Maksim I

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Maksim I
Rum Millet (Serbian)
DenominationEastern Orthodox Christianity
OccupationSpiritual leader of the Serbian Orthodox Church

Maksim I Skopljanac (

Patriarchal Monastery of Peć In 1674, he resigned due to advanced age, and died in 1680.[1]

Metropolitan of Raška

Maksim was born in

High Porte
. No matter how strange it was to elect a new patriarch while the current was still alive and well, the Serbian Church needed a leader and it set on electing a new patriarch in great haste.

Gavrilo's departure meant the downfall of the party within the Serbian Church which was set on establishing closer ties to the West. The other camp, bound on retaining good relations with the Ottoman authorities came to power. As Metropolitan Maksim was one of the most active proponents of this policy he was chosen to the patriarchal throne in

Peć
.

Patriarch

As a patriarch, Maksim abandoned negotiations with Rome and kept away from establishing closer ties to Russia. Two bishops that continued their ties with foreign powers were soon eliminated.

In order to fortify the faith of his flock but also to gather money needed to pay off heavy Ottoman taxes, Maksim traveled a lot from his seat in

Srem, in 1671 in Ovčar-Kablar gorge. He also ventured out of the domain of his Patriarchate and went collecting donation in Wallachia in 1662. Maksim also went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land
.

Despite Sultan's charter, Serbian bishops tried to get under their control the

Bosnia-Herzegovina. This was done mostly in order to gain more money. Maksim I was a proponent of this policy and in 1661 upon his visit to Livno
he was attacked by furious local Catholics and barely managed to save his life.

At his seat in the Monastery of Peć, Maksim ordered the Church of St Nicholas to be fresco painted (1672) after which he built the new dwellings for the monks (1674).

As a learned man and a lover of books, on his frequent journeys Maksim collected old books and manuscripts. Most of the books he donated to Serbian churches and monasteries.

Illness and death

He got sick at the beginning of March 1669 and a few months later

Arsenije Crnojević was chosen to be metropolitan of Hvosno (sometimes referred to as the metropolitan of Peć) and became Maksim's coadjutor. He died in October 1680 in Monastery of Peć where he was buried. His sarcophagus, together with his body, still stands in an open porch in front of the church of Saint Nicholas,[2] which he ordered to be repainted. This rather unusual place for a grave is explained by a local legend that says that he chose it himself burdened by guilt of his forerunner's faith.[3]

References

  1. ^ Вуковић 1996, p. 303-304.
  2. ^ "[sim] U Peckoj Patrijarsiji je zavrsena manifestacija "Dani Svetog Arsenija Srpskog"".
  3. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oe6tToXHT4c, 23:35 min

Bibliography

Eastern Orthodox Church titles
Preceded by
Gavrilo I
Serbian Patriarch

1655–1674
Succeeded by