Nekresi

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Coordinates41°58′19.11″N 45°46′3.99″E / 41.9719750°N 45.7677750°E / 41.9719750; 45.7677750
Nekresi
Native name
ნეკრესი (Georgian)
Aerial view of the Nekresi monastery
LocationQvareli Municipality, Kakheti, Georgia
Coordinates41°58′19.11″N 45°46′3.99″E / 41.9719750°N 45.7677750°E / 41.9719750; 45.7677750
Nekresi is located in Georgia
Nekresi
Location of Nekresi in Georgia

Nekresi (Georgian: ნეკრესი) is a historic and archaeological site in eastern Georgian region of Kakheti, between the town of Qvareli and the village of Shilda, at the foothills of the Greater Caucasus mountains. It is home to the still-functioning Nekresi monastery, founded in the 6th century.

Nekresi is known from the early medieval Georgian sources as a once flourishing town of antiquity. A series of archaeological expeditions, beginning in 1984, have uncovered various features of a large settlement, but its extent remains unknown because of a densely forested landscape and lack of written sources. Several major structures, unearthed across the site and mostly dated to Late Antiquity, bear traces of earthquakes and violent destruction. Nekresi was reduced to a village or a number of hamlets in the 8th century. Its principal monastery remained functional, but the town itself became engulfed in foliage and gradually disappeared from historical memory until its rediscovery by modern archaeology.

Some of the most important archaeological discoveries include the Nagebebi winery, a Zoroastrian fire temple, and the early Christian basilicas of Chabukauri and Dolochopi.

Nekresi Inscriptions
King Leon of Kakheti, flanked by his wife Tinatin and son Alexander, on a 16th-century fresco from the Nekresi church of the Dormition.

Nekresi—sometimes referred to as Nekrisi, and unusually, Nelkarisi or Nelkari—appears in the early medieval Georgian chronicles as a royal project in Kakheti, in the far east of Kartli, which was known to the Classical authors as Iberia. The founding of a city at Nekresi is ascribed to Parnajom, the fourth in a traditional list of the kings of Kartli[1] (r.109  90 BC, according to Cyril Toumanoff's chronology[2]). The ninth king, Arshak (r. 90–78 BC[3]), is reported to have embellished it[4] and Mirvanoz, a tutor of the boy-king Mirian (r. 284–361[5])—eventually the first Christian monarch of Kartli—is said to have strengthened the city’s walls.[6] Still later, King Trdat (r. 394–406[7]) is credited with founding a Christian church at Nekresi[8] and Dachi, son of King Vakhtang I (r. 447–522[9]), appears to have had Nekresi, together with Cheremi, in an appanage.[10]

In the 6th century, a hill at Nekresi became home to a Christian monastic foundation, associated in the medieval Georgian literary tradition with Abibos, one of the Thirteen Assyrian Fathers, a group of ascetics who popularized monasticism throughout the eastern Georgian domains.[11][12] Abibos proselytised among the mountaineers of the Aragvi valley and antagonized Zoroastrians, eventually being put to death by them.[12][13]

Nekresi's history as a major urban and religious center in the Late Antiquity was corroborated by a series of archaeological studies between 1984 and 2017.[14] Ruins of two large early Christian basilicas were uncovered at the wooded plots of Dolochopi and Chabukauri, some four kilometers apart, the former carbon dated to 387[15] and the latter identified by its excavator, Nodar Bakhtadze, with King Trdat's church.[16] Midway between these sites, at the foot of the hill on which the Nekresi monastery stands, a Zoroastrian fire temple was unearthed. Due to the lack of written sources and the dense foliage that covers the area, the extent of these settlements of Nekresi is unknown. After a series of earthquakes and foreign invasions, especially those by the Arabs in the 8th century, the town went in steady decline.[17] Nekresi was reduced to a rural settlement or group of villages, while the once flourishing town fell into oblivion and was largely reclaimed by nature by the Late Middle Ages.[18][19]

The hilltop monastery at Nekresi continued to function and also acted as the seat of a local bishop, entitled as Nekreseli. The establishment saw its defensive structures fortified during the relatively stable reigns of successive kings of Kakheti, Leon (r. 1518–1574) and Alexander II (r. 1574–1605). Subsequent turmoils and incessant marauding raids from the neighboring tribes of Dagestan compelled the bishop to transfer his see from the monastery to the relative security of the church of the Mother of God in the nearby village of Shilda in 1785. Shortly after the Imperial Russian takeover of the Georgian church in 1811, the diocese of Nekresi was abolished, followed by the dissolution of the convent itself. Both were restored in modern Georgia after the fall of the Soviet Union: the former bishopric was reconstituted as the Eparchy of Nekresi within the Georgian Orthodox Church in 1995 and the monastery became repopulated by monks in 2000.[20]

Monuments

Notes

References

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