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Nikodim Milaš

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Nikodim Milaš
A photo of Nikodim Milaš
Born
Nikola Ante Valmassoni Milaš

(1845-04-16)16 April 1845
Died2 April 1915(1915-04-02) (aged 69)
Occupation(s)bishop, theologian, historian, writer, translator, academic

Nikodim Milaš (Serbian Cyrillic: Никодим Милаш), born Nikola Milaš, baptized Nikola Ante Valmassoni Milaš (16 April 1845 – 2 April 1915), was a Serbian Orthodox Church bishop, theologian, university professor and academic. He was a writer, one of the most respected experts on Eastern Orthodox canon law, and less on church history. As a canon lawyer in Dalmatia, he defended the Serbian Orthodox Church against the state. He was an academic and polyglot. Milaš authored a number of books, including the criticized Orthodox Dalmatia (1901). His bibliography reportedly includes more than 180 works.

Beyond his work in canonical and ecclesiastical law, was dedicated in countering Catholic proselytism and state efforts which downplayed the Serbian Orthodox heritage. He was one of the founders of the Serb Party in Dalmatia served in the Diet of Dalmatia (1889-1901). However, in some of his historiographical writings portrayed the two denominations in a black-and-white manner and fabricated certain historical statements about the history of the Orthodox Church, which was used during the rise of Serbian nationalism and breakup of SFR Yugoslavia.

Biography

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Early life

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Milaš was born at Šibenik in Kingdom of Dalmatia (then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire) on 16 April 1845, as an illegitimate son of Serb Orthodox father Trifun Milaš who came to the city from an area around Vrlika and Italian Catholic mother Maria Valmassoni from Šibenik.[1][2] He was baptized on 24 April as Nikola Ante Valmassoni (later added Milaš) in the Roman Catholic church,[1] and three years later on 8 May 1848 in the Eastern Orthodox church in Šibenik according to the will of his father (then living in Istanbul in fear of Maria's family feud).[1] His mother eventually converted to Orthodoxy and married his father on 14 July 1851 in an Orthodox church.[1]

Education

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He attended local primary school in Italian language held by Franciscans, and then lower Dominican gymnasium of St. Dominik in Zadar, fourth class in Jesuits gymnasium in Dubrovnik, and maturity again in Zadar (1863).[3][4] He went to study theology in the Serbian Orthodox Theological School at Sremski Karlovci (1866), then philosophy in Vienna, but after a year moved to the Kievan Theological Academy and Seminary (then part of Imperial Russia), graduating in 1871.[5][4] He received a master's degree in Canon Law and Church History, and wrote his dissertation Nomocanon of Patriarch Photius.[citation needed]

Early activity

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Upon his return home, he was appointed as an assistant professor at the Seminary in Zadar (i.e. the Theological Orthodox Institute), a year later full professor of the canon law and practical theology, and soon dean of the seminary.[4] Professor Nikola Milaš was tonsured in 1873 at the Dragović monastery, and given the monastic name of Nikodim.[4] Because of his fluency in German, French, Italian, Russian, as well as Greek and Latin, he was able to read primary sources and contribute to the field of history. He advocated for Serbian language in secondary schools, organized and helped educational and humanitarian foundations and engaged in missionary work fostering Orthodoxy and Serbian identity in Dalmatia. He also directed fiery passion at what he saw as proselytization by the Catholic Church's high priesthood.[4]

Since 1873 with friend Ljubomir Vujnović worked on rising national awareness and unity among the Dalmatian Serbs, which according to Milaš, was also a reaction to the Dalmatian Croats who were denying the Serbs their national identity.[3] Being one of the founders of the Serb People's Party (Dalmatia), his public proclamations caused him further enmity among Croats, but also many Serbs, as recalled in his memoirs.[3] He opposed Sava Bjelanović's liberal idea that the Serbian national identity could be defined without confessional identity, and often was in conflict with Bjelanović (over editing of Srpski list and else),[6] leading the conservative right-wing branch of the party.[7]

In the early 1880s, when Josip Juraj Strossmayer called for the unification of South Slavs with veneration of Cyril and Methodius as common Slavic heritage, and on his Catholic initiative happened multinational Slavic pilgrimage to Rome, it sparked transnational and transconfessional debate, mostly among Serbs.[8] Milaš published a monograph "Sts. Cyril and Methodius and the Truth of Orthodoxy", opposing the Catholic church initiatives, and describing the brothers as "great warriors of Orthodoxy ... in the battle against the enemies of Orthodoxy".[8]

When Bosnia and Herzegovina came under Austrian rule, he believed that according to canon law, all Serbian church metropolitans in Bosnia should come under jurisdiction of the Metropolitanate of Karlovci.[9] In 1886 went to be rector of the Belgrade Seminary (Bogoslovija) in Serbia.[4] He tried to reform it to the modern standards.[4][10] In early 1888 he was back in Zadar where he completed that same year two major works: Roman Catholic Propaganda: its foundation and rules today (1889) and his six-volume treatise on the Serbian Orthodox Church entitled Orthodox Church and Canon Law (1890).[3]

After the death of bishop Stefan Knežević, he was elected Bishop of Dalmatia and Istria (1890-1912), and appointed Dean and Professor of canon law at Zadar's Theological Orthodox Institute where he taught from 1890 to 1910.[5][4] His most valuable historical work Documenta spectantia historiam ortodoxae dioeceseos Dalmatiae et Istriae a XV usque ad XIX saeculum (vol. I) was published in 1899, with unpublished second volume.[3]

Late activity and death

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Throughout his tenure, as opposed the unification of the Orthodox and Roman Catholic church; he was under pressure from anti-Serb Orthodox authorities and forced to endure aggressive Roman Catholic proselytism.[3] This motivated him to research and write the history of the Orthodox Church and Serbs in Dalmatia, published in 1901 as a book Pravoslavna Dalmacija (Orthodox Dalmatia).[3] However, the work riddled with many exceptional claims, had mixed critical reception.[3]

He continued to be politically active in the right-wing sector of the Serb Party, serving in the Diet of Dalmatia (1889-1901).[4] Because of his national engagement he was targeted by the secret police and members of the intelligentsia.[4] With the on-going Croat-Serb Coalition (1905), Milaš rejected to participate at the so-called Zadar Resolution (14 November 1905), possibly due to his rising unwelcoming attitude towards Croats, as expressed in Orthodox Dalmatia few years ago.[11]

Under constant pressure from civil authorities and other affairs, Milaš forcibly retired from the position of Bishop of Dalmatia in early 1912.[4] Such retirement was an uncommon event, and is considered that was caused by scandal surrounding the prolonged embezzlement of great amount of money of various funds (academic, school, construction and maintenance) and other goods of the Orthodox municipality.[1][2][12] The scandal caused suicide of Dositej Jović on 12 October 1910, then bishop of Kotor and consistory treasurer in Zadar, writing in his last letter that "there is my fault too, but it is more prevalent on the other, higher side" (with the "higher side" meant Milaš).[1][13] In the Serbian public and media the scandal was perceived with significant disappointment and disgrace.[1] In late 1911 the administrative board of the Orthodox priest association of the Dalmatian eparchy published a circulaire, which Milaš received in January 1912, in which blamed and held him morally responsible for the loses, and that according to the people's statements, the priesthood from Zadar talked of embezzlement as early as 1901.[1]

In 1914, when Austria-Hungary declared war against Serbia, the police searched his apartment and took possession of some of his private correspondences and latest work.[3] Milaš died in Dubrovnik on 20 March 1915.[5] On 4 October 1930 his remains were transferred to Šibenik and buried the next day "in a special chapel at the St. Salvation church" (of the Catholic monastery of St. Salvation until early 19th century and since then the Orthodox Church of the Dormition of the Theotokos, Šibenik).[4]

Legacy

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Milaš grew up in a region where jurisprudence was founded on Roman and Byzantine law.[14] Most of his work was translated into Russian, German, Romanian, Bulgarian and Greek, and has greatly influenced modern Orthodox canonists.[14] Milaš produced a number of collections of canonical texts and was particularly interested in the churches of North Africa in the Roman period. He was largely active on the matter of Church-State relations, a subject which preoccupied most of his work.[14] He translated The Constitution (Syntagma) of the Divine and Sacred Canons by Rallis and Potlis, and placed his commentaries in the context of previous Biblical hermeneutic works.[15] His bibliography includes more than 180 published works, either books or texts in various magazines. His collected works were published in 7 volumes.

He was one of the most respected experts and authorities on Eastern Orthodox canonical and ecclesiastical law,[15][16] and although his career as a church historian was less notable and plagued with ideological motivation, nonetheless belongs among notable Serbian church historians.[3]

Milaš was an honorary member of the Moscow Theological Academy, Saint Petersburg Theological Academy, corresponding member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts (SANU), member of the Society for recent history of Austria in Vienna, Matica Dalmatinska, Matica srpska, the Serb Archaeological Society and the Society of Saint Sava in Belgrade.[4]

He is included in the 100 most prominent Serbs, compiled by a committee of academicians at the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. In 2012, he was locally glorified as a saint by the Diocese of Dalmatia of the Serbian Orthodox Church.[17][better source needed]

Orthodox Dalmatia

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Milaš, motivated by political and ecclesial circumstances in Dalmatia which weren't in accordance with his vision, started to write Pravoslavna Dalmacija ("Orthodox Dalmatia") which was published in 1901.[3] Reportedly based on Simeon Končarević's chronicle (an unconfirmed source[3]), received mixed reviews already in the year of its publication,[3] and by modern scientific standards is regarded an unreliable pseudoscientific source.[1][2][18][19] According to Croatian historian Stjepan Antoljak (2004), it is "tendentiously" written, and "the goal of this book was clear and full of unverified claims and fabrications, which even today are not fully noticed and not pointed out, and not completely refuted",[3] while the Serbian historian Tibor Živković (2004), concluded that "his work for the time period is very poor in valid scientific apparatus and burdened with the writer's stated goal contained in the very title of his work" and that the "assessment of Milaš's book Orthodox Dalmatia was given in 1903 by Jovan Radonić, so its place in historiography has long been established and there is no need to recall all the shortcomings of that work".[20]

Related to the Serbian romantic nationalist ideology of the 19th and early 20th century, Milaš in the work claimed, fabricated and invented many factual inaccuracies about the history of Dalmatia, pre-Ottoman presence of Serbs, and foundation of Serb Orthodox monasteries and churches in Dalmatia, which influenced Serbian national historiography (including historians like Jovan Radonić, Viktor Novak and Marko Jačov), and Serbian nationalist sentiment.[3][1][2][19] Among his controversial claims are that Orthodoxy can be traced in Dalmatia since Apostolic Age, how the Serbs settled in Dalmatia in the 4th century, arrived there before the Croats, the region was ethnically Serbian until the 9th-11th century when Croatian rulers "imposed Catholicism and Croatism on the Serbs", as Cyril and Methodius were Orthodox (before the East–West Schism) and baptized the Croats to Eastern Orthodoxy, who formally became Catholics after the coronation of "treacherous"[21] Croatian king Demetrius Zvonimir (1075), that the Serbs re-settled Dalmatia in the 14-15th century as the Vlachs of Croatia represented a new wave of Serbs, during Ottoman time Dalmatia was exclusively settled by Serbs, among others.[1][2][19] That the Serbian Orthodox monasteries of Dragović, Krka and Krupa and other churches (incl. Church of Holy Salvation, Cetina[22]) in Dalmatia were founded since the 14–15th century.[1][19][23][24] He also shared Vuk Karadžić's viewpoint that all speakers of Shtokavian dialect are ethnic Serbs.[5]

With the work inspired and guided by an idea of forever existing intolerance of Serb Orthodoxy in Dalmatia,[25] Milaš was highly critical and made heavy accusations against the pope and Roman church,[2] claiming that the Croats initially were Orthodox Christians, and sacral heritage of Split was part of Serbian Orthodox heritage as well.[26] He promoted black-and-white thinking that everything related to Orthodoxy and Serbs is positive in comparison to Catholicism and Croats which is negative.[1][18] As summarized by Vjekoslav Perica, "Milaš views the religious history of Dalmatia and Croatia as a history of hatred and intolerance of ethnic Serbs under Venetian and Austria rule",[21] and "laid the foundations of Serbian ecclesiastical historiography (which coincides with the nationalist perspective in the secular Serbian historiography) on the assumption that Serbs and Croats were ethnically the same people, predetermined to form a unified Slavic (Orthodox) nation, had the popes not intervened and prevented these two fraternal Slavic peoples from becoming all Greek Orthodox".[21]

The book was reprinted in 1989 in Belgrade, receiving praise from a Serbian editor, during a time when nationalism, including Serbian nationalism, was rising in the period leading up to the breakup of Yugoslavia. Croatian church historians Stanko Bačić and Mile Bogović have contended that the re-priting of such ideas was used as argument and justification for Serbian politics during the Yugoslav Wars.[1][19][a] As did Sabrina P. Ramet,[27][28] and Emil Hilton Saggau also noted how his work echoed in the "many classic Serbian historical arguments used during the war in Croatia and Bosnia".[29]

Selected works

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  • "Historical-Canonical view on establishment of Serbo-Romanian Metropolis of Bukovina and Dalmatia" (1873)
  • Clerical dignities in the Orthodox Church (1879)
  • Slavic Apostles Ss. Cyril and Methodius (1881)
  • Codex canonum ecclesiae africane (1881)
  • St. Sava's Kormchya Book (1884)
  • Das Synodal-Statut der orth. Oriental Metropolie der Bukowina i Dalmatien mit Erläuterungen (1885)[30]
  • Roman Catholic Propaganda, its foundation and rules today (1889; translated in Russian 1889, and in Bulgarian 1890)
  • Question of Eastern Church and task of Austria in it (1889; 1890 translated in Romanian and German)
  • Orthodox Church and Canon Law in six volumes (first edition 1890; second revised edition 1890, translated in Russian 1897, in German 1897, in Bulgarian 1903)
  • Rules (Κανόνες) of Orthodox Church with commentary (I 1895, II 1896)
  • Documenta spectantia historiam orthodoxae dioeceseos Dalmatiae et Istriae a XV usque ad XIX saeculum (I, 1899)[31]
  • Orthodox Dalmatia (1901)
  • Principles of jurisdiction in Orthodox Church
  • Orthodox Monasticism (Mostar 1902)

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^
    During the on-going Russian invasion of Ukraine, to tackle the St. Basil's "Rule Thirteen" ("soldiers who killed in war may be refused communion for three years"), the "Orthodox internet resources typically tackle this problem with the help of Serbian bishop Nikodim"'s interpretation of the canonical law, "implied that Rule Thirteen is only a private opinion (theologoumenon) of an established theologian, not an official theological position held by the Church".[32]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Bačić, Stanko (1998). Osvrt na knjigu "Pravoslavna Dalmacija" E. Nikodima Milaša [Critics of points of view of Nikodim Milaš in his book "Orthodox Dalmatia"] (in Croatian). Zadar: Matica hrvatska. pp. 5–11, 12–20, 115–119, 200–209, 333–335, 348–352. ISBN 953-6419-19-X. Međutim, knjiga N. Milaša je prepuna povijesnih i drugih laži koje su pogibeljnije od bilo koje druge knjige ili sličnih djela. Ona je od svog izlaska iz tiska pothranjivala velikosrpstvo, pravoslavlje i srpsku mitologiju. Knjiga Nikodima Milaša, dakle, ne bi bila vrijedna nikakve pažnje jer je to gomila laži, neistina i krivotvorina, da ona nije do danas "evanđelje" i temelj velikosrpstva i srpske osvajačke politike, negiranja i samog postojanja Hrvata i katolika, osobito temelj velikosrpske mitologije u Dalmaciji, posebno sjevernoj. Zapravo je teško naći takvu ili lošiju knjigu od te uopće u svijetu. Ona je potpuno crno-bijela. Po njoj je sve što je pravoslavno i srpsko dobro, ili jedino dobro, a sve ostalo je loše i za svaku osudu. Neshvatljiva mržnja prema katolicizmu i Hrvatima prožima cijelu knjigu. Osim toga, veliki dio knjige čiste su izmišljene priče i navodi bez ikakvih dokaza. Teško je i razumjeti kako je i moguće napisati tako lošu i pogubnu knjigu, a osobito takvu kao ova koja je izazvala i izaziva neizmjerna zla. Isto tako, ne bi imalo toliko smisla osvrtati se na tu knjigu koja je tiskana 1901. godine, sada, bez obzira na njenu bezvrijednost i štetnost, da ta knjiga nije pretiskana 1989. godine ... vrijeme početaka očitog raspada Jugoslavije u Veliku Srbiju, odnosno vrijeme priprema uništenja svih nesrpskih naroda u Jugoslaviji ... očita namjera i svrha tog pretiska i bila potaknuti i što bolje i više oživjeti velikosrpstvo i opravdati velikosrpsku politiku. U tom popratnom uvodu iz 1989. godine pretisku knjige N. Milaša, nema nikakvih ograda i prigovora toj knjizi. Isto tako, u uvodu pretiska pisac ne nalazi ništa pozitivnoga izvan pravoslavlja i srpstva. Cijeli taj uvod, kao i sama knjiga N. Milaša pisani su pamfletistički i bez uobičajenog znanstvenog i komunikacijskog pristupa i postupka. Povrh svega, uvodničar tu knjigu N. Milaša smatra najboljom i najistinskijom poviješću Pravoslavne i Katoličke crkve uopće.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Čoralić, Lovorka (1998). "Review of "Stanko Bačić, Osvrt na knjigu »Pravoslavna Dalmacija« E. Nikodima Milaša, Matica hrvatska – Zadar, Zadar, 1998., 404 str."". Croatica Christian Periodica (in Croatian). 22 (42): 151–153. Iako se danas, uzevši u obzir potpunu odsutnost znanstvenih metoda i vidljivo zlonamjerno i politički promišljeno Milaševo iskrivljavanje povijesnih činjenica, možemo upitati je li ovako podroban osvrt uopće potreban ili je ogromnu količinu laži, uvreda i besmislica bolje prepustiti zaboravu...
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Antoljak, Stjepan (2004). Hrvatska historiografija (drugo dopunjeno izdanje) [Croatian historiography] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Matica hrvatska. p. 249, 778–781, 823. ISBN 9789531501408.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Nikodim Milaš – bishop". Serb National Council. Retrieved 26 January 2025.
  5. ^ a b c d "Milaš, Nikodim", Croatian Encyclopedia, 2021
  6. ^ Rajčić, Tihomir (2006). "Sava Bjelanović i njegova struja u Srpskoj stranci u Dalmaciji 80-ih godina XIX. st". Croatica Christiana Periodica (in Croatian). 30 (58). Catholic Faculty of Theology, University of Zagreb: 168, 170, 180, 182. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  7. ^ Rajčić, Tihomir (2005). "Srpski nacionalni pokret u Dalmaciji u XIX. stoljeću". Radovi (in Croatian) (47). Zadar: HAZU: 341–361. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  8. ^ a b Rohdewald, Stefan (2022). "The Invention of European, Christian Nations to Overcome the "Asian Yoke" in the Long 19th Century". Sacralizing the Nation through Remembrance of Medieval Religious Figures in Serbia, Bulgaria and Macedonia. Brill. pp. 299–301. doi:10.1163/9789004516335_004. ISBN 9789004516335. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  9. ^ Tomić, Marko (2019). "The view on the legal position of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Bosnia and Herzegovina under the rule of the Austro-Hungarian empire". Zbornik radova Pravnog fakulteta Novi Sad. 53 (4): 1449. doi:10.5937/zrpfns53-19345. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  10. ^ Mlakar, Mirko (2016). "Propovjedništvo u Srbiji u 19. stoljeću". Obnovljeni Život (in Croatian). 71 (3). Institute of Philosophy and Theology of Society of Jesus, University of Zagreb Faculty of Philosophy and Religious Studies: 357. doi:10.31337/oz.71.3.5. Retrieved 12 February 2025. Milaš, pozvan iz Zadra da reorganizira Bogosloviju (što nije uspio)...
  11. ^ Rajčić, Tihomir (2014). "Srpska stranka u Dalmaciji i njezino pragmatično uključivanje u politiku "novoga kursa"". Časopis za suvremenu povijest (in Croatian). 46 (2). Croatian Institute of History: 354–356, 358–359. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  12. ^ Aleksov, Bojan (2014). "The Serbian Orthodox Church". In Lucian Leustean (ed.). Orthodox Christianity and Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century Southeastern Europe. Fordham University Press. p. 77. doi:10.5422/fordham/9780823256068.003.0004. ISBN 9780823256082. Retrieved 10 February 2025. As elsewhere, the church in Dalmatia was not immune to fraudulence, corruption, and even dramatic scandals. The suicide of Dositej Jović, Bishop of Boka-Kotorska, in 1910 was explained by his appropriation of the Serbian autonomous church and school funds. The public accused the Bishop of Zadar, Nikodim Milaš, of the same and he retired
  13. ^ Pederin, Ivan (2004). "Odnos bečkoga dvora prema crkvenoj uniji u Dalmaciji dvadesetih godina 19. stoljeća". Crkva u svijetu (in Croatian). Vol. 39, no. 1. University of Split, Catholic Faculty of Theology. p. 161.
  14. ^ a b c Nichols, Aidan (1989). Theology in the Russian Diaspora: Church, Fathers, Eucharist in Nikolai Afanas'ev (1893-1966). Cambridge University Press. pp. 49–50. ISBN 9780521365437.
  15. ^ a b McGuckin, John Anthony (2014). The Concise Encyclopedia of Orthodox Christianity. John Wiley & Sons. p. 84. ISBN 9781118759332.
  16. ^ Perić, Dimšo (1997). "Ecclesiastical law today and its place in the system of legal sciences". Анали Правног факултета у Београду (in Serbian). 45 (1–3): 110. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  17. ^ "На локалном нивоу Цркве у Далмацији литургијски прослављен свети Никодим Милаш, епископ далматински | Српскa Православнa Црквa [Званични сајт]". arhiva.spc.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 26 January 2025.
  18. ^ a b Pederin, Ivan (1996). "Povijest i književna povijest kao autobiografija nacije". Encyclopaedia moderna (in Croatian). Vol. 16, no. 46. HAZU. p. 105. Ovo djelo zapravo je povijest pravoslavlja u Dalmaciji napisana na način blizak povijesti književnosti ili općoj povijesti ... Ako uzmemo u obzir da je ova knjiga tisana na početku XX. st., moramo opaziti da sve ove grješke dovode ovu knjigu ne samo na rub, nego dobro i preko ruba znanstvenosti. S druge strane upada u oči njezin polemički ton i vjerska nesnošljivost...
  19. ^ a b c d e Bogović, Mile (2018). Srpsko pravoslavlje i svetosavlje u Hrvatskoj u prošlosti i sadašnjosti [Serbian Orthodoxy and Saint Savism in Croatia in the past and present] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Alfa. p. 54–56, 92–93. ISBN 9789532978735.
  20. ^ Živković, Tibor (2004). Црквена организација у српским земљама: Рани средњи век [Organization of the Church in Serbian Lands: Early Middle Ages]. Belgrade: Историјски институт САНУ, Службени гласник. p. 1–2. ISBN 9788677430443. Три деценије после Светозара Никетића далматински епископ Никодим Милаш ставио је себи у задатак да испита стање црквене организације у Далмацији и њеном непосредном залеђу почев од најранијих времена, али је његово дело за ово раздобље веома сиромашно ваљаним научним апаратом и оптерећено задатим циљем писца садржаним у самом наслову његовог дела: Православна Далмација. Сличан методолошки приступ задржао је исти писац у своме делу Стон у средњим вијековима, где је, такође исувише закључака изведено на основу претпоставки. Оцену Милашеве књиге Православна Далмација дао је 1903. године Јован Радонић, тако да је њено место у историографији одавно утврђено и нема потребе овде подсећати на све мане тог дела
  21. ^ a b c Perica, Vjekoslav (2002). Balkan Idols: Religion and Nationalism in Yugoslav States. Oxford University Press. p. 15, 65, 72, 267. ISBN 9780198033899. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  22. ^ Škiljan, Filip (2008). "Problem srednjovjekovnih crkava koje su predane pravoslavnima" (PDF). Međunarodni znanstveni skup Srpsko-hrvatski odnosi u 20. veku: zbornik radova (in Croatian). Novi Sad: Centar za istoriju, demokratiju i pomirenje, Udruga za povijest, suradnju i pomirenje. pp. 91–102. ISBN 978-86-86601-05-6. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  23. ^ Sinobad, Marko (2008). "Review of "B. Čolović, Маnastir Krka, 2006"". Godišnjak Titius: Godišnjak za interdisciplinarna istraživanja porječja Krke. 1 (1). Split: 387–393.
  24. ^ Čolović, Branko (2014). Manastir Dragović (in Serbian). Zagreb: Srpsko kulturno društvo "Prosvjeta". pp. 26–49. ISBN 978-953-7611-65-1.
  25. ^ Fin, Monica (2014). "La polemica confessionale fra i serbi ortodossi e il clero cattolico in Dalmazia fra xvii e xix secolo. La vicenda di Gerasim Zelić". Studi Slavistici (in Italian). 11 (1): 25. doi:10.13128/Studi_Slavis-15340. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  26. ^ Perica, Vjekoslav (1999). "Dva spomenika jedne ere. Političke konotacije izgradnje pravoslavne crkve i katoličke konkatedrale u Splitu; 1971. – 1991". Časopis za suvremenu povijest. 31 (1). Zagreb: 95–96.
  27. ^ Ramet, Sabrina P. (2002) [1992]. Balkan Babel: The Disintegration of Yugoslavia from the Death of Tito to the Fall of Milosevic, 4th edition. Westview Press. p. 95, 99. ISBN 9780813339054. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  28. ^ Ramet, Sabrina P. (2019) [1995]. Beyond Yugoslavia: Politics, Economics, And Culture In A Shattered Community. Taylor & Francis. pp. 111–112. ISBN 9780429722325. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
  29. ^ Saggau, Emil Hilton (2024). "Outline of a Serbian Orthodox Doctrine of Righteous War". Religions. 15 (12). MDPI: 1473. doi:10.3390/rel15121473.
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  32. ^ Suslov, Mikhail (2025). "'To Lay Down His Life for His Friends': The Russian Orthodox Church in Search of a War Theory". In Helge Blakkisrud, Pål Kolstø (ed.). Political Legitimacy and Traditional Values in Putin's Russia. Edinburgh University Press. p. 109–131. doi:10.1515/9781399539029-008. ISBN 9781399539029. Retrieved 12 February 2025.

Further reading

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