翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Zoran Batrović
・ Zoran Belošević
・ Zoran Bečić
・ Zoran Bojović
・ Zoran Boškovski
・ Zoran Bujas
・ Zoran Cilinšek
・ Zoran Corporation
・ Zoran Cvetanović
・ Zoran Cvetković
・ Zoran Cvijanović
・ Zoran Damjanovski
・ Zoran Dimitrijević
・ Zoran Dimitrijević (footballer born 1963)
・ Zoran Djordjevic (photographer)
Zoran Djurovic
・ Zoran Dragić
・ Zoran Drvenkar
・ Zoran Dukić
・ Zoran Erceg
・ Zoran Erić
・ Zoran Ferić
・ Zoran Filipović
・ Zoran G. Jančić
・ Zoran Gajić
・ Zoran Hočevar
・ Zoran Hristić
・ Zoran Ivanović
・ Zoran Ivančić
・ Zoran Janjetov


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Zoran Djurovic : ウィキペディア英語版
Zoran Djurovic

Zoran Djurović (born November 12, 1968) is a Serbian artist, priest, and theologian.
==Biography==

Djurovic lived in Sutomore where he finished elementary school and Gymnasium in Bar. He studied design at the Gymnasium Slobodan Škerović in Podgorica, in the class of professor Dragoljub Bato Brajović, a student of Milo Milunović. He was devoted to comics and illustrations. His role models were John Buscema, Burne Hogarth, William Vance, and Frank Frazetta.
He graduated from the Theological Faculty of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Belgrade in 1995. The formation of his theological ideas in this period was specially influenced by Dobrivoje Midić (the latter Bishop of Požarevac-Braničevo, Ignatius), a follower of John Zizioulas and "revolutionary" Greek theologians. He frequently visits Peter Jevremović, Gavrilo Marković, Nenad Ilić, Vladimir Vukašinović, and other prominent figures from Belgrade's intellectual and artistic circles. He has served as a deacon since 1992 in the Monastery of the Presentation in Belgrade and in the St. John the Baptist Church in Mirijevo. He advocated frequent communion and “Return to the Fathers” at the theological faculty and in parishes. He has also taught Byzantine painting in 1994 at the University of the Third Age in Belgrade.
Djurovic enrolled in post-graduate studies in History of Philosophy (mentor Slobodan Žunjić) at The University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy, without taking doctorate because of the parish works. In 1996, he took over the parish in Smederevo, where the protagonist of a spiritual change which did not always encounter an approval was. He has held various solo exhibitions (Frescoes, Icons, and Paintings) and participated in numerous collective exhibitions in Serbia, Montenegro, and Italy. He has published various comic strips and illustrations in newspapers, magazines, and books. In 2001, he directed four TV transmissions about Christianity on Smederevo Television. The series was banned because of the method Djurovic used, which was considered too provocative. He was one of the protest leaders in Smederevo, which led to the fall of Slobodan Milošević.
Not wishing to be politically engaged, Djurovic left his country 2002 and moved to Rome, where he studied at Institutum Patristicum Augustinianum of the Pontifical Lateran University. In January 2007, he acquired a license in theology and patristic sciences.
He received his Doctorate in Theology and Patristic Sciences in June 2010. He studied at Analisi esegetico-teologica, at IPA, under the moderation of the following professors: Vittorino Grossi, OSA (first supervisor), Robert Dodaro, OSA (second mentor and the current president), and Nello Cipriani, OSA (advocatus diaboli). He published his thesis the same year. President of the Institute, Dodaro, said that he would try to apply an innovative research method present in this thesis in future doctoral researches.
He speaks several ancient languages (Greek, Hebrew, Syrian, Latin, Old Church Slavonic) and many modern ones (Slavic languages, Italian, English, Spanish, and French). He is devoted to translating and writing scientific researches and painting.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Zoran Djurovic」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.