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The Chilandar Monastery was first
mentioned in a Greek manuscript of 1015, as "completely abandoned and
empty". It is believed that a Boatman - George Chelandarios was the
founder of this monastery in 980, and the Monastery was called after him.
In the first Serbian sources it took fonn as Hilandar.
As it is known, the Chilandar
Monastery was granted by Emperor Alexius III, to Serbian monk Sava and to
his father the Grand Zhupan of Serbia Stevan Nemanja, in 1198, - 800 years
ago. It happeened when Stevan Nemanja renaunced the throne and came as a
monk of the Studenica Monastery in Serbia, to his youngest son, monk Sava,
in Greek monastery of Vatopedi, on Holy Athos. Simeon and Sava renewed the
Chilandar monastery. Since Chilandar
monastery was free of both the Protaton and imperial authority from
Constantinople, Simeon Nemanja issued a gold-sealed charter to Chilandar
constituting it as a Serbian monastery and the hereditary foundation of
the Nemanjic family, granting to the Monastery needed property for its
needs since it becames completely selfgoverning Serbian monastery. The
first abbot of Chilandar was Methodius, appointed by St. Simeon himself.
At the begining there were about 10 to 15 Serbian monks. After six years
in Chilandar monastery were some ninety monks, following St. Sava's
typikon. Monk Simeon died on February 13, 1199, in the narthex of
Chilandar monastery and was buried in the monastery church. In 1206, St.
Sava transferred the relics of St. Simeon to Studenica Monastery in
Serbia.
The most important position in the
Monastery was the abbot. The oikonomos was the most important position
after abbot, with two assistants - paroikonomos and oikonomos. The most
remarcable known abbots of Chilandar monastery in 13th century and at the
begining of 14th century were, after Methodius, Joanikije, who became
Serbian archbishop in 1272.; Jevstatije (1262-1265), later bishop of Zeta
and then archbishop of Serbia (1279-1286; Stephan, Kirijak, Arsenije,
Sava.
In the Monastery there had
been open a chamber with beds for seriously sick monks, which is counted
as the first Serbian hospital. It was later expanded by tzar Dushan and
tzar Lazar, following the latest West Europian methods, on the basis of
classical traditions of Hippocrates, Galen, Dioscorides, etc. (see
manucripts with medical texts from the late 14th and mid 16th centuries in
Chilandar). By the mid 14th century, Chilandar monastery possesed almost a
fifth of the Holy Athos peninsula alone (about 40 square miles). After the
Byzantine emperors John Ducas Vatatzes and Michael VIII Palaealogus, and
the Serbian kings Vladislav, Urosh I and Dragutin, - the most important
benefactor of Chilandar monastery was Serbian king Milutin (1282-1321),
exposing Serbia to stronger Byzantine social and cultural influence by
incursions into Byzantine territory in Macedonia. He in 1293,
built a new main church on the foundations of the old one, extending
existing fortifications; in 1302 he built Hrusija by the harbour and
so-called Milutin's Tower. At the end of the 14th century and in early
15th century, during Serbian princes and despots, the Chilandar's property
continued to expand.
Prince Lazar (1371-1389) added to
the main Chilandar church so-called Lazar's narthex. It was before the
Battle of Kosovo.
St. Sava had spent eleven
years as archmandrite of the Studenica monastery in Serbia (1206-1217),
and then again returned to Holy Athos, and set about gaining an
independent, autocephalous archbishopric for Serbia, which he did achieved
in Nicaea in 1219, and became the first Serbian archbishop. Coming back
from Nicaea to Serbia, he took from Chilandar the Krmchija-Code and other
needed books in order to build the new Church and state organization. He
also took from Chilandar some monks, and appointed them bishops for
diaceses which he had founded. The Serbian Church and Serbian State were
very well
established.
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