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  1. It is organized into metropolitanates and eparchies, located primarily in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, and Croatia. Other congregations are located in the Serb diaspora. The Serbian Patriarch serves as first among equals in his church. The current patriarch is Porfirije, enthroned on 19 February 2021.

  2. Eastern Orthodoxy is the major Christian denomination in Serbia, with 6,079,396 followers or 85% [1] [2] of the population, followed traditionally by the majority of Serbs, and also Romanians and Vlachs, Montenegrins, Macedonians and Bulgarians living in Serbia. The dominant Eastern Orthodox church in Serbia is the Serbian Orthodox Church.

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  4. The History of the Serbian Orthodox Church. Serbian Heritage Books. ISBN 978-0-9691331-2-4. Sava, Bishop of Šumadija (1996). Srpski jerarsi: od devetog do dvadesetog veka (in Serbian). Evro. External links. Serbian Orthodox Church, history at spc.rs; Pages on most of the Serbian Patriarchs (in Serbian) Kosovo.com: another list of Serbian ...

  5. Feb 18, 2021 · The Serbian Orthodox Church is an autocephalous, or ecclesiastically independent, member of the Orthodox communion, located primarily in Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and the Republic of Macedonia. Since many Serbs have emigrated to foreign countries, there are many Serbian Orthodox communities on all continents.

  6. This book is a comprehensive exposition of the interaction of a national (the Serbian people) and a religiou (the Orthodox Christian faith) content, in the formation of a distinctive national identity and a mode of being. Its interdisciplinary approach, drawing on sociology, social anthropology, theology, political theory, Balkan historiography ...

    • Christos Mylonas
  7. Altogether fifty-three monasteries in Serbia housed ninety-six monks in 1884 and ninety-eight in 1910.lxxxv Most monasteries had been ruined by high taxes and poor management. Traditional methods of land exploitation and land lending to local peasants could not endure the pressures of a modern economy.

  8. In a March 2018 opinion poll, the Montenegrin Orthodox Church has the lowest level of public trust in the country of any public institution (22.4%), while the Serbian Orthodox Church had the highest (62.3%). 99. The relationship with the Macedonian Orthodox Church is equally fraught, and the conflict is even longer-standing.

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