Antim Zepos (, , 1762âÂÂafter 1814) was the Metropolitan of (1802âÂÂ14) during the period of unrest in the Belgrade Pashalik, being witness to the Dahije tyranny in the pashalik and the First Serbian Uprising (1804âÂÂ13). As opposed to other Greek Patriarchal bishops, Zepos supported the Serbian rebels and encouraged them to fight. After fleeing to the Habsburg Monarchy and becoming ill, he slowly distanced himself from the Serbian insurgents. The Serbian leadership planned for him to be appointed Serbian Metropolitan but this failed. Zepos resigned in October 1814 after which his fate is unknown. He was remembered positively by the Serbian people.
Zepos was an ethnic Greek born on Mykonos in 1762. He was the protosynkellos of the Heraklion Metropolitanate prior to succeeding Danilo as Metropolitan of Uà ¾ice-Valjevo in 1802, Danilo being transferred to the Tarnovo Metropolitanate by the Ecumenical Patriarchate. His predecessor Danilo had moved the seat of the Metropolitanate from Valjevo to à  abac, so all three were found in titles. Zepos signed his title as "bishop of à  abac" or "bishop of Uà ¾ice". At first, the liturgy was made in Greek until he learned Serbian. He himself Serbianized his surname to Zepovià(). In 1803 Patriarch Kallinikos V ordered Zepos to remove superstitious beliefs common among the Serbian people, upon which Zepos ordained a greater number of priests. The local clergy and people quickly came to like and respect him, and archpriest Matija Nenadoviàwrote about him in his memoirs, commenting that he was "a Greek, but a holy soul", and also compared him with the Metropolitan of Belgrade Leontius who "was not as our holy Antim of Valjevo". These two were the bishops in the Belgrade Pashalik, both Greeks.
Zepos came to the Belgrade Pashalik at an insecure moment, when the Dahije (renegade Janissaries) had usurped power after capturing and murdering Vizier Hadji Mustafa Pasha and increasingly violently pressured the Serbs and desecrated churches. He witnessed the Slaughter of the Knezes (January 1804), in which Serb community leaders (including NenadoviÃÂ's father Aleksa) and clergymen were murdered. Upon the outbreak of uprising, Zepos actively supported the Serbian rebels. Zepos found himself in a terrible situation where the Janissaries terrorized à  abac in March, having burnt down 155 Christian houses, killed part of the Serb population in the town, including several clergymen, one which was Zepos' protosynkellos "cut into pieces", and also assaulted Zepos who was held hostage. Despite his delicate position in Ottoman-Serbian relations and belonging to the Ecumenical Patriarchate, he stood by the Serbian people, for which he earned the respect of the Serbian leadership and the spiritual leader of Habsburg Serbs, Metropolitan Stefan StratimiroviÃÂ. When Stratimiroviàreceived news of the situation he asked archpriest Matija Nenadoviàto save Zepos, as Zepos had done everything to protect his community. Leontius and Zepos both left for the Habsburg Monarchy in April 1804 to stay out of danger, being safe in Habsburg Zemun, and Stratimiroviàwas informed on 25 May 1804 that both were ready to return to Serbia. On 16 June 1804 the two are mentioned as staying at the Serbian rebel base at TopÃÂider. After an agreement with the "Turks", the situation in à  abac calmed down and Zepos returned to the town. The Serbian rebels had full trust in him by now. The uprising was subsequently turned against the Ottoman Empire after the Serbian rebels defeated and then murdered the Dahije leaders in August 1804, becoming a national uprising.
Zepos was part of the organization of the BogovaÃÂa Monastery assembly in August 1805 that was to proclaim KaraÃÂorÃÂe the "leader of the Serbian people" and at the same time establish the Governing Council to care for political, administrative and judicial affairs and to determine KaraÃÂorÃÂe's role and rights. Zepos was to cense KaraÃÂorÃÂe. Some 1,000 representatives of Valjevo, Rudnik and Belgrade nahiye arrived but the assembly was never held there. KaraÃÂorÃÂe instead chose to have an assembly at Borak (thereby suppressing opposition), where Zepos arrived with 300 followers. The assembly discussed issues, taxes, arming insurgents and buying ammunition, and chose the members for the Governing Council. Metropolitan Leontius was not invited, which points to distrust, while the rebels had full faith in Zepos, which he earned. The Governing Council began its work at the VoljavÃÂa Monastery and was then transferred to BogovaÃÂa. In 1805 Zepos allowed priest and vojvoda (general) Luka LazareviÃÂ to be relieved of his spiritual duties and marry for a second time (he was a widow), also being his best man (kum) at the wedding.
He was part of the delegation in Habsburg Klenak in January 1806 where talks with the Ottoman garrison of à  abac regarding a handover were held, but failed. At the beginning of 1806 Zepos stayed in his eparchy and rallied the people of MaÃÂva to join the uprising, which was outside his spiritual mission and could become problematic for the Patriarchate, while the Ottomans tried to capture him. When the Ottomans entered MaÃÂva in late January, Zepos fled with numerous refugees to Syrmia. Stratimiroviàwas informed about the events. Zepos' brother and maternal nephew were in Sremska Mitrovica at the time, his brother being seriously ill and his nephew going to a Serbian school. He asked Stratimiroviàand the Austrian general-command to let him be quarantined in Mitrovica "until the Serbs on that side resist the Turks".
Stratimiroviàsecured his stay in the Habsburg Monarchy. Onwards, Zepos informed Stratimiroviàon the events in the Pashalik and Serb victories, such as the important Battle of Mià ¡ar. When the Austrian authorities pressured him to leave Mitrovica (as to rid any responsibility), Stratimiroviàgave him the options of staying at Sremski Karlovci, Beà ¡enovo or à  ià ¡atovac Monastery at Fruà ¡ka Gora, and Zepos chose Beà ¡enovo, moving with his entourage in October 1806. In the meantime, the Serbian rebels had several victories and the Ottoman army on the fronts was in a bad state.
The Serbs took over Belgrade on 26 December 1806 and the last Ottoman garrison, at Uà ¾ice, capitulated on 15 July 1807. The Ottoman Empire had also declared war on Russia on 12 December 1806. An Ottoman Vizier order dated 13 July 1807 calls upon the earlier fatwah to violently subdue the Serbian rebels, and includes orders for the destruction "of that group", taking of their property, imprisonment and enslaving their women and children. Serbs had endured this kind of retribution in the 17th- and 18th centuries following revolts, and areas in western and central Serbia, and Kosovo, had been depopulated due to this. Zepos returned to Serbia in July 1807 but stayed only briefly. Stratimiroviàissued a certificate to Zepos on 25 July 1807 that included his flight with refugees, his honourable ways and support to the people. Zepos became sick with scurvy, vitamin-deficiency, and was too weak for duty.
Due to the situation the Porte forced the Ecumenical Patriarchate to be an intermediate (under Ottoman control) between the Serbian rebels and the Porte. In November 1807 Metropolitan Leontius was authorized to promise the Serbs their demands if they swore loyalty to the Ottoman sultan. The Serbs refused, banished Metropolitan Aksentios of Kyustendil (sent there to accompany Leontius in this mission) and threatened Leontius. In April 1808 Stratimiroviàwas informed of a pardon (amnesty) for Metropolitan Zepos to return to his eparchy sent by Metropolitan Kalinik of Dabar-Bosnia through Venedikt KraljeviÃÂ, surely with Ottoman knowing. From this time on, Zepos distanced himself more and more from the Serbian leadership and only sporadically went to Serbia. Leontius de facto took over his administration, as seen in his usage of the title "Serbian Metropolitan". In October 1808 Mulla Pasha of Vidin and Metropolitan Dionysios of Vidin met with Leontius, Stevan à ½ivkoviÃÂ-Telemak and Russian envoy Konstantin Rodofinikin in Poreàin eastern Serbia and discussed an ending to the conflict through diplomatic means, at first without informing the Serbian leadership.
In August 1809 Leontius left Serbia with Russian envoy Rodofinikin, due to disagreements with the Serbian leadership. Serbia was now left without bishops, leading the Serbian leadership to look to have archimandrite and vojvoda Melentije Stevanoviàordained a bishop via Russia, but this failed several times. In July 1810 the Serbian leadership uncanonically proclaimed Melentije a metropolitan vicar. Leontius was allowed to return to Serbia but sickness made him put Melentije as his representative (as "administrator of all Serbia") later that year. In 1811, the Serbian leadership sent Melentije to Wallachia to ask to be ordained as bishop of the two eparchies in Serbian territory, but this was denied again, as against Ottoman interest, against the Ecumenical Patriarchate, and uncanonical. Melentije continued to serve as the de facto metropolitan, at the same time being a military commander. It is believed that the Serbian leadership sought help from Stratimiroviàto appoint Zepos as Serbian Metropolitan, and Melentije as Metropolitan of Uà ¾ice-Valjevo. Due to the uncanonical reasons, Stratimiroviàlikely gave up on this. In a letter dated 22 February 1812, KaraÃÂorÃÂe asked Stratimiroviàto ensure with the Austrian authorities that Zepos could return as soon as possible to Serbia. During this time, Zepos met with KaraÃÂorÃÂe at Topola regarding proclaiming Zepos the Serbian Metropolitan and he was to return for further talks, but Zepos never returned to Serbia after this. Zepos likely was unwilling to go against the Ecumenical Patriarchate in this matter as it was uncanonical and there were no prerequisites for an autonomous Serbian church (the war was ongoing and Serbia was not recognized as a specific territory as was the Danubian Principalities).
With the suppression of the Serbian Uprising in 1813, general amnesty was given by the Porte in November 1813 to the rebels and surely to Zepos. He stayed at his position until October 1814, being mentioned as having resigned voluntarily. He was succeeded by Danilo II who was remembered negatively for overcharging the community, for which he was dethroned and sentenced to serve as an ordinary monk at Meteora. The fate of Zepos is unknown, but he is believed to have retired to Constantinople or the Greek provinces.
Zepos' portrait was painted in 1811 at Sremski Karlovci and then held at Beà ¡enovo until World War II.