Radovanje Grove ( / Radovanjski lug) is an oak forest located near Radovanje, Serbia. It is a natural memorial monument that covers . It was first marked during the reign of Serbian Prince Alexander KaraÃÂorÃÂeviÃÂ, and a memorial church dedicated to KaraÃÂorÃÂe was built in 1936. It was categorized as Immovable Cultural Heritage of Exceptional Importance in 1979.
Returning from exile in Russia in 1817, KaraÃÂorÃÂe Petroviàas leader of the First Serbian Uprising and Revolutionary Serbia, and his companion Naum Krnar stayed at a field hut owned by DragiàVojkiàin Radovanje Grove, in the Radovanje village. However, Miloà ¡ ObrenoviàI who had come to an arrangement with the Ottoman Turks as leader of the semi-autonomous Principality of Serbia, ordered for KaraÃÂorÃÂe and Krnar to be assassinated. Nikola NovakoviÃÂ, a confidant of Vujica VuliÃÂeviÃÂ, cut off KaraÃÂorÃÂe's head with a yatagan, and killed Krnar with a shotgun. He buried them, both headless in a grave 100 feet away from the hut to the stream, and their heads, skinless and stuffed, were sent to Istanbul in order to prove to the Ottomans that the two were dead.
The place of the assassination is marked by a large wooden cross with marble slab with text. Memorial church dedicated to KaraÃÂorÃÂe was built in the 1936.