Glogovac monastery | |
Other Names: | манастир Глоговац |
Order: | Serbian Orthodox |
Established: | first half of 14th century |
Dedication: | dedicated to Saint George |
Founder: | Stephen Dragutin of Serbia or Stephen Uroš II Milutin of Serbia |
Location: | near the village of Babići, municipality of Šipovo in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Republika Srpska entity |
Map Type: | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Coord: | 44.2196°N 17.2117°W |
The Glogovac Monastery (Serbian: Манастир Глоговац|Manastir Glogovac) is a Serbian Orthodox monastery dedicated to Saint George and located at the village of Babići near Šipovo in the Republika Srpska entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is the only monastery in this area.
Omer-paša Latas[1] started construction of monastery by building a church in 1867. Bishop Dionisije Milijević put this church into operation in 1869. According to one of the stories, enslaved Serbs asked the Sultan of Turkey to allow them to re-build this holy place. Permission was granted under condition that church bells were not heard. This is the reason the monastery is built between steep hills.[2]
Glogovac is the spiritual focal point for this area. Seventy five years after the monastery was re-built it was destroyed again. This time it was done by the Ustaše and this happened on October 14, 1944. Around 1960, the monastery was sufficiently re-built to be used as a parish church. In 1999, complete reconstruction was started and it was finished in 2005.[3] Left of the main building, work on building St. George's camp has started. Another project underway is the finishing of a building for pilgrims.