Mghvimevi monastery
მღვიმევის მონასტერი | |
42°17′51″N 43°18′03″E / 42.297364°N 43.300727°E | |
Location | Mghvimevi, Chiatura Municipality Imereti, Georgia |
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Type | Monastery complex |
The Mghvimevi monastery (
Location
The Mghvimevi monastery is situated in the eponymous village, in the
Layout
The Mghvimevi complex consists of several structures. East of the cave portal stands the main church, that of the Nativity of the Mother of God, a two-nave basilica. Its naves—the northern one narrower than the southern—are separated by a two-arched arcade supported by a single massive pillar. Both naves terminate in apses with faceted exteriors. The walls are built of stone, and faced with neatly hewn stone slabs, while a ceiling is cut into the adjoining rock. There is a painted wooden iconostasis, made in the 18th century, with the depictions of the Savior and Twelve Apostles as well as various scenes from the life of Jesus. The church has two doors, on the south and west. The west door was an 11th-century ornamented woodwork, removed for safekeeping to the Georgian National Museum in Tbilisi in 1920. The interior bear fragments of frescoes, including the portraits of the 13th-century church builders—Rati, eristavi of Racha of the Kakhaberidze family, his wife Rusudan, and his brother Niania—on the wall of the northern nave. The southern wall was repainted in the 16th century. The monastery housed several precious church items, including an 11th-century metalwork icon of the Supplication from Racha, now also preserved at the Georgian National Museum.[2][3]
At the opposite side of the cave portal is a small hall church, dedicated to St. Catherine. Its ceiling and west wall is hewn into rock, with the façade built of hewn stone slabs. There is a relief sculpture of a ram's head on the eastern wall and frescoes on the outer southern wall. Both of these churches are richly adorned with ornamented stone carvings, including decorative arches, window and door frames, sculpted crosses, and fretwork cornices. Despite the artistic value of individual elements in the architectural sculpture of Mghvimevi, the monastery buildings lack the overall integrity and craftsmanship characteristic for its contemporaneous monuments of medieval Georgia.[2][3]
A bell-tower and monastic dwellings mostly date to the 19th century.[3] There is also a set of buildings, part of the modern nunnery, founded in 2014.[4]
References
- ^ "List of Immovable Cultural Monuments" (PDF) (in Georgian). National Agency for Cultural Heritage Preservation of Georgia. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
- ^ a b c Bochoridze, G. (1995). იმერეთის ისტორიული ძეგლები [Historical monuments of Imereti] (in Georgian). Tbilisi. pp. 208–213.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ ISBN 978-9941-0-2725-3.
- ^ "მღვიმევის დედათა მონასტერს ახალი სამონასტრო კომპლექსი დაემატება" [New monastic complex is to added to the Mghvimevi nunnery.]. Karibche (in Georgian). 12 July 2014. Retrieved 23 August 2019.