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Eghegnamor Monastery

Monastery of Eghegnamor
Եղեգնամոր վանք
Religion
AffiliationArmenian Apostolic Church
RegionArmenian upland
Statusceased functioning as a monastery in 1920
Location
LocationTurkey Kars province
Armenia Armenian highland
StateTurkey
Eghegnamor Monastery is located in Turkey
Eghegnamor Monastery
Shown within Turkey
Geographic coordinates40°07′25″N 42°54′48″E / 40.1235°N 42.9133°E / 40.1235; 42.9133
Architecture
TypeArmenian church
StyleArmenian
Completed11th century

Eghegnamor monastery is a well-preserved medieval Armenian monastery in the middle of Çengilli village (formerly Eghegnamor) village near Kağızman city of modern Turkey.[1] Its great bulk and solidity still dominating the small, crudely built, flat-roofed, houses of the village. .

Word formation

Eghegnamor (Armenian: Եղեգնամոր) is a historical name of the settlement laying around the monastery. Eghegnamor in Armenian for reedy place. Çengilli is the current name of the village. It is derived from its 19th-century name, Chanli, which means "village of the bell-tower". The church is also known as Eghegnamor in Armenian literature. In another sources this monastery called as

History

Eghegnamor (Çengelli) lay in a district of Armenia known as Gabeghyank', which included the town of Kaghzvan (modern Kağızman), and was a part of a larger Armenian province known as Ayrarat. This district was initially a Mamikonian possession, but in the 9th century it became part of the territory of the Bagratids of Ani. When Kars split away from Ani, Gabeghyank' became part of the Kingdom of Kars. By the end of the 19th century the majority of the village's population still was Armenian. They were adherents to the Armenian Church and called the church St. Astvacacin (Armenian: Սուրբ Աստվածածին) (Holy Mother of God). This Armenian population was deported to Armenia in 1920 when this district became part of Turkey after the First World War. The village's present inhabitants, like most of the villages in this district, are Kurds - probably recent immigrants from either Erzurum or Doğubayazit. They use the church as a communal barn.

References

  1. ^ Մարության, Տիրան (2003). Հայ դասական ճարտարապետության ակունքներում. Մուղնի. pp. 431, 436. ISBN 9994133039.

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