petrovicnjegos

navigate by keyword : 1845 1851 1855 after attack august basis before buried canonised canonization cetinje chapel considered corpse danilo death decided decomposed desire expressed fearing founded governor grave grounds hand lovcen mausoleum monastery montenegro mount near njegoaiexcl only opened orthodoxy pasha peter petrovic petrovicnjegos possible predecessor prince remained remains right same sarcophagus shkodra skadar then throne transferred turkish undecomposed were whether which

Montenegro, Lovcen National Park . Mausoleum of Petar II Petrovic-Njegos Royalty Free Stock Photo
Statue of Petar II Petrovic-Njegos in Villa Borghese, Rome Royalty Free Stock Photo
Statue of Petar II Petrovic-Njegos in Villa Borghese, Rome Royalty Free Stock Photo
Mountains of Lovcen National Park Royalty Free Stock Photo
View of Stirovnik from Mount Lovcen Royalty Free Stock Photo
Mausoleum of Petar II Petrovic-Njegos viewing platform Royalty Free Stock Photo
Panoramic view of Tivat from the Kotor serpentine. Montenegro autumn 2019 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Mausoleum Njegoš
Mausoleum of Petar II Petrovic-Njegos in Lovcen National Park . Royalty Free Stock Photo
The view of the Kotor port from the embankment at sunset. Montenegro autumn 2019 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Monument to Peter II Petrovic Njegos in the mausoleum Royalty Free Stock Photo
Beautiful forest road in the Lovcen national Park. Montenegro autumn 2019 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Stunning view of the Bay of Kotor from the embankment at sunset. Montenegro autumn 2019 Royalty Free Stock Photo
The view of the Kotor Bay from the Kotor serpentine. Montenegro autumn 2019 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Beautiful forest road in the Lovcen national Park. Montenegro autumn 2019 Royalty Free Stock Photo
In 1845 Peter II Petrovic-Njegos expressed his desire to be buried after his death in the chapel, which he founded on Mount Lovcen. But after his death in 1851, fearing a possible attack on the grave of the Turkish Pasha Skadar Shkodra, the governor decided to be buried in the Cetinje monastery, near the grave of his predecessor Peter I Petrovic. August 26, 1855 his remains were transferred to Lovcen. Before the throne, Prince of Montenegro Danilo Petrovic-Njegos opened the sarcophagus, to see whether the corpse decomposed undecomposed corpse after death in Orthodoxy is considered one of the grounds for canonization, on the same basis was canonised predecessor Peter II, but to then only the right hand remained on it.


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