Misplaced Pages

Dajbabe Monastery

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Dajbabe)
Entrance to the Monastery

The Dajbabe Monastery (Serbian: Манастир Дајбабе, romanizedManastir Dajbabe) is a Serbian Orthodox Christian Monastery in Podgorica, Montenegro. It is located in a cave on Dajbabe hill (Dajbabska gora), which raises above Zeta valley (Zetska ravnica). The Dajbabe Monastery was dedicated to Uspenje Bogorodice or the Assumption of Mary, the monastery was founded in 1897. In the beginning, only the space of the cave was used as a sanctuary, with the plan to be expanded later with chapels. The visible part of the church is situated outside the cave, depicting a spacious entrance porch with two belfries. The Dajbabe Monastery also possesses a reliquary with the relics of St. Simeon Dajbabe.

See also

References

  1. Dajbabe monastery on the official website of the Metropolitanate of Montenegro and the Littoral of Serbian Orthodox Church
Podgorica City of Podgorica Montenegro
Administrative divisions
Neighborhoods
Municipality settlements List
Geography
Landmarks
Culture
Sports venues
Sport clubs
Events
Education
Media
Shopping malls
Companies
Transportation
Serbian Orthodox Church in Montenegro
Subdivisions of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Montenegro
Metropolitanate
Traditional dioceses
Only partial
Primates of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Montenegro
  • Ilarion I (1220–1242)
  • German I (1242–1250)
  • Neofit (1250–1270)
  • Jevstatije (1270–1279)
  • German II and Andrija (1279–1293)
  • Mihailo I (1293)
  • Jovan (1293–1305)
  • Mihailo II (1305–1319)
  • David I (1391—1396)
  • Arsenije I (1396—1417)
  • David II (1417—1435)
  • Jeftimije (1434—1446)
  • Teodosije (after 1446)
  • Josif (1453)
  • Visarion I (1482–1485)
  • Pahomije I (1491–1493)
  • Vavila (1493–1520)
  • German III (1520–1530)
  • Pavle (1530–1532)
  • Vasilije I (before 1540)
  • Nikodim (before 1540)
  • Ruvim I (1540–1559)
  • Makarije (1560–1561)
  • Ruvim II (1561–1569)
  • Pahomije II (1569–1579)
  • Gerasim (1575–1582)
  • Venijamin (1582–1591)
  • Nikanor I and Stevan (1591–1593)
  • Ruvim III (1593–1636)
  • Mardarije (1637–1659)
  • Rufim IV (1673–1685)
  • Vasilije II (1685)
  • Visarion II (1685–1692)
  • Sava I (1694–1697)
  • Danilo I (1697–1735)
  • Sava II (1735–1781)
  • Sava II and Vasilije III (1750–1766)
  • Arsenije II (1781–1784)
  • Petar I (1784–1830)
  • Petar II (1830–1851)
  • Danilo II (1851–1852)
  • Nikanor II (1858–1860)
  • Ilarion II (1860–1882)
  • Visarion III (1882–1884)
  • Mitrofan (1884–1920)
  • Gavrilo (1920–1938)
  • Joanikije I (1938–1945)
  • Arsenije III (1947–1961)
  • Danilo III (1961–1990)
  • Amfilohije (1990–2020)
  • Joanikije II (2020–)
Serbian Orthodox monasteries in Montenegro

42°24′14″N 19°13′57″E / 42.403852°N 19.232456°E / 42.403852; 19.232456

Stub icon

This article on an Eastern Orthodox church building in Montenegro is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: