| Monastery Of The Cross |
Article Index for Monastery Of |
Website Links For Monastery |
Information AboutMonastery Of The Cross |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT MONASTERY OF THE CROSS | |
| orthodox monasteries | |
| monasteries in georgia country | |
| monasteries in israel | |
| buildings and structures in jerusalem | |
| georgian culture | |
| greek culture | |
|
May refer to either of the twin Georgian monasteries (one in Mtskheta , Georgia , and the other in Jerusalem .) .]] The Monastery of the Cross in Jerusalem , built in 11th century by Georgians (under the patronage of Queen Tamar Of Georgia ), is situated in the Valley of the Cross (, ''Emeq HaMatzlevah'') ( 31°46'20.27"N, 35°12'30.96"E, 783m) overlooked by the Israel Museum and the Knesset . Legend has it that the monastery was erected on the burial spot of Adam 's head — though two other locations in Jerusalem also claim this honor — from which grew the tree that gave its wood to the Cross on which Christ was Crucified . The monastery is currently occupied by monks of the Jerusalem Patriarchate . LOST ARTWORK In the modern period the priest Petre Konchoshvili (1901), the Russian scholar Nikodim Kondakov (1904) and the German scholar Anton Baumstark (1908) published descriptions and photos of the wall paintings, many of which have since been destroyed or removed from the walls and sold in Europe. Among the scenes attested in the scholarly publications and now lost are the following:
“Wisdom Has Built Her House” on the west side of the south-east pier. It was still in situ in the photos taken in 1960.
Monastery of the Cross).]] The wall painting ensemble underwent considerable changes in the 1970s and 1980s. The Georgian inscriptions were painted over and replaced by Greek ones. For instance, in the 1901 photograph of the Council of Archangels there are Georgian inscriptions, but on the 1960 photographs the inscriptions are Greek; after cleaning the paintings, the Georgian inscriptions emerged again. The same happened in the case of the Anapeston. In many places (e.g. near the figures of St. Luke and St. Prochore) the outline of Georgian letters are clearly seen under the Greek inscription that is there now; in the 1980s the Greek Patriarchate had the frescoes ‘restored’ or, to be more precise, they were repainted very crudely with oil paints to acquire a more ‘complete aspect,’ as a result of which many features of the original paintings have been lost.
Holy Cross is also the name of the representational church of the Jerusalem Patriarchate in Setauket , NY. EXTERNAL LINKS |
|
|