Poganovo Monastery

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Poganovo monastery
Poganovo manastir.jpg
View of the Poganovo monastery.
Monastery information
Full nameМанастир Светог Јована Богослова - Погановo
Other namesMonastery of St. Jovan Bogoslov
OrderSerbian Orthodox
Established~1390
Dedicated toSaint John the Theologian
DioceseEparchy of Niš
People
Founder(s)Constantine Dragas
Architecture
Heritage designationCultural monument of Great Importance
Designated date31 May 1967
Site
LocationJerma gorge, near Dimitrovgrad
Frescoes from the Monastery church. From left to right: Descent from the Cross; Lamentation of Christ; Cutting of the empty Shroud; at the bottom heads of St Simeon Mirotočivi and Saint Sava, painted in all Serb monasteries

The Poganovo Monastery (Serbian: Mанастир Погановo, romanizedManastir Poganovo) is a Serbian Orthodox monastery situated in the gorges of the river Jerma, near the village Poganovo, municipality of Dimitrovgrad, Serbia.

According to some sources the frescoes were made by masters from Northern Greece.[1] Frescoes inscriptions are in Church Slavonic language.

Poganovo Monastery was protected by Serbia since 1949, and declared Monument of Culture of Great Importance in 1979, and it is protected by Republic of Serbia.[2]

History[]

Recently, two scholars have introduced Euthymia (Jefimija) into the discussion regarding the patronage of the famous bilateral icon representing a vision of the prophets Ezekiel and Habakkuk on one side and the Mother of God with St. John the Theologian on the other. Formerly at the monastery of John the Theologian at Poganovo, it is now kept in the National Gallery Sofia, Bulgaria.[3][4] as the monastery was on the territory of Bulgaria until 1920. Babić and Subotić argue against earlier opinions based on a partly preserved inscription, in Greek, that the icon was a gift of the Empress Helena Dragaš, wife of Byzantine Emperor Manuel II Palaiologos (1391-1425). They suggest that the donor may be Helena/Euthymia, who as a wife of a Despot would have had, in the late period, the title of vasilissa.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ http://www.b92.net/eng/travel/culture.php?nav_id=35213
  2. ^ Monuments of Culture in Serbia: Манастир Поганово (SANU) (in Serbian and English)
  3. ^ G. Babić, 'Sur l'icônede Poganovo el la Vasilissa Hélèn', in D. Davidov, ed., L'Art de Thessalonique et des pays Balkaniques et les courants spirituels auXIVe siècle (Belgrade, 1987), pp 57-65
  4. ^ G. Subotić, Ikona vasilise Jelene i osnovaći manastira Poganova, Saopštenja 25 (1993), pp. 25-40.

Further reading[]

External links[]

Coordinates: 42°58′47″N 22°38′15″E / 42.97972°N 22.63750°E / 42.97972; 22.63750

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