The Frauds of the Serbian Orthodox Church Regarding Autocephaly and Their Consequences for the State of Kosovo
THE FRAUDS OF THE SERBIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH REGARDING AUTOCEPHALY AND THEIR CONSEQUENCES FOR THE STATE OF KOSOVO

The
rise of the hegemonic Serbian state, beginning with autonomy in 1830 (on the
scale of the Pashalik of Belgrade) and recognition as a state at the Congress
of Berlin in 1878, culminating in its expansion into Albanian lands during the
Balkan Wars of 1912–1913—when Kosovo and Macedonia were recognized as
Serbian—was built upon the “spiritual title deeds” of the Serbian Orthodox
Church and its deceptions, presenting itself as “an essential part of Serbian
spiritual and cultural identity since the Middle Ages.”
This
deception, which was part of the Slavic-Russian concept to create vassal states
(Montenegro, Serbia, Bulgaria) in the European part of the Ottoman Empire,
relied heavily on the Serbian Orthodox Church and its claimed autocephaly from
the 13th century onward. However, as will be shown, it was only a temporary
autonomy from the Archbishopric of Ohrid (from 1219 to 1274).
The
narrative of this deception persisted for eight centuries, as the Serbian
Orthodox Church only gained true autocephaly in 1922, after the formation of
the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. Since ecclesiastical autocephaly
was always tied to statehood, the Serbian Orthodox Church obtained this “right”
only after the decisions of the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, which recognized
the new kingdom. In August 1920, a state delegation appealed to the Holy Synod
of the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Constantinople to unify three churches
(Karlovci, Montenegro, and the Metropolitanate of Belgrade) into one, which
under Karadjordjevi? influence, would be named the Serbian Orthodox Church.
The
Holy Synod, in accordance with political realities—since ecclesiastical
autocephalies were subordinate to state ones—approved the SKS state’s request,
on the condition of a payment of 1.5 million French francs. This allowed the
churches of Kosovo and Macedonia (until then under the jurisdiction of
Constantinople) to be included in the hierarchy of the unified Serbian Orthodox
Church. The final act of this agreement was signed in 1922 by the Patriarch of
Constantinople.
Thus,
this documented agreement makes it clear that there was no “continuity of
Serbian ecclesiastical autocephaly” from the Middle Ages. Rather, the
internationally recognized military occupation of Kosovo and Macedonia served
two purposes: first, to legitimize the assimilation of Orthodox populations
(Albanian and Macedonian) into Serbs, and second, to legitimize the
appropriation of medieval Orthodox Christianity—including churches and
monasteries—that had historically been shared religious sites.
Since
this centuries-old fraud continues to produce political consequences for the
state of Kosovo—especially because the Ahtisaari Plan treats Orthodox
Christianity and religious sites as property of the Serbian Orthodox Church—it
unjustly deprives Albanians (who adopted Christianity as early as the 4th
century, before any Slavs existed in Illyria) of an important part of their
spiritual and historical heritage. Therefore, it is necessary to clarify the
history of this fraud to ensure that the state of Kosovo defends its rightful
claim to shared spiritual, cultural, and religious heritage. This is especially
urgent as the issue becomes increasingly internationalized, while the Serbian
state and its church continue their propaganda regarding an “eight-century
historical and cultural right in Kosovo.”
This
fraud aims to exclude Albanians from the most significant part of their
historical-cultural identity—rooted in the medieval period when Illyria was its
center. It also raises questions about the Nemanjid dynasty of Raška (which
many ancient sources suggest had tribal origins) as part of this
cultural-political dualism. This includes the deceptive formula of the
“medieval Serbian state,” a claim that used the historical Dardanian core to
establish a despotate supported by Catholic crusades and leveraged it to rise
in Illyria with the goal of replacing the collapsing Byzantine Empire.
Not
coincidentally, during the reign of Grand Župan Stefan Dušan, Raška was known
in contemporary sources as Rasa, Rasien, Rex Rasien, or even “Illyricum
Magna”—but never as the “Serbian Kingdom.” Thus, when Catholic crusaders sacked
Constantinople in 1204 and declared the Latin Empire, while the Orthodox Church
relocated to Nicaea, the church of Raška, centered in Ži?a, received direct
support from the Holy See. This facilitated an unlawful separation from the
Archbishopric of Ohrid—where it had belonged since the time of Simeon—despite
being confirmed as such by Byzantine Emperor Basil II in 1018.
The
rewritten and manipulated documents of the Serbian Orthodox Church—especially
through the hagiographies (monastic biographies) from Hilandar Monastery and
other centers like Odessa, Karlovci, and Vienna from the 17th to 19th
centuries—sought to justify the claim that the Serbian Orthodox Church was
“recognized as autocephalous” by the Patriarchate of Constantinople. But
credible documents show this was merely a temporary independence of the Ži?a
Bishopric from Ohrid, not actual autocephaly.
Even
Dr. Dimitrije Ruvarac, archimandrite and manager of the Karlovci press and
Patriarchal Library, stated:
“There
is no doubt that Sava received some privileges for the Raška hierarchy in
Nicaea, but it is impossible to identify these as constituting the great
canonical act of establishing an autocephalous church.”
Similarly,
historian Dr. Janko Šafarik, in a report from 1855 after researching
Constantinople archives, said:
“We
cannot document any act by which Saint Sava became an independent archbishop.
No such act has been found to date.”
Church
historian Svetozar Niketi?, writing in 1870, noted that while the Serbian
Church considered Sava independent, the archbishops were still confirmed by the
Patriarch of Constantinople. It was only with Stefan Dušan that the temporary
right to ordain bishops independently began being falsely presented as full
autocephaly.
The
Serbian Orthodox Church later edited nearly all ecclesiastical documents to
promote this false narrative—especially those originating from Hilandar. This
documented fact helps free Albanian historiography from the constraints of
these manipulations, which are still widely quoted.
Even
some objective Serbian authors, like Ilarion Ruvarac, acknowledge the Vatican’s
behind-the-scenes influence during the Catholic conquest of Constantinople
(1204–1261), during which the Patriarchate was exiled to Nicaea. When Sava of
Raška sought separation from Ohrid, Bishop Dimitrije Homatian of Ohrid cursed
him, stating that such a break was forbidden by apostolic canon law.
His
letters remained ignored for over 50 years until the fall of the Latin Empire
in 1261, when Byzantium returned to Constantinople, and the Orthodox Church
resumed its place. This return was supported even by the Vatican, seeking to
restore normal relations between the two world centers amid growing Ottoman
threats.
As
part of these developments, the ecclesiastical power of the Ohrid Archbishopric
was restored, and the one-sided schism by Raška and Bulgaria—falsely claiming
autocephaly—was rejected. At the Council of Lyon in 1274, it was declared that
the act of independence in Nicaea had violated apostolic canon law, and the
Ohrid Archbishopric was reestablished as the rightful ecclesiastical authority.












