-
Jovan Kantul (Serbian Cyrillic: Јован Кантул, fl. 1592 – d. 1614),
sometimes numbered Jovan II was the
Archbishop of Peć and
Serbian Patriarch, the spiritual...
- the
Ottomans in
between 1596 and 1612,
alongside Serbian Patriarch Jovan Kantul (s. 1592–1614).
Grdan was part of the Nikšić tribe. The
tribe had originated...
-
uprising of 1596–1597, was a
rebellion organized by
Serbian Patriarch Jovan Kantul (s. 1592–1614) and led by Grdan, the
vojvoda ("duke") of Nikšić against...
- icon of
Saint Sava. The war
banners were
consecrated by
Patriarch Jovan Kantul, and the
uprising was
aided by
Serbian Orthodox metropolitans Rufim Njeguš...
- a
Serbian Orthodox monk and diplomat, the
secretary of
Patriarch Jovan Kantul (s. 1592–1614). Ljubibratić
hailed from the
Trebinje region, and was a descendant...
-
Patriarch and the
spiritual leader of the
Serbian Orthodox Church Jovan Kantul who
supported the
uprising of
Serbs was
captured by the
Ottomans and strangled...
- Grdan, the
vojvoda of Nikšić,
organized revolt with
Serbian Patriarch Jovan Kantul. From 1596, the
center of anti-Ottoman
activity in
Herzegovina was the Tvrdoš...
-
monastery in Kolašin, in what is now the
nation of Montenegro,
Patriarch Jovan Kantul ****embles the
rebel leaders of
Montenegro and Herzegovina. The
group agrees...
- Филип I
Philip I 1591–1592 20
Jovan II Јован II John II 1592–1613
Surnamed Kantul (Кантул). 21
Pajsije I Пајсије I
Paisius I 1614–1647 Born in Janjevo. 22...
- some
dioceses in
western Bulgaria. In the time of
Serbian Patriarch Jovan Kantul (1592–1614), the
Ottoman Turks took the
remains of
Saint Sava from monastery...