Joanikije II

Saint
Joanikije II
Archbishop of All Serbian and Maritime Lands

Joanikije II, fresco from the Church of St. Demetrius
Church Serbian Orthodox Church
Metropolis Serbian Patriarchate
See Monastery of the Patriarchate of Peć
Installed January 3, 1338
Term ended September 3, 1354
Predecessor Danilo II
Successor Sava IV
Other posts logotet
Orders
Rank Metropolitan, Archbishop, Patriarch
Personal details
Died September 3, 1354
Buried Monastery of Peć
Nationality Serb
Denomination Eastern Orthodoxy
Residence Prizren, Peć
Alma mater Hilandar
Sainthood
Feast day ? [O.S. September 3]
Canonized by Serbian Orthodox Church

Joanikije II (Serbian Cyrillic: Јоаникије II; fl. 1337– d. 1354) was the Serbian Archbishop (13381346) and first Serbian Patriarch (13461354). He was elected Serbian Archbishop on January 3, 1338. Prior to his election, he served as a logotet, royal chancellor, to the Kingdom of Serbia. He was elevated to Patriarch on Palm Sunday, April 6, 1346, done in order for Joanikije to crown King Stefan Uroš IV Dušan as Emperor on Easter of 1346 with the approval of the Patriarch of Trnovo, Archbishop of Ohrid, and community of Mount Athos. Joanikije continued a tradition of church building, and built, among others, two churches in the Holy Land: the Church of St. Elias on Mount Carmel and the Church of St. Nicholas on Mount Tabor. Joanikije died on September 3, 1354, which is his feast day. He was buried in the Monastery of the Patriarchate of Peć.

Life

Joanikije was born in the vicinity of Prizren, an important town in the Kingdom of Serbia. His family was Christian.

Joanikije served as a logotet, royal chancellor, to the Serbian King Stefan Uroš IV Dušan (r. 1331-1346; afterwards as Emperor until 1355).

Archbishop Danilo II died on December 19, 1337.[1] Joanikije was elected Serbian Archbishop on January 3, 1338.[1] He continued the Christian work of his predecessors, and had the Monastery of Peć, which was the seat of the Archbishop built by Nikodim and Danilo I, further worked on, adding icons and frescoes and other things.

King Dušan had expanded his territory into the deep Greek (Byzantine) south in the 1340s. Joanikije was elevated to Patriarch on Palm Sunday, April 6, 1346, done in order for Joanikije to crown King Stefan Uroš IV Dušan as Emperor on Easter of 1346 with the approval of the Patriarch of Trnovo, Archbishop of Ohrid, and community of Mount Athos.

Joanikije II continued a tradition of church building, and built, among others, two churches in the Holy Land: the Church of St. Elias on Mount Carmel and the Church of St. Nicholas on Mount Tabor.

Tomb of Joanikije II in the Monastery of Peć.

Joanikije II died on September 3, 1354, which is his feast day. He was buried in the Monastery of Peć.

Annotations

References

  1. 1 2 Miodrag Al Purković; Miodrag M. Purković (1976). Srpski patrijarsi Srednjega veka. Srpska pravoslavna eparhija zapadnoevropska. p. 27.

Sources

This article incorporates text from Joanikije II at OrthodoxWiki which is licensed under the CC-BY-SA and GFDL.
Eastern Orthodox Church titles
Preceded by
Danilo II
Archbishop of Serbs
January 3, 1338 – April 6, 1346
Succeeded by
None
Preceded by
None
Patriarch of Serbs and Greeks
April 6, 1346 – September 3, 1354
Succeeded by
Sava IV
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