Noravank

Noravank
Noravank
Նորավանք

Surb Astvatsatsin and Surb Karapet Churches with Surb Grigor's Chapel to the right, Noravank

Noravank is located in Armenia
{{{alt}}}
Shown within Armenia
Basic information
Location Amaghu Valley, Vayots Dzor Province,Armenia Armenia
Geographic coordinates 39°41′03″N 45°13′58″E / 39.684061°N 45.232872°E / 39.684061; 45.232872Coordinates: 39°41′03″N 45°13′58″E / 39.684061°N 45.232872°E / 39.684061; 45.232872
Affiliation Armenian Apostolic Church
Architectural description
Architectural style Armenian
Groundbreaking 1205

Noravank (Armenian: Նորավանք, meaning "New Monastery" in Armenian) is a 13th century Armenian Apostolic Church monastery, located 122 km from Yerevan in a narrow gorge made by the Amaghu river, nearby the city of Yeghegnadzor, Armenia. The gorge is known for its tall, sheer, brick-red cliffs, directly across from the monastery. The monastery is best known for its two-storey S. Astvatsatsin church, which grants access to the second floor by way of narrow stones jutting out from the face of building. The monastery is sometimes called Amaghu-Noravank, Amaghu being the name of a small recently destroyed village above the canyon, in order to distinguish it from Bgheno-Noravank, near Goris. In the 13th–14th centuries the monastery became a residence of Syunik's bishops and, consequently. a major religious and, later, cultural center of Armenia closely connected with many of the local seats of learning, especially with Gladzor's famed university and library.

Contents

History

Noravank was founded in 1205 by Bishop Hovhannes, the former Abbot of Vahanavank. The monastic complex includes the church of S. Karapet, S. Grigor chapel with a vaulted hall, and the church of S. Astvatsatsin (Holy Mother of God). Ruins of various civil buildings and khachkars are found both inside and outside of the compound walls. Noravank was the residence of the Orbelian princes. The architect Siranes and the remarkable miniature painter and sculptor Momik worked here in the latter part of the thirteenth and early fourteenth century.

Noravank Complex

The fortress walls surrounding the complex were built in the 17th–18th centuries.

Surb Astvatsatsin Church

Surb Astvatsatsin, the façade
The backside wall of the Astvatsatsin church
S. Astvatsatsin Church of Noravank

The nearest and grandest church is Surb Astvatsatsin (Holy Mother of God), also called Burtelashen (Burtel-built) in the honour of Prince Burtel Orbelian, its financier, is situated to the south-east of Surb Karapet church. Surb Astvatsatsin was completed in 1339, a masterpiece of the talented sculptor and miniaturist Momik, who designed it, and was also his last work. Near the church there is his tomb khachkar, small and modestly decorated, dated the same year. In recent times the fallen roof had been covered with a plain hipped roof, but in 1997 the drum and conical roof were rebuilt to reflect the original glory still attested by battered fragments. The ground floor contained elaborate tombs of Burtel and his family. Narrow steps projecting from the west façade lead up to the entrance to the church/oratory. Note the fine relief sculpture over the doors, Christ flanked by Peter and Paul.

Burtelashen is a highly artistic monument reminiscent of the tower-like burial structures of the first years of Christianity in Armenia. It is a memorial church. Its ground floor, rectangular in the plan, was a family burial vault, and the first floor (second to Americans), cross-shaped in the plan, was a memorial temple crownedwith a multi-column rotunda.

Burtelashen temple is the architecturally dominant structure of Noravank. An original three-tier composition of the building is based on the increasing height of the tiers and the combination of the heavy bottom with the divided middle and the semi-open top. Accordingly, decoration is more modest at the bottom and richer at the top. Employed here as elements of interior decoration are columns, small arches, profiled braces forming crosses of various shapes, medallions, window and door platbands.

The western portal is decorated with special splendor. An important role in its decoration is played by cantilever stairs leading to the first (second to Americans) storey across the ground-storey facade, with profiled butts of the steps. The doors are framed in broad rectangular platbands, with ledges in the upper part, with columns, fillets and strips of various, mostly geometrical, fine and intricate patterns. Between the outer plathand and the arched framing of the openings there are representations of doves and sirens with women's crowned heads. Such heraldic reliefs were widely used in fourteenth-century Armenian art and in earlier times in architecture, miniatures and works of applied art, on various vessels and bowls. The door tyrnpanums are decorated with high reliefs showing, in the ground storey, the Holy Virgin with the Child and Archangels Gabriel and Michael at her sides and, in the upper storey, a half-length representation of Christ and figures of the Apostles Peter and Paul. As distinct from the reliefs of Noravank's vestry, these ones are carved on a plain surface, which gives them greater independence. The figures are distinguished by plasticity of form, softness of modeling and accentuation of certain details of clothing.

A group of the founders of Burtelashen is depicted on three columns of the western part of its rotunda. The picture consisted of relief figures of the Holy Virgin with the Child, sitting on a throne, and two standing men in rich attire, one of them holding a model of the temple.

Surb Karapet Church

Surb Karapet Church
The façade of Surb Karapet Church with a striking depiction of God the Father

The second church is the Surb Karapet, a cross within square design with restored drum and dome built in 1216–1227, just North of the ruins of the original Surb Karapet, destroyed in an earthquake. The church was built by the decree of Prince Liparit Orbelian.

In 1340 an earthquake destroyed the dome of the church which in 1361 was reconstructed by the architect Siranes. In 1931 the dome was damaged during another earthquake. In 1949, the roof and the walls of the church were repaired and finally completely renovated in 1998 with the aid of an Armenian-Canadian family.

Forming the western antechamber is an impressive gavit of 1261, decorated with splendid khachkars and with a series of inscribed gravestones in the floor. Note the famous carvings over the outside lintel. The church houses Prince Smbat Orbelian's mausoleum. The gavit was probably a four-pillar one. In 1321 the building, probably destroyed by an earthquake, was covered with a new roof in the shape of an enormous stone tent with horizontal divisions, imitating the wooden roof of the hazarashen—type peasant home. This made the structure quite different from other Armenian monuments of the same kind. The ceiling has four rows of brackets forming stalactite vaulting with a square lighting aperture at the top. A broad protruding girth over the half-columns, the deep niches with khachkars and the low tent-like ceiling almost devoid of decoration give the dimly lit interior a gloomy look.

The exterior decoration focus' mainly on the western facade where the entrance to the building is. Framed in two rows of trefoils and an inscription, the semi-circular tympanum of the door is filled with an ornament and with a representation of the Holy Virgin seated on a rug with the Child and flanked by two saints. The ornament also has large letters interlaced by shoots with leaves and flowers. The Holy Virgin is sitting in the Oriental way with Child. The pattern of the rug is visible with drooping tassels. In Syunik temples of the thirteenth-fourteenth centuries the cult of the Holy Virgin was widely spread. She was depicted in relief, and many churches were dedicated to her.

The pointed tympanum of the twin window over the door is decorated with a unique relief representation of the large-headed and bearded God the Father with large almond shaped eyes blessing the Crucifix with his right hand and holding in his left hand the head of Adam, with a dove — the Holy Spirit — above it. In the right corner of the tympanum there is a seraph dove; the space between it and the figure of the Father is filled with an inscription.

Surb Grigor Chapel

Grave of Elikum Orbelian

The side chapel of Surb Grigor was added by the architect Siranes to the northern wall of Surb Karapet church in 1275. The chapel contains more Orbelian family tombs, including a splendid carved lion/human tombstone dated 1300, covering the grave of Elikum son of Prince Tarsayich Orbelian. The modest structure has a rectangular plan, with a semi-circular altar and a vaulted ceiling on a wall arch. The entrance with an arched tympanum is decorated with columns, and the altar apse is flanked with khachkars and representations of doves in relief.

Khachkars

The complex has several surviving khachkars. The most intricate of them all is a 1308 khachkar by Momik. Standing out against the carved background are a large cross over a shield-shaped rosette and salient eight-pointed stars vertically arranged on its sides. The top of the khachkar shows a Deesis scene framed in cinquefoil arches symbolizing a pergola as suggested by the background ornament of flowers, fruit and vine leaves.

Sources

Gallery

Panorama of Noravank monastery and Amaghu valley


External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Noravank —  Pour l’article homonyme, voir Bgheno Noravank.  Noravank Complexe monastique de Noravank (de ga …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Noravank — Coordenadas: 39°41′2.62″N 45°13′58.34″E / 39.6840611, 45.2328722 …   Wikipedia Español

  • Noravank Foundation — was established in 2001 with an aim to conduct strategic researches in cooperation with Armenian and foreign senior staff, to analyse the problems of the Armenian community, Armenology and the church state society relations. The Noravank… …   Wikipedia

  • Bghèno-Noravank — Bgheno Noravank  Pour l’article homonyme, voir Noravank.  Bgheno Noravank Monastère de Bgheno Noravank …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bgheno-Noravank —  Pour l’article homonyme, voir Noravank.  Bgheno Noravank Monastère de Bgheno Noravank. Présentation …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Kloster Noravank — mit Canyon. Noravank (Armenisch: Նորավանք, Neues Kloster) ist ein armenisches Kloster aus dem 13. Jahrhundert. Es befindet sich in der Nähe der Stadt Jeghegnadsor und ist 122 km von Eriwan entfernt. Weblinks …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Bgheno-Noravank — Not to be confused with Noravank Monastery, Bgheno Noravank Monastery is a complex much further south in Syunik Marz, Armenia, which now consists of a small church dating to 1062, located on a little wooded promontory, and ornately decorated with …   Wikipedia

  • Momik — Khatchkar, 1308. Momik (en arménien Մոմիկ ; ? – 1333), dit Momik le Vardapet, est un sculpteur, architecte et enlumineur arménien du XIVe siècle …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Les monastères Arméniens — Liste des monastères arméniens Pour consulter un article plus général, voir : Architecture arménienne. Voici la plupart des monastères arméniens d Arménie et autour de l Arménie : Sommaire : Haut A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Liste Des Monastères Arméniens — Pour consulter un article plus général, voir : Architecture arménienne. Voici la plupart des monastères arméniens d Arménie et autour de l Arménie : Sommaire : Haut A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”