
The '''' (Nomocanon of Saint Sava, , or ()) was the highest code in the Serbian Orthodox Church. It was finished in 1219. This legal act was written in simple language. Its basic purpose was to organize the continuation and functioning of the Serbian Kingdom and the Serbian Church. It was originally printed under the name Rules of Speech ('') in Serbian at Raška, Serbia, in two successive issues, one for Wallachia and another for Transylvania (in 1640). It is Serbia's first Serbian-language church-state constitution.
via Wikipedia infobox
The '''' (Nomocanon of Saint Sava, , or ()) was the highest code in the Serbian Orthodox Church. It was finished in 1219. This legal act was written in simple language. Its basic purpose was to organize the continuation and functioning of the Serbian Kingdom and the Serbian Church. It was originally printed under the name Rules of Speech ('') in Serbian at Raška, Serbia, in two successive issues, one for Wallachia and another for Transylvania (in 1640). It is Serbia's first Serbian-language church-state constitution.
==Byzantine nomocanons== John Scholasticus, the Patriarch of Constantinople, was the writer of the first church-civil codex in which the material is systematically arranged. The twelve Novellae of Emperor Justinian (Novellae Constitutiones) on the subject of church and law are a part of this codex. It is known as the Nomocanon of John Scholasticus (ca. 550) or the Syntagma of John Scholasticus (). Syntagmas are nomocanons that contain rules without explanations.
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
via Wikidata · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).