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Studenica Monastery
The monastery Studenica, dedicated
to the Presentation of the Holy Virgin, is the mother-church
of all Serbian temples. It was constructed over a quite
long period. The first stage works were completed by
the spring of 1196, when Stefan Nemanja abandoned his
throne and settled in the monastery's foundation. When
he later left for Hilandar, his son and successor Stefan
took over the care of Studenica. Nemanja died in Hilandar
in 1299. Nemanja's third son Sava, after reconciling
his brothers Stefan and Vukan, moved Stefan's relics
to Studenica. Under guardianship of Sava, Studenica
became the political, cultural and spiritual center
of medieval Serbia. Among his other endeavors, Sava
composed a Typik, the rule-book where he described St.
Simon's life, leaving evidence of the spiritual and
monastic life of his time.
Studenica enjoyed continual care by the members of the
Nemanjic dynasty. King Radoslav added to the church
a splendid narthex in 1235. King Milutin built a small
but lovely church dedicated to saints Joachim and Anna.
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Since the fall of the last of the medieval
Serbian states in 1459, the Turks often assaulted the
monastery. The first of the significant restorations
of the damage took place in 1569, when the frescoes
in the Church of the Presentation were repainted. In
the early seventeenth century, an earthquake and a fire
befell the monastery, and historical documents and a
significant part of the artistic heritage were destroyed
and lost forever.
The Virgin's Church is a domed single-nave
basilica. At its eastern end there is a three-sided
apse, while an extended narthex faces west; there are
also vestibules on the north and the south. In the 1230s,
a large exonarthex was added. The facades were built
with slabs of white marble; inside, the church is revetted
with tufa blocks. Externally, the Church harmoniously
reconciles two architectural styles, the Romanesque
and the Byzantine. The blending of these two styles
eventually produced a particular style of architecture
known as the Raska School.
The artistic achievements of the sculpture
of Studentica culminate in four portals, primarily the
west one, inside between the narthex and the exonarthex.
On the north wall under the dome, there is a window
made of many square panes with medallions carved on
a leaden plaque which represent eight fantastic animals
- the symbols of the Virgin's virtues. There are also
two rosettes denoting the Divine Eye. The masons came
to Studenica most probably from the Adriatic region,
perhaps from Kotor, where Nemanja used to have a palace.
They left an insciption in Serbian lettering on the
tympanum of the west portal.
The church was painted in the first
decade of the thirteenth century. The original frescoes
have been partly preserved in the altar area, under
the dome, on the west wall, and in the lower registers
of the nave. The most splendid representation is that
of the Crucifixion, painted on blue background in 1209,
one of the paramount achievements in Serbian art. On
the south wall there is the "founders' composition"
which shows the Virgin taking Nemanja-Simon with the
church model to Jesus Christ as the Magistrate Impartial.
The narthex was painted in 1569. Those
frescoes include an exquisite representation of the
Last Judgment in the upper registers, and the portrait
of Nemanja's wife Ana as the nun Anastasija.
The earliest fresco painting in Studenica
marks the supreme achievement of Byzantine art in the
region. The frescoes in Radoslav's narthex and the pareclesions
originate from the 1230s and display a close relation
to the painting style of the main church. The north
chapel, dedicated to St. Nicholas, contains a composition
of the Hetimasia and a cycle dealing with the life of
St. Nicholas. In the south chapel one finds the portraits
of Nemanja, Stefan the First Crowned and King Radoslav
with his wife Ana. On the north wall of the narthex,
three dignitaries of the Serbian church are portrayed
- the archbishops Sava, Arsenije and Sava II (Radoslav's
brother).
Northward from the Studenica refectory
is the eighteenth century monastic residence, now housing
a museum and displaying a number of the precious exhibits
from the Studenica treasury. However, the frequent wars
and plunders have considerably reduced the richest depository
of Serbian spiritual life and culture in general.
Northwest of the Church of the Virgin
there is the church of saints Joachim and Ann, known
after its founder King Milutin as the King's Church.
The church was constructed in 1314, in the form of a
compressed cross, with the exterior structure of an
octagonal dome. It is built of stone and tufa, with
plastered facades. Inside this small church are frescoes
of significant value, which date from the second half
of the fourteenth century, painted by King Milutin's
favorite artists.
The complex of the Studenica monastery
includes the Church of St. Nicholas, a small single-nave
church frescoed inside with works from the twelfth or
possibly early thirteenth centuries. Between the Church
of St. Nicholas and the King's Church are the foundations
of the church dedicated to St. John the Baptist. West
of the Virgin's Church, there is an old refectory made
of rubble, built during the time of Archbishop Sava.
Finally, on the western side of the monastery complex
there is a bell tower, erected in the thirteenth century.
There used to be a chapel inside; now, only fragments
of frescoes can be seen there. Remains of fresco painting
have also been numbered on the external part of the
narthex, splendidly representing the Nemanjic dynasty
genealogy. They obviously relate to the frescoes from
the Virgin's Church which date back to 1208-9.
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