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Paraskeva of the Balkans

Saint Paraskeva of the Balkans (also known as: Света Петка Българска, Petka of Bulgaria, Petka of Serbia, Paraskeva of Serbia, Paraskeva the Serbian, Paraskeva of Belgrade, Parascheva the New, Parascheva the Young, Ancient Greek: Ὁσία Παρασκευὴ ἡ Ἐπιβατινή, Greek: Οσία Παρασκευή η Επιβατινή ή Νέα, Romanian: Sfânta Cuvioasă Parascheva, Serbian: Света Петка / Sveta Petka or Петка Параскева / Света Петка Македонка / Petka Paraskeva, Paraskeva Pyatnitsa, Parascheva of Tirnovo) was an ascetic female saint of the 10th century.

Saint Paraskeva of the Balkans
Icon of St Petka from Klisura Monastery, Bulgaria.
Saint Nun[1]
BornEpivates
(modern-day Selimpaşa, Istanbul, Turkey)
Died11th century
Kallikrateia
(modern-day Greece)
Venerated inEastern Orthodox Church
Major shrineMetropolitan Cathedral of Iaşi, Romania; Church of St Paraskeva, Nesebar
Feast14 October
27 October
Patronageembroiderers, needle workers, spinners, weavers[2]

Biography

 
Visual hagiography of St Paraskeva (Patriarchate of Peć, 1719-20).

Paraskeva was born in the town of Epivates (close to present-day Istanbul) on the shore of the Sea of Marmara.[3] Her parents were wealthy landowners.[2]

Legend says that as a child, Paraskeva heard in a church the Lord's words: "Whoever wants to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me." (Mark 8, 34). These words would determine her to give her rich clothes away to the poor and to flee to Constantinople.[2] Her parents, who did not support her decision to follow an ascetic, religious life, looked for her in various cities. Paraskeva fled to Chalcedon in Asia Minor, and afterwards lived at the church of the Most Holy Theotokos in Heraclea Pontica in Bithynia.[2] She led an austere life, experiencing visions of the Virgin Mary. Her travels took her to Jerusalem; she wished to spend the rest of her life there. After seeing Jerusalem, she settled in a convent in the desert near the River Jordan.

When she was 25, an angel appeared, telling her to return to her homeland. She returned to Constantinople, and then, aged 25, lived in the village of Kallikrateia, in the church of the Holy Apostles. She died at the age of 27.

Local church-building

A church dedicated to her was built in Epivates (present-day Selimpaşa) on the spot where her house of birth once stood. The oldest testimony regarding the church - written by the Russian traveller Anthony of Novgorod (who later became Archbishop of Novgorod) - dates back to the early-13th century. In August 1817 a great fire completely destroyed the church; it was rebuilt in 1820 with the financial support of the citizens of Constantinople and of the former Prince of Moldo-Wallahia, Alexander Kallimachi. In 1885 the Community[which?] demolished the old church in order to construct a much bigger one on the same site. The building, completed after 6 years, re-used parts of the 1327–1341 Byzantine tower of Duke Alexis Apokaukos as building material. It was the biggest church in the whole of Eastern Thrace (16 m in height, 26 m in width and 30 m in length), a real jewel that could be seen from kilometres away.[citation needed] It was completely demolished in the spring of 1979; a park occupies the site.

Veneration

Christian tradition states that after an old sinner was buried near Paraskeva’s grave, the saint protested by appearing in a dream to a local monk. The vision informed the monk where the saint had been buried; when the body was unearthed, it was found to be incorrupt.[2] The relics were translated to the church of the Holy Apostles in Kallikrateia.[2]

The cult of Saint Parascheva spread in the 14th century from Bulgaria northwards into the Romanian principalities, Wallachia and Moldavia. In this period, Bishop Evtimiy of Tarnovo (1332-1402) wrote the biography of Saint Parascheva - "Hagiography of Saint Petka of Tarnovo”.[4] The bishop's work was inspired from the Greek Bios of deacon Basilikos, written in the year 1150 by request of Constantinople Patriarch Nicholas IV Mouzelon.

Sometimes, Saint Parascheva of Thrace(St.Petka) is named The New. There are two other saints with her name, Saint Paraskevi of Rome (2nd century) and Saint Paraskevi of Iconium.

Some scholars wrote that there could be According to some scholars, siome overlappings between these three saints. Also, confusion might have occurred with some folk tales characters. Paraskeva’s cult and attributes became confused with that of other saints with the same name as well as pre-Christian deities of the Slavs.[5]

This confusion was made because the Greek name of St Parascheva was “paraskevi”, meaning “Friday”. The translation in languages as Romanian or Serbian was “Sfânta Vineri” or “Sveta Petka” meaning Saint Friday. The translation from Greek language to Romanian, Serbian or Bulgarian language was sometimes misunderstood by some scholars who connected the translated name of Saint Parascheva, Saint Friday, with a certain character from folk tales having a similar name.

As one scholar asks:

Was Parasceve, or Paraskeva, an early Christian maiden named in honor of the day of the Crucifixion? Or was she a personification of that day, pictured cross in hand to assist the fervor of the faithful? And was the Paraskeva of the South Slavs the same who made her appearance in northern Russia?[5]

The answer is that there is a complete separation between the 10th-century Christian Saint Parascheva The New (called "of the Balkans") and the folk character mentioned above, derived perhaps from pre-Christian mystical beliefs. The separation is made by rich biography and iconography transferred from the 10th century to 21st, all this information and studies being connected to a real person who lived in that period.

Hagiographies of Saint Parascheva (Petka) were written by: deacon Basilikos in 1150, bishop Evtimiy of Tarnovo in ca. 1385, metropolitan Matei of Mira in 1605, metropolitan Varlaam of Moldova in 1643, Saint Nikodimos the Athonite (19th century), Romanian Bishop Melchisedec of Roman in 1889.[6]

The cults of Paraskevi of Iconium (Paraskeva-Pyatnitsa) and Paraskeva of the Balkans were conflated with that of a Slavic deity associated with Friday, alternatively known as Petka, Pyatnitsa, or Zhiva.[7][8][9] Attributes, such as the association with spinning, were also merged into the cult of these saints.[7]

Any confusion was clarified after Romanian Orthodox Church decided on 28 February 1950 to generalise the cult of Saint Parascheva The New.[10] The generalisation of the cult was celebrated on 14 October 1955 in Iasi Cathedral with the presence of high rank clerics from Bulgaria and Russia.

Some modern Romanian theologians published studies about Saint Parascheva: Pr. Gh. Păvăloiu (1935), Arhim. Varahil Jitaru (1942), D. Stănescu (1938), Pr. M. Țesan (1955), Pr. Scarlat Porcescu, Pr. Prof. Mircea Păcurariu.

Relics

In subsequent years, Paraskevi’s relics were transferred to various churches in the region.[2]

In 1238, the relics were transferred from Kallikrateia to Veliko Tarnovo, capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire.[11]

In 1393, they were transferred to Belgrade,[11] specifically the Ružica Church. When Belgrade fell to Ottoman forces in 1521, the relics were transferred to Constantinople. In 1641, the relics were transferred to Trei Ierarhi Monastery, in Iaşi, Moldavia (nowadays, eastern part of Romania). In 1888, they were transferred to the Metropolitan Cathedral of Iaşi.[2]

A severe drought in 1946-47 affected Moldavia, adding to the misery left by the war. Metropolitan Justinian Marina permitted the first procession featuring the coffin containing the relics of Saint Paraskevi, kept at Iaşi since then. The relics wended their way through the drought-deserted villages of Iaşi, Vaslui, Roman, Bacău, Putna, Neamţ, Baia and Botoşani Counties. The offerings collected on this occasion were distributed, based on Metropolitan Justinian's decisions, to orphans, widows, invalids, school cafeterias, churches under construction, and to monasteries in order to feed the sick, and old or feeble monks.[12]

Iași Pilgrimage

Pilgrimage at the shrines located in the Metropolitan Cathedral of Iași has become one of the major religious events in Romania. Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims gather each year in Iași in the second weekend of October to commemorate St. Parascheva, while the city itself established its Celebration Days at the same time.

Noteworthy churches

 
St. Paraskeva depicted on a Serb Orthodox painting

References

  1. ^ "Преподобная Параске́ва-Пе́тка Сербская". azbyka.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-05-20.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h . Patron Saints Index. 2010. Archived from the original on June 15, 2010. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  3. ^ Kiril Petkov, The Voices of Medieval Bulgaria, Seventh-Fifteenth Century: The Records of a Bygone Culture, Volume 5, BRILL, 2008, ISBN 9004168311, p. 274.
  4. ^ Life of Saint Parascheva, bishop Evtimy of Tarnovo, romanian title - Viata Sfintei Parascheva, de Sfantul Eftimie din Tarnovo, Editura Agapis
  5. ^ a b Nicholas Valentine Riasanovsky, Gleb Struve, Thomas Eekman, California Slavic Studies, Volume 11 (University of California Press, 1980), 39.
  6. ^ Life and miracles of Saint Parascheva The New and history of his relics, bishop Melchisedec of Roman, romanian title - Viața și minunile Cuvioasei noastre Parascheva cea nouă și istoricul sfintelor ei moaște, București, 1889
  7. ^ a b Joanna Hubbs, Mother Russia: the feminine myth in Russian culture. Volume 842 of Midland Book (Indiana University Press, 1993), 117.
  8. ^ Boris Rybakov. Ancient Slavic Paganism
  9. ^ Boris Rybakov (2010). "Ancient Slavic Paganism". Bibliotekar. Retrieved April 1, 2010.
  10. ^ "Saints Daco-Romans and Romanians, Pr. Prof. Dr. Mircea Pacurariu, Romanian title Sfinti Daco-Romani si Romani”, Editura Mitropoliei Moldovei si Bucovinei, Iasi, 1994
  11. ^ a b . Orthodox America. 2010. Archived from the original on January 11, 2001. Retrieved April 1, 2010.
  12. ^ . Centrul de pelerinaj. 2010. Archived from the original on August 13, 2009. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  13. ^
  14. ^ http://sv-paraskeva.if.ua

paraskeva, balkans, other, saints, named, paraskevi, parascheva, list, saints, named, paraskevi, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable,. For other saints named Paraskevi or Parascheva see List of saints named Paraskevi This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Saint Paraskeva of the Balkans also known as Sveta Petka Blgarska Petka of Bulgaria Petka of Serbia Paraskeva of Serbia Paraskeva the Serbian Paraskeva of Belgrade Parascheva the New Parascheva the Young Ancient Greek Ὁsia Paraskeyὴ ἡ Ἐpibatinh Greek Osia Paraskeyh h Epibatinh h Nea Romanian Sfanta Cuvioasă Parascheva Serbian Sveta Petka Sveta Petka or Petka Paraskeva Sveta Petka Makedonka Petka Paraskeva Paraskeva Pyatnitsa Parascheva of Tirnovo was an ascetic female saint of the 10th century Saint Paraskeva of the BalkansIcon of St Petka from Klisura Monastery Bulgaria Saint Nun 1 BornEpivates modern day Selimpasa Istanbul Turkey Died11th centuryKallikrateia modern day Greece Venerated inEastern Orthodox ChurchMajor shrineMetropolitan Cathedral of Iasi Romania Church of St Paraskeva NesebarFeast14 October27 OctoberPatronageembroiderers needle workers spinners weavers 2 Contents 1 Biography 2 Local church building 3 Veneration 4 Relics 5 Iași Pilgrimage 6 Noteworthy churches 7 ReferencesBiography Edit Visual hagiography of St Paraskeva Patriarchate of Pec 1719 20 Paraskeva was born in the town of Epivates close to present day Istanbul on the shore of the Sea of Marmara 3 Her parents were wealthy landowners 2 Legend says that as a child Paraskeva heard in a church the Lord s words Whoever wants to come after Me let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow Me Mark 8 34 These words would determine her to give her rich clothes away to the poor and to flee to Constantinople 2 Her parents who did not support her decision to follow an ascetic religious life looked for her in various cities Paraskeva fled to Chalcedon in Asia Minor and afterwards lived at the church of the Most Holy Theotokos in Heraclea Pontica in Bithynia 2 She led an austere life experiencing visions of the Virgin Mary Her travels took her to Jerusalem she wished to spend the rest of her life there After seeing Jerusalem she settled in a convent in the desert near the River Jordan When she was 25 an angel appeared telling her to return to her homeland She returned to Constantinople and then aged 25 lived in the village of Kallikrateia in the church of the Holy Apostles She died at the age of 27 Local church building EditA church dedicated to her was built in Epivates present day Selimpasa on the spot where her house of birth once stood The oldest testimony regarding the church written by the Russian traveller Anthony of Novgorod who later became Archbishop of Novgorod dates back to the early 13th century In August 1817 a great fire completely destroyed the church it was rebuilt in 1820 with the financial support of the citizens of Constantinople and of the former Prince of Moldo Wallahia Alexander Kallimachi In 1885 the Community which demolished the old church in order to construct a much bigger one on the same site The building completed after 6 years re used parts of the 1327 1341 Byzantine tower of Duke Alexis Apokaukos as building material It was the biggest church in the whole of Eastern Thrace 16 m in height 26 m in width and 30 m in length a real jewel that could be seen from kilometres away citation needed It was completely demolished in the spring of 1979 a park occupies the site Veneration EditChristian tradition states that after an old sinner was buried near Paraskeva s grave the saint protested by appearing in a dream to a local monk The vision informed the monk where the saint had been buried when the body was unearthed it was found to be incorrupt 2 The relics were translated to the church of the Holy Apostles in Kallikrateia 2 The cult of Saint Parascheva spread in the 14th century from Bulgaria northwards into the Romanian principalities Wallachia and Moldavia In this period Bishop Evtimiy of Tarnovo 1332 1402 wrote the biography of Saint Parascheva Hagiography of Saint Petka of Tarnovo 4 The bishop s work was inspired from the Greek Bios of deacon Basilikos written in the year 1150 by request of Constantinople Patriarch Nicholas IV Mouzelon Sometimes Saint Parascheva of Thrace St Petka is named The New There are two other saints with her name Saint Paraskevi of Rome 2nd century and Saint Paraskevi of Iconium Some scholars wrote that there could be According to some scholars siome overlappings between these three saints Also confusion might have occurred with some folk tales characters Paraskeva s cult and attributes became confused with that of other saints with the same name as well as pre Christian deities of the Slavs 5 This confusion was made because the Greek name of St Parascheva was paraskevi meaning Friday The translation in languages as Romanian or Serbian was Sfanta Vineri or Sveta Petka meaning Saint Friday The translation from Greek language to Romanian Serbian or Bulgarian language was sometimes misunderstood by some scholars who connected the translated name of Saint Parascheva Saint Friday with a certain character from folk tales having a similar name As one scholar asks Was Parasceve or Paraskeva an early Christian maiden named in honor of the day of the Crucifixion Or was she a personification of that day pictured cross in hand to assist the fervor of the faithful And was the Paraskeva of the South Slavs the same who made her appearance in northern Russia 5 The answer is that there is a complete separation between the 10th century Christian Saint Parascheva The New called of the Balkans and the folk character mentioned above derived perhaps from pre Christian mystical beliefs The separation is made by rich biography and iconography transferred from the 10th century to 21st all this information and studies being connected to a real person who lived in that period Hagiographies of Saint Parascheva Petka were written by deacon Basilikos in 1150 bishop Evtimiy of Tarnovo in ca 1385 metropolitan Matei of Mira in 1605 metropolitan Varlaam of Moldova in 1643 Saint Nikodimos the Athonite 19th century Romanian Bishop Melchisedec of Roman in 1889 6 The cults of Paraskevi of Iconium Paraskeva Pyatnitsa and Paraskeva of the Balkans were conflated with that of a Slavic deity associated with Friday alternatively known as Petka Pyatnitsa or Zhiva 7 8 9 Attributes such as the association with spinning were also merged into the cult of these saints 7 Any confusion was clarified after Romanian Orthodox Church decided on 28 February 1950 to generalise the cult of Saint Parascheva The New 10 The generalisation of the cult was celebrated on 14 October 1955 in Iasi Cathedral with the presence of high rank clerics from Bulgaria and Russia Some modern Romanian theologians published studies about Saint Parascheva Pr Gh Păvăloiu 1935 Arhim Varahil Jitaru 1942 D Stănescu 1938 Pr M Țesan 1955 Pr Scarlat Porcescu Pr Prof Mircea Păcurariu Relics EditIn subsequent years Paraskevi s relics were transferred to various churches in the region 2 In 1238 the relics were transferred from Kallikrateia to Veliko Tarnovo capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire 11 In 1393 they were transferred to Belgrade 11 specifically the Ruzica Church When Belgrade fell to Ottoman forces in 1521 the relics were transferred to Constantinople In 1641 the relics were transferred to Trei Ierarhi Monastery in Iasi Moldavia nowadays eastern part of Romania In 1888 they were transferred to the Metropolitan Cathedral of Iasi 2 A severe drought in 1946 47 affected Moldavia adding to the misery left by the war Metropolitan Justinian Marina permitted the first procession featuring the coffin containing the relics of Saint Paraskevi kept at Iasi since then The relics wended their way through the drought deserted villages of Iasi Vaslui Roman Bacău Putna Neamţ Baia and Botosani Counties The offerings collected on this occasion were distributed based on Metropolitan Justinian s decisions to orphans widows invalids school cafeterias churches under construction and to monasteries in order to feed the sick and old or feeble monks 12 Iași Pilgrimage EditPilgrimage at the shrines located in the Metropolitan Cathedral of Iași has become one of the major religious events in Romania Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims gather each year in Iași in the second weekend of October to commemorate St Parascheva while the city itself established its Celebration Days at the same time Noteworthy churches Edit St Paraskeva depicted on a Serb Orthodox painting Wikimedia Commons has media related to Parascheva of the Balkans Metropolitan Cathedral Iași Romania Church of Saint Paraskevi Ὁsias Paraskeyῆs Neoi Epivates Greece Church of Saint Stefanos and Saint Paraskeva Ἁgioy Stefanoy kaὶ Ὁsias Paraskeyῆs Ptolemaida Greece Church of St Petka Breznik Bulgaria Church of St Paraskeva Nesebar Bulgaria Church of St Petka of the Saddlers Sofia Bulgaria Church of St Petka Ruse Bulgaria Church of St Petka Vukovo Bulgaria St Petka of Bulgaria Baba Vanga s Church Rupite Bulgaria Monastery of St Petka Brajcino North Macedonia 16th cent Church of St Petka Siricino North Macedonia 1567 Church of St Peta Selnik North Macedonia 14th cent Church of Pious Paraskeva Desești Romania Church of Saint Paraskevi Paloumba Greece Church of Pious Parascheva Poienile Izei Romania Church of Saint Parascheva 17th century Majs Hungary Wooden Church of Saint Paraskevi of Serbia 1820 with a belfry in Ivano Frankivsk Raion Ivano Frankivsk Oblast Ukraine Church of St Petka Belgrade Serbia 13 Church of St Petka Pljevlja Montenegro Church of St Petka Dubica Bosna i Hercegovina Church of Saint Parascheva Slabinja Croatia St Petka s Church Banovci Croatia Saint Petka Serbian Orthodox Church Maidstone Ontario Church of St Paraskevia Ukraine Ivano Frankivsk Opryshivtsi 14 Saint Petka Serbian Orthodox Church in Windsor Lakeshore Ontario Canada St James the Apostel and St Paraskeva The Hague The NetherlandsReferences Edit Prepodobnaya Paraske va Pe tka Serbskaya azbyka ru in Russian Retrieved 2021 05 20 a b c d e f g h Saint Petca Parasceva Patron Saints Index 2010 Archived from the original on June 15 2010 Retrieved March 31 2010 Kiril Petkov The Voices of Medieval Bulgaria Seventh Fifteenth Century The Records of a Bygone Culture Volume 5 BRILL 2008 ISBN 9004168311 p 274 Life of Saint Parascheva bishop Evtimy of Tarnovo romanian title Viata Sfintei Parascheva de Sfantul Eftimie din Tarnovo Editura Agapis a b Nicholas Valentine Riasanovsky Gleb Struve Thomas Eekman California Slavic Studies Volume 11 University of California Press 1980 39 Life and miracles of Saint Parascheva The New and history of his relics bishop Melchisedec of Roman romanian title Viața și minunile Cuvioasei noastre Parascheva cea nouă și istoricul sfintelor ei moaște București 1889 a b Joanna Hubbs Mother Russia the feminine myth in Russian culture Volume 842 of Midland Book Indiana University Press 1993 117 Boris Rybakov Ancient Slavic Paganism Boris Rybakov 2010 Ancient Slavic Paganism Bibliotekar Retrieved April 1 2010 Saints Daco Romans and Romanians Pr Prof Dr Mircea Pacurariu Romanian title Sfinti Daco Romani si Romani Editura Mitropoliei Moldovei si Bucovinei Iasi 1994 a b St Petca Parasceva Orthodox America 2010 Archived from the original on January 11 2001 Retrieved April 1 2010 Dobrogea Centrul de pelerinaj 2010 Archived from the original on August 13 2009 Retrieved March 31 2010 Church of St Petka Serbian http sv paraskeva if ua Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paraskeva of the Balkans amp oldid 1122053943, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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