Projects. Panagia managed - a holy place for Orthodox Christians

  • 29.09.2019

One of the oldest images of the Mother of God is the icon Mother of God"Oranta" (Prayer). Often there is another name - the icon of the Mother of God "Panagia" (All-holy). According to the iconographic type, the icon "Great Panagia" goes back to the famous Blachernae icon of the Mother of God from Constantinople.

In Russia, the most ancient in this way is the icon "Yaroslavl Oranta" ("Great Panagia"), which, according to legend, was painted by the first Russian icon painter, the Monk Alipiy, a monk Caves Monastery in Kiev.

Description of the icon

Traditionally, on the icon of the Mother of God "Oranta" the Mother of God is depicted with arms raised and outstretched to the sides, with Christ Emmanuel in a circle on her chest, also spreading her arms in a blessing gesture, which is rare: as a rule, on the icons of the Mother of God, the Infant or Child Christ is blessed with one hand .

The name "Emmanuel" bears any image of the Savior in adolescence, including on the icons of the Mother of God. His gaze is full of childish seriousness, and the gaze of the Mother of God is meekness and humility before the Will of God.

Subsequently, the same type of iconography became characteristic of the icons of the Virgin "The Sign", " life-giving spring” and “The Inexhaustible Chalice”.

The Panagia Sumela icon belongs to a slightly different iconographic type, which is also referred to as the Oranta (Panagia) type. This is a half-length image of the Mother of God with Jesus on her knees.

This icon has its own dramatic history. Tradition says that this face was painted by St. Luke himself. Miraculously the icon ended up on a bare rock ledge, and the Mother of God herself ordered two Greek monks to build an Orthodox monastery here, which was called Sumela. This happened in the 4th century, and since then it has become widely known as the abode of the Virgin of the Black Mountain.

The meaning of the icon of the Mother of God "Oranta"

In iconography, each element of the image has its own meaning. So, on the icon “Theotokos Oranta”, the raised hands of the Mother of God are turned with palms to Heaven, which symbolizes her intercession before the Creator for every, even sinful, soul.

On the sleeves of the Mother of God there are cuffs in the form of wide ribbons with cords that tighten the sleeves at the wrist.

This element of the liturgical vestments of priests symbolizes the patronage and service of the Orthodox Church.

In view Orthodox icon"Panagia" expresses the main Christian dogmas, which include immaculate conception and two essences of Jesus Christ - Divine and Human. Here Christ Emmanuel personifies the Eucharist - the main church sacrament of communion with the Body and Blood of Christ.

What do the icons "Oranta" ("Panagia") help with?

The Mother of God has always been the Heavenly Intercessor, Patroness, for this they turn to Her, praying for the salvation of the soul, for the healing of physical and mental ailments, for support in moments of difficult life trials, and she really helps.

Icons "Oranta" - "Panagia" have an incredible power of influence: they help to gain a clear understanding of the true path, bestow spiritual enlightenment, protect from the evil thoughts of enemies. The power of the “Oranta” icon is so great that it is able to protect entire countries from enemy attacks, it is not for nothing that the Queen of Heaven appears on it in all Her majesty and power.

Prayer icon

Oh, our glorified intercessor, the Most Holy Theotokos! We offer our prayers to You! Our only hope is in you! Come to the aid of us sinners, help us cope with grief and sorrow! Save us from evil, protect our homeland from enemies and do not let us lose heart, O Holy Virgin! Lead on the path of righteousness, fill our souls with light! Cast out the darkness from our hearts, and the demons that have settled in our bodies! You are our only protector! Our salvation is in You! Pray before the Lord for our sins, grant us repentance and forgiveness! Be near and do not leave us, for we will glorify Your name, Queen of Heaven! May it be the will of God. In the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Panagia Sumela (Turkey) - the most detailed information with photos, videos and location on the map.

Panagia Sumela (Turkey)

Panagia Sumela is an ancient Orthodox monastery located in the Black Sea region of Turkey south of Trabzon. It is built on a narrow ledge of a steep cliff among picturesque mountains and forests. Panagia Sumela is one of the oldest and most beautiful monasteries in the world, famous for its colorful frescoes.

Location

The monastery is located near the town of Macka, 30 km south of Trabzon. Panagia Sumela is located on the territory national park Altındere at an altitude of 1200 meters above sea level.

How to get there: from Trabzon drive to Macka. Next, you need to find dolmush in the Altındere park.

Until 2019, the monastery is under reconstruction. Until its completion, Panagia Sumela can only be viewed from the side.

Story

The monastery of Panagia Sumela was founded in the 4th century BC. In the 6th century it was destroyed by the Arabs and later rebuilt. During the Byzantine period, he enjoyed considerable influence and privileges. In the 14-15th century these lands were occupied by the Turks. It is interesting that the Ottomans preserved the rights and freedoms of the monastery and its greatest prosperity came in the 18-19 centuries. Everything changed in the 20th century after the First World War. The Greek diaspora was evicted, and the monastery was abolished.

According to legend, the monastery was founded by two monks who found here in a cave an ancient icon of the Mother of God, painted by the Apostle Luke.


Description

Architecturally, Panagia Sumela resembles the rock churches of Cappadocia. The monastery is actually built on a rock, which makes a strong impression. The complex consists of rock ancient church, a chapel, a kitchen, a library, a guest house and monastic cells, as well as a destroyed aqueduct that collected water.


The oldest part of the monastery is a rock church carved right into the cave. The church contains beautiful frescoes from the 17th and 18th centuries.

By blessing His Holiness Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia from 11 to 18 September 2017 in St. Petersburg will be a miraculous icon Holy Mother of God Panagia Sumela.

On September 11, the shrine arrives from Greece to St. Petersburg at the Kazan Cathedral. On September 12, the shrine will follow at the head of the City procession to the Holy Trinity Alexander Nevsky Lavra. At the end of the procession, the miraculous image will be delivered to the Transfiguration Cathedral.

The icon of the Mother of God "Panagia Sumela" will be in the Transfiguration Cathedral from September 12 to 18, everyone can bow to the holy image.

According to ancient sources, in 385 the monks Barnabas and Sophronius came to one of the temples of Athens to bow miraculous icon Theotokos, written, according to legend, by the Evangelist Luke. Then they suddenly heard the voice of the Virgin. She ordered the monks to follow the icon all the way to Pontus, stop at Mount Mela and found a new monastery there.

Then the two angels lifted up the priceless face, and the shocked monks followed him. After long wanderings, Barnabas and Sofrony ended up at the Black Mountain. There they found a face painted by St. Luke, he stood on a bare rocky ledge. Again, the Mother of God appeared to them and said that there would be water. And indeed from the rock above the cave suddenly sounded life-giving miraculous spring. It still exists today.

Stone by stone, Barnabas and Sophronius built the temple around which the monastery began to form. In the Kingdom of Pontus, and then in the Empire of Trebizond, he always enjoyed the favor of the Byzantine monarchs.

Subsequently, it was on Mount Mela that representatives of the Komnenos dynasty were crowned on the throne. Even after the Turks destroyed the Christian state, the monastery flourished. This was the will of the Sultan Ottoman Empire Selim the Magnificent in the 16th century. There is a legend about how once, during a hunt, the sultan suddenly found himself at the foot of the Black Mountain and saw on it a richly decorated Christian monastery and a church with a shining gold cross. In a rage, the sovereign ordered the faithful Janissaries to immediately raze the shrine of the "infidels" to the ground. But he did not have time to utter the last word, as he immediately fell off his horse and huddled in death convulsions. However, God spared him, and the next day the Sultan was forced to grant the Sumel Monastery all the former privileges and his favor.

In general, the monastery did not know big troubles up to tragic events forced resettlement in Greece. In 1923, the Turkish government allowed the removal of the icon of Panagia Sumela, as well as other valuables, but since then almost everyone has forgotten about this monastery.

The monastery with the blinded faces of the saints, which has not yet been returned to life, has been declared a national monument of Turkey.

August 15, 2010 in the monastery for the first time in 90 years was served Divine Liturgy, which brought thousands of Orthodox pilgrims from different countries.

Having adopted the Christian faith many centuries ago, the Greeks of Asia Minor, and especially Pontus, carefully preserved it, remaining faithful to it throughout their entire historical path.

They loved their fertile land, treated with awe and reverence everything that was created on this land, and especially the Christian shrines that became symbols of their faith. One of these shrines is the monastery of Panagia Sumela, famous throughout the Christian world, where the icon of the Mother of God Panagia Sumela (“All Saint from Mount Mela”) was located.

Panagia Sumela is creed of the Greeks of Pontus. The first name of Her miraculous image, written Evangelist Luke himself, It was Panagia Athiniotissa, that is, the Most Holy Theotokos of Athens.
The fact is that the Apostle Luke was not only an evangelist, but also the first icon painter. Moreover, he is considered patron saint of doctors and painters. As the Greek historian notes in his writings Neophyte Kavsokalivit, the apostle Luke first engraved icons on hard wood, and then painted them. According to legend, Luke created three icons of the Mother of God, the fate of each of which turned out differently: he gave one of them to the temple on the island of Cyprus, the other to the temple on the Peloponnese peninsula, and the third icon had to go through thorny path- from Greece to Pontus, to Mount Mela, and from there again to Greece.
Material about the history of the icon of Panagia, written by Luke, was published in 1775archimandriteParthenius Metaxopoulos and historian Neophyte Kavsokalivit. According to them, Luke gave the icon he painted to one of the churches the city of Thebes. After his death his student by name Ananias p ate her in the biggest Orthodox church the city of Athens, from where she got her first name - "Panagia Afiniotissa".
Historical documents and imperial decrees that have survived to this day on the founding of the Sumel Monastery at the end of the 4th century confirm the fact of the stay of the holy Apostle Luke in the Roman province of Achaia in the north of the Peloponnese peninsula, his martyrdom and burial in the neighboring province of Bethia at the age of eighty-four years. The saint was buried in the city of Thebes (now Thebes), where his first marble tomb still stands today. The relics of the holy Apostle Luke remained there until the middle of the 4th century, and then they were transferred to Constantinople.

After the death of the Apostle Luke, his disciple took care of the icon, and over time it ended up in Athens, in one of the churches in honor of the Mother of God, where it remained until the coming to power of Emperor Theodosius I (379-395). During his reign, the Mother of God appeared to one of the Athenian priests named Basil and said that he and his nephew, the deacon Sotirichius, needed to become monks. After taking tonsure with the names of Barnabas and Sophronius, they went to venerate the miraculous icon of the Mother of God, which was kept in a nearby church. Kneeling before the icon, they heard the voice of the Most Holy Theotokos:
"I'm going East. I'm heading to Mount Mela. Follow me…". After these words, the icon lit up and, with the help of the angels, left the temple, flying towards the east coast. Evksinskyponta(Blackseas). The monks followed her, making a long journey: from the rocks of Meteora to the shores of the Halkidiki peninsula, and then - on a small boat - to Maronia, located in Western Thrace. From Maronia, again on foot, Barnabas and Sophrony headed towards the capital of Byzantium - to the city Constantinople from where the ship sailed to Trebizond, stopping in the village of Kuspidi, where they stayed for the night. In the morning, during breakfast, the owners of the house put on the table fried fish, white wine and home-baked village bread, while the owner told the monks that he had caught the fish in Pixity River, originating WithMela mountains. Hearing about Mount Mela, the monks were delighted and began to ask him how to get there. Inspired by what they had told, Barnabas and Sophronius continued on their way, reaching the treasured mountain, located in the Trebizond region, 48 km from the Black Sea coast.
The monks climbed the steep mountainside, pushing their way through thickly growing trees and shrubs. Suddenly, at an altitude of 400 meters from the foot of a vertical cliff, swallows flew out of the cave, to which they came very close. The entrance to the cave was cluttered with the crown of a tall pine tree. From inside the cave, through the greenery of frequent pine needles, unusual light, which, as it turned out, came from the icon of Panagia Afiniotissa ...
Barnabas and Sophronius, entering the cave, knelt before the icon of the Most Holy Theotokos (Panagia), thanking God with tears in their eyes for help in fulfilling their mission. Since then, the icon has received its the second name is Sumela, that is, from Mount Mela (stu Mela). Inside the cave, the monks built a small Church of Saint Barbarathe first abode of the icon of Panagia Athiniotissa in the land of Pontus. It was this place that the Mother of God intended for them.
There were no water sources nearby, and therefore it was very difficult to live here. The monks prayerfully turned to the Mother of God, begging for help. And a miracle happened, the rock above the cave split, and fresh, cool water poured out of the crack. This is how the miraculous spring “The Well in Heaven” appeared, which became one of the main shrines of the future monastery, which still exists today, although 1600 years have passed since then.

Thanks to the mercy of the Mother of God, the monks Barnabas and Sophrony, in the first, most difficult months of the existence of their monastery, had both food and water. Soon people started talking about two ascetic monks and the miraculous icon of the Mother of God that appeared on Mount Mela, and pilgrims began to come to the cave, overcoming a long and difficult climb to the top of the mountain. Some remained and became monks themselves, and by the time of the death of its founders, who died on the same day in 412, the monastery flourished. The high and inaccessible walls of the monastery in the harsh rocks have become a place of pilgrimage for Christians for centuries. The monastery had 4 floors with 72 cells and the fifth floor-gallery, which had a protective function.

In the 6th century, the monastery was attacked and destroyed by the Cretan Arabs, who hunted by robbery even in the Black Sea Trebizond. But already in 664 the monastery was restored by a peasant named Christopher through the intercession of the Virgin. Pilgrims began to come to the monastery again, some of them were tonsured, and by the time of his death, the Monk Christopher was already the confessor of a large community.

The monastery of Panagia Sumela grew, grew richer and became more and more famous, and became the most influential and wealthy in the Pontic land. The emperors of the Byzantine Empire, and then of Trebizond, from the Komnenos dynasty, patronized him and made rich donations. It is known that a precious, most skillfully carved cross with large particles of the Cross of the Crucifixion of our Lord Jesus Christ inlaid in it was a gift from Manuel Komnenos III. Another emperor, Alexei Komnenos III, in gratitude to Panagia Sumela for miraculous salvation during the storm he allocated huge funds for the renovation of all the buildings of the Monastery and for the construction of new ones defensive towers. Also in the monastery were the relics of Saints Barnabas, Sophronius and Christopher. The monastery of Panagia Sumela was self-governing and had great privileges.

After the capture of Trebizond in 1461 and the occupation of Pontus by the Turks, the affairs of the monastery continued to go surprisingly well. There is a legend about the monastery of Panagia Sumela. One day, Sultan Selim (1512-1520) accidentally wandered here while hunting. He was fascinated by the unusual location on the slope of the cliff and the beauty of the monastery. But religious fanaticism turned out to be stronger, and he ordered the burning of the Christian shrine. But having given this order, he immediately fell off his horse, trembled in convulsions, foam appeared on his lips. The servants of the Sultan began to beg him to cancel such a cruel decision, and as soon as he did this, he instantly received healing. Since then, a decree on the privileges of the monastery came into force, which was followed by more than one generation of Turkish rulers. Indeed, for many years of Ottoman rule, no one dared to touch the monastery. Moreover, he was not taxed. Inhabitants nearby Greek settlements districts Matsuka, Santa and Surmena supplied the monastery with the necessary products, and in case of danger, they stood up with weapons in their hands to protect the Orthodox Church.

During the 16 centuries of its existence, the Monastery of Panagia Sumela has become famous not only as a religious, but also as a major cultural and educational center. The rarest ancient manuscripts were stored and copied in his library. Suffice it to say that out of 52 Greek manuscripts kept in the Ankara Museum, 34 were removed from the library of the Panagia Sumela Monastery. Thanks to the painstaking work of bookbinders, the works of many ancient philosophers and writers have been preserved for history.

In 1922, the genocide of Orthodox Pontic Hellenism was committed. Blinded by religious fanaticism, the Turks slaughtered the Christians. The victims of this terrible genocide were 350,000 innocent Pontic Greeks, and the survivors were forcibly evicted and dispersed in many countries. Most of the refugees were accepted by Russia, while the main part of the settlers ended up in northern Greece. The long-suffering Pontic Greeks began to settle in their new homeland from scratch, never forgetting their patroness Panagia Sumela.

Before leaving martyr Pontus, the monks hid in the chapel of St. Barbara the miraculous icon of Panagia Sumela, along with the gospel of St. Christopher and the cross of the Emperor of Trebizond, Manuel Comnenos.

In 1930, the Prime Minister of Greece, Eleftherios Venizelos, asked the Prime Minister of Turkey, who visited Athens, to allow the Greek delegation to go to Pontus and bring the symbols of Orthodoxy to Greece. The mission to bring the Pontic relics to Greece was entrusted to a native of Pontus, the monk Ambrose Sumeliotis (Sumelsky), who, having secured a letter to the Turkish authorities from the Turkish embassy in Greece, went to Constantinople on October 14, and from there to Pontus. Despite the fact that he knew the location of the hidden treasures of Orthodoxy, it was not easy to find them. Over the past years, the courtyard of the chapel was heavily overgrown with vegetation, but, as Ambrose Sumeliotis said, Panagia again helped him: the spade seemed to find the buried chest by itself, and the treasures returned safe and sound to Greece. They were placed in the Athens Byzantine Museum, a treasury of Orthodox relics.

So the icon of Panagia Sumela returned to Athens after 16 centuries and was kept in the Museum of Byzantine Art in Athens until 1952, when a new Temple in honor of the Assumption of the Virgin for the miraculous icon of Panagia Sumela in the village of Kastania (Veria) was erected with donations collected by the Pontians in just a year , on the slopes of Mount Vermione.The miraculous icon again gathers around itself Pontic Greeks from all over the world.

Today, the famous image of the Virgin Panagia Sumela, brought from Turkey, is located on the slope of Mount Vermios in the Vermi region of northern Greece, twenty kilometers from Veria, in the village of Kastania on the way to Kozani. The Pontians, who settled in Greece, built a temple here in honor of the Assumption of the Virgin, and the image of Panagia was solemnly transferred to it from Veria. Formally, this temple has the status of a monastery, but there are no inhabitants there. The icon is enclosed in a silver setting depicting the prophets David, Moses, Isaiah and Aaron. The lines and colors on the icon have faded from time to time, and now the faces are already indistinguishable. The only thing that can still be seen is the outline of one eye of the Virgin.

Deprived of its shrines, today the Sumela Monastery is dilapidated walls, inside of which a unique rock temple has remained. Many of the images painted on the walls are still preserved, although time does not spare them. The ruins of the Sumel Monastery are listed as national treasures of Turkey, but the Turkish government is doing nothing to restore the unique monument of Christianity, which tourists from all over the world come to see. For many of them, this is just an educational excursion. For Orthodox Greeks, the descendants of those who once built a monastery, prayed for centuries in it, for whom this land, these mountains were once native, to visit Panagia Sumela, bow to its walls, light candles in memory of their ancestors - this is an act that every Pontic Greek aspires to do in his life.

In 2010 year, with the permission of the Turkish Ministry of Culture,with the energetic assistance of Ivan Savvidi, in Panagia Sumela, 88 years after the eradication of the Greeks of Pontus with their historical homeland, the first liturgy was held on the day of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, in honor of Panagia Soumeliotissa, Madame Pontus...

Drops of water fall from a crevice in the rock inside the monastery, just like many centuries ago. There is a belief that if you make a wish, you catch a drop with your palm, then the wish will certainly come true. And every Greek who has visited this holy place, invoking the Mother of God, always wishes that the sacred Christian monastery, built and prayed by the ancestors in the very center of historical Pontus, regained its former strength and began to flourish. August 15, O.S. On the day of the Assumption of the Most Holy Theotokos, Orthodox Christians, and above all the Greeks, whose ancestors lived in the fertile lands of Pontus, celebrate the memory of the icon of the Mother of God Panagia Sumela.

In Greece, the day of the Assumption of the Mother of God is celebrated not as a sad fact, but in order to worship and appreciate the Mother of Christ, who is a symbol of hope and soothing human pain, the mother of all living things. Many people fast until August 15th. In all churches and monasteries of the Holy Mother of God, magnificent celebrations are carried out. The most famous of these places are Panagia tis Tinou in the Cyclades and the monastery of Panagia Sumela in Vermio. These places are visited by thousands of people, even Greeks from distant Australia, America, Canada, in order to bow to the Most Holy Theotokos.

LITURGY IN ANCIENT MONASTERY IN TURKEY

For the first time since 1922, the Orthodox liturgy on the feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary (August 15, according to a new style) in ancient monastery Panagia Sumela near Trabzon (historical name - Trebizond) on the territory of the Republic of Turkey. The service was led by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, who was co-served by hierarchs from the Russian and Greek Churches. The liturgy was attended by thousands of pilgrims, including the descendants of the Pontic Greeks who were evicted from these places 87 years ago.

The Turkish authorities have taken increased security measures in connection with the historic service. It is noteworthy that it became the first patriarchal liturgy in the 1600-year history of Sumela.

The group of pilgrims from Russia was headed by Bishop Tikhon of Podolsky, chairman of the financial and economic department of the Moscow Patriarchate, and the Department for External Church Relations of the Moscow Patriarchate was represented by the Secretary for Inter-Orthodox Relations, Priest Igor Yakimchuk. The pilgrims of the Greek Church were led by Metropolitan Pavel of Dram.

At the end of the service, Patriarch Bartholomew, Metropolitan Pavel and Bishop Tikhon exchanged greetings.

Divine service in the Panagia Sumela monastery became possible as a result of agreements concluded with the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Turkey and the leadership of the province of Trabzon. The most important role in the negotiations was played by a prominent Russian politician, businessman and public figure Ivan Savvidi, head of the International Confederation of Pontic Greeks.

The monastery of Panagia Sumela was founded at the end of the 4th - beginning of the 5th century at an altitude of 1300 meters above sea level on a chalk cliff near Trebizond. Its founder is considered to be Rev. Barnabas. From the end of the 4th century, the miraculous icon of the Mother of God Panagia Sumela was kept in the monastery, painted, according to legend, by St. apostle Luke. During the Byzantine era, the monastery enjoyed the favor of several generations of emperors and became the most influential and wealthy in the territory of Pontus during the era of the Trebizond Empire (1204-1461). After the fall of the empire, all the privileges of the monastery were confirmed by Sultan Selim and all subsequent Ottoman rulers, writes Wikipedia.

The monastery reached its greatest prosperity in the 18th-19th centuries. However, after the Greco-Turkish war of 1919-1922 and the subsequent population exchange monastic life broke off in Sumela. The shrines of the monastery, including the miraculous icon of Panagia Sumela, were first saved by the Pontic Greeks, and later transported to Greece in 1931, where they were kept in the Benaki Museum in Athens. The icon of Panagia Sumela became a temple icon in the village of Kastania, founded by the Pontians resettled in Greece.

After a long break, an organized Orthodox pilgrimage to Panagia Sumelu became possible only in 2007. On November 22, 2009, a meeting was held in Moscow between Chairman of the Turkish Grand National Assembly Mehmet Ali Shahin and Ivan Savvidi, deputy of the State Duma of the Russian Federation, coordinator of the inter-parliamentary deputy group for relations with the Greek Parliament, during which the issue of pilgrimage was also discussed.

On June 8, 2010, the Turkish Ministry of Culture, at the request of the Ecumenical Patriarch, agreed to hold the first Divine Liturgy since 1922 in Panagia Sumela Monastery.

On August 2, Ivan Savvidi met with Patriarch Bartholomew at the Patriarchate of Constantinople in Istanbul, during which the details of the upcoming service were discussed.

Text: Blagovest-info, photos by Reuters, AP





Procession with the miraculous icon of the Mother of God Panagia Sumela


Η εικόνα της Παναγίας Παναγιά Σουμελά / The Sumel Icon of the Mother of God

  • Dates of the celebration of the icons of the Virgin Akathist to the icons of the Virgin
  • Approximately 50 km. south of Trabzon at an altitude of 1200 m on the slopes of the cliff there is (it seems as if magically hanging) the historical spiritual center of the Orthodox Christians of Pontus - the monastery of Panagia Sumela, partially carved into the rocks. The monastery is also widely known throughout the world as the abode of the Virgin of the Black Mountain.

    A rather steep ascent along a rocky path among sheer cliffs takes at least 40-50 minutes. It's worth it, because it's a kind of time travel - crossing right into the IV century. It was then that the Greek monks Barnabas and Sophronius founded an Orthodox monastery here. Moreover, the place was indicated to them by the Mother of God herself.

    The face, painted by Saint Luke, stood on a bare rocky ledge. Yes, even at a decent height. How to start building here?

    According to ancient sources, in 385 the monks Barnabas and Sophronius came to one of the temples of Athens to bow to the miraculous icon of the Mother of God, painted, according to legend, by the Evangelist Luke. Then they suddenly heard the voice of the Virgin. She ordered the monks to follow the icon all the way to Pontus, stop at Mount Mela and found a new monastery there.

    Then the two angels lifted up the priceless face, and the shocked monks followed him. After long wanderings, Barnabas and Sofrony ended up at the Black Mountain. There they found a face painted by St. Luke, he stood on a bare rocky ledge. Yes, even at a decent height. How to start building here? There is not even a source of water nearby. But the Mother of God appeared again and said that there would be water. And indeed, from the rock above the cave, a life-giving miraculous spring suddenly burst forth. It still exists today.

    Stone by stone, Barnabas and Sophronius built the temple around which the monastery began to form. In the Kingdom of Pontus, and then in the Empire of Trebizond, he always enjoyed the favor of the Byzantine monarchs.

    Subsequently, it was on Mount Mela that representatives of the Komnenos dynasty were crowned on the throne. Even after the Turks destroyed the Christian state, the monastery flourished! Such was the will of the Ottoman Sultan Selim the Magnificent in the 16th century. There is a legend about how once, during a hunt, the sultan suddenly found himself at the foot of the Black Mountain and saw on it a richly decorated Christian monastery and a church with a shining gold cross. In a rage, the sovereign ordered the faithful Janissaries to immediately raze the shrine of the "infidels" to the ground.

    But before he had time to utter the last word, he immediately fell off his horse and thrashed in death convulsions. However, the heavens spared him, and almost the next day the sultan was forced to grant the Sumelsky monastery all the former privileges and his favor.

    In general, the monastery did not know big troubles until the tragic events of forced resettlement in Greece. The Turkish government allowed the removal of the icon of Panagia Sumela, as well as other valuables, but since then almost everyone has forgotten about this monastery. ... For now, it’s more honest to call it Holy place"cultural ruins"...

    The monastery with the blinded faces of the saints, which has not yet been returned to life, has been declared a national monument of Turkey. However, for the time being, it is more honest to call this holy place “cultural ruins”, and therefore not the best earthly refuge for angels with sad eyes ...

    August 15, 2010 on the day of the celebration of the Assumption of the Mother of God (Constantinople Orthodox Church lives according to the new style), for the first time in 90 years, the Divine Liturgy was served in the monastery, which was attended by thousands of Orthodox pilgrims from different countries.