Jovan Kantul

Jovan Kantul (Serbian Cyrillic: Јован Кантул, fl. 1592 – d. 1614), sometimes numbered Jovan II was the Archbishop of Peć and Serbian Patriarch, the spiritual leader of the Serbian Orthodox Church, from 1592 until his death in 1614. He planned a major revolt in the Ottoman Balkans, with Grdan, the vojvoda of Nikšić, asking the pope for aid (see Serb Uprising of 1596–97). Owing to his activities for planning a Serbian revolt, he was arrested and put on trial in Istanbul in 1612. He was found guilty of treason and was executed two years later (1614).

Jovan
Archbishop of Peć and Serbian Patriarch
Fresco by Georgije Mitrofanović (1619–20)
Fresco depicting Jovan Kantul
ChurchSerbian Patriarchate of Peć
SeePatriarchal Monastery of Peć
Installed1592
Term ended1614
PredecessorFilip I
SuccessorPajsije I
Personal details
Born
Jovan Kantul

Died1614
Istanbul
NationalityRum Millet (Ottoman)
DenominationEastern Orthodox Christian
OccupationSpiritual leader of the Serbian Orthodox Church

Title

  • "Archbishop of Peć and Patriarch of all Serbs and Bulgarians and Western Regions" (Јована м. б. архијепископа пећког и свим Србљем и Бугаром и западним странам патријарха), 20 July 1611.[1]

References

  1. Ilarion Ruvarac (1888). O pećkim patrijarcima: od Makarija do Arsenija III (1557-1690). Štamparija I. Vodicke. У Крци, манастиру у Далмацији сахранило се писмо „Јована м. б. архијепископа пећког и свим Србљем и Бугаром и западним странам патријарха" писано г. 7122. месецајулија 20. дан у Пећи 1611. всеосвештеном митрополиту ...

Sources

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