Jefrem Janković Tetovac

1640 – 18 March 1718), known as Jefrem Tetovac (Јефрем Тетовац; "of Tetovo"), was a Serbian and Russian Orthodox bishop, writer and bibliophile.

[3] During the Great Turkish War (1683–99), in the event known as the Great Serbian Migration,[4] Janković and his countrymen feared Ottoman reprisal so they joined the Serbian Patriarch Arsenije III Crnojević and fled northwards into the Kingdom of Hungary, all the way to Szentendre, which the Patriarch made his new home.

[5] There, Jefrem was appointed in 1694 as the Orthodox bishop of Mohacs and Sziget, an important post because of the need to fight off aggressive Catholic propaganda.

[6] Due to the pressure of the state to adopt union with Rome, Jefrem left for Russia in early 1703 as the Patriarch's envoy with an assignment to plead for help.

[3] He had a brother, Dimitrije, probably a monk, who visited him in 1709/1710 in Russia, bringing an Evangelion printed in the Kyiv Pecherska Lavra back to the Orahovica Monastery.