Dimitrije MladenoviÃÂ (; 1794-1890) was an Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople Protoiereus in the Kumanovo kaza (district) of the Ottoman Empire.
He was born in 1794 in the village of Proevce (now North Macedonia). He became a priest in 1818, then a protojerej (archpriest) in 1830, and finally an ikonom (churchwarden) of the Kumanovo district subordinate to the Metropolitan of Skopje (Patriarchate of Constantinople) in 1833. He was commonly known as the "Old Churchwarden" (áÃÂðÃÂø øúþýþü).
In the period of 1847âÂÂ51, the Church of St. Nicholas in Kumanovo was built by the ktitors: ikonom priest Dimitrije, Krsto Puto and his son Denko KrstiÃÂ, priest Neà ¡a, Hadà ¾i-StojilkoviÃÂ, and the families of RikaÃÂovci, à  apkalijanci, Borozani and StojanÃÂeajini.
He was taken down from the position of ikonom in 1855 but returned to the office a year later. In 1860 he and Denko KrstiÃÂ were called to a hearing in Skopje by the Grand Vizier Mehmed Pasha Kibrizli, to be hanged, but paid for their release. Later in 1871 he was called by the vali in Prizren for questioning of his "immoral lifestyle", allegedly a campaign of the Bulgarian Exarchate, but he was released under a plea of the local population of Kumanovo to the Vali.
After the death of Dimitrije, Denko Krstiàsucceeded as the ikonom of Kumanovo. His daughter Katerina married Hadà ¾i-Vasilje from Vranje, from which marriage the acclaimed historian and ethnographer Jovan Hadà ¾i-Vasiljeviàsprung.