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The oldest preserved Cyrillic manuscript preserved in Serbian, the Gospel of Miroslav, will be on display at the National Museum every Saturday in December, the institution said. In addition, this precious document of Serbian cultural heritage will be exhibited on Friday, December 7th.
The Gospel was created in the eighties of the twelfth century. Written on parchment, it consists of 181 sheets in leather briefcase. The narrative in the latest gospel list says that it was commissioned by Duke Duke Miroslav, brother of the great mayor Stefan Nemanja. It is considered that the student of Gligoria, whose signature is on the last printed list, the scribe or miniature of the gospel.
The Miroslav Gospel is preserved in the National Museum of Belgrade and one of the leaves is in the National Library of St. Petersburg.
The gospel is written in Old Slavic, in Serbian editorials and raccoons of spelling. In its composition, an evangelist is a liturgical book composed of four gospels. The text of the Gospel is written in two columns, black and black, and most titles are in red. The book contains 296 miniature feathers of cartoons, then painted with a brush and decorated with gold. The gospel girdle is not original, it probably dates back to the 14th century and is presumed to have been extracted from another manuscript.
In 1979, the Gospel was proclaimed a cultural asset of great importance and in June 2005, the Gospel of Miroslav was inscribed on the World Memory of the World list. The National Library of Serbia, which is the institution of origin for the protection of ancient and rare books, prescribes that the Gospel of Miroslav can be exposed only ten days a year.
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