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St.
Sava, Archbishop of Serbia

The son of
Stefan Nemanja, the great Serbian national leader, he was born in
1169. As a young man he yearned for the spiritual life, which led
him to flee to the Holy Mountain, where he became a monk and with
rare zeal followed all the ascetic practices. Nemanja followed his
son's example and himself went to the Holy Mountain, where he lived
and ended his days as the monk Simeon.
Sava obtained
the independence of the Serbian Church from the Emperor and the
Patriarch, and became its first archbishop. He, together with his
father, built the monastery of Hilandar and after that many other
monasteries, churches and schools throughout the land of Serbia.
He traveled to the Holy Land on two occasions, on pilgrimage to
the holy places there. He made peace among his brothers, who were
in conflict over their rights, and also between the Serbs and their
neighbors.
In creating
the Serbian Church, he created the Serbian state and Serbian culture
along with it. He brought peace to all the Balkan peoples, working
for the good of all, for which he was venerated and loved by all
on the Balkan peninsula. He gave a Christian soul to the people
of Serbia, which survived the fall of the Serbian state.
He died in
Trnovo in the reign of King Asen, being taken ill after the Divine
Liturgy on the Feast of the Theophany in 1236. King Vladislav took
his body to Mileseva, whence Sinan Pasha removed it, burning it
at Vracar in Belgrade on April 27th, 1594.
Prologue from
Ohrid, translated by Mother Maria
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