Otkhara Cave Monastery Complex
Otkhara | |
---|---|
Mchishta | |
Coordinates | 43°14′27″N 40°29′56″E / 43.24083°N 40.49889°E |
Elevation | 600 m |
The Otkhara cave complex is a group of caves at the foot of the
Description
The cave entrances are located at the height of several metres above the ground surface and arranged in several tiers. They are rectangular in shape, ostensibly human-hewn, and faced by stones, joined together with lime mortar. Each of these caves is a narrow grotto of about 2 to 3 metres in width, but as high as 15 metres. Wooden details of rock-hewn openings have survived. According to local legends, the caves used to house a community of monks, but later it was used as a shelter for brigands. In the latter half of the 19th century, a nobleman from Otkhara, Mazhar Shervashidze, led a group of locals in an attempt to explore the caves. He was able to ascend the first tier and reportedly recovered a couple of silver objects, the subsequent fate of which is unknown.[3] It was only in 1958 that the caves were first explored scientifically, by a group of specialists from Tbilisi with the help of rockclimbers. Several utensils of everyday use found in the caves are dated to the 13th–14th century.[2]
References
- Russian-occupied territory.
- ^ a b Pachulia, Vianor P. (1968). Исторические памятники Абхазии, их значение и охрана [Historical monuments of Abkhazia, their importance and protection.] (PDF) (in Russian). Moscow: Nauka. pp. 109–110.
- ^ Leonid, Archimandrite (1885). Абхазия и в ней Ново-Афонский Симоно-Кананитский монастырь [Abkhazia and its New Athos Monastery] (in Russian). Moscow. pp. 53–54.
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External links
- Otkhara Cave Monastery Complex. Historical monuments of Abkhazia — Government of the Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia.