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Domentijan (Serbian Cyrillic: Доментијан; c. 1210-after 1264), also known as Domentijan the Hilandarian (Доментијан Хиландарац), was a major figure in medieval Serbian literature and philosophy.[1] He was a monk at the Hilandar Monastery and a contemporary of Saint Sava.[2] In fact, he accompanied St. Sava when the latter visited the Holy Land. He was much respected by the royal court, as well as by the monks on Mount Athos. Athonite scribe Teodore's account of his troubles, recorded on the pages of John Exarch's Hexameron (Šestodnev), which Teodore was copying at Domentijan's request, contains many references concerning Domentijan's humanity and assistance extended to him. The manuscript is now in the State Historical Museum in Moscow.

Domentijan
Native name
Доментијан Хиландарац
Born1210
Grand Principality of Serbia
Died1264 (aged c. 54)
Occupationmonk, scribe, writer, philosopher
LanguageSerbian Old Church Slavonic

It may be concluded that Domentijan was essentially a hymnologist who wrote biographies to two Serbian saints but, in fact, glorified monasticism and Christianity.


Biography of St. Sava


Domentijan's biography of St. Sava, written c. 1253 (and an earlier one of St. Simeon Nemanja) was expressly written by order of the royal court of King Stefan Uroš I, seven years after Sava's death. It is a work giving an account of St. Sava's life, yet it is also an apotheosis of monasticism. Domentijan's style is characterized by fluent narration, panegyric diction, an abundance of theological and mystical elements with an emphasis on a spiritual and clearly monastic point of view. Domentijan wrote it in the kellion (cell) built by Sava at Karyes, the Athonite seat.


Biography of St. Simeon


For his biography of St. Simeon, Domentijan used material from works of previous authors and thus unintentionally preserved some of them until contemporary time.[2] He drew freely from Stefan the First-Crowned's biography of Stefan Nemanja; one-third of his own biography of St. Sava; and in the Panegyric to St. Simeon, he used a few lines from Ilarion's Panegyric to St. Vladimir.


Legacy


He is included in The 100 most prominent Serbs. Đura Daničić published Domentijan's texts in Belgrade in 1865.[3][2] Srpska književna zadruga adapted them to modern language in 1938.[2]


See also



References


  1. Mateja Matejić and Dragan Milivojević, "An Anthology of Medieval Serbian Literature in English" (Columbus, Ohio, Slavica Publioshers, Inc., 1978), p. 55
  2. Đorđe Radojičić (1971). Živan Milisavac (ed.). Jugoslovenski književni leksikon [Yugoslav Literary Lexicon] (in Serbo-Croatian). Novi Sad (SAP Vojvodina, SR Serbia): Matica srpska. p. 98.
  3. Daničić 1865.

Sources





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