- Syrian Monastery
The Syrian Monastery, also known as Suryan Monastery, is a Coptic Orthodox
monastery located in theNitrian Desert . It is located about 500 meters northwest of theMonastery of Saint Pishoy . Ecclesiastically, the monastery is dedicated to theVirgin Mary and carries her name. However, it is better known as the "Syrian Monastery" because it was mainly used by Syrianmonk s.Etymology, foundation and ancient history
The exact date of the monastery's foundation is unknown. Most sources seem however to agree that its foundation took place in the sixth century A.D. The establishment of the monastery is closely connected to the
Julian heresy , which spread inEgypt during the papacy of Pope Timothy III of Alexandria. The Julianists believed in the incorruptibility of Christ's body. This was in contradiction with the teaching of the Orthodox Church, which held that Christ had taken human flesh that prevented him from being ideal and abstract, and therefore corruptible. Yet, in themonasteries ofScetes , a majority of themonks embraced theJulian heresy . In reaction, those who did not follow the heresy obtained permission from the governor Aristomachus to erect new churches and monasteries, so that they could settle apart from the Julianists. These new facilities were often built alongside the old ones, even keeping the same name but adding to it the word "Theotokos ", thus recognizing the significance of the incarnation, which the Julians seemed to minimize. The Syrian Monastery was therefore established by those monks of theMonastery of Saint Pishoy who rejected theJulian heresy . At the time of its construction, they called it the "Monastery of the Holy Virgin Theotokos".Towards the beginning of the eighth century A.D., the monastery was sold to a group of wealthy Syrian merchants from
Tikrit , who had settled inCairo , for 12,000 dinars. These merchants converted the monastery for use by Syrian monks, and rebaptized it "Monastery of the Holy Virgin of the Syrians". This could be one of the sources of the monastery's modern name. Yet, it is also possible that the monastery had already been inhabited by Syrian monks since the fourth century A.D., which could trace the monastery's name to that period.The Syrian Monastery, like the rest of the monasteries in
Scetes , was subject to fierce attacks by desertBedouins andBerbers . The fifth of these attacks, which took place in817 A.D., was particularly disastrous to this monastery. The monastery was then rebuilt in850 A.D. by two monks, named Matthew and Abraham.In
927 A.D., one of the monastery's monks, known as Moses ofNisibis (c.907 -943 A.D.), traveled toBaghdad to ask theAbbasid caliph Al-Muqtadir to grant tax exemption to the monasteries. Moses ofNisibis then traveled through Syria andMesopotamia in search of manuscripts. After three years of traveling, he returned toEgypt , bringing with him 250 Syriac manuscript. This made of the Syrian Monastery a prosperous and important facility, possessing many artistic treasures and a library rich inSyriac texts.Medieval history
Based on a census taken by Mawhub ibn Mansur ibn Mufarrig, the co-author of the
History of the Patriarchs of Alexandria , the Syrian Monastery had some sixty monks in1088 A.D. It was the third at the time in theNitrian Desert , after theMonastery of Saint Macarius the Great and theMonastery of Saint John the Dwarf .In the middle of the twelfth century, the Syrian Monastery witnessed a period of trouble, when no Syrian priest was present. In the fourteenth century, the monastery was decimated by the plague. When a monk named Moses from the Monastery of Mar Gabriel in
Tur Abdin visited the monastery in1413 A.D., he found only one remaining Syrianmonk .Towards the end of the fifteenth century, the Patriarch of
Antioch visited the Syrian Monastery, granting it many privileges and donations, in order to restore it to its former glory. However, Egyptian monks continued to populate the monastery and, by1516 A.D., only 18 out of 43monk s were Syrian. By the time ofPope Gabriel VII of Alexandria , who himself had been a monk at the Syrian Monastery, it was able to supply ten monks to theMonastery of Saint Paul the Anchorite and twenty to theMonastery of Saint Anthony in theEastern Desert when those two communities were damaged byBedouin raids.In the seventeenth century, western travelers from
France ,Germany andEngland visited the monastery and reported that there were two churches, one for the Syrians and one for theEgyptians (Copt s). They also mention a miraculous "Tree of Saint Ephrem". According to tradition, Saint Ephrem was a fourth century Syrian theologian and ascetic fromNisibis . He sought to meet the holy monkSaint Pishoy , and thus came to the monastic centers ofScetes . When the two men met, they were unable to communicate because Ephrem spoke onlySyriac . Yet, suddenly and miraculously,Saint Pishoy began to express himself in that language, enabling his visitor to understand him. During this exchange, it is said that Saint Ephrem leaned his staff against the door of the hermitage and all at once it became rooted and even sprouted foliage. Near the church of the Holy Virgin, monks will continue to point out even today this tamarind, miraculously born from Ephrem's staff.When Peter Heyling, [] a
Lutheran missionary fromLubeck , and Yusuf Simaan Assemani, a Lebanese envoy of Pope Clement XI of Rome, visited the Syrian monastery between the mid-seventeenth and mid-eighteenth centuries, they found no Syrian monks living in it. The latter managed to acquire forty precious manuscripts from the monastery's library, which are kept today in theVatican Library .Modern history
Between
1839 and1851 , theBritish Museum inLondon was able to procure about five hundredSyriac manuscripts from the monastery's library, concerned not only with religious topics, but also with philosophy and literature. Famous visitors to the monastery during this time included Lansing (1862 ), Chester (1873 ), Junkers (1875 ), Jullien (1881 ) and Butler (1883 ).The manuscripts found in the Syrian monastery inspired intense research on the
Syriac language and culture, for until that time, many classical texts fromAristotle ,Euclid ,Archimedes ,Hippocrates andGalen were known to Western scholars only in their thirteenth century Latin translations. Even these were often translations from earlier Arabic sources. These documents are the oldest copies of important Greek classical texts, with some dating back to the fifth century.Today, the Syrian monastery provides a great opportunity to study the development of
Copt ic wall painting. Between1991 and1999 , several segments of wall paintings layered on top of each other were uncovered in the Church of the Holy Virgin and the Chapel of the Forty-nine Martyrs, dating from between the seventh and the thirteenth centuries. There is currently an ongoing project to uncover, restore and conserve wall paintings within the monastery.The monastery is enclosed by a large wall, built towards the end of the ninth century, and whose height varies between 9.5 and 11.5 meters. The monastery also includes a keep (tower) and a refectory. The five churches inside the monastery are named after the
Virgin Mary (2 of the churches), theForty Nine Elder Martyrs of Scetes , Saints Honnos and Marutha, andSaint John the Dwarf .
=Coptic Popes from the Syrian Monastery=*Pope Gabriel VI (
1466 –1475 )
*Pope Shenouda III (1971 - present)Current abbot
The current abbot of the monastery is His Grace Bishop Mattheos (Matthew).
Other monasteries of the
Nitrian Desert * The Monastery of Saint Pishoy
* The Monastery of Saint Macarius the Great
* The Paromeos Monasteryee also
*
Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria
*Desert Fathers
*Wadi El Natrun ource
* [http://touregypt.net/featurestories/surian.htm The Syrian Monastery]
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