"Order of Lord Rastudije" in Bosnia, in which 12 monks, called krstjani, enrolled as early as 1203, of whom Dragić Ljubiša and Dražeta participated in the declaration of renouncing the schism at Bilino Polje.
Rastudije and his supporters were condemned as heretics at the first synod in Žiča in 1221 by the Serbian Orthodox Church, which cursed them:[1] Many researchers identify Rastudije with Aristodius, who, condemned by the Catholic Church and banished from Dalmatia, finds refuge with Ban Kulin in Bosnia.
There were, among others, two Dalmatian patarenes, brothers Aristodije and Matej, sons of the Greek Zerubbabel, who moved to Zadar from Apulia in the second half of the 12th century.
Exiled Dalmatian Christians find refuge in Bosnia, where Ban Kulin welcomes them warmly.
In the letter of Cardinal Konrad, the papal legate for France, in which he summoned the French bishops to a synod in 1223, the head of the Bosnian Church is considered the antipope of Western European heretics, to whom the Albigensians go for advice and adopt his views.