Ćirjak Račanin
Ćirjak Račanin (Serbian Cyrillic: Ђирјак Рачанин; probably the area of Bajina Bašta, Serbia c. 1660-Szentendre, Hungary 1731) was a Serbian writer and monk.
There was as much of the moralist as of the wit in Ćirjak Račanin, and that side found its purest expression in devotional texts, which he is said to have not only ornately decorated and illuminated but composed during long nights of guard duty in the tower of the fortified Rača monastery. The Turks several times carried out reprisals against the monks for engaging in educational activities and promoting Serbian culture (copying ancient church manuscripts and writing books and disseminating them). Eventually the monks were forced to take their archive with them and with their spiritual leader, Arsenije III Čarnojević, went to join the Christian forces in the Battle of Zenta in northern Serbia. At the time Serbia, with the help of Austria, harbored hope to rid itself of the Ottoman yoke. Two of Serbia's greatest sons, Đorđe Branković, Count of Podgorica, and Jovan Monasterlija were gathering volunteers for the ultimate confrontation. Ćirjak Račanin, like his fellow monks, joined the insurgents, led by Monasterlija, who was under the supreme commander of the Austrian crown.
After the defeat of the Ottoman army, Ćirjak Račanin left the Austrian army to give his full attention to Serbian politics and his writing career.
See also
- Račanin, disambiguation page
References
- Stanoje Stanojević (1928). Narodna enciklopedija srpsko-hrvatsko-slovenacka. Izdavac̆: Bibliografski zavod d.d.
Ćirjak Raćanin
- Jovan Skerlić, Istorija nove srpske književnosti (Belgrade, 1914, 1921) pages 26-28.