Pljevlja Gymnasium

Pljevlja Gymnasium

1901
Location
Pljevlja
Montenegro
Information
Type Charter school
State school
Gymnasium
Latin
Russian
English
French
University preparatory school
Established November 18, 1901
Founder Serbian Orthodox Church in Pljevlja
Status Functional
Affiliation Secular
Website

The Pljevlja Gymnasium (Serbian: Пљеваљска гимназија / Pljevaljska gimnazija)[1] or Tanasije Pejatović Gymnasium (Гимназија Танасије Пејатовић/Gimnazija Tanasije Pejatović ) was established by the Serbian Orthodox Church on November 18, 1901. At that time, it was the eighth Serbian classical gymnasium in the Sanjak of Novi Pazar catering to Christian pupils living in the Ottoman Empire. This high school became one of the most significant Serbian educational institutions in the Kingdom of Serbia.

Background

The Pljevlja region has a rich history centered around culture and education. Churches and monasteries were the earliest educational institutions in the region. The Holy Trinity Monastery (Pljevlja) has been of great significance of cultural and spiritual life for the Orthodox Serbs since the Middle Ages. It continues to be of cultural importance to this day. The school in the Holy Trinity Monastery has been in service since the 16th century. The school in the nearby Dovolja monastery has been functional since the 18th century. The primary school system was established in this region in 1823.

History

Prof. Tanasije Pejatović, first director.

The Pljevlja Gymnasium was established in 1901 as the Serb Gymnasium (Srpska gimnazija/Српска ) with the financial support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the then Kingdom of Serbia. The gymnasium's first director was Tanasije Pejatović and Jovan Cvijić as supervisor.

The language of instruction was the Serbian language. Subjects included social sciences and natural sciences, history, social geography, physical geography, anthropology and ethnography.

In 1913, the territory and school was transferred to the Kingdom of Montenegro, which later became the Kingdom of Yugoslavia on March 29, 1919, falling under the jurisdiction of the Zeta Banovina province in 1929. In 1944 studies were resumed in the gymnasium. Later on the 8th of April 1945 it was organized into the Ministry of Education of PR Montenegro. In 1968, the gymnasium was renamed to Tanasije Pejatović Gymnasium.

In 1977, as part of the Stipe Šuvar statewide education reform in Socialist Yugoslavia, the gymnasium was merged into the Vocational education stream, removing many advantages over other schools. The principals of all gymnasiums in SR Serbia and SR Montenegro were desperately lobbying the scientific and policy-making community to re-establish their special status, rights, funding, and curriculum. As a result, in 1991 the school was officially re-established as a classical gymnasium.

Honours

References

Literature

Sources

External links

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