Bodbe Monastery

Coordinates: 41°36′24″N 45°56′00″E / 41.6066°N 45.9334°E / 41.6066; 45.9334
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Bodbe Monastery
ბოდბის მონასტერი
Sighnaghi, Kakheti Province (Mkhare),  Georgia
Bodbe Monastery is located in Georgia
Bodbe Monastery
Shown within Georgia
Geographic coordinates41°36′24″N 45°56′00″E / 41.6066°N 45.9334°E / 41.6066; 45.9334
Architecture
Completed17th century
Website
https://sighnaghitravel.com/sighnaghi/cultural-monuments/bodbe-monastery

The Monastery of

St. Nino
, the 4th-century female evangelist of Georgians, whose relics are shrined there.

Landscape and architecture

The Bodbe Monastery is nested among tall

Alazani Valley, where it commands views of the Greater Caucasus
mountains.

The extant church – a three-

bell-tower
was erected between 1862 and 1885. Part of the 17th-century wall surrounding the basilica was demolished and the earlier original one restored in 2003.

Some 3 km from the convent, a small Chapel of St. Zabulon and St. Sosana was constructed, in the 1990s, to house a St. Nino’s Spring, which, according to a local legend, emerged through Nino’s prayers and is believed to have a healing power.

History

Bodbe Monastery in 1905
Pilgrims at the St. Nino Spring.

According to Georgian tradition, St. Nino, having witnessed the conversion of Georgians to the

Abbas I of Persia in 1615, the Bodbe monastery was restored by King Teimuraz I of Kakheti
(r. 1605-1648). With the revival of monastic life in Bodbe, a theological school was opened. The monastery also operated one of the largest depositories of religious books in Georgia and was home to several religious writers and scribes.

After the annexation of Georgia by the Russian Empire (1801), the Bodbe monastery continued to flourish under Metropolitan John Maqashvili and enjoyed the patronage of Tsar Alexander I of Russia. In 1823, the monastery was repaired and adorned with murals. Upon John’s death in 1837, the Russian Orthodox exarchate active in Georgia since 1810 abolished the convent and converted it into a parish church. In the following decades, the monastery went into disrepair, but, in the 1860s, Archimandrite Macarius (Batatashvili) began to restore the monastery and established a chanting school. The chapel housing St. Nino’s relics were refurbished by Mikhail Sabinin in the 1880s. In 1889, Bodbe was visited by Tsar Alexander III of Russia who decreed to open a nunnery there. The resurrected convent also operated a school where needlework and painting was taught.

In 1924, the Soviet government closed down the monastery and converted it into a hospital. In 1991, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the Bodbe monastery was resumed as a convent. Restoration works were carried out between 1990 and 2000 and resumed in 2003.

External links