The Grgeteg Monastery (Serbian: Манастир Гргетег, romanized:Manastir Grgeteg) is a Serb Orthodoxmonastery on the Fruška Gora mountain in the northern Serbia, in the province of Vojvodina. According to tradition, the monastery was founded by Zmaj Ognjeni Vuk (DespotVuk Grgurević) in 1471.[1] The earliest historical records about the monastery date back to 1545/1546. The monastery had been deserted before the 1690 Great Migration of the Serbs, but a renewal, undertaken by Bishop Isaija Đaković, took place in 1708. Around 1770, the extant baroque church was erected and it underwent restoration in 1898 under the guiding hand of Hermann Bollé. It was then that the residential buildings which enclose the church from all four sides were reconstructed. The first walled rocailleiconostasis in the church interior was painted and inlaid by Jakov Orfelin in 1774–1775. The extant iconostasis is a 1902 work of Uroš Predić.
↑Kulić, Branka; Srećkov, Nedeljka (1994). The Monasteries of the Fruška Gora. Provincial institute for the protection of the cultural monuments of Vojvodina. pp.63–69. ISBN9788676391158.
* Monastery in Kosovo, which is the subject of a territorial dispute between Serbia and Kosovo. ** The Eparchy of Timișoara (covering Romania) and the Eparchy of Buda (covering Hungary), whose jurisdiction is limited to ethnic Serbs in those countries, are regarded as part of the traditional jurisdiction of the Serbian Orthodox Church, but stricto sensu are not within its canonical territory.