Tronoša Chronicle

1526 Serbian chronicle From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Tronoša chronicle (Serbian: Троношки летопис; Троношки родослов) is a Serbian chronicle dating to 1526,[1] transcribed by Orthodox hieromonk Josif Tronošac (Троношац) in 1791[2][3] at the Tronoša monastery near Loznica, in western Serbia. The Tronoša manuscript is the oldest survived copy, of which there are several transcriptions, one of them transcribed by Serafim.[4] A copy is held at the monastery, while the original manuscript by Josif is held in Vienna.[5]

Also known asSerbian Chronicle
Date1791 (manuscript)
1526 (lost original)
LanguageSerbian
Quick facts Also known as, Date ...
Tronoša chronicle
Also known asSerbian Chronicle
Date1791 (manuscript)
1526 (lost original)
Place of originTronoša monastery, Ottoman Empire
LanguageSerbian
AuthorJosif
ScriptSerbian Cyrillic
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The chronicle includes hagiographies of Serbian rulers. The Battle of Kosovo (1389) is described in the chronicle, probably based on the story about the battle transferred to the region north of Sava and Danube in the first half of the 18th century.[6] According to tradition, as included in the chronicle, Prince Lazar of Serbia and his army had a holy communion before the battle at the church in Samodreža.[7]

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