Mount Athos: The seaward façade of Ivéron Monastery
Department | Archive |
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Collection | BSA SPHS Image Collection |
Reference No. | BSA SPHS 01/4211.8584 |
Level | Item |
Description | Film negative, approximately quarter plate size, an original negative. |
Dimensions | 11 x 8 cm |
Place |
Ivéron Monastery Mount Athos |
Dates | 1911 |
Donor/Creator |
Hasluck, Dr Frederick William |
Project | Hasluck in Mount Athos 1911 |
Scope and Content | Part of a series of images taken by F.W. Hasluck during the course of his visit to Mount Athos in 1911. The original description in the SPHS register reads: "Athos: Ivéron, seaward facade". |
Notes | Date based on Hasluck's visit to Mount Athos to research his book, Mount Athos and its Monasteries (1924). |
Further information | Iveron - the Monastery of the Iberians" (after the foreign term for the medieval Georgian kingdom of Kartli) - was founded ca. 980 and said to occupy the site of the previous Clement Monastery. Iveron's chapel of the Baptist (Timios Prodromos) probably marks the spot of the previous monastery's katholikon which, in turn, was said to have been constructed on a temple of Poseidon. The founders of Iveron were three Georgians, two of whom were monks from Lavra. The initial building of the katholikon, dedicated to the Dormition of the Virgin, dates to this early period. According to a chronicle of Iveron, the monastery was sacked in the 13th century and remained in a depressed state until the 15th century when a mission was sent from Georgia to re-built. Fortunes reversed again and in the 17th century restoration work was carried out with Georgian, Moldo-Wallachian and other funds. Hasluck, when he visited in 1911, remarks that the monastery had suffered after the fire of 1860, but newer (post-fire) buildings had been constructed to blend in with the old-fashioned style. Hasluck, F.W. 1924. Athos and its Monasteries, London: Kegan Paul (pp. 162-167) |