Acheiropoietos Monastery

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationLambousa
CountryCyprus
Founded11th century
Acheiropoietos Monastery
Μονή Ἀχειροποίητου
Acheiropoietos Monastery is located in Cyprus
Acheiropoietos Monastery
Acheiropoietos Monastery
35°21′10″N 33°11′26″E / 35.35278°N 33.19056°E / 35.35278; 33.19056
LocationLambousa
CountryCyprus
DenominationGreek Orthodox
History
Founded11th century
DedicationVirgin Mary
Cult presentHoly Trinity
Relics heldShroud of Joseph of Arimathea
Architecture
StyleByzantine architecture
Specifications
Number of domes2
Number of spires1
Administration
MetropolisChurch of Cyprus

The Acheiropoietos Monastery (Greek: Μονή Ἀχειροποίητου, also Παναγία Ἀχειροποίητος and Acheripoetos) was a medieval Byzantine Orthodox monastery in Lambousa near Lapithos, Cyprus.

The Church of Panagia Acheiropoietos from the south west, as the monument stood in 1973.

According to tradition, the monastery got its name from an acheiropoietos (meaning made without hands), an icon believed to have been miraculously moved from its original location in Asia Minor by the Virgin Mary to save it from destruction due to the Turkish conquest.[1][2]

The monastery soon gained prominence and eventually became the religious center of the region. The monastery was the headquarters of the Bishop of Lambousa, one of the 15 bishops on the island until 1222.[3][4]

According to legend, the shroud of Joseph of Arimathea was once held in the monastery and was taken to Turin, Italy, in 1452 where it remains today and is now known as the Shroud of Turin.[3]

In 1735 the Russian Monk Vasily Barsky visited the monastery and noted that there were nine to ten monks on the premises.[5] Petermann, a German traveler who visited the monastery in 1851, recalled that ninety years before his time Turkish raiders from Karaman had looted and burnt the monastery.[5] By the nineteenth century, the number of monks had been reduced further, and by the twentieth the monastery had no resident monks.[3] Following independence, the monastery was a well known church that was used by the Christian Greek Cypriots but after the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974, the monastery became a military encampment and barracks for the Turkish Army.[5] The complex continues to be closed to the public.

Architecture

Lambousa Treasure

References

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