Category talk:Serbian composers

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
WikiProject iconSerbia Category‑class
WikiProject iconThis category is within the scope of WikiProject Serbia, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Serbia on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.
CategoryThis category does not require a rating on Wikipedia's content assessment scale.


Joachim, Domestikos of Serbia (fl 1347-1385), also known as Jovan (Joakim) Harsijanitski, was a Serbian composer of religious music in the courts of Serbian despots Stefan Lazarević and his predecessor Djuradj Branković.

The liturgical music of the Serbian Orthodox Church before the founding of Studenica monastery (in Serbia in 1183) and Hilandar (on Mount Athos in 1198) is indistinguishable from Russian and Church Slavonic chant. Chants in honour of the Serbian saints are found as early as the 13th-century, among the most notable Serbian composers known from the 14th-century is Joachim, Domestikos Of Serbia whose manuscript dates between 1360-1385 from Vatopedi monastery at Mount Athos and the main transcriber of the 15th-century bilingual manuscript, now in possession of the National Library of Athens (No. 928), is the composer Isaiah the Serb from the Matejche Monastery. The only thing that is clear is Joachim's nationality and profession -- domestikos. In the Byzantine terminology that meant the man occupied himself with writing and composing music. It proves once again the existence of close links between the Byzantine and Serbian churches during the Middle Ages and after.

Principal Works[edit]

  • Praise the Lord!
  • Kratima Terirem

References[edit]