Sveti Đurađ monastery
Manastir Sveti Đurađ | |
| Monastery information | |
|---|---|
| Denomination | Serbian Orthodox |
| Established | 1485 |
| Dedicated to | Saint George |
| Diocese | Eparchy of Temišvar |
| People | |
| Founder(s) | Jovan Branković |
| Abbot | Nikon Korićanac |
| Architecture | |
| Style | Serbian Baroque |
| Completion date | 1794 |
| Site | |
| Location | Mânăstire (Birda), Timiș County |
| Country | Romania |
| Coordinates | 45°24′40″N 21°20′09″E / 45.4111548°N 21.3358361°E |
Sveti Đurađ or St. George Monastery (Serbian Cyrillic: Манастир Свети Ђурађ; Romanian: Mănăstirea Sfântul Gheorghe) is a medieval Serbian Orthodox monastery located in Mânăstire, Timiș County, Romania, 20 km from the Romanian-Serbian border. It was established in 1485 by Serbian despot Jovan Branković; the present buildings date to 1794, built by Iguman Augustin Petrović as a school and monastic church.
Services are held in Serbian and Old Church Slavonic. The last resident of the monastery, Sister Evgenija, died in 2020. Among the relics that the monastic church houses is a fragment of the skull of Saint George, brought here in the 15th century by Đorđe Branković, and a piece of the chain with which Saint Peter was bound.
The monastery is listed as a historic monument by Romania's Ministry of Culture. The monastic church and the monks' cells are given as separate entries.