Noravank Monastery. Armenia. September 22

in #hive-163772last year

The Monastery was founded in 1105 by Bishop Hovhannes and now includes the church of St. Karapet, the St. Grigor Chapel, and the Church of St. Astvatsatsin.

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St. Astvatsatsin in the foreground.The original was completed in the 14th C, the roof was restored from "flat" to the now conical shape as recently as the 1990's, we were told it is heavily criticised in some quarters as being a "fantasy reconstruction".

Still pretty impressive though?

As can be seen a lot of reconstruction has taken place over the centuries

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Source

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St. Karapet, built and rebuilt since the early 13th C, mainly due to earthquakes reducing it to rubble. The roof again was reconstructed as late as 1998, paid for by a private Armenian-canadian family. It also houses the chapel of St. Grigor.

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Contrasting from the bright hot sunshine to the darkness and cold inside

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A simple altar

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It also houses the gravestones (allegedly) of Prince Orbelian and his family, former or residents of Noravank.

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Some magnificent views of the narrow winding gorge of the Amaghu River

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To say that the location and setting was breathtaking is an understatement of humongous proportions

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Took my breath away

Orbelian's Caravanserai

Built in the time of Prince Orbelian, he whose bones lie at Noravank, the caravanserai ( I have loved the mysticism of that word since Santana released an album of that name back in '72) gave shelter to weary travellers and their livestock as they traversed the Vardenyats Mountain Pass.

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With just a single entrance into a hall with three separate naves the travellers would bed down, with their animals close by in an adjoining nave

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Each nave allowed light in and smoke from fires out via several openings known as an oculus.

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Visible under the arches are stone water troughs for use by the animals

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The caravanserai was completely renovated in the late 1950's

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Interesting explore through such old site with all the history attached.

Santana made good music, musicians often wrote into songs the places they had journeyed through.

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See more excellent 70's music!!!!!

Always great sound in that era!

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@joanstewart(1/10) tipped @grindle

The views along the gorge… what a location. Nice building too, the little dark corners, the arches…
Awesome.
Thanks for sharing @grindle 😎

cheers @littlebee4 have a restful weekend!

Cheers @grindle 👋🏻😊 have a relaxed weekend too

Great photo story!

The Medieval hotel looks like a fantasy location from the Lord of the Rings. Impressive.

When I am in Georgia, every time I promise myself to visit Armenia... Near, cheap, so many things to see... Hope next time.

cheers @x-rain thanks for stopping by thanks for your supportive comments, it would be so easy to pop over the border and experience so much history and locations like this

Armenia has very beautiful places. Hope one day I'll take a travel there. Congratulations for the photos and the history!

cheers @handrehermann thanks for stopping by and your kind comments, yes it is a wonderful country to visit. have a great weekend

Have a great weekend you too!

Great photos as always. The landscape is absolutely stunning. It looks so sparse must have been quite a feat to build those churches. I love the simple altar and the inscriptions on the wall. The Orbelian stopover triggers the imagination.

cheers @momogrow thanks for your supportive comments, yes a wild and barren country steeped in rich history, I loved it!

😀 - must have been great to travel there.

Loved it.

The Middle East is so magical… Your pictures took me back to Israel for a while. I’ve never been to Armenia, but I’m pretty sure I’d love this place, it’s a country full of revelations. Congratulations for this amazing post!

Thanks @belug for your kind and much appreciated comments, I have yet to visit Israel I am sure it is a great place to see. History and photography