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Our Lady of Ljeviš

Our Lady of Ljeviš (Serbian: Богородица Љевишка, Bogorodica Ljeviška; Albanian: Kisha e Shën Premtës) is a 14th-century Serbian Orthodox church in the town of Prizren, in southern Kosovo. Since 2006, the church is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site named Medieval Monuments in Kosovo.

Our Lady of Ljeviš
Богородица Љевишка (Serbian)
Bogorodica Ljeviška (Serbian)
Kisha e Shën Premtës (Albanian)
Overview of the church, 1980
42°12′41″N 20°44′09″E / 42.21139°N 20.73583°E / 42.21139; 20.73583
LocationPrizren
CountryKosovo
DenominationSerbian Orthodox
History
StatusChurch[2][3]
Founded1306–1307
Founder(s)Stephen Milutin
DedicationDormition of the Mother of God[1]
Architecture
Functional statusSemi-active[2]
StyleSerbo-Byzantine style[4]
Administration
DioceseEparchy of Raška and Prizren[3]
Part ofMedieval Monuments in Kosovo
CriteriaCultural: ii, iii, iv
Reference724-003bis
Inscription2006 (30th Session)
Endangered2006–
Official nameCrkva Bogorodice Ljeviške
TypeMonument of Culture of Exceptional Importance
Designated11 March 1948
Reference no.SK 1369

In the beginning of the 14th century it was built during the reign of Stefan Milutin, King of Serbia, on the site of a former Byzantine church. The rebuilt church featured frescoes by Byzantine Greek painters, Michael and Eutychios Astrapas. After the Ottomans completed its annexation of the region in the 15th century, a minaret was erected and the complex was converted into a mosque. In 1912, when the Serbian army annexed Kosovo, the status of the church was restored. After World War II, under SFR Yugoslavia, it saw extensive restoration and reconstruction and functioned as a museum. The site was heavily damaged during the 2004 unrest in Kosovo and has been going through several phases of restoration since then.

Name edit

Bogorodica ljeviška was the official name in Milutin's era although the church was popularly known as the Church of St. Paraskeva.[5] This is the name by which it is known by both Albanians as Shën Premte and Serbs as Sveta Petka. Consequently, when it became a mosque it was known Cuma Cami (Albanian: Xhuma Xhami, Serbian: Џума-џамија, Džuma-džamija[2]), the Friday Mosque, although it was officially known as Fatih Cami, Mehmed Fatih's mosque.

"Ljeviška" (of Ljeviš) is a Serbianized version of the Greek word "Eleusa" (Ελεούσα), meaning "merciful", a type of depiction of the Virgin Mary in icons in which the infant Jesus Christ is nestled against her cheek.[6]

History edit

The site has been used as a religious and burial site since antiquity. Remains of an altar of the Roman era have been found in the outer walls of the later church. A stone slab which depicts a laurel wreath has also been found within the walls of the church. It may have been part of a public building of the same era in the region of Prizren. These findings are common of medieval times, as parts of older buildings were frequently used as building materials (spolia). They highlight valuable information about the city of Prizren in the Roman period and indicate that it may have been a settlement bigger than a village at that time.[7]

Stefan Milutin, King of Serbia commissioned its rebuilding and expansion in 1306/7 on the site of a Byzantine basilica of the 11th century.[8][9] The church was built by Vitus of Kotor.[10][verification needed] The Byzantine church had three naves to which Milutin added two more. The architecture of the rebuilt church utilized Late Byzantine architecture through the use of five domes, monumental inscriptions in its exterior and the Byzantine belfry. Milutin chose to utilize these elements as a symbol in order to highlight his own partially Byzantine origin and relation to the imperial family.[9] Another aspect of the frescoes of Bogorodica is their depiction of Orthodox councils as a symbol that referred to the challenges the Orthodox Church faced against the Catholic Church, a situation common in the borderlands between Catholicism and Orthodoxy in the Balkans.[11]

In the 15th century, Prizren became part of the expanding Ottoman Empire. In 1455, Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror (Fatih Mehmet) visited Prizren, which at the time had eight Orthodox and two Catholic churches. Sultan Mehmed chose Bogorodica to become a mosque. An inscription in the church describes the event of the conversion.[12] The conversion into a mosque saw the erection of a minaret, which was removed in 1923 after Serbia had annexed Kosovo. In this period, it was formally called Fatih camisi, while popularly it was known as Cuma Cami, which is how the site is known to the local inhabitants.[13] The archival records of the mosque are a valuable source for the history of Ottoman Prizren. In the Great Turkish War, the Austrian army held Prizren briefly. As a plague erupted, imperial general Silvio Piccolomini visited Prizren to meet Catholic Archbishop Pjetër Bogdani. There, a few days later he died as he had contracted the plague and was buried in the graveyard of the church.[5]

In 1948, it was recognized by the Yugoslav government as a protected cultural site and in 1950–52 a large-scale reconstruction and restoration project began. When it was completed, the site was turned into a museum. Further restoration work was done in the 1970s and 1980s.[14] In 1990, Serbia designated it a Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance. After the Kosovo War, the complex was guarded by KFOR. It was heavily damaged during the 2004 unrest in Kosovo when it was burnt along with other Serbian Orthodox sites.[15][16] On 13 July 2006, it was placed on UNESCO's World Heritage List as an extension of the Visoki Dečani site (named Medieval Monuments in Kosovo), which, as a whole, was placed on the List of World Heritage in Danger. In 2005–2008, it was restored by the Commission for Implementation of Reconstruction for Serbian Orthodox Church monuments in Kosovo of the European Union. The site is part of the protected cultural heritage of the Kosovo under its Ministry of Culture.[14] In 2020, conservation and restoration of the exterior and churchyard was carried out, under finance Serbian Ministry of Culture and Information after authorization was secured from local institutions.[17]

Gallery edit

Sources edit

References edit

  1. ^ "BOGORODICE LJEVIŠKA MOLI BOGA ZA NAS Proslavljena hramovna slava Prizrenske svetinje". Srbin.info. 30 August 2017. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
  2. ^ a b c "Bogorodica Ljeviška nije obnovljena ni posle 15 godina od pogroma". Politika. 27 April 2019. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
  3. ^ a b Zečević, D. (17 December 2018). "1.000 GODINA EPARHIJE RAŠKO-PRIZRENSKE: Duhovni bedem srpskog naroda". Večernje novosti. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
  4. ^ The Serbo-Byzantine style, found mainly in the areas conquered from Byzantium, became more widespread in the reign of King Milutin. [...] The fine churches of Bogorodica Ljeviška and Gračanica, both in Kosovo, were built in this style.Bobot, Rajko (1985). Socialist Republic of Serbia. Jugoslovenska Revija. p. 39.
  5. ^ a b Nenadović 1963, p. 268
  6. ^ Otašević, Dušan (2017). Serbian Artistic Heritage in Kosovo and Metohija: Identity, Significance, Vulnerability. Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. p. 184. ISBN 978-86-7025-753-5.
  7. ^ Brugmann 2006, p. 15.
  8. ^ Ćurčić 2005, p. 23.
  9. ^ a b Ćurčić 2004, p. 70
  10. ^ Ćurčić 2004, p. 73.
  11. ^ Boeck 2015, p. 140.
  12. ^ İğciler 2004, p. 23-24.
  13. ^ Kaleshi 1987, p. 231.
  14. ^ a b "Database of Cultural Heritage of Kosovo". Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Kosovo.
  15. ^ "Prizren, OUR LADY OF LJEVIS (XIV century) - burnt inside (PHOTO: 22.3.2004) - Serbian Orthodox Church [Official web site]".
  16. ^ "Eighth anniversary of violence against KiM Serbs/OrthoChristian.Com". pravoslavie.ru. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  17. ^ "Завршена санација и конзервација звоника на цркви Богородице Љевишке у Призрену". Politika Online. Retrieved 2020-06-18. Крајем 2019. и почетком 2020. године изведени су припремни радови, а како су локалне власти сагласност за извођење радова на цркви издале средином јануара 2020. године, реализација је померена за пролеће текуће године.

Bibliography edit

  • Boeck, Elena (2015). Imagining the Byzantine Past: The Perception of History in the Illustrated Manuscripts of Skylitzes and Manasses. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107085817.
  • Ferrari, Silvio; Benzo, Andrea (2014). Between Cultural Diversity and Common Heritage: Legal and Religious Perspectives on the Sacred Places of the Mediterranean. London & New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781317175032.
  • Todić, Branislav (1999). Serbian Medieval Painting: The Age of King Milutin. Belgrade: Draganić. ISBN 9788644102717.
  • Brugmann, Birte (2006). "An archeological map of the historic zone of Prizren" (PDF). CHWB.
  • Kaleshi, Hasan (1987). "The Oldest Vakuf Charter in Yugoslavia". Revue de philologie orientale. 36.
  • Ćurčić, Slobodan (2004). Byzantium: Faith and Power (1261-1557). Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York. ISBN 1588391132.
  • Ćurčić, Slobodan (2005). Judson J. Emerick (ed.). "Renewed from the Very Foundations": The Question of the Genesis of the Bogorodica Ljeviska in Prizren. Archaeology in architecture: studies in honor of Cecil L. Striker. von Zabern. ISBN 9783805334921. Retrieved 26 November 2012.
  • Nenadović, Slobodan (1963). Bogorodica Ljevis̆ka: njen postanak i njeno mesto u arhitekturi Milutinovog vremena. Narodna knjiga.
  • İğciler, Ahmet (2004). Prizren'de yok olan Osmanlı izleri. Kosova Türk Araştırmacılar Derneği.

External links edit

  • Photograph collection of the Blago Fund

lady, ljeviš, serbian, Богородица, Љевишка, bogorodica, ljeviška, albanian, kisha, shën, premtës, 14th, century, serbian, orthodox, church, town, prizren, southern, kosovo, since, 2006, church, part, unesco, world, heritage, site, named, medieval, monuments, k. Our Lady of Ljevis Serbian Bogorodica Љevishka Bogorodica Ljeviska Albanian Kisha e Shen Premtes is a 14th century Serbian Orthodox church in the town of Prizren in southern Kosovo Since 2006 the church is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site named Medieval Monuments in Kosovo Our Lady of LjevisBogorodica Љevishka Serbian Bogorodica Ljeviska Serbian Kisha e Shen Premtes Albanian Overview of the church 198042 12 41 N 20 44 09 E 42 21139 N 20 73583 E 42 21139 20 73583LocationPrizrenCountryKosovoDenominationSerbian OrthodoxHistoryStatusChurch 2 3 Founded1306 1307Founder s Stephen MilutinDedicationDormition of the Mother of God 1 ArchitectureFunctional statusSemi active 2 StyleSerbo Byzantine style 4 AdministrationDioceseEparchy of Raska and Prizren 3 UNESCO World Heritage SitePart ofMedieval Monuments in KosovoCriteriaCultural ii iii ivReference724 003bisInscription2006 30th Session Endangered2006 Cultural Heritage of SerbiaOfficial nameCrkva Bogorodice LjeviskeTypeMonument of Culture of Exceptional ImportanceDesignated11 March 1948Reference no SK 1369 In the beginning of the 14th century it was built during the reign of Stefan Milutin King of Serbia on the site of a former Byzantine church The rebuilt church featured frescoes by Byzantine Greek painters Michael and Eutychios Astrapas After the Ottomans completed its annexation of the region in the 15th century a minaret was erected and the complex was converted into a mosque In 1912 when the Serbian army annexed Kosovo the status of the church was restored After World War II under SFR Yugoslavia it saw extensive restoration and reconstruction and functioned as a museum The site was heavily damaged during the 2004 unrest in Kosovo and has been going through several phases of restoration since then Contents 1 Name 2 History 3 Gallery 4 Sources 4 1 References 4 2 Bibliography 5 External linksName editBogorodica ljeviska was the official name in Milutin s era although the church was popularly known as the Church of St Paraskeva 5 This is the name by which it is known by both Albanians as Shen Premte and Serbs as Sveta Petka Consequently when it became a mosque it was known Cuma Cami Albanian Xhuma Xhami Serbian Џuma џamiјa Dzuma dzamija 2 the Friday Mosque although it was officially known as Fatih Cami Mehmed Fatih s mosque Ljeviska of Ljevis is a Serbianized version of the Greek word Eleusa Eleoysa meaning merciful a type of depiction of the Virgin Mary in icons in which the infant Jesus Christ is nestled against her cheek 6 History editThe site has been used as a religious and burial site since antiquity Remains of an altar of the Roman era have been found in the outer walls of the later church A stone slab which depicts a laurel wreath has also been found within the walls of the church It may have been part of a public building of the same era in the region of Prizren These findings are common of medieval times as parts of older buildings were frequently used as building materials spolia They highlight valuable information about the city of Prizren in the Roman period and indicate that it may have been a settlement bigger than a village at that time 7 Stefan Milutin King of Serbia commissioned its rebuilding and expansion in 1306 7 on the site of a Byzantine basilica of the 11th century 8 9 The church was built by Vitus of Kotor 10 verification needed The Byzantine church had three naves to which Milutin added two more The architecture of the rebuilt church utilized Late Byzantine architecture through the use of five domes monumental inscriptions in its exterior and the Byzantine belfry Milutin chose to utilize these elements as a symbol in order to highlight his own partially Byzantine origin and relation to the imperial family 9 Another aspect of the frescoes of Bogorodica is their depiction of Orthodox councils as a symbol that referred to the challenges the Orthodox Church faced against the Catholic Church a situation common in the borderlands between Catholicism and Orthodoxy in the Balkans 11 In the 15th century Prizren became part of the expanding Ottoman Empire In 1455 Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror Fatih Mehmet visited Prizren which at the time had eight Orthodox and two Catholic churches Sultan Mehmed chose Bogorodica to become a mosque An inscription in the church describes the event of the conversion 12 The conversion into a mosque saw the erection of a minaret which was removed in 1923 after Serbia had annexed Kosovo In this period it was formally called Fatih camisi while popularly it was known as Cuma Cami which is how the site is known to the local inhabitants 13 The archival records of the mosque are a valuable source for the history of Ottoman Prizren In the Great Turkish War the Austrian army held Prizren briefly As a plague erupted imperial general Silvio Piccolomini visited Prizren to meet Catholic Archbishop Pjeter Bogdani There a few days later he died as he had contracted the plague and was buried in the graveyard of the church 5 In 1948 it was recognized by the Yugoslav government as a protected cultural site and in 1950 52 a large scale reconstruction and restoration project began When it was completed the site was turned into a museum Further restoration work was done in the 1970s and 1980s 14 In 1990 Serbia designated it a Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance After the Kosovo War the complex was guarded by KFOR It was heavily damaged during the 2004 unrest in Kosovo when it was burnt along with other Serbian Orthodox sites 15 16 On 13 July 2006 it was placed on UNESCO s World Heritage List as an extension of the Visoki Decani site named Medieval Monuments in Kosovo which as a whole was placed on the List of World Heritage in Danger In 2005 2008 it was restored by the Commission for Implementation of Reconstruction for Serbian Orthodox Church monuments in Kosovo of the European Union The site is part of the protected cultural heritage of the Kosovo under its Ministry of Culture 14 In 2020 conservation and restoration of the exterior and churchyard was carried out under finance Serbian Ministry of Culture and Information after authorization was secured from local institutions 17 Gallery edit nbsp Bell tower nbsp St Barbara nbsp Fresco of King Milutin before restoration in Church Our Lady of Ljevis in Prizren nbsp Bathing of the Christ destroyed during the 2004 unrest in Kosovo nbsp The fresco of King Milutin Bogorodica Ljeviska nbsp Saint Simeon Stefan Nemanja fresco from Mother of God Ljeviska nbsp Fresco Communion of Apostles Bogorodica Ljeviska nbsp Stefan Prvovencani beginning of the 14th century 1307 1309 fresco from Bogorodica Ljeviska church in Prizren nbsp Saint Sava beginning of the 14th century 1307 1309 fresco from Bogorodica Ljeviska church in Prizren nbsp View of the church in 2010 after restoration Sources editReferences edit BOGORODICE LJEVISKA MOLI BOGA ZA NAS Proslavljena hramovna slava Prizrenske svetinje Srbin info 30 August 2017 Retrieved 25 June 2020 a b c Bogorodica Ljeviska nije obnovljena ni posle 15 godina od pogroma Politika 27 April 2019 Retrieved 25 June 2020 a b Zecevic D 17 December 2018 1 000 GODINA EPARHIJE RASKO PRIZRENSKE Duhovni bedem srpskog naroda Vecernje novosti Retrieved 25 June 2020 The Serbo Byzantine style found mainly in the areas conquered from Byzantium became more widespread in the reign of King Milutin The fine churches of Bogorodica Ljeviska and Gracanica both in Kosovo were built in this style Bobot Rajko 1985 Socialist Republic of Serbia Jugoslovenska Revija p 39 a b Nenadovic 1963 p 268 Otasevic Dusan 2017 Serbian Artistic Heritage in Kosovo and Metohija Identity Significance Vulnerability Belgrade Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts p 184 ISBN 978 86 7025 753 5 Brugmann 2006 p 15 Curcic 2005 p 23 a b Curcic 2004 p 70 Curcic 2004 p 73 Boeck 2015 p 140 Igciler 2004 p 23 24 Kaleshi 1987 p 231 a b Database of Cultural Heritage of Kosovo Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Kosovo Prizren OUR LADY OF LJEVIS XIV century burnt inside PHOTO 22 3 2004 Serbian Orthodox Church Official web site Eighth anniversary of violence against KiM Serbs OrthoChristian Com pravoslavie ru Retrieved July 29 2018 Zavrshena sanaciјa i konzervaciјa zvonika na crkvi Bogorodice Љevishke u Prizrenu Politika Online Retrieved 2020 06 18 Kraјem 2019 i pochetkom 2020 godine izvedeni su pripremni radovi a kako su lokalne vlasti saglasnost za izvoђeњe radova na crkvi izdale sredinom јanuara 2020 godine realizaciјa јe pomerena za proleћe tekuћe godine Bibliography edit Boeck Elena 2015 Imagining the Byzantine Past The Perception of History in the Illustrated Manuscripts of Skylitzes and Manasses Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107085817 Ferrari Silvio Benzo Andrea 2014 Between Cultural Diversity and Common Heritage Legal and Religious Perspectives on the Sacred Places of the Mediterranean London amp New York Routledge ISBN 9781317175032 Todic Branislav 1999 Serbian Medieval Painting The Age of King Milutin Belgrade Draganic ISBN 9788644102717 Brugmann Birte 2006 An archeological map of the historic zone of Prizren PDF CHWB Kaleshi Hasan 1987 The Oldest Vakuf Charter in Yugoslavia Revue de philologie orientale 36 Curcic Slobodan 2004 Byzantium Faith and Power 1261 1557 Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York ISBN 1588391132 Curcic Slobodan 2005 Judson J Emerick ed Renewed from the Very Foundations The Question of the Genesis of the Bogorodica Ljeviska in Prizren Archaeology in architecture studies in honor of Cecil L Striker von Zabern ISBN 9783805334921 Retrieved 26 November 2012 Nenadovic Slobodan 1963 Bogorodica Ljevis ka njen postanak i njeno mesto u arhitekturi Milutinovog vremena Narodna knjiga Igciler Ahmet 2004 Prizren de yok olan Osmanli izleri Kosova Turk Arastirmacilar Dernegi External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bogorodica Ljeviska Photograph collection of the Blago Fund Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Our Lady of Ljevis amp oldid 1215713081, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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