SOME OBSERVATIONS ABOUT SERBIAN-ORTHODOX SPIRITUALITY IN BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA IN THE OTTOMAN-TURKISH PERIOD Cover Image

NEKA ZAPAŽANJA O SRPSKO-PRAVOSLAVNOJ DUHOVNOSTI U BOSNI I HERCEGOVINI U OSMANSKO TURSKOM VREMENU
SOME OBSERVATIONS ABOUT SERBIAN-ORTHODOX SPIRITUALITY IN BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA IN THE OTTOMAN-TURKISH PERIOD

Author(s): Boris Nilević
Subject(s): History of Church(es), 16th Century, The Ottoman Empire, Eastern Orthodoxy, History of Religion
Published by: Orijentalni Institut u Sarajevu
Keywords: Serbian-Orthodox spirituality; Bosnia and Herzegovina; The Ottoman Empire; Serb monks;

Summary/Abstract: Venetians, Germans and French, after traveling through Bosnia and Herzegovina’s lands, spoke ironically about our cultural level under the Osmanlis’ rule, saying that Serb monks were peasant dullards, On the basis of their communication with the people and clergymen they stated the Serbs did not know the articles of religion, nor the formulae of Sunday prayers, sacraments of obedience; that the priests did not know themselves what they were telling the people; that only the minority knew the "Lord’s Prayer" and "faith"; that monks after the service went to work in the fields; that they did not speak any other languages, etc. The western world did not see many a thing in the life of the Orthodox monasteries. For it, this remained a secret. In those foreign notes there was no mention of monks (biographers, icon-painters), printers, bookbinder, copyists, writers of introductions and postscripts to sacred writings, skillful envoys visiting Sultans, Russian Tsars and the Lords of Wallachia and Moldavia, the monks-merchants trading with Dubrovnik. Had the western world seen that, then it would have learned that it was not complete spiritual ignorance and general negligence that dominated the Serb people and their church during the Osmanli-Turkish times. Sometimes even historians created that dark about understanding those times by accepting data uncritically.

  • Issue Year: 1995
  • Issue No: 42-43
  • Page Range: 201-209
  • Page Count: 9
  • Language: Bosnian