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Nicodemus Sinaita

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Nicodemus Sinaita also referred to as "Sinai monk Nicodemus" or in Serbian Cyrilic -- Синајски монах Никодим-- was one of many 14th-century Eastern Orthodox, traveling monk-ascetics who wrote and translated books and encouraging and training others in the contemplative life and promoting a psychophysical method of prayer called Hesychasm.

Nicodemus is mentioned in the Serbian Chancellery in Dubrovnik Serbian Chancellery[1]accounting books under the date of 6 June 1354, who received his deposit during the reign of Prince Nikola Barbadin, in accordance with the agreement between the people of Dubrovnik and Tsar Dušan on the monastery in Ston. [2] Or, in the opinion of the late Metropolitan Amfilohije Radović of Montenegro, isn't that perhaps one of those monks who moved to Palestine after the ceding of the Monastery of the Holy Mother of God, Ston Monatery according to Stefan Dušan's charter to the people of Dubrovnik?

References[edit]

  1. https://www.google.ca/books/edition/Language_Planning_and_National_Identity/1TtvBAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Serbian+Chancellery+in+Dubrovnik&pg=PA77&printsec=frontcover
  2. Сперанский, Славьянская письменность XI-XIV вв на Синае и в Палестине, Известия отделия русского язика и словесности Академии наук СССР, XXXII, Ленинград 1927, стр. 64.

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