The Mala Remeta Monastery (Serbian: Манастир Мала Ремета, romanized:Manastir Mala Remeta) is a Serb Orthodoxmonastery on the Fruška Gora mountain in the northern Serbia, in the province of Vojvodina. Its foundation is traditionally ascribed to the Serbian KingDragutin (1276–1282). The earliest historical records relating to the monastery date back to the middle of the 16th century.
At the end of the 17th century, Turks had already destroyed it, so when Rača was torn down, the refugee monks came to their appendage Mala Remeta and reconstructed it. The appearance of the earlier church is not known, and the extant one was erected on the same site in 1739. The throne icons on the altar screen were painted by Janko Halkozović in 1759, and the wall paintings are a 1910 work of Kosta Vanđelović.
* 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.