Kamani Monastery

The Kamani Monastery (Georgian: კამანის ეკლესია, Abkhaz: Камантәи ауахәама)is located at the village of Kamani in Abkhazia/Georgia, north of Sukhumi. The monastery building is a 1980s construction on the foundations of a medieval church.[2]

Kamani Monastery
კამანის ეკლესია (in Georgian)
Камантәи ауахәама (in Abkhaz)
The Kamani monastery in 2006.
Religion
AffiliationGeorgian Orthodox
ProvinceAbkhazia[1]
Location
LocationGeorgia (country) Gantiadi, Gagra District, Abkhazia, Georgia
Kamani Monastery is located in Abkhazia
Kamani Monastery
Shown within Abkhazia
Kamani Monastery is located in Georgia
Kamani Monastery
Kamani Monastery (Georgia)
Geographic coordinates43°05′43″N 40°59′50″E
Architecture
TypeChurch
Completed1980s

History

The locale of Kamani, also known as Komani, is associated in the local Abkhaz-Georgian legends with Saint John Chrysostom, who allegedly died there after being exiled from Constantinople to the Black Sea coast. In 1884, the Greek scholar Konstantinos Vrissis visited the area and conjectured that it was Kamani, not Comana Pontica, where John Chrysostom died and was initially buried.[3]

Only the foundation survived of a medieval stone monastic building, a hall church design without a protruding apse. In the 1880s, under the Russian rule, a Christian convent was founded there, but it fell in disuse with the arrival of the Soviet power in the region. In the late 1980s, the church was rebuilt through the efforts of the Abkhaz Yuri Anua. In 1990, Ilia II, Catholicos Patriarch of Georgia, consecrated the church. In July 1993, during the War in Abkhazia, the monastery was stormed by the Abkhaz separatist forces; Yuri Anua and the Georgian priest Andria Kurashvili were killed.[2]

In 2001, a group of Abkhaz monks returned to the Kamani monastery, which was transferred by the Sukhumi government, in 2011, in possession of the self-proclaimed Abkhazian Orthodox Church.[4] Georgia has inscribed the church on the list of cultural heritage and reported, in 2015, the physical condition of the monument as poor.[2]

References

  1. The political status of Abkhazia is disputed. Having unilaterally declared independence from Georgia in 1992, Abkhazia is formally recognised as an independent state by 5 UN member states (two other states previously recognised it but then withdrew their recognition), while the remainder of the international community recognizes it as as de jure Georgian territory. Georgia continues to claim the area as its own territory, designating it as Russian-occupied territory.
  2. Gelenava, Irakli, ed. (2015). Cultural Heritage in Abkhazia (PDF). Tbilisi: Meridiani. pp. 62–63.
  3. Leonid, Archimandrite (1885). Абхазия и в ней Ново-Афонский Симоно-Кананитский монастырь [Abkhazia and its New Athos Monastery] (in Russian). Moscow. pp. 57–60.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. Абхазской православной церкви переданы в безвозмездное бессрочное пользование 38 храмов и соборов. (in Russian). Apsnypress. 9 February 2011. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
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