthodox priests built a monastery dedicated to Saint Archangel Gabriel Serbian Manastir Svetog Arhanђela Gavrila on the foundations or near them 10 of the deserted and destroyed Catholic Monastery of All Saints 11 Eparchy of Vretanija edit Some scholars promoted the view that Marca as a diocese of the Serbian Patriarchate of Pec was established in the late 16th century 1578 or 1597 12 This theory was used as evidence clarification needed of the long time presence of the Serb population on the northern bank of river Sava 12 In 1609 Serb Orthodox priests established Marca Monastery in Marca near Ivanic Grad In the same year the Marca Monastery became a seat of the Eparchy of Vretanija This bishopric was the westernmost eparchy of the Serbian Patriarchate of Pec Its name was derived from Vretanija Serbian Vretaniјski ostrov which was a part of the title of the Serbian Patriarch 13 Its first bishop was Simeon Vratanja appointed in 1609 by the Serbian Orthodox patriarch Jovan to the position of bishop of all Orthodox Serbs who settled to Croatia 14 This appointment marked establishment of the Eparchy of Vretanja in 1609 according to historian Aleksa Ivic 15 Establishment as Eastern Catholic church edit Being under strong pressure from Croatian clergy and state officials to recognize the jurisdiction of the Pope and to convert the population of his bishopric to Eastern Catholicism Simeon Vratanja visited Pope Paul V in 1611 and recognized his jurisdiction and maybe the Union of Florence as well 16 The strongest influence to his decision had Martin Dobrovic who convinced Simeon to recognize papal jurisdiction and to accept the Eastern Catholicism 17 18 In November 1611 the Pope appointed Simeon as bishop of Serbs of Slavonia Croatia and Hungary He also granted all estates that once belonged to the Catholic Monastery of All Saints to the Marca Monastery 19 Pope Paul V granted to Bishop Simeon Greek Catholic episcopal authority in Croatia Hungary Slavonia and Zumberak which was also confirmed by Archduke Ferdinand and Bishop of Zagreb Petar Petretic From Vlach Bishop Simeon as he was called by authorities from Vienna it was expected to implement unification of Orthodox Vlachs with the Catholic Church in area of Croatian Military Frontier and Slavonian Military Frontier 20 On 21 November 1611 Marca was established as an eparchy bishopric of the Eastern Catholic Church 21 having around 60 000 believers 1 Period of semi union 1611 1670 edit Simeon continued to use Slavic language Julian calendar and maintained connection with Serbian Patriarchate of Pec 22 In 1642 Benedikt Vinkovic wrote a letter to emperor Ferdinand III to write a report about Vlachs Orthodox Serbs 23 Vinkovic s activities were aimed against Serb bishop of Marca Maksim Predojevic whom he reported to the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith when Predojevic refused to support the conversion of the population of his bishopric to Catholicism 24 Vinkovic had intention to depose Predojevic and appoint Rafael Levakovic instead 25 In 1648 the king appointed Sava Stanislavic as bishop of the Bishopric of Marca as wished by the Slavonian Serbs although Petar Petretic bishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Zagreb proposed another candidate 26 This kind of semi union attitude of Serb bishops of the Bishopric of Marca remained until 1670 and appointment of Pavle Zorcic on the position of bishop 27 All priests of the Bishopric of Marca who objected to the union were arrested and imprisoned in Malta where they all died 28 Period of union 1670 1753 edit Main article Eparchy of Krizevci Until 19 November 1735 the Marca monastery was the seat of the Greek Catholic bishops when the Orthodox Grenzers expelled the last three Greek Catholic monks Following the verdict of Vienna authorities and decision that monastery belongs to the Greek Catholics the Orthodox Grenzers burned Marca monastery on 28 June 1739 29 In 1754 around 17 000 Serb Uskoks rebelled in support of the Marca monastery the seat of Uskok bishopric The monastery was abandoned as ordered by Empress Maria Theresa and its treasury was looted 30 Bishops editThe bishops of the Eparchy of Marca were Simeon Vratanja 1607 1629 Maxim Predojevic 1630 1642 Gabrijel Predojevic 1642 1644 Vasilije Predojevic 1644 1648 Sava Stanislavic 1648 1661 Gabrijel Mijakic 1663 1670 Pavao Zorcic 1671 1685 Marko Zorcic 1685 1688 Isaija Popovic 1689 1699 Gabrijel Turcinovic 1700 1707 Grgur Jugovic 1707 1709 Rafael Markovic 1710 1726 Georg Vucinic 1727 1733 Silvester Ivanovic 1734 1735 Teofil Pasic 1738 1746 Gabrijel Palkovic 1751 1758 Vasilije Bozickovic 1759 1777 References edit a b Foundation 2001 p 97 Letopis matice srpske U Srpskoj narodnoj zadruznoj stampariji 1926 p 319 Tako јe na rushevinama srpske pravoslavie episkopiјe u Marchi stvorena krizhevachka uniјatska biskupiјa koјa i danas postoјi Љushiћ Radosh 2008 Srpska drzhavnost 19 veka Srpska kњizhevna zadruga p 449 ISBN 9788637910282 Naseљavaњem i podizaњem crkava i manastira stvoreni su preduslovi za crkvenu organizaciјu Srba koјa јe nastala u manastiru Marchi marchanska uskochka ili vretanshska episkopiјa pochetkom 17 veka Frucht 2005 p 535 Population movements began in earnest after the Battle of Smederevo in 1459 and by 1483 up to two hundred thousand Orthodox Christians had moved into central Slavonia and Srijem eastern Croatia Miller Nicholas J Miller Nick 1997 Between Nation and State Serbian Politics in Croatia Before the First World War University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0 8229 3989 4 Frucht 2005 p 535 In the early sixteenth century Orthodox populations had also been established in western Croatia sinod Srpska pravoslavna crkva Sveti arhijerejski 1972 Sluzbeni list Srpske pravoslavne crkve p 55 Tridesetih godina XVI v mnogi Srbi iz Bosne su se naselili u Kraњskoј Shtaјerskoј i Zhumberku Seobe Srba u Slavoniјu i Hrvatsku traјale su kroz ceo XVI XVII i XVIII v U prvoј polovini XVI v su se naјpre zaseљavali u turskom delu Slavoniјe a u drugoј polovini istog veka su se preseљavali iz turskog u austriјski deo Slavoni јe sinod Srpska pravoslavna crkva Sveti arhijerejski 2007 Glasnik Vol 89 p 290 MANASTIR LEPAVINA posveћen Vavedeњu Presvete Bogorodice podignut 1550 Zlatko Kudelic 2010 Caploviceva povijest Marcanske biskupije p 138 1 Kudelic 2002 p 145 Kolaric 2002 p 77 a b Kudelic 2002 p 147 Cirkovic 2004 p 137 Damjanovic Roksandic amp Makovic 2005 p 12 Kudelic 2002 p 148 Milutin Miltojevic Serbian Historiography of Union of Serbs in the 17th century Nis University p 225 Ivic 1909 p 45 arhiv 1916 p 89 Manastir Marcha Metropolitanate of Zagreb and Ljubljana Archived from the original on 19 May 2015 Retrieved 30 May 2015 Zlatko Kudelic 2010 Caploviceva povijest Marcanske biskupije p 136 138 2 Z Kudelic Isusovacko izvjesce o krajiskim nemirima 1658 i 1666 godine Hrvatski institut za povijest 2007 page 121 Milutin Miltojevic Serbian Historiography of Union of Serbs in the 17th century Nis University p 225 tisak 1917 p 37 Kasic 1967 p 49 Kasic 1988 p 144 Spomenica 1996 p 74 Milutin Miltojevic Serbian Historiography of Union of Serbs in the 17th century Nis University p 225 Milutin Miltojevic Serbian Historiography of Union of Serbs in the 17th century Nis University p 225 Zlatko Kudelic 2010 Caploviceva povijest Marcanske biskupije p 139 3 Medakovic 1971 p 236 Sources editDept Central European University History Foundation European Science 2001 Frontiers of faith religious exchange and the constitution of religious identities 1400 1750 Central European University Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 Kolaric Juraj 2002 Povijest krscanstva u Hrvata Katolicka crkva Hrvatski studiji Sveucilista u Zagrebu ISBN 978 953 6682 45 4 tisak 1917 Djela Jugoslavenske akademije znanosti i umjetnosti Tisak Dionicke tiskare Kasic Dusan Lj 1967 Srbi i pravoslavlje u Slavoniji i sjevernoj Hrvatskoj Savez udruzenja pravosl svestenstva SR Hrvatske Damjanovic Dragan Roksandic Drago Makovic Zvonko 2005 Saborna crkva Vavedenja Presvete Bogorodice u Plaskom povijest episkopalnog kompleksa Srpsko Kulturno Drustvo Prosvjeta ISBN 978 953 6627 77 6 Medakovic Dejan 1971 Putevi srpskog baroka Nolit Spomenica 1996 Spomeniza o srpskom pravoslavnom vladiǎnstvu pakrackom Muzej Srpske Pravoslavne Crkve Kasic Dusan Lj 1988 Srpska naselja i crkve u sjevernoj Hrvatskoj i Slavoniji Savez udruzenja pravoslavnih svestenika SR Hrvatske Ivic Aleksa 1909 Seoba srba u hrvatsku i slavoniju prilog ispitivanju srpske proslodti tokom 16 i 17 veka Sremski karlovci arhiv Croatia Drzavni 1916 Vjesnik Kudelic Zlatko 2002 Prvi marcanski grkokatolicki biskup Simeon 1611 1630 Hrvatski institut za povijest Zagreb Republika Hrvatska Frucht Richard C 2005 Eastern Europe An Introduction to the People Lands and Culture ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 800 6 Further reading editVukoviћ Sava 1996 Srpski јerarsi od devetog do dvadesetog veka Serbian Hierarchs from the 9th to the 20th Century Evro Unireks Kaleniћ Ivic Pavle ed 1995 The History of Serbian Culture Edgware Porthill Publishers ISBN 9781870732314 Kudelic Zlatko 2007 Marcanska biskupija Habsburgovci pravoslavlje i crkvena unija u Hrvatsko slavonskoj vojnoj krajini 1611 1755 Hrvatski Inst za Povijest ISBN 978 953 6324 62 0 Kudelic Zlatko 2007 Isusovacko izvjesce o krajiskim nemirima 1658 i 1666 godine i o marcanskom biskupu Gabrijelu Mijakicu 1663 1670 Hrvatski institut za povijest Kudelic Zlatko 2004 Katolicko pravoslavni prijepori o crkvenoj uniji i grkokatolickoj Marcanskoj biskupiji tijekom 1737 i 1738 godine Povijesni Prilozi 27 101 131 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eparchy of Marca amp oldid 1199572815, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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