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- Peja_(priest) abstract "Peja (Serbian Cyrillic: Пеја; fl. 1515–23) was a Serbian Orthodox priest active in the Sanjak of Sofia (in the Ottoman Empire, now Bulgaria) in the early 16th century. He wrote the liturgical rite and biography (žitije) on Đorđe Kratovac between 1515 and 1523, in the Serbian recension of Old Church Slavonic. The work was published by Serbian intellectual Stojan Novaković (1842–1915), transcribed from a manuscript held in the National Library of Serbia in Belgrade. Priest Peja was the spiritual guide and host of the young silversmith Đorđe, a Serb from Kratovo, whom he taught the bible. Đorđe was burnt alive on a pyre on 11 February 1515 after he refused to convert to Islam, due to which he later was proclaimed a New Martyr. Peja then moved to Ravanica, the foundation and burial site of Prince Lazar of Serbia (r. 1374–1389), one of the most important figures of Serbian history, whom he mentioned in his works regarding the Battle of Kosovo (1389).".
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageID "47356966".
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageLength "2976".
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageOutDegree "23".
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageRevisionID "705132210".
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Kosovo.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Belgrade.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Bulgaria.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Category:16th-century_Bulgarian_people.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Category:16th-century_Serbian_people.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Bulgarian_Orthodox_priests.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_Bulgarian_writers.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_Serbian_Orthodox_clergy.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_Serbian_writers.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Death_by_burning.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Orthodox_Church.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Kratovo,_Macedonia.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Lazar_of_Serbia.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink National_Library_of_Serbia.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink New_Martyr.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Old_Church_Slavonic.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Ottoman_Empire.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Pyre.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Ravanica.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Saint_George_of_Kratovo.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Sanjak_of_Sofia.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Serbian_manuscripts.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLink Stojan_Novaković.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Peja".
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Floruit.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-bg.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-sr-cyr.
- Peja_(priest) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Peja_(priest) subject Category:16th-century_Bulgarian_people.
- Peja_(priest) subject Category:16th-century_Serbian_people.
- Peja_(priest) subject Category:Bulgarian_Orthodox_priests.
- Peja_(priest) subject Category:Medieval_Bulgarian_writers.
- Peja_(priest) subject Category:Medieval_Serbian_Orthodox_clergy.
- Peja_(priest) subject Category:Medieval_Serbian_writers.
- Peja_(priest) hypernym Priest.
- Peja_(priest) type Person.
- Peja_(priest) comment "Peja (Serbian Cyrillic: Пеја; fl. 1515–23) was a Serbian Orthodox priest active in the Sanjak of Sofia (in the Ottoman Empire, now Bulgaria) in the early 16th century. He wrote the liturgical rite and biography (žitije) on Đorđe Kratovac between 1515 and 1523, in the Serbian recension of Old Church Slavonic. The work was published by Serbian intellectual Stojan Novaković (1842–1915), transcribed from a manuscript held in the National Library of Serbia in Belgrade.".
- Peja_(priest) label "Peja (priest)".
- Peja_(priest) sameAs Q12291063.
- Peja_(priest) sameAs Поп_Пейо.
- Peja_(priest) sameAs Пеја.
- Peja_(priest) sameAs Q12291063.
- Peja_(priest) wasDerivedFrom Peja_(priest)?oldid=705132210.
- Peja_(priest) isPrimaryTopicOf Peja_(priest).