235:'s "War and Peace" at the time. Later, in 1921, Milorad Dimitrijević, a Belgrade engineer, bought the second edition, published on 25 May 1597, in Dubrovnik, where he was on a trip. Both editions, the first and the second, were presented to the National Library of Serbia. The first edition consisting of only two sheets of paper, of which we only have a copy today, was burned in the German bombing of Belgrade and the National Library on April 6, 1941, and second edition, on four sheets, is fortunately preserved.
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printed the Bible on his newly-invented, mechanical movable type in 1439. Following the invasions of
Serbian lands, leaders began to think of the needs of the people living in the conquered territories, and ordered churches and monasteries of worship and learning to be built and books to be provided
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The first page of the syllabary has the
Serbian alphabet, followed by vowels, then the syllables, the names of all the letters, etc. The syllabary of Inok Sava originates from the time when very few European countries and cultures possessed their own teaching aids for school children. The syllabary
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fascinates the most with its teaching methods because it was the first in Europe to have applied the principle of phonetic reading. However, this syllabary remained neglected and somewhat forgotten. Meanwhile, the Serbs learned literacy from imported books, either published in
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Stefan Paštrović came to the idea to have the manuscripts corrected and printed into books like those which exist in northern Venice. He set out to find his relative Inok Sava, a monk at Visoki Dečani, and to send him on that mission.
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429:
Perspectives on
Ottoman studies: Papers from the 18th Symposium of the International Committee of Pre-Ottoman and Ottoman Studies (CIEPO) at the University of Zagreb 2008
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145:, meaning traveller. Inok Sava was well educated and familiar with Ivan Fyodorov's work. He also had the good fortune to improve on Fyodorov's primer.
486:"Austrian Enlightenment in Cyrillic: Joseph Kurzbock's Cyrillic printing shop and the transmission of the Enlightenment to Austria's Serbs. (Report)"
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Pages from Азбука or Читанка (Azbuka or Čitanka), the first
Serbian language textbook primer, published by Inok Sava in 1597.
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Encyclopedia of
Library and Information Science: Volume 33 – the Wellesley College Library to Zoological Literature: A Review
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77:. There was an earlier Азбука or Читанка (ABC (Reader)), the first Ruthenian language textbook, printed by
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and traveller who published a
Serbian Primer (syllabary) in 1597. Of rare books designated by the
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for them. Most of the available manuscript copies of books were riddled with copyists' errors.
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500:"ZA NJEGA NIJE ZNAO NI VUK KARADŽIĆ: Pogledajte prvi srpski bukvar star 420 godina! (FOTO)"
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Inok Sava was a contemporary of printer Ivan
Fyodorov, who published the Russian Primer in
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was brought from Russia to Serbia in 1724 through the auspices of
Mojsije Petrović of the
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The first
Serbian book to be published in Cyrillic to teach children the ABC was a
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was known to only a few academics at the time. It's not surprising because the
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Symposium, Comité International d'Études pré-Ottomans et
Ottomanes (2010).
54:(First Serbian Spelling Book by Inok Sava) is considered among the rarest.
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in two editions in 1597, was composed by Inok Sava under the patronage of
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101:, in 1574 and another Primer four years later (1578) in Ostrog,
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Slavic Alphabet Tables: Volume 3 – Odds and Ends (1530–1963)
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We know little about Inok Sava except that he was born in
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was once called. These Serbian primers were based on
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Kent, Allen; Lancour, Harold; Daily, Jay E. (1982).
112:(Montenegro), the first Montenegrin printed books –
141:in Serbian. Such a monk was usually referred to as
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212:by Joseph Kurzböck, printed in Vienna in 1770;
16:Serbian author of literacy books (born c. 1530)
42:- c. 1530 – after 1597), was a Serbian monk,
358:Prvi srpski bukvar inoka Save, Venecija 1597
464:. University of Bamberg Press. p. 8.
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137:as a travelling monk, a gatherer of alms,
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85:or so-called Cyrillic alphabet as well.
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220:, 1776) and newer methods of learning.
116:—appearing in 1494 some 55 years after
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409:Kondufor, I͡U︡riĭ I͡U︡Rʹevich (1986).
180:had initiated new primers such as the
355:Inok, Sava; Blečić, Mihailo (1991).
153:or the territories belonging to the
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81:in 1574. The primer featured the
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272:, Božidar Goraždanin's grandson
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412:A Short History of the Ukraine
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223:In 1893 the Russian consul in
103:Crown of the Kingdom of Poland
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530:16th-century Serbian writers
186:Gavrilo Stefanović Venclović
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458:Kempgen, Sebastian (2016).
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206:Metropolitanate of Karlovci
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388:. CRC Press. p. 429.
218:Teodor Janković Mirijevski
48:National Library of Serbia
172:By the 19th century, the
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133:and was associated with
525:Christian hagiographers
231:, who was translating
108:Printing came late to
192:(First Beginners) by
296:Jakov of Kamena Reka
202:Theophan Prokopovich
178:Age of Enlightenment
286:Hieromonk Mardarije
163:Old Church Slavonic
83:Old Church Slavonic
291:Hieromonk Pahomije
281:Hieromonk Makarije
270:Dimitrije Ljubavić
118:Johannes Gutenberg
52:Prvi srpski bukvar
471:978-3-86309-446-1
439:978-3-643-10851-7
395:978-0-8247-2033-9
336:Jerolim Zagurović
276:Hegumen Mardarije
155:Holy Roman Empire
114:Cetinje Octoechos
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306:Stefan Marinović
260:Andrija Paltašić
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194:Zaharije Orfelin
174:Inok Sava Bukvar
167:Slavonic-Serbian
75:Stefan Paštrović
65:. The Alphabet (
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301:Mojsije Dečanac
265:Božidar Vuković
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229:Okica Gluščević
159:Austrian Empire
151:Imperial Russia
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540:1597 deaths
520:1530 births
233:Leo Tolstoy
514:Categories
342:References
139:milostinja
131:Paštrovići
157:, as the
123:Hieromonk
89:Biography
39:Inok Sava
33:romanized
28:Инок Сава
20:Inok Sava
249:See also
196:, 1767;
188:, 1717;
225:Shkoder
61:called
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24:Serbian
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214:Bukvar
210:Bukvar
182:Bukvar
143:putnik
71:Venice
67:Bukvar
63:Bukvar
59:primer
44:scribe
466:ISBN
434:ISBN
390:ISBN
363:ISBN
165:and
110:Zeta
95:Lviv
216:by
208:;
200:by
184:by
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22:(
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