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Image:Gandzasar Monastery1.jpg|Gandzasar Monastery
Image:Gandzasar Monastery1.jpg|Gandzasar Monastery
Image:Gandzasar Monastery3.jpg
Image:Gandzasar Monastery3.jpg|Gandzasar Monastery
Image:Gandzasar2.jpg
Image:Gandzasar2.jpg|Drum of the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist
Image:Gandzasar little stream of light.jpg|Interior of the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist
Image:Tombstone-of-hasan-jalal-vahtangian.jpg
Image:Gandzasar little stream of light.jpg|Interior
Image:Gandzasar ornaments.jpg|Gandzasar bas-reliefs
Image:Gandzasar ornaments.jpg|Gandzasar bas-reliefs
Image:Armenian Flag Khachen.gif
Image:Armenian Flag Khachen.gif|Royal flag of Hasan-Jalal Vahtangian (reigned 1214-1261), founder of the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist
Image:Gandzasar ornaments 2.jpg|Armenian medieval lapidary inscriptions on Gandzasar's walls
Image:Gandzasar ornaments 2.jpg|Armenian medieval lapidary inscriptions on Gandzasar's walls
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Revision as of 02:56, 16 September 2011

Gandzasar
Գանձասար
Religion
AffiliationArmenian Apostolic Church
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusFunctioning
Year consecratedJuly 20, 1240
Location
Locationnear the village of Vank, Martakert province,
Republic of Artsakh Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
Architecture
TypeMonastery, Church
StyleArmenian
Completed1238
Website
www.gandzasar.com

Gandzasar monastery (Armenian: Գանձասարի վանք) is a 10-13th century Armenian monastery situated in the Mardakert region of Nagorno-Karabakh, near the village of Vank. "Gandzasar" means treasure mountain or hilltop treasure in Armenian.[1] The monastery holds relics believed to belong to St. John the Baptist and St Zechariah, father of John the Baptist[2]. Gandzasar was the residence of the catholicoi of the Catholicosate of Aghvank[3] of the Armenian Apostolic Church from about 1400 until 1816,[4] and is now the seat of the Archbishop of Artsakh.

History and architecture

The monastery at Gandzasar is known since the 10th century. [5][6] The construction of Gandzasar's Cathedral of St. John the Baptist began in 1216, under the patronage of the Armenian prince of Khachen, Hasan-Jalal Dawla, and it was completed in 1238 and consecrated on July 22, 1240.

The complex is protected by high walls. Within the complex is the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist (Սուրբ Յովհաննու Մկրտիչ եկեղեցի in Armenian), built between 1216 and 1238.[7] The drum of its dome has exquisite bas-reliefs that depict the Crucifixion, Adam and Eve, and two ministers holding a model of the church above their heads as an offering to God. The bas-reliefs have been compared to the elaborate carvings of Aghtamar,[8] and some art historians consider the monastery to represent one of the masterpieces of Armenian architecture. Anatoly L. Yakobson, a prominent Soviet medieval art historian, described Gandzasar as a "pearl of architectural art....This is a unique monument of medieval architecture and monumental sculpture, which by right ought to be regarded as an encyclopedia of 13th-century Armenian art."[9]

Gandzasar's cathedral church shares many architectural forms with the main churches of two other Armenian monasteries also built in the mid-13th century: Hovhannavank Monastery and Harichavank Monastery. [10][11]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Thus, the name divided into syllables, Գանձ+ա+սար, is translated as գանձ = treasure; սար = mountain or hilltop, with the letter "-ա-" (-a-), forming an agglutinative compound.
  2. ^ Kirakos Gandzaketsi. “Kirakos Gandzaketsi’s history of the Armenians,” Sources of the Armenian Tradition. New York, 1986, p. 67
  3. ^ Movses Kalankatuatsi. History of the Land of Aluank, translated from Old Armenian by Sh. V. Smbatian. Yerevan: Matenadaran (Institute of Ancient Manuscripts), 1984, p. 33, 46, 89-93
  4. ^ Hewsen, Robert H. (2001). Armenia: A Historical Atlas. The University of Chicago Press. p. 159. ISBN 0-226-33228-4.
  5. ^ Anania Mokatsi. On the Rebellion of the House of Aghvank. Yerevan, Luis, 1956, p. 14
  6. ^ Chorbajian, Levon; Donabedian Patrick; Mutafian, Claude. The Caucasian Knot: The History and Geo-Politics of Nagorno-Karabagh. NJ: Zed Books, 1994
  7. ^ Khatcherian, Hrair (1997). Artsakh: A Photographic Journey. Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America, p. 13.
  8. ^ See Comneno, Lala M., Cuneo, P, and Manukian, S. Volume 19: Gharabagh. Documents of Armenian Art - Documenti di Architettura Armena Series. Polytechnique and the Armenian Academy of Sciences, Milan, OEMME Edizioni, 1980, Introduction
  9. ^ Hakobyan, Hravard H (1990). The Medieval Art of Artsakh. Yerevan, Armenian SSR: Parberakan. p. 76. ISBN 5-8079-0195-9.
  10. ^ Thierry, Jean-Michel and Patrick Donabedian. Les Arts Arméniens. Paris, 1987.
  11. ^ Thierry, Jean. Eglises et Couvents du Karabagh. Antelais, Lebanon, 1991, pp. 161-165

Further reading

  • Template:Ru icon Yakobson, Anatoly L. “From the History of Medieval Armenian Architecture: the Monastery of Gandzasar,” in: Studies in the History of Culture of the Peoples in the East. Moscow-Leningrad. 1960.