Jump to content

Monastery of Surp Gevork of Goms: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Undid revision 410441524 by 46.241.129.178 (talk)
Vandalism suspected
Line 14: Line 14:
| religious_affiliation = [[Armenian Apostolic Church]]
| religious_affiliation = [[Armenian Apostolic Church]]
| rite =
| rite =
| region = [[Eastern Anatolia Region]]
| region = [[Armenian_highland|Armenian Upland]]
| state =
| state =
| province = [[Bitlis Province]]
| province = [[Bitlis Province]]

Revision as of 07:26, 28 January 2011

Monastery of the of Saint George of Goms
Գոմքի Սուրբ Գևորգ վանք
File:Goms southeast.jpg
Religion
AffiliationArmenian Apostolic Church
ProvinceBitlis Province
RegionArmenian Upland
StatusCeased functioning as a monastery in 1915
Location
LocationTurkey Turkey
Architecture
TypeArmenian church
StyleArmenian
Completed10th century


Word Formation

Monastery of the of Saint George of Goms (Armenian: Գոմքի Սուրբ Գևորգ վանք). Saint George in Armenian for Saint George. Goms was a settlement in the district of Kardchkan which was an southwestern end of Historical Armenia's Vaspurakan province for the many centuries. The local Armenian peasants called it Jojglukh vank (Monastery of the Great Head) (Armenian: Ջոջգլուխ վանք). Goms, meaning "cowsheds", was the name of the nearest village to the monastery: this village is now called Kümüs by its Kurdish inhabitants, its official name is Çanakdüzü.

Environment

The monastery lies at shores of lake Van, within a compact and almost square fortified enclosure. The masonry of the enclosure wall is not bonded into the structure of the church, implying that it is a later construction and the church was originally free-standing. There are oval shaped defensive towers at the south-east and north-east corners of the wall. The wall's masonry shows two distinct layers:

  • the bottom three quarters was constructed using roughly shaped but regularly laid stone blocks
  • the top third uses larger and less regularly shaped stones.

History

This monastery is not mentioned in any known historical source. However historian-orientalist J. M. Thierry considers that both the design of the church and historical events indicate that the church was probably built just after the conquest of this district, called Kardchkan in Armenian, by Gagik Artsruni, the king of Vaspurakan, in 905 AD. The head of the monastery was, by tradition, the bishop of Kardchkan - which suggests that the monastery was once the most important in the district. After the Armenian king John-Senekerim II ceded his Kingdom_of_Vaspurakan to the Byzantine_empire in 1022, the empire produced a list of the region’s bishopric seats; one such seat was at a monastery of Saint George - this could perhaps have been Goms. The monks possessed a relic that they claimed to be the head of Saint George, and for this reason the monastery was an important pilgrimage site. Due to increasing Kurdish violence, in 1830 the monks had to abandon the monastery and move to a more secure location in the village of Goms. There was an unsuccessful attempt to return to the monastery at the end of the 19th century. The isolated location of the monastery has helped to maintain its preservation and it was functioning until the Armenian Genocide in 1915. In 1923 this abandoned monastery was plundered and ruined by Turks and Kurds. But considerable damage has occurred since the early 1970's. In addition, the rising waters of lake Van during the 1990's have eroded the coastline within the bay and now threatens the base of the monastery's fortified wall.