- Sevanavank
Sevanavank ("Սևանավանք" in Armenian, meaning "monastery of Sevan") is a
monastery located on the northwestern shore ofLake Sevan in the easternArmenia n province ofGeghark'unik' , not far from the town ofSevan .According to an inscription in one of the churches, it was founded in
874 AD by princessMiriam , the daughter ofAshot I who became a king a decade later. At the time, Armenia was still struggling to free itself from theArab rule.The monastery was strict as it was mainly intended for those monks from
Echmiadzin who had sinned.Jean-Marie Chopin , a French explorer of theCaucasus , visited it in1830 and reported about aregime withoutmeat ,wine , youth or women. Another explorer visited it in1850 and reported thatmanuscript s were still being copied manually.Today the two churches, Sourb Arakelots (Holy Apostoles) and Sourb Astvatsatsin (Mother of God), remain both cross shaped with
octagon altambour s and quite similar in appearance. Beside them lie the ruins of agavit whose roof was originally supported by 6wood en columns. Some of the remains of the gavit and its columns can be seen in theYerevan Museum of History.Initially the monastery was built at the southern shore of a small island. After artificial draining of the Lake Sevan, which started in the
Stalin era, the water level fell about 20 metres, and theisland transformed into apeninsula . At the southern shore of this newly created peninsula, a guesthouse of the Armenian Writers' Union was built, the eastern shore is occupied by the Armenian president's summer residence, while the monastery's still active seminary moved to newly constructed buildings at the northern shore of the peninsula.Due to easier accessibility (once it became a peninsula), good highway and railway connections with Yerevan, a well developed tourist industry in the town of Sevan town, and the picturesque location (although less picturesque than it was before the lake level drop), Sevanavank is one of the most visited sights in Armenia.
Images of Sevanavank
External links
* [http://www.armenica.org/cgi-bin/armenica.cgi?=2=ba=1=baz0020 Sevanavank at Armenica.org]
* [http://www.armeniapedia.org/index.php?title=Sevanavank_Monastery Armeniapedia.org article]
* [http://www.armeniainfo.am/sites/?section=religious_desc&page=2&site_id=86 ArmeniaInfo entry]
* [http://armeniaphotos.info/photos/armenia_sights/sevan Sevan Pictures at Armenia Photos.info]
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