Pavlovich was born around 1695 in
Silistra, a port on the
Danube river located in the southwestern part of
Dobruja. Then ruled by the
Ottoman Empire and a major regional centre as the capital of the vast
Silistra Province, today the city is part of
Bulgaria. His father, Pavel, was a local Bulgarian. Parteniy began his education at the Silistra religious school under the teacher Tetradios; the curriculum at the school was in a
Greek dialect. He also studied at a Bulgarian school, where he learned the literary
Church Slavonic language, which he would later use in his autobiography and marginal notes. In Silistra, Pavlovich also finished a full
grammar course under the teacher Palaiologos from
Constantinople. the capital of
Wallachia, where he graduated from the
Princely Academy of Saint Sava. At the academy, he was taught
theology,
humanities,
natural science and
mathematics. In March 1719, upon graduating from the academy, Pavlovich moved to
Padua,
Italy in seek of further education. However, he could not come to terms with the
Roman Catholic teachings in Padua and would often be involved in dogmatic disputes with the local clergy, which forced him to leave the city. He visited and unsuccessfully attempted to study in
Venice,
Bologna,
Florence,
Rome,
Naples and
Otranto, though he was always in trouble due to his Eastern Orthodox religious views, and had to leave Italy before the end of 1719 after less than half a year there. After his stay in Italy, he was in southwestern
Macedonia as a teacher in
Siatista and Kostur (
Kastoria). There he also began to teach the
rationalism of
René Descartes, which the
Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople saw as unsuitable. Thus, the Orthodox leaders temporarily removed him from his position until he at least nominally renounced his heretic teachings. After his stay in
South Macedonia, Pavlovich was, for a year, a teacher in
Risan on the
Adriatic coast of
Montenegro. In 1721, Pavlovich travelled around the
Ohrid region and the mountains of
Albania, visiting holy sites of the Orthodox Church. ==Religious figure, traveller and writer==