fbpx
Wikipedia

Slava (tradition)

Slava (Serbian Cyrillic: Слава, lit.'Glory, Celebration', pronounced [ˈslâʋa]) is a family's annual ceremony and veneration of their patron saint. The ceremony is found mainly among Orthodox Serbs.

Slava
Слава
Slava prepared for the veneration of Saints
Observed bySerbian Orthodox Christians
SignificanceVeneration of the family's patron saint
ObservancesChurch services, family and other social gatherings
Slava
Slava prepared for the veneration of John the Baptist
CountrySerbia
DomainsRitual, Celebration, Religious practice
Reference01010
RegionEurope and North America
Inscription history
Inscription2014 (9th session)
ListIntangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity

Although its origin is unknown, this old tradition is an important ethnic marker of Serbian identity. It is a tribute to the family's first ancestor, through the male lineage, who was baptized into Christianity, with its presiding saint. The family celebrates the Slava annually on the saint's day. In 2014, it was inscribed on UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists of Serbia.

Slavski kolač, also known simply as kolač, is a ritual bread often prepared during the celebration of the Slava.

History edit

Origin theses edit

 
Saint Sava (1174–1236)

Serbian historians consider that records of Slava amongst Serbs can be traced back at least to 1018.[1] However, the true origin of the Slava is unknown. According to one hypothesis, the Slava has its origins in Greek and Roman hero cult. Proponents of the Greek hypothesis point to etymology in that the Serbian word for wheat, koljivo, an indispensable item of the Slava, is derived from the Greek term for gain of wheat, koliva. Proponents of the Roman hypothesis point to the fact that Slava customs mimic Roman forms of celebration including bread breaking and toasting.[2] Another hypothesis states that the Slava has its origin in Medieval Serbia, connected to Saint Sava, the first Archbishop of the Serbs. There are indications that the institution of the Slava in the Serbian Orthodox Church dates from Saint Sava, that "in his understanding and tactful approach to Serbian folk religion", he "seems to have found a compromise formula satisfactory to both his people's pagan tradition and the requirements of theology".[3] The slava is a reinterpretation of a Serbian pagan rite:[4] the ancestor-protector became a Christian saint,[5] frequently St. Nicholas,[4] with the pagan rite being reduced of many religious elements and frequent ceremonies and becoming a social event with the annual meeting of the family and friends.[5][6]

In the scientific literature exists a discussion about the historical and ethnological origin of the Slava, which has not been completed. According to some Serbian researchers, "the thesis of how Slava is Serbian ethnic identification marker is simply delusion of the romantic and patriotic citizenry".[7]

Modern edit

The increased effective geographic mobility brought about by the post World War II urbanization of a previously highly agrarian society, combined with the suppression of Serbian Orthodox traditions under the Communist rule, has made some aspects of the custom more relaxed. In particular, in the second half of the 20th century it became common to see traditional patriarchal families separated by great distances, so by necessity Slava came to occasionally be celebrated at more than one place by members of the same family.

While the Slava kept something of a grassroots underground popularity during the Communist period, the post-Communist revival of Serbian Orthodox traditions has brought it a resurgence. It is recognized as a distinctly (if not quite exclusively) Serbian custom, and today it is quite common for nonobservant Christians or even atheists to celebrate it in one form or another, as a hereditary family holiday and a mark of ethnocultural identification.

The custom is also helpful in genealogical studies as an indicator in kinship relations between families, such as tracing one's family to a specific region. It "becomes a simultaneous signifier of national and spiritual kinship and a core expression of the Serbian cosmology, whereby the dialectics of temporal, physical, and spiritual continuity converge into validated perceptions of cultural and social reality—re-enacted on a recurrent (annual) basis.[8]

In November 2014 it was inscribed in the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists of Serbia.[9][10]

Practicing groups edit

The tradition is an important ethnic marker of Serbian identity.[11] The slogan: Где је слава, ту је Србин (Gde je slava, tu je Srbin, lit.'Where there is a Slava, there is a Serb') was raised as a Serbian national identifier by Miloš Milojević after his travel to Kosovo and Metohija in 1871–1877.[11] Serbs usually regard the Slava as their most significant and most solemn feast day.[12] The tradition is also very well preserved among the Serb diaspora.[13]

Besides present day Serbia, Slava is commonly celebrated amongst ethnic Serbs living in neighbouring Croatia, Bosnia and Montenegro. Despite the tradition being inherently tied to Serbian Orthodox Christianity it is also practiced to a lesser extent amongst some Catholic and Muslim ethnicities in the region, occasionally among Croats,[14][15][16] as well as Catholics from the Bay of Kotor, and Gorani living in present-day southern Kosovo.[citation needed] Furthermore, similar tradition can be found in Western Bulgaria and North Macedonia and also among some Vlachs and Aromanians.[11]

Customs and feast edit

 
Breaking the kolač, illustration by V. Titelbah, 1877.

The Slava is a family's annual ceremony and veneration of their patron saint.[17] It is a tribute to the family's first ancestor who was baptized into Christianity, with its presiding saint.[2] The family's patron saint is passed down from father to son and only males are allowed to carry out the Slava's rituals.[18] Upon marriage, women typically adopt the patron saint of their spouse although it is not uncommon for them to continue celebrating their native family's saint as well (in which case the secondary one is known as preslava).[2] Close friends and family gather at the home for a ritual feast. Although a religious ceremony for the purpose of saint veneration, the family's intent behind the celebration is for "the good health of the living" as well as for a "general remembrance of the souls of the departed family members".[2] Many Serbian communities (villages, cities, organizations, political parties, institutions, companies, professions) also celebrate their patron saint. For example, the city of Belgrade celebrates the Ascension of Jesus Christ as its patronal feast.[19]

A Slava celebration incorporates aspects of pagan traditions with minimal clerical involvement.[8] The ritual foods that are prepared for the feast are the slavski kolač (or simply kolač), a ritual bread, and koljivo (or žito), a dish of minced boiled wheat, sweetened and sometimes mixed with chopped walnuts.[2][20] A beeswax candle stamped with an image of the saint is also a staple at the celebration.[20]

Prior to the slava, a priest surrounded by family members blesses the house. This is done in front of the saint's icon and the lit candle whereby the priest recites a prayer. Every room in the house is then sprinkled with holy water along with the members of the family who are each named and wished good health.[2]

The top of the kolač is adorned with the Christian cross, the peace dove, and other symbols. The kolač symbolizes the body of Jesus, and the wine with which the kolač is eaten represents his blood.[21] The parish priest, either at the home or at the church, consecrates the kolač with wine; afterwards the man of the household cuts it into quarters and turns it cut-side up. It is further cut into pieces by other family members and oldest or most important guests, a total of three times.[22] In other traditions the bread is "broken" together by the guests after being ritually turned.[2][20] The koljivo is a symbol of the Resurrection of Christ (cf. "if the grain does not die..." in the Gospel) and partaken in memory of the dead (deceased family members).[2] The cutting into the bread three times is a symbolism of the Holy Trinity.[8]

The rest of the feast consists of a meal, the contents of which depends on whether or not the celebration falls in a period of fasting. During a fast (post), the meal would not contain any meat but seafood (pesco-vegan).[20] Outside of a fasting period, these restrictions would not apply and the Slava is considered mrsna. Thus, colloquially, slavas can be referred to as posna or mrsna.[2] Appropriately-made sweets are consumed, as well. Alcohol is served to adults.[20]

The most common feast days are St. Nicholas (Nikoljdan, 19 December), St. George (Đurđevdan, 6 May), St. John the Baptist (Jovanjdan, 20 January), St. Demetrius (Mitrovdan, 8 November), St. Michael (Aranđelovdan, 21 November) and St. Sava (Savindan, 27 January). Dates given are according to the Gregorian calendar. The Serbian Orthodox Church uses the Julian calendar.

See also edit

Annotations edit

  • Krsna slava (Крсна слава, "christened Slava") and Krsno ime (Крсно име, "christened name")

References edit

  1. ^ Nikola F., Paković (2015). "Slava ili krsno ime kod Srba". Glasnik Etnografskog instituta SANU. LXIII: 128.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Montgomery, David W. (2018). Everyday Life in the Balkans. Indiana University Press. pp. 291–292. ISBN 978-0-25303-820-3.
  3. ^ Serb World. Vol. 3–4. Neven Publishing Corporation. 1982. p. 5.
  4. ^ a b A. P. Vlasto (1970). The Entry of the Slavs Into Christendom: An Introduction to the Medieval History of the Slavs. CUP Archive. pp. 223–. ISBN 978-0-521-07459-9.
  5. ^ a b The folk arts of Yugoslavia: papers presented at a symposium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, March 1977. Duquesne University Tamburitzans Institute of Folk Arts. 1976. p. 41.
  6. ^ Folk Culture: Folk culture & the great tradition. Institute of Oriental and Orissan Studies. 1983. p. 113.
  7. ^ Petko Hristov, The Use of Holidays for Propaganda Purposes: The “Serbian” Slava and/or the “Bulgarian” Săbor Petko Hristov, Ethnologia Balkanica, LIT Verlag, 2002, Issue No: 06, p 79: And here we completely agree to the conclusion of Milenko Filipović that the thesis regarding the slava, služba or the krastno ime were a purely Serbian feature, was “…a delusion of the romantic and patriotic citizenry and those from among those circles that were writers”, a delusion, of which …je samo srpstvo imalo više štete, nego koristi” [“The Serbian people have had more losses than benefits/advantages”]. (Filipović M., 1985; 152). Although here and there in scholarly publications, and particularly in popular books, even in the formal publications of the Serbian Eastern Orthodox Church, some of these romantic delusions about the slava as a Serbian ethnic identification marker are repeated, the serious scholars giving interpretation to the slava M.Filipović, V.Čajkanović, P.Vlahović, N.Pantelić, S.Zečević, D.Bandić, point out mostly the agrarian and integrative functions of the set of rites and rituals, united under the name of slava, and its tie-up with the cult for the forefathers.
  8. ^ a b c Mylonas, Christos (2003). Serbian Orthodox Fundamentals: The Quest for an Eternal Identity. Central European University Press. pp. 56–57. ISBN 978-9-63924-161-9.
  9. ^ "Permanent Delegation of Serbia to UNESCO - Paris". www.unesco-paris.mfa.gov.rs. Retrieved 2021-06-16.
  10. ^ "Slava, celebration of family saint patron's day". UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage.
  11. ^ a b c Petko Hristov, The Use of Holidays for Propaganda Purposes: The "Serbian" Slava and/or the "Bulgarian" Săbor in Ethnologia Balkanica. LIT Verlag Münster. pp. 69–80. GGKEY:ES2RY3RRUDS.
  12. ^ Celia Jaes Falicov (1991). Family Transitions: Continuity and Change Over the Life Cycle. New York City: Guilford Press. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-89862-484-7.
  13. ^ Michael B. Petrovich; Joel Halpern (1980). "Serbs". In Stephan Thernstrom; Ann Orlov; Oscar Handlin (eds.). Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups (2nd ed.). Harvard University Press. p. 925. ISBN 978-0-674-37512-3.
  14. ^ Mišur, Ivo (2018). "Variability of Krsna Slava in Catholic Croats in the Neretva Valley". Ethnologica Dalmatica. 25.
  15. ^ "krsna slava". Croatian Encyclopedia (in Croatian). Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleža. 2021. Retrieved 2022-04-17.
  16. ^ Mišur, Ivo (2022). "The Bans Of Krsna Slava Among Catholics In Herzegovina (Summary)". Ethnologica Dalmatica. 29.
  17. ^ McDonald, Gordon C. (1973). "Area Handbook for Yugoslavia". Pamphlet. U.S. Government Printing Office: 208. ISSN 0892-8541.
  18. ^ Kaser, Karl (2012). Household and Family in the Balkans: Two Decades of Historical Family Research at University of Graz. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 72. ISBN 978-3-64350-406-7.
  19. ^ "The Ascension of Jesus - the Patron Saint-day of the City of Belgrade and Ascension Church". spc.rs. Serbian Orthodox Church. 14 June 2013.
  20. ^ a b c d e Gercevic, Srdjan (28 November 2016). "Slava: Hygge, Serbian-Style". Balkan Insight.
  21. ^ . Stil Magazin. Archived from the original on 2 October 2017.
  22. ^ "La Slava, celebration of the feast of the patron saint of the family". ich.unesco.org. UNESCO World Heritage.

Further reading edit

  • Hrizostom Vojinović (2003). Srpska slava ili krsno ime. Fleš. ISBN 9788684541026.
    • "Српска слава или крсно име".
  • Jovan Todorovich (1978). Serbian Patron Saint (Krsna Slava).
  • Dimitrije Kiki Popadic (1999). Krsna Slava Among the Serbs: A Case for Contextualized Reinterpretation. Fuller Theological Seminary.
  • Љубисав Милосављевић, ed. (2005). Домаћине, срећна ти крсна слава. ИТТ Национал. ISBN 978-86-85233-37-1.
  • Milan T. Vuković (1972). Narodni običaji, verovanja i poslovice kod Srba.
  • Krsto Milovanović (1997). Slave. Narodno delo. ISBN 9788671191197.
  • Mile Nedeljković (1991). Slava u Srba. Vuk Karadžić. ISBN 9788630703256.
  • Bratislav Grubačić; Momir Tomić (1988). Srpske slave: narodni običaji i verovanja, narodne pesme i zdravice, slavska jela i pića. Litera. ISBN 9788674670026.
  • Dimitrije M. Kalezić (2000). Krsne slave u Srba. Narodna knjiga–Alfa.
  • Влаховић, П. (1998). Крсна слава и њена улога у породичном и друштвеном животу код Срба. В: Етно-културолошки зборник. Књ. ІV, Сврљиг, 23–32.
  • Чајкановић, Веселин. "Мит и религија у Срба." Српска књижевна задруга 443 (1973): 128–153.
  • Vasić, M. (1985). Slava-Krsno ime. u: O krsnom imenu-zbornik. Beograd: Prosveta, 218–219.
  • Radenković, L. R. (2013). Slava: The Serb family feast. Zbornik Matice srpske za slavistiku, (84), 9-23.
  • Pavković, Nikola F. (2015). "The Slava or Patron Saint's Day among the Serbs" (PDF). Glasnik Etnografskog instituta SANU. 63 (1): 123–145. doi:10.2298/GEI1501123P.

External links edit

  • Ranković, Ljubomir. (in Serbian). Svetoslavlje. Archived from the original on 2015-05-07.
  • "Serb families honour their saints with Slava celebrations". BBC. 3 March 2013.
  • Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage (November 2014). "Slava". Nomination file no. 01010 for Inscription on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2014. Paris, France: UNESCO.

slava, tradition, slava, serbian, cyrillic, Слава, glory, celebration, pronounced, ˈslâʋa, family, annual, ceremony, veneration, their, patron, saint, ceremony, found, mainly, among, orthodox, serbs, slavaСлаваslava, prepared, veneration, saintsobserved, byser. Slava Serbian Cyrillic Slava lit Glory Celebration pronounced ˈslaʋa is a family s annual ceremony and veneration of their patron saint The ceremony is found mainly among Orthodox Serbs SlavaSlavaSlava prepared for the veneration of SaintsObserved bySerbian Orthodox ChristiansSignificanceVeneration of the family s patron saintObservancesChurch services family and other social gatherings SlavaUNESCO Intangible Cultural HeritageSlava prepared for the veneration of John the BaptistCountrySerbiaDomainsRitual Celebration Religious practiceReference01010RegionEurope and North AmericaInscription historyInscription2014 9th session ListIntangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity Although its origin is unknown this old tradition is an important ethnic marker of Serbian identity It is a tribute to the family s first ancestor through the male lineage who was baptized into Christianity with its presiding saint The family celebrates the Slava annually on the saint s day In 2014 it was inscribed on UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists of Serbia Slavski kolac also known simply as kolac is a ritual bread often prepared during the celebration of the Slava Contents 1 History 1 1 Origin theses 1 2 Modern 2 Practicing groups 3 Customs and feast 4 See also 5 Annotations 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editOrigin theses edit nbsp Saint Sava 1174 1236 Serbian historians consider that records of Slava amongst Serbs can be traced back at least to 1018 1 However the true origin of the Slava is unknown According to one hypothesis the Slava has its origins in Greek and Roman hero cult Proponents of the Greek hypothesis point to etymology in that the Serbian word for wheat koljivo an indispensable item of the Slava is derived from the Greek term for gain of wheat koliva Proponents of the Roman hypothesis point to the fact that Slava customs mimic Roman forms of celebration including bread breaking and toasting 2 Another hypothesis states that the Slava has its origin in Medieval Serbia connected to Saint Sava the first Archbishop of the Serbs There are indications that the institution of the Slava in the Serbian Orthodox Church dates from Saint Sava that in his understanding and tactful approach to Serbian folk religion he seems to have found a compromise formula satisfactory to both his people s pagan tradition and the requirements of theology 3 The slava is a reinterpretation of a Serbian pagan rite 4 the ancestor protector became a Christian saint 5 frequently St Nicholas 4 with the pagan rite being reduced of many religious elements and frequent ceremonies and becoming a social event with the annual meeting of the family and friends 5 6 In the scientific literature exists a discussion about the historical and ethnological origin of the Slava which has not been completed According to some Serbian researchers the thesis of how Slava is Serbian ethnic identification marker is simply delusion of the romantic and patriotic citizenry 7 Modern edit The increased effective geographic mobility brought about by the post World War II urbanization of a previously highly agrarian society combined with the suppression of Serbian Orthodox traditions under the Communist rule has made some aspects of the custom more relaxed In particular in the second half of the 20th century it became common to see traditional patriarchal families separated by great distances so by necessity Slava came to occasionally be celebrated at more than one place by members of the same family While the Slava kept something of a grassroots underground popularity during the Communist period the post Communist revival of Serbian Orthodox traditions has brought it a resurgence It is recognized as a distinctly if not quite exclusively Serbian custom and today it is quite common for nonobservant Christians or even atheists to celebrate it in one form or another as a hereditary family holiday and a mark of ethnocultural identification The custom is also helpful in genealogical studies as an indicator in kinship relations between families such as tracing one s family to a specific region It becomes a simultaneous signifier of national and spiritual kinship and a core expression of the Serbian cosmology whereby the dialectics of temporal physical and spiritual continuity converge into validated perceptions of cultural and social reality re enacted on a recurrent annual basis 8 In November 2014 it was inscribed in the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists of Serbia 9 10 Practicing groups editThe tradition is an important ethnic marker of Serbian identity 11 The slogan Gde јe slava tu јe Srbin Gde je slava tu je Srbin lit Where there is a Slava there is a Serb was raised as a Serbian national identifier by Milos Milojevic after his travel to Kosovo and Metohija in 1871 1877 11 Serbs usually regard the Slava as their most significant and most solemn feast day 12 The tradition is also very well preserved among the Serb diaspora 13 Besides present day Serbia Slava is commonly celebrated amongst ethnic Serbs living in neighbouring Croatia Bosnia and Montenegro Despite the tradition being inherently tied to Serbian Orthodox Christianity it is also practiced to a lesser extent amongst some Catholic and Muslim ethnicities in the region occasionally among Croats 14 15 16 as well as Catholics from the Bay of Kotor and Gorani living in present day southern Kosovo citation needed Furthermore similar tradition can be found in Western Bulgaria and North Macedonia and also among some Vlachs and Aromanians 11 Customs and feast edit nbsp Breaking the kolac illustration by V Titelbah 1877 The Slava is a family s annual ceremony and veneration of their patron saint 17 It is a tribute to the family s first ancestor who was baptized into Christianity with its presiding saint 2 The family s patron saint is passed down from father to son and only males are allowed to carry out the Slava s rituals 18 Upon marriage women typically adopt the patron saint of their spouse although it is not uncommon for them to continue celebrating their native family s saint as well in which case the secondary one is known as preslava 2 Close friends and family gather at the home for a ritual feast Although a religious ceremony for the purpose of saint veneration the family s intent behind the celebration is for the good health of the living as well as for a general remembrance of the souls of the departed family members 2 Many Serbian communities villages cities organizations political parties institutions companies professions also celebrate their patron saint For example the city of Belgrade celebrates the Ascension of Jesus Christ as its patronal feast 19 A Slava celebration incorporates aspects of pagan traditions with minimal clerical involvement 8 The ritual foods that are prepared for the feast are the slavski kolac or simply kolac a ritual bread and koljivo or zito a dish of minced boiled wheat sweetened and sometimes mixed with chopped walnuts 2 20 A beeswax candle stamped with an image of the saint is also a staple at the celebration 20 Prior to the slava a priest surrounded by family members blesses the house This is done in front of the saint s icon and the lit candle whereby the priest recites a prayer Every room in the house is then sprinkled with holy water along with the members of the family who are each named and wished good health 2 The top of the kolac is adorned with the Christian cross the peace dove and other symbols The kolac symbolizes the body of Jesus and the wine with which the kolac is eaten represents his blood 21 The parish priest either at the home or at the church consecrates the kolac with wine afterwards the man of the household cuts it into quarters and turns it cut side up It is further cut into pieces by other family members and oldest or most important guests a total of three times 22 In other traditions the bread is broken together by the guests after being ritually turned 2 20 The koljivo is a symbol of the Resurrection of Christ cf if the grain does not die in the Gospel and partaken in memory of the dead deceased family members 2 The cutting into the bread three times is a symbolism of the Holy Trinity 8 The rest of the feast consists of a meal the contents of which depends on whether or not the celebration falls in a period of fasting During a fast post the meal would not contain any meat but seafood pesco vegan 20 Outside of a fasting period these restrictions would not apply and the Slava is considered mrsna Thus colloquially slavas can be referred to as posna or mrsna 2 Appropriately made sweets are consumed as well Alcohol is served to adults 20 The most common feast days are St Nicholas Nikoljdan 19 December St George Đurđevdan 6 May St John the Baptist Jovanjdan 20 January St Demetrius Mitrovdan 8 November St Michael Aranđelovdan 21 November and St Sava Savindan 27 January Dates given are according to the Gregorian calendar The Serbian Orthodox Church uses the Julian calendar nbsp Slavski kolac a type of bread that has an important role in the celebration of the Slava nbsp Koljivo nbsp Zito nbsp Church prepared for the celebration of a Slava Trebinje Republika Srpska Bosnia and Herzegovina nbsp Slava candleSee also editKoliada Patronal feast day National symbols of SerbiaAnnotations editKrsna slava Krsna slava christened Slava and Krsno ime Krsno ime christened name References edit Nikola F Pakovic 2015 Slava ili krsno ime kod Srba Glasnik Etnografskog instituta SANU LXIII 128 a b c d e f g h i Montgomery David W 2018 Everyday Life in the Balkans Indiana University Press pp 291 292 ISBN 978 0 25303 820 3 Serb World Vol 3 4 Neven Publishing Corporation 1982 p 5 a b A P Vlasto 1970 The Entry of the Slavs Into Christendom An Introduction to the Medieval History of the Slavs CUP Archive pp 223 ISBN 978 0 521 07459 9 a b The folk arts of Yugoslavia papers presented at a symposium Pittsburgh Pennsylvania March 1977 Duquesne University Tamburitzans Institute of Folk Arts 1976 p 41 Folk Culture Folk culture amp the great tradition Institute of Oriental and Orissan Studies 1983 p 113 Petko Hristov The Use of Holidays for Propaganda Purposes The Serbian Slava and or the Bulgarian Săbor Petko Hristov Ethnologia Balkanica LIT Verlag 2002 Issue No 06 p 79 And here we completely agree to the conclusion of Milenko Filipovic that the thesis regarding the slava sluzba or the krastno ime were a purely Serbian feature was a delusion of the romantic and patriotic citizenry and those from among those circles that were writers a delusion of which je samo srpstvo imalo vise stete nego koristi The Serbian people have had more losses than benefits advantages Filipovic M 1985 152 Although here and there in scholarly publications and particularly in popular books even in the formal publications of the Serbian Eastern Orthodox Church some of these romantic delusions about the slava as a Serbian ethnic identification marker are repeated the serious scholars giving interpretation to the slava M Filipovic V Cajkanovic P Vlahovic N Pantelic S Zecevic D Bandic point out mostly the agrarian and integrative functions of the set of rites and rituals united under the name of slava and its tie up with the cult for the forefathers a b c Mylonas Christos 2003 Serbian Orthodox Fundamentals The Quest for an Eternal Identity Central European University Press pp 56 57 ISBN 978 9 63924 161 9 Permanent Delegation of Serbia to UNESCO Paris www unesco paris mfa gov rs Retrieved 2021 06 16 Slava celebration of family saint patron s day UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage a b c Petko Hristov The Use of Holidays for Propaganda Purposes The Serbian Slava and or the Bulgarian Săbor in Ethnologia Balkanica LIT Verlag Munster pp 69 80 GGKEY ES2RY3RRUDS Celia Jaes Falicov 1991 Family Transitions Continuity and Change Over the Life Cycle New York City Guilford Press p 219 ISBN 978 0 89862 484 7 Michael B Petrovich Joel Halpern 1980 Serbs In Stephan Thernstrom Ann Orlov Oscar Handlin eds Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups 2nd ed Harvard University Press p 925 ISBN 978 0 674 37512 3 Misur Ivo 2018 Variability of Krsna Slava in Catholic Croats in the Neretva Valley Ethnologica Dalmatica 25 krsna slava Croatian Encyclopedia in Croatian Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleza 2021 Retrieved 2022 04 17 Misur Ivo 2022 The Bans Of Krsna Slava Among Catholics In Herzegovina Summary Ethnologica Dalmatica 29 McDonald Gordon C 1973 Area Handbook for Yugoslavia Pamphlet U S Government Printing Office 208 ISSN 0892 8541 Kaser Karl 2012 Household and Family in the Balkans Two Decades of Historical Family Research at University of Graz LIT Verlag Munster p 72 ISBN 978 3 64350 406 7 The Ascension of Jesus the Patron Saint day of the City of Belgrade and Ascension Church spc rs Serbian Orthodox Church 14 June 2013 a b c d e Gercevic Srdjan 28 November 2016 Slava Hygge Serbian Style Balkan Insight Slavski kolac Stil Magazin Archived from the original on 2 October 2017 La Slava celebration of the feast of the patron saint of the family ich unesco org UNESCO World Heritage Further reading editHrizostom Vojinovic 2003 Srpska slava ili krsno ime Fles ISBN 9788684541026 Srpska slava ili krsno ime Jovan Todorovich 1978 Serbian Patron Saint Krsna Slava Dimitrije Kiki Popadic 1999 Krsna Slava Among the Serbs A Case for Contextualized Reinterpretation Fuller Theological Seminary Љubisav Milosavљeviћ ed 2005 Domaћine sreћna ti krsna slava ITT Nacional ISBN 978 86 85233 37 1 Milan T Vukovic 1972 Narodni obicaji verovanja i poslovice kod Srba Krsto Milovanovic 1997 Slave Narodno delo ISBN 9788671191197 Mile Nedeljkovic 1991 Slava u Srba Vuk Karadzic ISBN 9788630703256 Bratislav Grubacic Momir Tomic 1988 Srpske slave narodni obicaji i verovanja narodne pesme i zdravice slavska jela i pica Litera ISBN 9788674670026 Dimitrije M Kalezic 2000 Krsne slave u Srba Narodna knjiga Alfa Vlahoviћ P 1998 Krsna slava i њena uloga u porodichnom i drushtvenom zhivotu kod Srba V Etno kulturoloshki zbornik Kњ IV Svrљig 23 32 Chaјkanoviћ Veselin Mit i religiјa u Srba Srpska kњizhevna zadruga 443 1973 128 153 Vasic M 1985 Slava Krsno ime u O krsnom imenu zbornik Beograd Prosveta 218 219 Radenkovic L R 2013 Slava The Serb family feast Zbornik Matice srpske za slavistiku 84 9 23 Pavkovic Nikola F 2015 The Slava or Patron Saint s Day among the Serbs PDF Glasnik Etnografskog instituta SANU 63 1 123 145 doi 10 2298 GEI1501123P External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Slava nbsp Look up slava in Wiktionary the free dictionary Rankovic Ljubomir Krsna Slava in Serbian Svetoslavlje Archived from the original on 2015 05 07 Serb families honour their saints with Slava celebrations BBC 3 March 2013 Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage November 2014 Slava Nomination file no 01010 for Inscription on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2014 Paris France UNESCO Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slava tradition amp oldid 1223907866, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.