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Details of the Gomari Monastery

 

Rebkong is located in the Golden Valley of the Rongwu Guchu River in Malho prefecture southeast of Qinghai province, The valley is at about 2600m above sea-level, extends from the north to south, and is surrounded by several mountains. Rebkong is also famous for itâs Tibetan traditional arts and cultural preservation. The there are several large monasteries and villages scattering around the Rongwu town which is home to hundreds of artist. The most well known villages and monasteries are Sanggeshung Yago and Sanggeshung Mago(upper and lower Wutun), Gomar Gompa, Nyamtok village.etc. If you are interested in learning Tibetan culture and Tibetan traditional arts, Rebkong will be one of most recommend region.

blog.snowliontours.com/2012/11/amdo-region-of-tibet/

Ettal Monastery.

In 1328, the Holy Roman Emperor was returning from Rome with what was considered a miraculous statue of Mary and Jesus. He was in political and financial trouble, so to please God, he founded a monastery with this statue as its centerpiece. The monastery became important as a place of pilgrimage.

 

The monastery of Geghard (Armenian: Գեղարդ, meaning spear) is a unique architectural construction in the Kotayk province of Armenia, being partially carved out of the adjacent mountain, surrounded by cliffs. It is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

 

While the main chapel was built in 1215, the monastery complex was founded in the 4th century by Gregory the Illuminator at the site of a sacred spring inside a cave.

  

For more information:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geghard

The magnificent Medieval Studenica Monastery is the mother church of all Serbian Orthodox shrines. The Monastery was found somewhere around 1190 AD by Grand Price [ Serbian: Veliki Župan ] Stefan Nemanja, founder of the great Nemanjići dynasty, as the principal endowment and mausoleum church. It was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1986 and as a Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance by the Republic of Serbia in 1979.

It was hot! as is apparent from the exhausted tourists.

 

Hemis Gompa, Ladakh, India

A monastery in western Macedonia.

The old Monastery has been vandalised and all the beautiful old frescos are destroyed. You can still see the bullet holes of the war.

Northern Cyprus

Germany 2017 - Maulbronn Monastery (German: Kloster Maulbronn) is a former Roman Catholic Cistercian Abbey and Protestant seminary located at Maulbronn in the German state of Baden-Württemberg.[2] The 850 year old, mostly Romanesque monastery complex, one of the best preserved examples of its kind in Europe,[3] is one of the very first buildings in Germany to use the Gothic style.[4] In 1993, the abbey was declared a UNESCO World Heritage The complex, surrounded by turreted walls and a tower gate, today houses the Maulbronn

 

Under the auspices of the abbot Bernard of Clairvaux, the Cistercians began major expansion into southern Germany. A knight named Walter von Lomersheim became very enthused in the spread of this order of monks and donated a stretch of land between to the Cistercian order. So it was that, in 1147, the monastery was founded by 12 monks who traveled from Alsace.[2] The main church, built in a style transitional from Romanesque to Gothic, was consecrated in 1178 by Arnold, Bishop of Speyer. A number of other buildings — infirmary, refectory, cellar, auditorium, porch, south cloister, hall, another refectory, forge, inn, cooperage, mill, and chapel — followed in the course of the 13th century. The west, east and north cloisters date back to the 14th century, as do most fortifications and the fountain house or lavatorium.

 

After the Reformation began in the year 1517, Ulrich, Duke of Württemberg, seized the monastery in 1504,[dubious – discuss] later building his hunting lodge and stables there. The monastery was pillaged repeatedly: first by the knights under Franz von Sickingen in 1519, then again during the German Peasants' War six years later. In 1534, Duke Ulrich secularised the monastery, but the Cistercians regained control — and Imperial recognition — under Charles V's Augsburg Interim. In 1556, Christoph, Duke of Württemberg, built a Protestant seminary, with Valentin Vannius becoming the first abbot two years later, odd, because the Reformation banned religious orders and abbots; Johannes Kepler studied there 1586–89.

 

In 1630, the abbey was returned to the Cistercians by force of arms, with Christoph Schaller von Sennheim becoming abbot. This restoration was short-lived, however, as Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden forced the monks to leave again two years later, with a Protestant abbot returning in 1633; the seminary reopened the following year, however the Cistercians under Schaller also returned in 1634. Under the Peace of Westphalia, in 1648, the confession of the monastery was settled in favour of Protestantism; with abbot Buchinger withdrawing in process. A Protestant abbacy was re-established in 1651, with the seminary reopening five years later. In 1692, the seminarians were removed to safety when Ezéchiel du Mas, Comte de Mélac, torched the school, which remained closed for a decade.

 

The monastery was secularised by Frederick I, King of Württemberg, in the course of the German Mediatisation in 1807, forever removing its political quasi-independence; the seminary merged with that of Bebenhausen the following year, now known as the Evangelical Seminaries of Maulbronn and Blaubeuren.

 

The monastery, which features prominently in Hermann Hesse's novel Beneath the Wheel, was inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1993. The justification for the inscription was as follows: "The Maulbronn complex is the most complete survival of a Cistercian monastic establishment in Europe, in particular because of the survival of its extensive water-management system of reservoirs and channels". Hesse himself attended the seminary before fleeing in 1891 after a suicide attempt, and a failed attempt to save Hesse from his personal religious crisis by a well-known theologian and faith healer.[6]

 

To represent Baden-Württemberg, an image of the Abbey appears on the obverse of the German 2013 €2 commemorative coin.

Details of the Gomari Monastery

 

Rebkong is located in the Golden Valley of the Rongwu Guchu River in Malho prefecture southeast of Qinghai province, The valley is at about 2600m above sea-level, extends from the north to south, and is surrounded by several mountains. Rebkong is also famous for itâs Tibetan traditional arts and cultural preservation. The there are several large monasteries and villages scattering around the Rongwu town which is home to hundreds of artist. The most well known villages and monasteries are Sanggeshung Yago and Sanggeshung Mago(upper and lower Wutun), Gomar Gompa, Nyamtok village.etc. If you are interested in learning Tibetan culture and Tibetan traditional arts, Rebkong will be one of most recommend region.

blog.snowliontours.com/2012/11/amdo-region-of-tibet/

The Monastery of the Virgin above the village of Kandila in Arcadia, Greece.

Info extracted from website: Now located in North Miami, The Monastery of St. Bernard de Clairvaux was completed in 1141 in Sacramenia, near Segovia in northern Spain.

 

Bernard of Cairvaux was a Cisterciari monk (later canonized) and one of the most influential church leaders of his time. Cistercian monks occupied the Monastery for nearly 700 years. After a social revolution in the 1830's, the Monastery’s Cloisters were seized, sold, and converted into a granary and stable.

 

In 1925, William Randolph Hearst purchased the Cloisters and the Monastery's outbuildings. The structures were dismantled stone by stone, bound with protective hay, packed in more than 11,000 wooden crates, numbered for identification and shipped to the United States. Soon after the shipment arrived, Hearst's financial problems forced most of his collection to be sold at auction. The massive crates remained in a warehouse in Brooklyn, New York, for 26 years. One year after Hearst’s' death in 1952, they were purchased by two entrepreneurs for use as a tourist attraction. It took 19 months and the equivalent of nearly $20 million dollars (in today’s currency) to put the Monastery back together. In 1953 Time magazine called it “the biggest jigsaw puzzle in history.”

 

In 1964, Colonel Robert Pentland, Jr, who was a multimillionaire banker, philanthropist and benefactor of many Episcopal churches, purchased the Cloisters and presented them to the Bishop of Florida. Today the parish Church of St. Bernard de Clairvaux is an active and growing congregation in the Episcopal Diocese of Southeast Florida. Services are held on Sundays and weekdays in both English and Spanish.

  

Arankele Monastery’s sylvan environment and ruins of bathing ponds gives the impression it was once a pleasure park. Arankele, on the contrary, was a 6th century cave hermitage up a forested hillside. The densely wooded terrain crowded with huge hardwood trees are interspersed by the openings and clearings created by the on-going process of clearing scattered debris to unearth the ruins and re erecting the fallen ruins.

Hâncu monastery - Moldova

 

The Hâncu Monastery (Romanian: Mănăstirea Hâncu) is a monastery in Bursuc, Moldova. The monastery was founded in 1678.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hâncu_monastery

At the Monastery of St John the Theologian, Patmos.

Monastery Pilgrimage 2008

The Sinaia Monastery, located in Sinaia, in Prahova County, Romania, was founded by Prince Mihail Cantacuzino in 1695 and named after the great Saint Catherine's Monastery on Mount Sinai in Egypt.

As of 2005, it is inhabited by 13 Christian Orthodox monks led by hegumen Macarie Boguș.

It is part of the Bucharest archdiocese.

 

Its architectural style is Byzantine

 

The monastery gave its name to the town of Sinaia.

The monastery consists of two courtyards surrounded by low buildings.

In the centre of each courtyard there is a small church built in the Byzantine style.

One of them —"Biserica Veche" (The Old Church)— dates from 1695, while the more recent "Biserica Mare" (The Great Church) was built in 1846.

 

The monks possess a library that is a repository for valuable jewels belonging to the Cantacuzino family, as well as the earliest Romanian translation of the Bible, dated 1668.

 

Prince (Spătarul) Mihail Cantacuzino founded the monastery upon his return from a pilgrimage to Mount Sinai.

The first buildings were completed between 1690 and 1695.

It was designed to serve as a monastery as well as a fortified stronghold on the route from Brasov to Bucharest.

The initial plan was for the monastery to hold 12 monks, to imitate the Twelve Apostles, but in time the number of monks grew.

 

In the midst of the Russo-Turkish War, 1735–1739, before deserting the monastery, monks hid the valuables by burying them inside a bell.

During a battle, the Turks defeated troops stationed within the walls of the monastery.

The Ottomans burned the area and broke through the wall in two places.

 

Until 1850, Sinaia consisted of little more than the monastery and a group of huts.

In 1864, however, the monastic estate was assigned to the Board of Civil Hospitals (Eforia Spitalelor Civile), which opened a hospital and several baths, and helped develop mineral springs in Sinaia.

 

In 1948, the monastery was put under the patronage of the Archdiocese of Bucharest from the Board of Civil Hospitals.

The Romanian Patriarch, Justinian Marina, restored the buildings between the years 1951 and 1957 with money from the Archdiocese.

During this period, the whole monastery was fitted with running water, electricity, and natural gas.

Thanks to the efforts of King Carol I, the Great Church of the monastery became the first church to use electric lights inside.

 

Under the leadership of Hegumens Ioasaf and Paisie, construction of The Great Church began in 1842 using funds allocated by the monastery and was completed in 1846.

This smaller structure was enlarged by the Board of Civil Hospitals during a period from 1897 to 1903.

All these efforts gave the building the appearance it has today.

 

Created by architect George Mandrea, the structure utilizes the Moldavian style and the Brâncovenesc style from Walachia.

It is said that the belt of three green enamel lines that encircle the building represent the unity of the Holy Trinity in one God and the unity of the Three Romanian Kingdoms in one country.

 

The gold mosaic paintings inside were created by Danish artist Aage Exner in a typical neo-Byzantine style.

The main illustrations show five persons:

Iosif Gheorghian mitropolit primat – he re-opened the building in 1903

Carol I of Romania – shown dressed as an officer, with his right hand upon a rock pillar with a missing piece.

This symbolizes the missing Romanian territories at that time

Elisabeth of Wied – Queen consort of Romania, known in the literary world as Carmen Sylva

Princess Maria of Romania – Queen Elisabeta's only child, who died at an early age

Mihail Cantacuzino – builder of the Old Church

 

The furniture was made of wood (sycamore, maple, and oak) by Constantin Babic and his students at the Bucharest Art School (Ṣcoala de Arte si Meserii).

The King's throne displays the royal emblem and the motto Nihil sine Deo (Nothing without God).

The Queen's throne is embossed with the letters E.D. Both thrones are gold-plated.

 

The two Russian icons, of Saint Serghei and Saint Nicholas, were a gift from Tsar Nicholas II of Russia in 1903.

They were presented to the Hegumen Nifon Arhimandritul for the baptism of Prince Nicholae, son of King Ferdinand.

 

A remarkable piece adorning the monastery is the epitaphios by Anna Roth, made of silk and gold on a cotton base.

It took three years (from 1897 to 1900) to finish.

 

During the leadership of Hegumen Nifon Popescu (1888–1909), a large bell tower was added to the monastery walls.

It was completed in 1892.

The 1,700-kilogram bell was brought from the Colţea Tower in Bucharest.

 

To the left of the bell tower atthe entrance lies the Museum.

In 1895 the museum of the monastery was opened, the first exhibition of religious objects in Romania.

It holds collections of icons and crosses from the 17th century, the very first Bible in Romanian (Bucharest, 1688), and many other precious objects.

 

The New Church dates back to 1846, but was renovated and enlarged in the following decades at the initiative of King Carol the 1st who used the monastery as a summer residence until the inauguration of the nearby Peles Castle.

Given the constant presence of its royal guests, the Great Church was adorned with the large-scale painted portraits of Queen Elisabeta and King Carol the 1st and two royal seats close to the altar.

 

The large proportions of the New Church and combination of typical elements of the ‘Brancovenesc’ style — the small porch with carved stone columns and ornated portal — and the Moldavian church style — high and solid walls similar to a fortress — create a one of a kind church in Southern Romania, a symbol of the cultural unity of the Romanian provinces.

Studenica Monastery, Serbia

Yuriev Monastery, Velikiy Novgorod

REPKONG - Qinghai Province - Gomari Monastery - China - Tibetan New Year - groepsontbijt met ceremonie - Group breakfast with ceremony

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibet_Autonomous_Region

www.flickr.com/photos/rietje/show/

Inside the Amarbayasgalant monastery, Mongolia.

 

Taken with Leica R3 and 35 mm Elmarit on Kodak Ektar in 2011

The old Serb Orthodox monastery of Sopoćani, the foundation of St. King Uroš I, built in the second half of the 13th century and located west of Novi Pazar, is a World Heritage Site since 1979

whc.unesco.org/en/list/96

www.traveltheunknown.com/

blog.traveltheunknown.com/

an not very old monastery, app. 100 years, now abandoned

Cernica Monastery is located near the town of Pantelimon, in Ilfov County.

 

It was founded in 1608 by the nobleman Cernica Știrbei.

The monastery sits on the shore of Lake Cernica, offering a picturesque landscape and a serene atmosphere for prayer and reflection.

  

Cernica Monastery, established in 1608 during the reign of Radu Șerban, was founded by Cernica Știrbei, the great vornic of Michael the Brave, and his wife, Chiajna.

This monastic complex has been a significant center of monastic education.

Within the monastery grounds, three churches and three chapels have been constructed.

 

The main church, dedicated to Saint Nicholas, suffered damage during the 1802 earthquake and was repaired between 1809 and 1815 by Archimandrite Timotei.

A major restoration was undertaken in 1925 following another earthquake in 1838 that caused the collapse of a turret, and a fire in 1923.[2]

 

The church dedicated to Saint George was originally built in the 18th century by Dan Brașoveanu.

It was completely rebuilt between 1962 and 1964, and further consolidated after the damages from the large Vrancea earthquake of March 1977.

 

In 1804, Archimandrite George constructed the small, beautiful Church of Saint Lazarus within the monastery's cemetery.

 

The three chapels of the monastery are "The Dormition of the Mother of God," built in 1790, "Saint John," constructed in 1842, and "The Entrance into the Church."

 

Between 1900 and 1904, the poet Tudor Arghezi was a monk at Cernica Monastery.

The cemetery of Cernica Monastery is the final resting place of many Romanian personalities, including painter Ion Țuculescu, Metropolitan Nifon, theologian Saint Dumitru Stăniloae, writer Gala Galaction, orientalist Athanase Negoiță, sociologist Ernest Bernea, pianist Johnny Răducanu, singer Zavaidoc, actress Stela Popescu, director Geo Saizescu, translator Stelian Gruia, academician Emilian Popescu, broadcaster Marioara Murărescu, and politician Pan Halippa.

  

The church is built in Neoclassical with Romanian decorative elements.

 

The architecture of the monastery features monumental churches with trilobed plans, lateral apses, and prominent domes.

Structures like the Church of Saint Nicholas and the Church of Saint George are built with strong masonry columns that support the vaults of the nave and narthex, highlighting a traditional ecclesiastical architectural style.

 

The Church of Saint Lazarus, located in the monastery's cemetery, is notable for its rich external decorations.

It exemplifies the traditional monastic architectural style that combines functionality with spiritual aesthetics, characteristic of Orthodox Christian architecture.

  

Cernica Monastery is located near the town of Pantelimon, in Ilfov County.

 

It was founded in 1608 by the nobleman Cernica Știrbei.

The monastery sits on the shore of Lake Cernica, offering a picturesque landscape and a serene atmosphere for prayer and reflection.

  

Cernica Monastery, established in 1608 during the reign of Radu Șerban, was founded by Cernica Știrbei, the great vornic of Michael the Brave, and his wife, Chiajna.

This monastic complex has been a significant center of monastic education.

Within the monastery grounds, three churches and three chapels have been constructed.

 

The main church, dedicated to Saint Nicholas, suffered damage during the 1802 earthquake and was repaired between 1809 and 1815 by Archimandrite Timotei.

A major restoration was undertaken in 1925 following another earthquake in 1838 that caused the collapse of a turret, and a fire in 1923.[2]

 

The church dedicated to Saint George was originally built in the 18th century by Dan Brașoveanu.

It was completely rebuilt between 1962 and 1964, and further consolidated after the damages from the large Vrancea earthquake of March 1977.

 

In 1804, Archimandrite George constructed the small, beautiful Church of Saint Lazarus within the monastery's cemetery.

 

The three chapels of the monastery are "The Dormition of the Mother of God," built in 1790, "Saint John," constructed in 1842, and "The Entrance into the Church."

 

Between 1900 and 1904, the poet Tudor Arghezi was a monk at Cernica Monastery.

The cemetery of Cernica Monastery is the final resting place of many Romanian personalities, including painter Ion Țuculescu, Metropolitan Nifon, theologian Saint Dumitru Stăniloae, writer Gala Galaction, orientalist Athanase Negoiță, sociologist Ernest Bernea, pianist Johnny Răducanu, singer Zavaidoc, actress Stela Popescu, director Geo Saizescu, translator Stelian Gruia, academician Emilian Popescu, broadcaster Marioara Murărescu, and politician Pan Halippa.

  

The church is built in Neoclassical with Romanian decorative elements.

 

The architecture of the monastery features monumental churches with trilobed plans, lateral apses, and prominent domes.

Structures like the Church of Saint Nicholas and the Church of Saint George are built with strong masonry columns that support the vaults of the nave and narthex, highlighting a traditional ecclesiastical architectural style.

 

The Church of Saint Lazarus, located in the monastery's cemetery, is notable for its rich external decorations.

It exemplifies the traditional monastic architectural style that combines functionality with spiritual aesthetics, characteristic of Orthodox Christian architecture.

  

REPKONG - Qinghai Province - Gomari Monastery - China - Tibetan New Year - groepsontbijt met ceremonie - Group breakfast with ceremony

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibet_Autonomous_Region

www.flickr.com/photos/rietje/show/

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