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Hadži-Ruvim

Hadži-Ruvim (Serbian Cyrillic: Хаџи-Рувим; 19 April 1752 – 29 January 1804), born Rafailo Nenadović (Serbian Cyrillic: Рафаило Ненадовић), was a Serbian Orthodox archimandrite (superior abbot) of the Bogovađa Monastery, near Lajkovac, an artist and engraver,[1] who was part of a plot to overthrow the Dahije, renegade Janissaries that had taken control of the Sanjak of Smederevo. He was jailed and later killed in the event known as the Slaughter of the Knezes. Hadži-Ruvim was an artist, wood carver, engraver and book collector. His most beautiful engraved cross was the one for Čokešina Monastery dating from 1799.[2] He left notes and drawings on empty pages at the monasteries he visited. In Mionica, 92 kilometers from Belgrade, there's a church famous for the icons belonging to the Hadzi-Ruvim Art School.[3]

Hadži

Ruvim Nenadović
Born
Rafailo Nenadović

(1752-04-19)19 April 1752
Died29 January 1804(1804-01-29) (aged 51)
Cause of deathBeheading
NationalitySerbian
Other namesNešković
SpouseMarija Simeunović (d. 1783)
ReligionEastern Orthodoxy
ChurchSerbian Church

Early life

Rafailo Nenadović was born on 19 April [O.S. 8 April] 1752 in the village of Babina Luka, in the Valjevo nahija of the Sanjak of Smederevo (also known in historiography as the Belgrade Pashalik). He was one of four sons born to Nenad "Neško"[a] and Marija[5][b] The eldest of the four sons, Nikola, was the father of the revolutionary Petar Nikolajević Moler (1775–1816).[4] His paternal family hailed from the Nikšić tribe (now in Montenegro).[7]

According to the Serbian linguist and folklorist Vuk Karadžić,[8] Nenadović ran into trouble in his youth when he mischievously disguised himself as a girl to attend a Turkish girl's prelo (weaving-session, traditional women's gathering). As this was forbidden (haram), the Turks condemned him to hang and went searching for him. He fled his home and hid in the monasteries, where he was schooled, and when his act had been forgotten, he returned home.[9] Other historians maintain that he took to the monasteries due to his thirst for knowledge and "book-loving".[4] He learned Greek.[10]

On 13 May 1774,[7] Nenadović married Marija Simeunović,[5] a woman from Dokmir,[4] with whom he had a son and daughter.[7] That year, he was ordained a priest by Bishop Evstratije of Užice, at the Ćelije Monastery, and served in his home village.[11] He did wood carving and woodcutting.[12] Some of his carved wooden crosses date to this period and are considered to be masterpieces of ecclesiastical art.[4]

Religious service

 
Ruvim took monastic vows at the Bogovađa Monastery. It was destroyed in the 1788–91 war, then reconstructed upon his return.

Following his wife's death in 1783, Nenadović took his monastic vows and adopted the name Ruvim[5] at the Bogovađa Monastery.[7] He made a pilgrimage (hadžiluk; hence the prefix "hadži") to the Holy Land, Jerusalem, in 1784[5] and returned in 1785.[13][7] On 25 May 1786, he was appointed the hegumen (monastery head) of the Voljavča Monastery.[7] He remained there until 1788, the beginning of the Austro-Turkish War (1788–91),[13] or by 6 April 1789 at the latest,[7] when the Ottomans burned down the monastery, along with many others in the Belgrade Pashalik.[13] Serbs participated in the war, managing to occupy the pashalik for the Austrians. Hadži-Ruvim fled with the brotherhood, saving some of the monastery's treasures.[7] He recorded that the Ottomans had looted much of the inventory.[14] For a while, he was at the Velika Remeta Monastery at Fruška Gora, in the Habsburg monarchy. When the war cooled down in 1791, he returned to the Belgrade Pashalik, not to Voljavča, but Bogovađa, which had also been burned down.[14][7]

Hadži-Ruvim recorded that five monasteries and eight churches had been destroyed in the Valjevo nahiya during the war.[15] Bogovađa was repaired by Hadži-Ruvim, hegumen Vasilije Petrović and jeromonah (priest-monk) Hadži-Đera over the years,[7] with work starting on 13 June 1791.[16] Hadži-Ruvim's trip to Sarajevo in March 1792 is shrouded in mystery, and three hypotheses have been proposed for the reasons behind his visit.[13] One is that he went to collect funds for the reconstruction of Bogovađa;[13] that he feared for his life and took refuge in Bosnia; or that went to retrieve the stolen defter of Voljavča.[14] A new theory is that he went to Sarajevo to recruit builders for Bogovađa, although the other three theories should not be neglected, as noted by the historian Vladimir Krivošejev. Work on the monastery was finished in 1794. Danilo, the Metropolitan of Šabac–Valjevo, promoted Hadži-Ruvim to the position of archimandrite on 26 October 1795.[16] An interesting note is that Hadži-Ruvim had signed himself as archimandrite already in 1790, which suggests that he had already been promised the title by the time the monastery was renewed.[17]

Apart from the Holy Land and Fruška Gora, Hadži-Ruvim visited Hilandar, Studenica, and monasteries in the Podrinje and Ovčar regions, among others, and left notes and drawings on empty pages at the monasteries he visited.[13] In one note, he called the Ottoman Empire and the sultan "God-hating".[18] In another, dated August 1793, Hadži-Ruvim blamed the Greek metropolitan of Belgrade, Dionysius Papazoglou, and Austrian feldmarschall Valis, for the surrender of Belgrade.[19]

After the war, Sultan Selim III promised the Serbs some privileges, but these barely materialized.[5] In 1801, renegade Janissaries known as the Dahije seized control of Belgrade and the Sanjak of Smederevo, and the Serbs' situation worsened once again.[5] On 15 December 1801, they murdered Hadji Mustafa Pasha, the Vizier of Belgrade (1793–1801).[20] Prominent Serbs sought the right moment to rise up and revive the Serbian state, and conspired throughout the sanjak.[5] Hadži-Ruvim was a party to this movement.[5]

Plot against the Dahije and death

 
Hadži-Ðera and Hadži-Ruvim (sitting) with conspirators, in a painting by Pavle Simić (1818–1876).

In early 1802, some Ottoman sipahi and Mustafa Pasha's men, in agreement with the Serbian knezes, attempted to remove the Dahije. Fighting raged in Požarevac, but the Dahije emerged triumphant. Despite this, the sipahi and the Serbs continued to plot their removal. Although antagonistic elements, the tyranny of the Dahije forced the sipahi and the Serbs to cooperate. The Serbs, organizing themselves in western Serbia (where knez Aleksa Nenadović was the leading figure) and Šumadija, wanted as the sipahi to return the state of Mustafa Pasha's rule, but needed securities – the status of Christians in the Ottoman Empire, as history told, was never permanent. In 1803, plans were processed and consultations made regarding this. The sipahi worked on one side, the Serbian seniors (starešine) and knezes (subject village heads) on the other.[21]

 
Hadži-Ruvim left the Belgrade Pashalik for the Studenica monastery after increased tensions in early 1803.

As a reputable church leader, protector of his people and great artist, Ruvim was for years targeted by the Dahije who tried to remove him by all means.[4] It is considered that Hadži-Ruvim wrote the appeal in the name of twelve knezes to the Ottoman sultan, a petition for aid against the tyranny of the Dahije, based on which the sultan seriously threatened the Dahije.[4] A monk had informed the Dahije that twelve knezes secretly met at Bogovađa in January 1803.[22] Tradition holds that the letter was written by Hadži-Ruvim and his disciple Hadži-Đera, and that the knezes swore Oath before Hadži-Ruvim that they would rise up against the Dahije.[22] As recorded by Vuk Karadžić,[23] Hadži-Ruvim had a quarrel with the subaša of the prnjavor (parish settlement) in 1802, then complained several times to knez Aleksa Nenadović to have the subaša replaced (which would have been easy during Mustafa Pasha's rule), but Nenadović was unable to do him the favour.[24] Because of the conspiracy (which the Dahije later learnt of) and quarrel, Hadži-Ruvim was forced to hide in the monasteries of Nikolje, Studenica, and on Mount Athos.[25] He left Bogovađa for Studenica in the beginning of 1803.[24] A manuscript in Nikolje dated 9 March 1803 records him arriving there on flight from Bogovađa.[24] From Studenica, he sent fourteen messages to people in the Belgrade Pashalik, one of which was recorded to have arrived in Valjevo on 29 March.[24] These messages called the Serbs to prepare an uprising against the Dahije.[22] He also visited the Ovčar-Kablar monasteries.[22] By Easter he arrived at Mount Athos.[9]

After visiting the monasteries, he returned home to Bogovađa in late autumn 1803.[26] Meanwhile, another conspiracy letter had been written by knez Aleksa Nenadović (or prota Matija Nenadović in his name) to Austrian major Mitizer in Zemun that asked of the Austrians to prepare ammunition and officers to help them "get rid of the Dahije".[27] Upon his return to Bogovađa, Hadži-Ruvim received a message from Aleksa Nenadović asking him to flee, as the Turks wrongly accused him of writing that letter to the Austrians, which was intercepted on the Sava ferry[9] by the Dahije.[24] The letter had been intercepted while Hadži-Ruvim was away from the Belgrade Pashalik, and his return might have been viewed by the Dahije as a signal for uprising, therefore they held him accountable.[24] Nenadović asked Hadži-Ruvim to leave the Belgrade Pashalik once again, so as to leave suspicion solely on Nenadović,[9] as it was believed that Hadži-Ruvim was out of danger. Hadži-Ruvim did not listen to Nenadović,[24] whom he messaged that he "had enough of fleeing and wandering."[28]

After the Dahije intercepted Nenadović's letter, they increased the monitoring of Christians.[29] They then learnt of further plans after finding a corresponding letter between the chieftains and the Ottoman government in a frisking of a priest in Ostružnica.[30] The Dahije now took serious measures to suppress any plans, and decided to assault all notable Serbs, and to place new knezes and seniors in their place, then hold the notable Serbs as hostages until the confiscation of weapons from the rayah.[30] They then planned to kill male adults, and employ the rest into their army and Islamize them.[30] The Dahije began to take measures, especially in the Valjevo area.[31] The Dahije sent secret orders to their muteselims to kill each of their knez on the given day.[32] It seems that Mehmed-aga Fočić was tasked with overseeing the operation.[33] The victims were obor-knezes, knezes, buljubašas and other chosen people.[34] The killings began on 23 January.[35] By 25 January, the Dahije decided that all notable Serbs were to be assaulted, so that what was left would become real "rayah, to serve the Turks well".[34] Other Turk lords then began to attack chosen notable people in their districts.[34] Karađorđe, who had led plans in Šumadija, survived attempts.[36] According to contemporary accounts, heads were put on public display at the Valjevo town square to serve as an example to those who might plot against the rule of the Dahije.[37] Metropolitan Leontius invited Hadži-Ruvim to Belgrade and asked him of the state of the people, to which he answered that no words could describe the discontent and suffering, and advised the Metropolitan that the two cross into Austria, as the people planned an uprising against the Dahije.[38] The Metropolitan then informed the Dahije of their discussion, and the Dahije arrested Hadži-Ruvim and brought him to Kučuk-Alija on 28 January, then killed him the next day.[38] According to Vuk Karadžić, "they say that they dragged him with pliers and cut off his breasts and the meat below his armpits, then killed him".[39] By 4 February 72 decapitated heads were brought to Belgrade.[33]

He was later buried in the porta of the St. Michael's Cathedral, Belgrade.

Aftermath

The Uprising against the Dahije broke out on 15 February 1804, the day after the Orašac Assembly. One of Ruvim's crosses was used by hegumen Konstantin Vujanić from Čokešina to swear in and bless the hajduk band (četa) led by the Nedić brothers that fought the Turks in Vranjevac.[4] The most beautiful and largest of his crosses (known as "Hadži-Ruvim's cross")[40] was used by prota Matija Nenadović at the first Ruling Council of Revolutionary Serbia in 1805.[4]

Legacy and art

His death is included in Serbian epic poems,[41] including poems recorded from contemporary guslar Filip Višnjić.[42]

One of the most important persons of the Bogovađa brotherhood at the Bogovađa Monastery,[7] archimandrite Hadži-Ruvim was very interested in history, and at that time in Serbia there were not many people who established private libraries and wrote library bibliographies.[43] He collected a list of his library books at the end of the 18th century (which was rare), "an endeavor worthy of recognition".[43] A very literate and educated man, not only for commonfolk but for hierarchs as well, he collected books in which he drew initials, ornaments and miniatures.[12] He recorded historical events and wars, the state of the Serbian people at that time in the Belgrade and Valjevo districts.[12]

Hadži-Ruvim is regarded as one of the last great Serbian woodcarvers, graphic artists and artists-engravers of the 18th century. He was also known as the "carver of the Cross." He engraved Krušedol Monastery, and the covers for the Gospel with twenty-eight scenes from the lives of Christ, Mother of God and St. Stevan. His most beautiful engraved cross was the one for Čokešina Monastery dating from 1799. His artistry represents a fusion of traditional Serbian and European Late Baroque art, and therefore it can be said that he played a significant role in the development of arts in Serbia in the late 18th and early 19th century. His woodcuts were based on the Krušedol works, and included scenes of the life of Christ and the Mother of God (Bogorodica), and he decorated many books with his pen drawings, among others the works of the ktetors of the Bogovađa Monastery, knezes Pavle and Jovan Velimirović. He illustrated their figures on the basis of 16th-century frescoes. His most elaborately engraved cross was the one for Čokeštine Monastery dating from 1799.

Pavle Simić (1818–1876) illustrated the meeting of conspirators in a painting (included in the article).[44]

Borivoje Marinković collected and published Ruvim's notes with commentary in two volumes (1989–90).[45] Predrag Savić wrote the novel Kaluđeri i smrt about Hadži-Ruvim.[46]

For his effort to liberate and defend the Serbian people, through which he paid with his head, he became a "national martyr".[12] Milan Milićević said of him: "Peace be upon his patriotic soul, and his name glorious forever".[18]

Endnotes

  1. ^ Hence the surnames Nenadović and Nešković.[4]
  2. ^ Also went by the diminutive Mara.[6]

References

  1. ^ Vlahović, Vlaho S. (1940). "Manual: Slavonic Personalities (Past and Present)".
  2. ^ "Čokešina Monastery".
  3. ^ "Mionica | Serbian Audio guide - Tourist Organization of Srbia".
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Sekendek 2009.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Krivošejev 1992, p. 72.
  6. ^ Idrizović 2012, para. 2; Sekendek 2009
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Idrizović 2012, para. 2.
  8. ^ Sekendek 2009; Karadžić 1829, p. 8
  9. ^ a b c d Milićević 1888, p. 776.
  10. ^ Karadžić 1829, p. 11.
  11. ^ Marinković 1989, pp. 169–170, 188, 197.
  12. ^ a b c d Idrizović 2012, para. 3.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Krivošejev 1992, p. 73.
  14. ^ a b c Krivošejev 1992, p. 74.
  15. ^ Radosavljević 2007, p. 94.
  16. ^ a b Krivošejev 1992, p. 75.
  17. ^ Krivošejev 1992, p. 76.
  18. ^ a b Milićević 1888, p. 780.
  19. ^ Radosavljević 2007, p. 88.
  20. ^ Novaković 1904, p. 39.
  21. ^ Novaković 1904, pp. 41–42.
  22. ^ a b c d Subašić 2014.
  23. ^ Novaković 1904, p. 47, Milićević 1888, p. 776, Karadžić 1829, p. 9
  24. ^ a b c d e f g Novaković 1904, p. 47.
  25. ^ Sekendek 2009, Novaković 1904, p. 47
  26. ^ Subašić 2014, Milićević 1888, p. 776
  27. ^ Sekendek 2009, Novaković 1904, pp. 43–46
  28. ^ Sekendek 2009, Milićević 1888, p. 776
  29. ^ Novaković 1904, p. 46.
  30. ^ a b c Novaković 1904, p. 48.
  31. ^ Novaković 1904, p. 51.
  32. ^ Novaković 1904, p. 53.
  33. ^ a b Novaković 1904, p. 54.
  34. ^ a b c Novaković 1904, p. 55.
  35. ^ Novaković 1904, pp. 53–55.
  36. ^ Novaković 1904, p. 57.
  37. ^ Ranke 1847, pp. 119–120.
  38. ^ a b Novaković 1904, p. 52.
  39. ^ Karadžić 1829, p. 10.
  40. ^ Subašić 2016.
  41. ^ Morison 2012, pp. 48, 58, 60, 61, 114.
  42. ^ Novaković 1904, pp. 52–53.
  43. ^ a b Idrizović 2012, para. 1.
  44. ^ Serbian Studies. Vol. 11–12. NASSS. 1997. p. 150.
  45. ^ Marinković 1989, Marinković 1990
  46. ^ Savić 2013.

Sources

  • Đorđević, M.; Nedeljković, S. (2015). "Политичке прилике у београдском пашалуку у предвечерје српске револуције (1787–1804)". Teme-Časopis Za Društvene Nauke: 965–979.
  • Gerolymatos, Andre (2003). The Balkan Wars: Conquest, Revolution, and Retribution from the Ottoman Era to the Twentieth Century and Beyond. Basic Books. pp. 146–148. ISBN 978-0-465-02732-3.
  • Idrizović, Nenad (1 June 2012), , Православље (Internet ed.), SPC (1085): 31–32, ISSN 0555-0114, archived from the original on 22 April 2014
  • Karadžić, Vuk (1829). "Даница". 4. Vienna: 8–11. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) (Public Domain)
  • Krivošejev, Vladimir (1992). "Цртице за биографију Хаџи Рувима Нешковића" (PDF). Гласник. Историјски архив Ваљево. 26–27: 72–77.
  • Marinković, Borivoje (1989). Hadži Ruvim: pre celine, pre smisla. Zapisi s komentarima (1777–1790) (in Serbian). Милић Ракић.
  • Marinković, Borivoje (1990). Hadži Ruvim: pre celine, pre smisla. Zapisi s komentarima (1791–1803) (in Serbian). Милић Ракић.
  • Milićević, Milan (1888). Поменик знаменитих људи у српскога народа новијега доба. Srpska kraljevska štamparija. pp. 776–780. (Public Domain)
  • Morison, W. A. (2012) [1942]. The Revolt of the Serbs Against the Turks 1804–1813. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-67606-0.
  • Nenadović, Matija (1893). Kovačević, Ljubomir (ed.). Мемоари Матије Ненадовића [Memoirs of Matija Nenadović]. Srpska književna zadruga. pp. 57, 64, 67–69, 89. (Public Domain)
  • Novaković, Stojan (1904). Устанак на дахије 1804 [Uprising on the Dahije 1804]. Belgrade: Државна штампарија. (Public Domain)
  • Radosavljević, Nedeljko V. (2010). Архимандрит Хаџи Рувим Нешковић (1752–1804). Историјски часопис (in Serbian) (LIX): 297–320.
  • Radosavljević, Nedeljko V. (2007). Православна црква у Београдском пашалуку 1766–1831: управа Васељенске патријаршије [The Orthodox Church in Belgrade Pashaluk 1766–1831: The Administration of the Universal Patriarchy]. Istorijski institut. pp. 18, 86, 88, 94, 95, 97, 98, 103, 107, 170, 171, 177, 178, 182, 184–186, 234, 248, 272, 276, 279, 294, 297, 317, 324, 339, 372, 373, 412, 444. ISBN 978-86-7743-065-8.
  • Radosavljević, Nedeljko V. (2009). Шест портрета православних митрополита 1766–1891 [Portraits of Six Orthodox Mitropolitans 1766–1891]. Istorijski institut. pp. 31, 35, 37, 42, 49, 50, 52–54, 63. ISBN 978-86-7743-078-8.
  • Ranke, Leopold von (1847). History of Servia, and the Servian Revolution. J. Murray.
  • Ranković, Zdravko (February 2003). "Pre 200 godina". Revija Kolubara. Valjevo: Kolubara.
  • R., D. (1905). "Хаџи Рувим игуман вољавачки 1787". Српски сион (4): 122–123. (Public Domain)
  • Savić, Predrag (2013) [2001]. Хаџи Рувим [Hadži Ruvim] (PDF) (in Serbian). Smart Studio.
  • Sekendek, Bogdan (2009). Kojekude... njegovim tragom. Šabac: Zadužbinarsko društvo "Prvi srpski ustanak" Mišar.
  • Subašić, Boris (6 March 2016). "Тајна крста Хаџи-Рувима". Novosti.
  • Subašić, Boris (19 January 2014). "Hadži Ruvim: Duhovni vođa srpskih ustanika, prva žrtva dahija". Novosti.

Further reading

  • Šakota, Mirjana. "Hadži Ruvim u Studenici" (in Serbian). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

hadži, ruvim, serbian, cyrillic, Хаџи, Рувим, april, 1752, january, 1804, born, rafailo, nenadović, serbian, cyrillic, Рафаило, Ненадовић, serbian, orthodox, archimandrite, superior, abbot, bogovađa, monastery, near, lajkovac, artist, engraver, part, plot, ove. Hadzi Ruvim Serbian Cyrillic Haџi Ruvim 19 April 1752 29 January 1804 born Rafailo Nenadovic Serbian Cyrillic Rafailo Nenadoviћ was a Serbian Orthodox archimandrite superior abbot of the Bogovađa Monastery near Lajkovac an artist and engraver 1 who was part of a plot to overthrow the Dahije renegade Janissaries that had taken control of the Sanjak of Smederevo He was jailed and later killed in the event known as the Slaughter of the Knezes Hadzi Ruvim was an artist wood carver engraver and book collector His most beautiful engraved cross was the one for Cokesina Monastery dating from 1799 2 He left notes and drawings on empty pages at the monasteries he visited In Mionica 92 kilometers from Belgrade there s a church famous for the icons belonging to the Hadzi Ruvim Art School 3 HadziRuvim NenadovicBornRafailo Nenadovic 1752 04 19 19 April 1752Babina Luka Sanjak of Smederevo now Serbia Died29 January 1804 1804 01 29 aged 51 Belgrade FortressCause of deathBeheadingNationalitySerbianOther namesNeskovicSpouseMarija Simeunovic d 1783 ReligionEastern OrthodoxyChurchSerbian Church Contents 1 Early life 2 Religious service 3 Plot against the Dahije and death 4 Aftermath 5 Legacy and art 6 Endnotes 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further readingEarly life EditRafailo Nenadovic was born on 19 April O S 8 April 1752 in the village of Babina Luka in the Valjevo nahija of the Sanjak of Smederevo also known in historiography as the Belgrade Pashalik He was one of four sons born to Nenad Nesko a and Marija 5 b The eldest of the four sons Nikola was the father of the revolutionary Petar Nikolajevic Moler 1775 1816 4 His paternal family hailed from the Niksic tribe now in Montenegro 7 According to the Serbian linguist and folklorist Vuk Karadzic 8 Nenadovic ran into trouble in his youth when he mischievously disguised himself as a girl to attend a Turkish girl s prelo weaving session traditional women s gathering As this was forbidden haram the Turks condemned him to hang and went searching for him He fled his home and hid in the monasteries where he was schooled and when his act had been forgotten he returned home 9 Other historians maintain that he took to the monasteries due to his thirst for knowledge and book loving 4 He learned Greek 10 On 13 May 1774 7 Nenadovic married Marija Simeunovic 5 a woman from Dokmir 4 with whom he had a son and daughter 7 That year he was ordained a priest by Bishop Evstratije of Uzice at the Celije Monastery and served in his home village 11 He did wood carving and woodcutting 12 Some of his carved wooden crosses date to this period and are considered to be masterpieces of ecclesiastical art 4 Religious service Edit Ruvim took monastic vows at the Bogovađa Monastery It was destroyed in the 1788 91 war then reconstructed upon his return Following his wife s death in 1783 Nenadovic took his monastic vows and adopted the name Ruvim 5 at the Bogovađa Monastery 7 He made a pilgrimage hadziluk hence the prefix hadzi to the Holy Land Jerusalem in 1784 5 and returned in 1785 13 7 On 25 May 1786 he was appointed the hegumen monastery head of the Voljavca Monastery 7 He remained there until 1788 the beginning of the Austro Turkish War 1788 91 13 or by 6 April 1789 at the latest 7 when the Ottomans burned down the monastery along with many others in the Belgrade Pashalik 13 Serbs participated in the war managing to occupy the pashalik for the Austrians Hadzi Ruvim fled with the brotherhood saving some of the monastery s treasures 7 He recorded that the Ottomans had looted much of the inventory 14 For a while he was at the Velika Remeta Monastery at Fruska Gora in the Habsburg monarchy When the war cooled down in 1791 he returned to the Belgrade Pashalik not to Voljavca but Bogovađa which had also been burned down 14 7 Hadzi Ruvim recorded that five monasteries and eight churches had been destroyed in the Valjevo nahiya during the war 15 Bogovađa was repaired by Hadzi Ruvim hegumen Vasilije Petrovic and jeromonah priest monk Hadzi Đera over the years 7 with work starting on 13 June 1791 16 Hadzi Ruvim s trip to Sarajevo in March 1792 is shrouded in mystery and three hypotheses have been proposed for the reasons behind his visit 13 One is that he went to collect funds for the reconstruction of Bogovađa 13 that he feared for his life and took refuge in Bosnia or that went to retrieve the stolen defter of Voljavca 14 A new theory is that he went to Sarajevo to recruit builders for Bogovađa although the other three theories should not be neglected as noted by the historian Vladimir Krivosejev Work on the monastery was finished in 1794 Danilo the Metropolitan of Sabac Valjevo promoted Hadzi Ruvim to the position of archimandrite on 26 October 1795 16 An interesting note is that Hadzi Ruvim had signed himself as archimandrite already in 1790 which suggests that he had already been promised the title by the time the monastery was renewed 17 Apart from the Holy Land and Fruska Gora Hadzi Ruvim visited Hilandar Studenica and monasteries in the Podrinje and Ovcar regions among others and left notes and drawings on empty pages at the monasteries he visited 13 In one note he called the Ottoman Empire and the sultan God hating 18 In another dated August 1793 Hadzi Ruvim blamed the Greek metropolitan of Belgrade Dionysius Papazoglou and Austrian feldmarschall Valis for the surrender of Belgrade 19 After the war Sultan Selim III promised the Serbs some privileges but these barely materialized 5 In 1801 renegade Janissaries known as the Dahije seized control of Belgrade and the Sanjak of Smederevo and the Serbs situation worsened once again 5 On 15 December 1801 they murdered Hadji Mustafa Pasha the Vizier of Belgrade 1793 1801 20 Prominent Serbs sought the right moment to rise up and revive the Serbian state and conspired throughout the sanjak 5 Hadzi Ruvim was a party to this movement 5 Plot against the Dahije and death EditFurther information Dahije and Slaughter of the Knezes Hadzi Dera and Hadzi Ruvim sitting with conspirators in a painting by Pavle Simic 1818 1876 In early 1802 some Ottoman sipahi and Mustafa Pasha s men in agreement with the Serbian knezes attempted to remove the Dahije Fighting raged in Pozarevac but the Dahije emerged triumphant Despite this the sipahi and the Serbs continued to plot their removal Although antagonistic elements the tyranny of the Dahije forced the sipahi and the Serbs to cooperate The Serbs organizing themselves in western Serbia where knez Aleksa Nenadovic was the leading figure and Sumadija wanted as the sipahi to return the state of Mustafa Pasha s rule but needed securities the status of Christians in the Ottoman Empire as history told was never permanent In 1803 plans were processed and consultations made regarding this The sipahi worked on one side the Serbian seniors staresine and knezes subject village heads on the other 21 Hadzi Ruvim left the Belgrade Pashalik for the Studenica monastery after increased tensions in early 1803 As a reputable church leader protector of his people and great artist Ruvim was for years targeted by the Dahije who tried to remove him by all means 4 It is considered that Hadzi Ruvim wrote the appeal in the name of twelve knezes to the Ottoman sultan a petition for aid against the tyranny of the Dahije based on which the sultan seriously threatened the Dahije 4 A monk had informed the Dahije that twelve knezes secretly met at Bogovađa in January 1803 22 Tradition holds that the letter was written by Hadzi Ruvim and his disciple Hadzi Đera and that the knezes swore Oath before Hadzi Ruvim that they would rise up against the Dahije 22 As recorded by Vuk Karadzic 23 Hadzi Ruvim had a quarrel with the subasa of the prnjavor parish settlement in 1802 then complained several times to knez Aleksa Nenadovic to have the subasa replaced which would have been easy during Mustafa Pasha s rule but Nenadovic was unable to do him the favour 24 Because of the conspiracy which the Dahije later learnt of and quarrel Hadzi Ruvim was forced to hide in the monasteries of Nikolje Studenica and on Mount Athos 25 He left Bogovađa for Studenica in the beginning of 1803 24 A manuscript in Nikolje dated 9 March 1803 records him arriving there on flight from Bogovađa 24 From Studenica he sent fourteen messages to people in the Belgrade Pashalik one of which was recorded to have arrived in Valjevo on 29 March 24 These messages called the Serbs to prepare an uprising against the Dahije 22 He also visited the Ovcar Kablar monasteries 22 By Easter he arrived at Mount Athos 9 After visiting the monasteries he returned home to Bogovađa in late autumn 1803 26 Meanwhile another conspiracy letter had been written by knez Aleksa Nenadovic or prota Matija Nenadovic in his name to Austrian major Mitizer in Zemun that asked of the Austrians to prepare ammunition and officers to help them get rid of the Dahije 27 Upon his return to Bogovađa Hadzi Ruvim received a message from Aleksa Nenadovic asking him to flee as the Turks wrongly accused him of writing that letter to the Austrians which was intercepted on the Sava ferry 9 by the Dahije 24 The letter had been intercepted while Hadzi Ruvim was away from the Belgrade Pashalik and his return might have been viewed by the Dahije as a signal for uprising therefore they held him accountable 24 Nenadovic asked Hadzi Ruvim to leave the Belgrade Pashalik once again so as to leave suspicion solely on Nenadovic 9 as it was believed that Hadzi Ruvim was out of danger Hadzi Ruvim did not listen to Nenadovic 24 whom he messaged that he had enough of fleeing and wandering 28 After the Dahije intercepted Nenadovic s letter they increased the monitoring of Christians 29 They then learnt of further plans after finding a corresponding letter between the chieftains and the Ottoman government in a frisking of a priest in Ostruznica 30 The Dahije now took serious measures to suppress any plans and decided to assault all notable Serbs and to place new knezes and seniors in their place then hold the notable Serbs as hostages until the confiscation of weapons from the rayah 30 They then planned to kill male adults and employ the rest into their army and Islamize them 30 The Dahije began to take measures especially in the Valjevo area 31 The Dahije sent secret orders to their muteselims to kill each of their knez on the given day 32 It seems that Mehmed aga Focic was tasked with overseeing the operation 33 The victims were obor knezes knezes buljubasas and other chosen people 34 The killings began on 23 January 35 By 25 January the Dahije decided that all notable Serbs were to be assaulted so that what was left would become real rayah to serve the Turks well 34 Other Turk lords then began to attack chosen notable people in their districts 34 Karađorđe who had led plans in Sumadija survived attempts 36 According to contemporary accounts heads were put on public display at the Valjevo town square to serve as an example to those who might plot against the rule of the Dahije 37 Metropolitan Leontius invited Hadzi Ruvim to Belgrade and asked him of the state of the people to which he answered that no words could describe the discontent and suffering and advised the Metropolitan that the two cross into Austria as the people planned an uprising against the Dahije 38 The Metropolitan then informed the Dahije of their discussion and the Dahije arrested Hadzi Ruvim and brought him to Kucuk Alija on 28 January then killed him the next day 38 According to Vuk Karadzic they say that they dragged him with pliers and cut off his breasts and the meat below his armpits then killed him 39 By 4 February 72 decapitated heads were brought to Belgrade 33 He was later buried in the porta of the St Michael s Cathedral Belgrade Aftermath EditThe Uprising against the Dahije broke out on 15 February 1804 the day after the Orasac Assembly One of Ruvim s crosses was used by hegumen Konstantin Vujanic from Cokesina to swear in and bless the hajduk band ceta led by the Nedic brothers that fought the Turks in Vranjevac 4 The most beautiful and largest of his crosses known as Hadzi Ruvim s cross 40 was used by prota Matija Nenadovic at the first Ruling Council of Revolutionary Serbia in 1805 4 Legacy and art EditHis death is included in Serbian epic poems 41 including poems recorded from contemporary guslar Filip Visnjic 42 One of the most important persons of the Bogovađa brotherhood at the Bogovađa Monastery 7 archimandrite Hadzi Ruvim was very interested in history and at that time in Serbia there were not many people who established private libraries and wrote library bibliographies 43 He collected a list of his library books at the end of the 18th century which was rare an endeavor worthy of recognition 43 A very literate and educated man not only for commonfolk but for hierarchs as well he collected books in which he drew initials ornaments and miniatures 12 He recorded historical events and wars the state of the Serbian people at that time in the Belgrade and Valjevo districts 12 Hadzi Ruvim is regarded as one of the last great Serbian woodcarvers graphic artists and artists engravers of the 18th century He was also known as the carver of the Cross He engraved Krusedol Monastery and the covers for the Gospel with twenty eight scenes from the lives of Christ Mother of God and St Stevan His most beautiful engraved cross was the one for Cokesina Monastery dating from 1799 His artistry represents a fusion of traditional Serbian and European Late Baroque art and therefore it can be said that he played a significant role in the development of arts in Serbia in the late 18th and early 19th century His woodcuts were based on the Krusedol works and included scenes of the life of Christ and the Mother of God Bogorodica and he decorated many books with his pen drawings among others the works of the ktetors of the Bogovađa Monastery knezes Pavle and Jovan Velimirovic He illustrated their figures on the basis of 16th century frescoes His most elaborately engraved cross was the one for Cokestine Monastery dating from 1799 Pavle Simic 1818 1876 illustrated the meeting of conspirators in a painting included in the article 44 Borivoje Marinkovic collected and published Ruvim s notes with commentary in two volumes 1989 90 45 Predrag Savic wrote the novel Kaluđeri i smrt about Hadzi Ruvim 46 For his effort to liberate and defend the Serbian people through which he paid with his head he became a national martyr 12 Milan Milicevic said of him Peace be upon his patriotic soul and his name glorious forever 18 Endnotes Edit Hence the surnames Nenadovic and Neskovic 4 Also went by the diminutive Mara 6 References Edit Vlahovic Vlaho S 1940 Manual Slavonic Personalities Past and Present Cokesina Monastery Mionica Serbian Audio guide Tourist Organization of Srbia a b c d e f g h i Sekendek 2009 a b c d e f g h Krivosejev 1992 p 72 Idrizovic 2012 para 2 Sekendek 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k Idrizovic 2012 para 2 Sekendek 2009 Karadzic 1829 p 8 a b c d Milicevic 1888 p 776 Karadzic 1829 p 11 Marinkovic 1989 pp 169 170 188 197 a b c d Idrizovic 2012 para 3 a b c d e f Krivosejev 1992 p 73 a b c Krivosejev 1992 p 74 Radosavljevic 2007 p 94 a b Krivosejev 1992 p 75 Krivosejev 1992 p 76 a b Milicevic 1888 p 780 Radosavljevic 2007 p 88 Novakovic 1904 p 39 Novakovic 1904 pp 41 42 a b c d Subasic 2014 Novakovic 1904 p 47 Milicevic 1888 p 776 Karadzic 1829 p 9 a b c d e f g Novakovic 1904 p 47 Sekendek 2009 Novakovic 1904 p 47 Subasic 2014 Milicevic 1888 p 776 Sekendek 2009 Novakovic 1904 pp 43 46 Sekendek 2009 Milicevic 1888 p 776 Novakovic 1904 p 46 a b c Novakovic 1904 p 48 Novakovic 1904 p 51 Novakovic 1904 p 53 a b Novakovic 1904 p 54 a b c Novakovic 1904 p 55 Novakovic 1904 pp 53 55 Novakovic 1904 p 57 Ranke 1847 pp 119 120 a b Novakovic 1904 p 52 Karadzic 1829 p 10 Subasic 2016 Morison 2012 pp 48 58 60 61 114 Novakovic 1904 pp 52 53 a b Idrizovic 2012 para 1 Serbian Studies Vol 11 12 NASSS 1997 p 150 Marinkovic 1989 Marinkovic 1990 Savic 2013 Sources EditĐorđevic M Nedeljkovic S 2015 Politichke prilike u beogradskom pashaluku u predvecherјe srpske revoluciјe 1787 1804 Teme Casopis Za Drustvene Nauke 965 979 Gerolymatos Andre 2003 The Balkan Wars Conquest Revolution and Retribution from the Ottoman Era to the Twentieth Century and Beyond Basic Books pp 146 148 ISBN 978 0 465 02732 3 Idrizovic Nenad 1 June 2012 Haџi Ruvim Nenadoviћ veliki kњigoљubac Pravoslavљe Internet ed SPC 1085 31 32 ISSN 0555 0114 archived from the original on 22 April 2014 Karadzic Vuk 1829 Danica 4 Vienna 8 11 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Public Domain Krivosejev Vladimir 1992 Crtice za biografiјu Haџi Ruvima Neshkoviћa PDF Glasnik Istoriјski arhiv Vaљevo 26 27 72 77 Marinkovic Borivoje 1989 Hadzi Ruvim pre celine pre smisla Zapisi s komentarima 1777 1790 in Serbian Miliћ Rakiћ Marinkovic Borivoje 1990 Hadzi Ruvim pre celine pre smisla Zapisi s komentarima 1791 1803 in Serbian Miliћ Rakiћ Milicevic Milan 1888 Pomenik znamenitih љudi u srpskoga naroda noviјega doba Srpska kraljevska stamparija pp 776 780 Public Domain Morison W A 2012 1942 The Revolt of the Serbs Against the Turks 1804 1813 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 67606 0 Nenadovic Matija 1893 Kovacevic Ljubomir ed Memoari Matiјe Nenadoviћa Memoirs of Matija Nenadovic Srpska knjizevna zadruga pp 57 64 67 69 89 Public Domain Novakovic Stojan 1904 Ustanak na dahiјe 1804 Uprising on the Dahije 1804 Belgrade Drzhavna shtampariјa Public Domain Radosavljevic Nedeljko V 2010 Arhimandrit Haџi Ruvim Neshkoviћ 1752 1804 Istoriјski chasopis in Serbian LIX 297 320 Radosavljevic Nedeljko V 2007 Pravoslavna crkva u Beogradskom pashaluku 1766 1831 uprava Vaseљenske patriјarshiјe The Orthodox Church in Belgrade Pashaluk 1766 1831 The Administration of the Universal Patriarchy Istorijski institut pp 18 86 88 94 95 97 98 103 107 170 171 177 178 182 184 186 234 248 272 276 279 294 297 317 324 339 372 373 412 444 ISBN 978 86 7743 065 8 Radosavljevic Nedeljko V 2009 Shest portreta pravoslavnih mitropolita 1766 1891 Portraits of Six Orthodox Mitropolitans 1766 1891 Istorijski institut pp 31 35 37 42 49 50 52 54 63 ISBN 978 86 7743 078 8 Ranke Leopold von 1847 History of Servia and the Servian Revolution J Murray Rankovic Zdravko February 2003 Pre 200 godina Revija Kolubara Valjevo Kolubara R D 1905 Haџi Ruvim iguman voљavachki 1787 Srpski sion 4 122 123 Public Domain Savic Predrag 2013 2001 Haџi Ruvim Hadzi Ruvim PDF in Serbian Smart Studio Sekendek Bogdan 2009 Kojekude njegovim tragom Sabac Zaduzbinarsko drustvo Prvi srpski ustanak Misar Subasic Boris 6 March 2016 Taјna krsta Haџi Ruvima Novosti Subasic Boris 19 January 2014 Hadzi Ruvim Duhovni vođa srpskih ustanika prva zrtva dahija Novosti Further reading EditSakota Mirjana Hadzi Ruvim u Studenici in Serbian a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hadzi Ruvim amp oldid 1114905939, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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