E-Mail | News | Videos | Music | Jokes | Links | Directory | Classifieds | Articles | Forums | Encyclopedia | Famous | E-Cards | Radio
Categories
Geography
People
Uncategorized
 
Top Articles
Armenian Air Force
Dilijan
Alaverdi
Jack Kachkar
Aram Andonian
 
 
Hanragitaran » Geography Category: Geography 
Shoghakat
Posted on July 24, 2010, 3:54 amAuthor : ARMENIANS.NET 
 (0 Rating)

The Church of Shoghakat (meaning "drop of light") was erected in 1694 by Prince Alamal Sotoretsi during the time of Catholicos Nahapat in the present day city of Etchmiadzin, Armenia in the Armavir Province. This church together with other nearby sites is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The church sits on the holy site where an unnamed nun following Gayané and Hripsimé was martyred during the time of the conversion of Armenia to Christianity in the year 301 AD.

The fifth century Armenian historian Agathangelos wrote that the young and beautiful Hripsimé who at the time was a Christian nun in Rome, was to be forcefully married to the Roman emperor Diocletian. She and the abbess Gayané among other nuns fled the tyrant emperor and left to Armenia.

The pagan Armenian King Trdat received a letter from Diocletian in which he described her beauty. Trdat discovered where the nuns were hiding, and fell in love with Hripsimé and later Gayané. After their refusal of his advances, Hripsimé and Gayané were tortured and martyred separately at the locations of the churches of their names. The remaining thirty-eight nuns were martyred at the location of Shoghakat.

The name of the church refers to the ray of light that appeared during the martyrdom of the nun. During the time that Hripsimé was being tortured, Gayané had told her to "be of good cheer, and stand firm" in her faith. King Trdat was to be later converted to Christianity and made it the official religion of the kingdom.

At the site of the present day church of Shoghakat, there was an earlier church from the 6th-7th century which unfortunately has not survived. It is believed that the structure standing at the site today possibly rests on the foundations of the earlier church. At the southwest of the building, excavations uncovered the remains of a single-chamber church thought to have been a 4th century memorial chapel.

It was constructed on a stepped platform. At the southern wall is a small semi-circular apse, which is thought to have served as a southern portico. The bases of the wall piers have features that are characteristic to 4th to 5th century Armenian churches. Two portals to the chapel were also located, one to the south and one to the west.

Shoghakat is a domed single nave basilica with a semi-circular eastern apse that is flanked by narrow chapels. There are four pendentives that help make the transition from the square central bay to the octagonal drum. As in some of the other medieval Armenian churches, the octagonal dome is situated off-center and to the west. There is only one portal into the church, which leads to the gavit.




Rate this article   

Related Articles

Aram Andonian

Posted on: September 17, 2010, 6:21 am Category : People 
Aram Andonian (1875, Istanbul - December 23, 1952, Paris) was an Armenian journalist, historian and writer.
Read More »
Nazaret Daghavarian

Posted on: September 17, 2010, 6:18 am Category : People 
Nazaret Daghavarian (Chaderjian, 1862, Sebastia - 1915) was an Armenian doctor, agronomist and public activist, one of the founders of Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU).
Read More »
Hagop Baronian

Posted on: September 17, 2010, 6:17 am Category : People 
Hakop Baronian (1843–1891) was an influential Armenian writer, satirist, educator, and social figure in the 19th century. Born in Edirne, Paronian is widely acknowledged as the greatest Armenian satirist of all time, closely followed by Yervant Odian.
Read More »
Erukhan

Posted on: September 17, 2010, 6:12 am Category : People 
Erukhan (1870-1915) was the pen name for Yervant Srmakeshkhanlian. He was an Armenian writer of the late 19th and early 20th century. He was arrested, tortured, and killed by the Turkish authorities during the Armenian Genocide.
Read More »
Yervant Odian

Posted on: September 17, 2010, 5:49 am Category : People 
Yervant Odian (1869-1926) is considered to be one of the most influential Armenian satirists, along with the roughly contemporary Hagop Baronian. Odian's writings, which include novels and short stories, often humorously point out humanity's vices. He had the unique ability to conceive of and write stories at any given instant.
Read More »
Ruben Sevak

Posted on: September 17, 2010, 4:20 am Category : People 
Rupen Sevag (February 15, 1885 - August 26, 1915) was an Armenian poet, prose-writer, and doctor.
Read More »
Levon Shant

Posted on: September 17, 2010, 4:18 am Category : People 
Levon Shant (born Levon Seghoposian on April 6, 1869 in Constantinople, Ottoman Empire - died November 29, 1951 in Beirut; Lebanon), was an Armenian playwright, novelist, poet, and founder of the Hamazkayin National Cultural Foundation.
Read More »
 
Tags:
UNESCO World Heritage Site, Armavir, Armenia, Etchmiadzin, Catholicos Nahapat, Prince Alamal Sotoretsi, Church of Shoghakat
 
Ejmiatsin, Armenia « Previous Next » Saint Hripsime Church
 
Search
 
Recent Articles
Aram Andonian
Krikor Balakian
Nazaret Daghavarian
Hagop Baronian
Erukhan
 
Recent Tags
Aram Andonian
Krikor Balakian
Nazaret Daghavarian
Hakop Baronian
Diran Kelekian
 
Random Pic
 
 
   
Advertise with us | Business Solutions | © 1989-2010 ARAM