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Saint Savva I, first Archbishop of Serbia
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Saint Savva I, first Archbishop of Serbia
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Saint Savva I, first Archbishop of Serbia
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Saint Savva I, first Archbishop of Serbia | High quality serigraph icon, Made in RUSSIA | Size: 18 x 14 cm

$130.50 
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About this item
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  • high quality serigraph icon
  • icon on wood
  • Size: 7 x 5,5 inches (18x14x2,5 cm)
  • icon style: recessed (with kovcheg)
  • Balkan icon
  • Certificate of Quality
  • Made in Russia
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Item description from the seller
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Saint Savva, First Archbishop of Serbia, in the world Rostislav (Rastko), was a son of the Serbian king Stephen Nemanya and Anna, daughter of the Byzantine Emperor Romanus. From his early years he fervently attended church services and had a special love for icons.

At seventeen years of age, Rostislav met a monk from Mount Athos, secretly left his father’s house and set off for the Saint Panteleimon monastery. (By divine Providence in 1169, the year of the saint’s birth, the ancient monastery of the Great Martyr and healer Panteleimon was given to Russian monks.)

For his holy life and virtuous deeds on Mount Athos, the monk was made an archimandrite at Thessalonica. At Nicea in the year 1219 on the Feast of the Dormition of the Most Holy Theotokos, the Ecumenical Patriarch Germanus consecrated Archimandrite Savva as Archbishop of Serbia. The saint petitioned the Byzantine Emperor to grant permission for Serbian bishops to elect their own Archbishop in future. This was a very important consideration in a time of frequent wars between the eastern and western powers.

The legacy of Saint Savva lives on in the Orthodox Church traditions of the Slavic nations. He is associated with the introduction of the Jerusalem Typikon as the basis for Slavic Monastic Rules. The Serbian Hilandar monastery on Mt. Athos lives by the Typikon of Saint Savva to this day. Editions of The Rudder (a collection of church canons) of Saint Savva, with commentary by Alexis Aristines, are the most widely disseminated in the Russian Church. In 1270 the first copy of The Rudder of Saint Savva was sent from Bulgaria to Metropolitan Cyril of Kiev. From this was copied one of the most ancient of the Russian Rudders, the Ryazan Rudder of 1284. It in turn was the source for a printed Rudder published in 1653, and since that time often reprinted by the Russian Church. Such was the legacy of Saint Savva to the canonical treasury of Orthodoxy.

The icon is of very high quality. The middle part of the obverse of the icon has a depression of up to 0.3 cm, creating a traditional "KOVCHEG" for ancient icons. 

 

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Listed on 9 December, 2023