Eparchy of Buda
47°40′09″N 19°04′30″E / 47.66919100°N 19.07490600°E / 47.66919100; 19.07490600Information Denomination Eastern Orthodox Sui iuris church Serbian Orthodox Church
Patriarchate of Peć (Serbia) Established 16th century Cathedral Virgin's Cathedral ("Belgrade Cathedral"), Szentendre Language Church Slavonic
Serbian Current leadership Governance Szentendre (Serbian: Сентандреја) Bishop Lukijan Pantelić [sh] Map Website www.serbdiocese.hu
Patriarchate of Peć (Serbia)
Serbian
The Eparchy of Buda (Serbian: Будимска епархија or Budimska eparhija) is a diocese or eparchy of the Serbian Orthodox Church, having jurisdiction over the territory of Hungary. The seat of the eparchy is in Szentendre (Serbian: Сентандреја or Sentandreja) near Budapest.
Name
The term Buda (Serbian: Будим or Budim) in the name of the eparchy refers to the name of the former city of Buda, which merged with the city of Pest to form the modern city of Budapest in 1873. That change did not affect the eparchy and the original name has been kept to the present day.[1]
History
Early Christianity in Pannonia
Christianization of Slavs in Pannonia
Orthodox Christianity in Kingdom of Hungary
Serbian Eparchy of Buda under Turkish Rule
Serbian Eparchy of Buda under Habsburg Rule
Serbian Eparchy of Buda in Modern Hungary
Bishops
List of Serbian Orthodox Bishops of Buda:
- Archbishop Sava of Buda
- Metropolitan Sevastijan I
- Metropolitan Sevastijan II (†1662);
- Metropolitan Simeon (around 166?);
- Metropolitan Viktor (1660–1668 and 1680–1684);
- Bishop Kiril (1668–1680);
- Evtimije Popovic (1695–1700);
- Vikentije Popović-Hadžilavić (1708–1713);
- Mihailo Milosevic (bishop) (1716–1728);
- Vasilije Dimitrijevic (bishop) (1728–1748);
- Dionisije Novaković (1749–1767);
- Arsenije Radivojevic (1770–1774);
- Sofronije Kirilović (1774–1781);
- Stefan Stratimirović (1786–1790);
- Dionisije Popovic (1791–1828);
- Stefan Stanković (1829–1834);
- Justin Jovanovic (1834);
- Panteleimon Zivkovic (1836–1839);
- Platon Atanacković (1839–1851);
- Arsenije Stojković (1852–1892);
- Lukijan Bogdanović (1897–1908);
- Georgije Zubkovic (1913–1951);
- Hrizostom Vojinović (1951–1952);
- German Đorić (1952–1956);
- Arsenije Bradvarević (1960–1963);
- 1963–1988 various administrators;
- Danilo Krstić (1988–2002, admin. 1984–1988);
- Lukijan Pantelić [sh] (2002–present).
Monasteries
- Serbian Orthodox Monastery of Grabovac (Grábóc)
- Orthodox Monastery of Serbian Kovin (Ráckeve)
Gallery
- The Serbian Patriarch Arsenije III
- The Serbian Patriarch Arsenije IV
- The mitre of Arsenije Stojković, Serbian Orthodox Bishop of Buda
- The previous co-cathedral, the Church of Saint Demetrius in Buda
-
See also
Notes
- ^ Kašić 1966, pp. 10.
References
- Kašić, Dušan, ed. (1966). Serbian Orthodox Church: Its past and present. Vol. 2. Belgrade: Serbian Orthodox Church.
- Вуковић, Сава (1996). Српски јерарси од деветог до двадесетог века (Serbian Hierarchs from the 9th to the 20th Century). Евро, Унирекс, Каленић.
- Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915.
- Fodor, Pál; Dávid, Géza, eds. (2000). Ottomans, Hungarians, and Habsburgs in Central Europe: The Military Confines in the Era of Ottoman Conquest. BRILL. ISBN 9004119078.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Buda.
- Official website (in Hungarian)
- v
- t
- e
- Belgrade Metropolitanate
- Karlovci Metropolitanate
- Karlovci Patriarchate
- Hvosno
- Lipljan
- Toplica
- Banjska
- Marča
- Samokov
- Kyustendil
- Arad (1695–1865)
- Kostajnica (1713–1771)
- Šabac and Valjevo (1831–2006)
- Kotor and Dubrovnik (1870–1931)
- Zahumlje and Raška (1878–1931)
- Ohrid (1920–1931)
- Bitola (1920–1931)
- Ohrid and Bitola (1931–1967)
- Zletovo and Strumica (1920–1967)
- Mukačevo and Prešov (1931–1945)
- (For others see: History of the Serbian Orthodox Church)