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Bosnian Church

Bosnian Church
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The Bosnian Church (Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian: Crkva bosanska Latin: Ecclesia bosniensis) is historically thought to be an indigenous branch of the Bogomils that existed in Bosnia during the Middle Ages. Adherents of the church called themselves simply Krstjani ("Christians"). The Order of the Dragon made famous by Vlad the Impaler, i.e., "Dracula", was originally given its impetus of existence, not only simply by the "pagan Turks", but by the dualist Bosnian Church and the knights and nobility affiliated and attached to the underground religious society. The Ottoman conquest is thought by mainstream historians as terminating the church's existence or influence, but the subject of the extent of survival and influence is currently academically in dispute. The church's organization and beliefs are poorly understood, because few if any records were left by church members, and the church is mostly known from the writings of outside sources, primarily Roman Catholic ones.

Bosnian Church

History
Bosnia was on the boundary between the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. The Croats to the West and Hungarians to the North embraced Roman Catholicism, while the Serbian lands to the east embraced Eastern Orthodoxy. During the later Middle Ages most of Bosnia was partly Roman Catholic as well, but no accurate figures exist as to the numbers of adherents of the two churches. The Bosnian Church coexisted uneasily with Roman Catholicism for much of the later Middle Ages. Part of the resistance of the Bosnian Church was political; during the 14th century, the Roman Church placed Bosnia under a Hungarian bishop, and the schism may have been motivated by a desire for independence from Hungarian domination. Several Bosnian rulers were Krstjani, but some of them embraced Roman Catholicism for political reasons. Outsiders accused the Bosnian Church of links to the Bogomils, a stridently dualist sect of dualist-gnostic Christians (self-entitled) heavily influenced by the Manichaean Paulician movement and also to the Patarene heresy (itself only a variant of the same belief system of Manichean-influenced dualism). The Bogomili heretics at one point mainly were centered in Bulgaria and are now known by historians as the direct lineal progenitors of the Cathari. The Inquisition reported about a dualist sect in Bosnia in the late 15th century and called them "Bosnian heretics", but this sect was according to some historians most likely not the same as the Bosnian Church. The historian Franjo Raki wrote about this in 1869 based on Latin sources but the Croatian scholar Dragutin Kniewald in 1949 established the credibility of the Latin documents in which the Bosnian Church is described as heretical.[1] It is thought today that the Bosnian dualists, who were persecuted by both the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches, were entirely converted to Islam thus contributing to the ethnogenesis of the modern-day Bosniaks. The Bosnian Church was dualist in character, and so was neither a schismatic Catholic nor Orthodox Church.[2] According to Mauro Orbini (d.1614), the Patarenes and the Manicheans[3] were two Christian religious sects in Bosnia. The Manicheans had a bishop called djed and priests called strojnici (strojniks), the same titles ascribed to the leaders of the Bosnian Church.[4] The church left a few traditions by those who converted to Islam, one of which is having mosques built out of wood because many Bogomilian churches were primarily built of wood. Another tradition is having the imam stay at the grave of a deceased person which is something not found in other Islamic communities. Some historians now believe that the Bosnian Church had largely disappeared before the Turkish conquest in 1463. Other historians dispute a discrete terminal point. The religious centre of the Bosnian Church was located in Motre, near Visoko, where the house of krstjani was founded.[5]

Characteristics
The Church had its own bishop and used the Slavic language in liturgy. The bishop was called djed (lit. "grandfather"), and had a council of twelve men called strojnici. The monasteries were called hia (lit. "house"), and the heads of monasteries were often called gost (lit. "guest") and served as strojnici. The Church was mainly composed of monks in scattered monastic houses. It had no territorial organization and it did not deal with any secular matters other than attending people's burials. It did not involve itself in state issues very much. Notable exceptions were Steak in front of National Museum of Bosnia and when King Stephen Ostoja of Bosnia, a member of the Bosnian Herzegovina Church himself, had a djed as an advisor at the royal court between 1403 and 1405, and an occasional occurrence of a krstjan elder being a mediator or diplomat.

Bosnian Church The monumental tombstones called steci (plural) / steak (singular) that appeared in medieval Bosnia and Herzegovina are identified with the Bosnian Church.

Bosnian Church scholarship


The phenomenon of Bosnian medieval Christians has been attracting scholars' attention for centuries, but it was not until the latter half of the 19th century that the most important monograph on the subject, "Bogomili i Patareni" (Bogomils and Patarens), 1870, by eminent Croatian historian Franjo Raki, had been published. Raki argued that the Bosnian Church was essentially Gnostic and Manichaean in nature. This interpretation has been accepted, expanded and elaborated upon by a host of later historians, most prominent among them being Dominik Mandi, Sima irkovi, Vladimir orovi, Miroslav Brandt and Franjo anjek. However, a number of other historians (Leon Petrovi, Jaroslav idak, Dragoljub Dragojlovi, Dubravko Lovrenovi, and Noel Malcolm) stressed theologically the impeccably orthodox character of Bosnian Christian writings and claimed that for the explanation of this phenomenon suffices the relative isolation of Bosnian Christianity, which retained many archaic traits predating the East-West Schism in 1054. On the other hand, the American historian of the Balkans, prof. John Fine, does not believe in the dualism of the Bosnian Church at all.[6] Though he represents his theory as a "new interpretation of the Bosnian Church", his view is very close to J. idak's early theory and several other scholars before him.[7] He believes that there could well have been heretical groups alongside of the Bosnian Church, however, the church itself was Catholic.

References
[1] Denis Bai. The roots of the religious, ethnic, and national identity of the Bosnian-Herzegovinan Muslims. University of Washington, 2009, 369 pages (p. 194). http:/ / books. google. com/ books?id=RivPTByg2rMC& printsec=frontcover& dq=The+ roots+ of+ the+ religious& hl=en& ei=dJNuToAOhs6IAtHOzeIG& sa=X& oi=book_result& ct=result& resnum=2 [2] Denis Bai, p. 186. [3] The Paulicians and Bogomils have been confounded with the Manichaeans. L. P. Brockett, The Bogomils of Bulgaria and Bosnia - The Early Protestants of the East. Appendix II, http:/ / www. reformedreader. org/ history/ brockett/ bogomils. htm [4] Mauro Orbini. II Regno Degli Slav: Presaro 1601, p.354 and , , p. 146. [5] Old town Visoki declared as national monument (http:/ / www. aneks8komisija. com. ba/ main. php?id_struct=6& lang=1& action=view& id=2409). 2004. [6] Fine, John. The Bosnian Church: Its Place in State and Society from the Thirteenth to the Fifteenth Century: A New Interpretation. London: SAQI, The Bosnian Institute, 2007. ISBN 0-86356-503-4 [7] Denis Bai, p.196.

External links
L. P. Brockett, The Bogomils of Bulgaria and Bosnia - The Early Protestants of the East (http://www. reformedreader.org/history/brockett/bogomils.htm)

Article Sources and Contributors

Article Sources and Contributors


Bosnian Church Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=524408701 Contributors: Ajdebre, Ajstov, Alenmahovic, Alice Mudgarden, Anaraug, Ancient Land of Bosoni, Angel ivanov angelov, AxelBoldt, Bardon Dornal, Benne, Biruitorul, Blahblah5555, BokicaK, Bosoni, Breno, Closedmouth, Colonies Chris, Damir Misic, Damir Mii, Dbachmann, Duja, Edward321, Grace321, HRE, HarisM, Ivan Ilir, JRThro, Jayhawk1, Joy, Kebeta, Khoikhoi, King.tvrtko, Leonardo Alves, Maurice Carbonaro, Millosh, Mir Harven, MirkoS18, Mladifilozof, Morwen, Nellis, Nikola Smolenski, No such user, Noirceuil, Only, PANONIAN, PRODUCER, PaxEquilibrium, Pierre de Lyon, Praxis Icosahedron, Pseudo-Richard, RandomishLodestone, Rchamberlain, Rcoogan, Reuben, Rjwilmsi, Romanm, Sarajevomistik, Shemaia, Shirt58, Skittlez313, Surtsicna, Sv Jeronim, The Mysterious El Willstro, The Truth Now, Thingg, Tom Radulovich, Vanished user ewfisn2348tui2f8n2fio2utjfeoi210r39jf, Vanjagenije, Visca el barca, VoX, Woohookitty, , 93 anonymous edits

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File:Coa Illustration Cross Crossed circle.svg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Coa_Illustration_Cross_Crossed_circle.svg License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike Contributors: Madboy74 File:Stecak Zmeljaski Muzej Sarajevo.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Stecak_Zmeljaski_Muzej_Sarajevo.jpg License: GNU Free Documentation License Contributors: Original uploader was bs:Korisnik:Toni at bs.wikipedia

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