Pavle I, Serbian Patriarch

Serbian Patriarch Pavle I (Serbian Cyrillic: Српски патријарх Павле I; fl. 1527–1541) was the Archbishop of Peć and self-proclaimed Serbian Patriarch from around 1530 to 1541. He tried to end the long period of vacancy of the Serbian Patriarchal Throne, with limited and temporary success.[1]

Pavle I
Archbishop of Peć and Serbian Patriarch
ChurchSerbian Patriarchate of Peć and Archbishopric of Ohrid (in dispute)
Installedaround 1530
Term ended1541
Other post(s)Metropolitan of Smederevo (until 1530)
Personal details
BornBefore 1500
DiedAfter 1541
NationalityRum Millet (Serbian)
DenominationSerbian Orthodox
Residence
Previous post(s)Metropolitan of Smederevo

Biography

As the Metropolitan of Smederevo, he managed with the help of notable Serbs and some Ottoman officials to take control over the Archiepiscopal see of Peć, and worked toward its renewed autocephaly, recreating the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć that had been vacant since 1463 and formally abolished by the Ottomans,[2] who transferred all Serbian eparchies to the jurisdiction of the Archbishopric of Ohrid.[3]

Most of the higher clergy, however, supported the Archbishop Prohor of Ohrid, and on the Church assembly on 13 March 1532 anathematized Pavle and his followers. After some time Pavle made peace with Prohor, and recognized his supreme jurisdiction, but later began a more active struggle for removing Peć from the jurisdiction of Ohrid. He successfully had Prohor and his closest people imprisoned by the Ottoman government, and had unreliable bishops removed and began reorganizing Serbian Orthodox Church, proclaiming himself Serbian Patriarch.[4]

Prohor managed to free himself and after talks with the Sultan was reappointed as Archbishopric of Ohrid. Upon Prohor's return, an assembly was summoned on 20 July 1541 which stripped Pavle of his titles and priesthood, along with bishop Neofit of Lesnovo, Teofan of Zvornik and Pahomije of Kratovo, all of whom Pavle had appointed – those who still recognized them as their bishops were to be anathematized. After this, Pavle went into exile.[5]

References

  1. Вуковић 1996, p. 383.
  2. Fotić 2008, p. 519-520.
  3. Слијепчевић 1962, pp. 321–322.
  4. Пузовић 2000, pp. 27.
  5. Ćirković 2004, pp. 134–135.

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.