Prince-Bishopric of Montenegro

Prince-Bishopric of Montenegro
Митрополство Црногорско
Mitropolstvo Crnogorsko
1516–1852
Unification of (old) Montenegro and the Hills (1796)
  Area Old Montenegro (1)
  Area of two hill tribes
Bjelopavlići (2) and Piperi (3)
StatusIndependent state (1516–1696)
Ottoman vassal state (1696–1852)
CapitalCetinje
Official languagesSerbian
Religion
Serbian Orthodoxy (official)
Demonym(s)Montenegrins
GovernmentTheocratic Serbian Orthodox ecclesiastical principality (1516–1767, 1773–1852)
Prince-bishop 
• 1516–1520
Vavila (first) (de jure)
• 1697–1735
Danilo (first) (de facto)
• 1851–1852
Danilo II (last)
Head of the Senate of Montenegro and the Highlands[1] 
• 1831–1834
Ivan Vukotić
• 1834–1852
Pero Petrović
LegislatureAssembly of Montenegro and the Highlands
History 
• Establishment
1516
13 March 1852
CurrencyMontenegrin perun (proposed)
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Zeta under the Crnojevići
Sanjak of Montenegro
Montenegro vilayet
Principality of Montenegro
Today part ofMontenegro

The Prince-Bishopric of Montenegro (Serbian: Митрополство Црногорско, romanizedMitropolstvo Crnogorsko, lit.'Metropolitanate of the Black Mountain') was a Serbian Orthodox ecclesiastical principality that existed from 1516 until 1852. The principality was located around modern-day Montenegro. It emerged from the Eparchy of Cetinje, later known as the Metropolitanate of Montenegro and the Littoral, whose bishops defied the Ottoman Empire overlordship and transformed the parish of Cetinje into a de facto theocracy, ruling it as Metropolitans (Vladike, also known as prince-bishops).

The first prince-bishop was Vavila. The system was transformed into a hereditary one by Danilo Šćepčević, a bishop of Cetinje who united the several tribes of Montenegro into fighting the Ottoman Empire that had occupied all of Montenegro (as the Sanjak of Montenegro and Montenegro Vilayet) and most of southeastern Europe at the time. Danilo was the first in the House of Petrović-Njegoš to occupy the position as the Metropolitan of Cetinje in 1851, when Montenegro became a secular state (principality) under Danilo I Petrović-Njegoš. The Prince-Bishopric of Montenegro also briefly became a monarchy when it was temporarily abolished in 1767–1773: this happened when the impostor Little Stephen posed as the Russian Emperor and crowned himself the Tsar of Montenegro.


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