Showing posts with label Churches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Churches. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 January 2012

ST SOPHIA AGIA SOPHIA - ISTANBUL CHURCHES

St. Sophia - Chora church- St. Mary Diakonissa ******************************************************** H Agia Sophia or Saint Sophia. The Greek name in full is *Ναός τῆς Ἁγίας τοῦ Θεοῦ Σοφίας* Church of the Holy Wisdom of God, it was dedicated to the Holy Wisdom of God rather than a specific saint named Sophia. It is one of the greatest surviving examples of Byzantine architecture. Of great artistic value was its decorated interior with mosaics and marble pillars and coverings. The temple itself was so richly and artistically decorated that Justinian proclaimed, "Solomon, I have outdone thee!" *Νενίκηκά σε Σολομών*. Justinian himself had overseen the completion of the greatest cathedral ever built up to that time, and it was to remain the largest cathedral for 1000 years. It is an enormous and magnificent structure with an extremely large dome which dominates the exterior of the building. The Architectural style of this Byzantine Temple is domed basilica. Its architects were Anthemius from Tralles and Isidorus from Miletus. In 1453, Constantinople was conquered by the Ottoman Turks and Sultan Mehmed II ordered the Chrisian Temple to be converted into a mosque. The bells, altar, iconostasis, and sacrificial vessels were destroyed, and many of the Mosaics were eventually plastered over. The Islamic Features such as the mihrab, the minbar, and the four Minarets outside were added over the course of its history under the Ottomans. For almost 500 years the principal mosque of ...

Wednesday, 12 October 2011

Churches and Temples in Capitol, Rome

greek architecture


Temple of Jupiter

The temple of Jupiter, the most important in ancient Rome, was founded in honour of the arch-god around 509 BC on the southern summit of the Capitoline hill. From the few traces that remain, archaeologists have been able to reconstruct the rectangular, Greek appearance of the temple as it once stood. In places you can see remnants of its particularly Roman feature, the podium. Most of this lies beneath the Museo Nuovo wing of the Palazzo dei Conservatori. By walking around the site, from the podium's southwestern corner in Via del Tempio di Giove to its southeastern corner in Piazzale Caffarelli, you can see that the temple was about the same size as the Pantheon.

San Marco

The church of San Marco was founded in 336 by Pope Mark, in honour of St Mark the Evangelist. The Pope's relics lie under the altar. The church was restored by Pope Gregory IV in the 9th century - the magnificent apse mosaics date from this period.

Further major rebuilding took place in 1455-71, when Pope Paul II Barbo made San Marco the church of the Venetian community in Rome.

The blue and gold coffered ceiling is decorated with Pope Paul's heraldic crest, the lion rampant, recalling the lion of St Mark, the patron saint of Venice. The appearance of the rest of the interior, with its colonnades of Sicilian jasper, was largely the creation of Filippo Barigioni in the 1740s. Complemented by an interesting array of funerary monuments in the aisles, the style is typical of the late Roman Baroque.

Leon Battista Alberti, whose name is also mentioned tentatively in connection with Palazzo Venezia, may have been the architect of the elegant travertine arcade and loggia of the façade.

Santa Maria in Aracoeli

Dating from at least the 6th century, the church of Santa Maria in Aracoeli, or St Mary of the Altar in the Sky, stands on the northern summit of the Capitoline, on the site of the ancient temple to Juno. Its 22 columns were taken from various ancient buildings; the inscription on the third column to the left tells us that it comes "a cubiculo Augustorum" - from the bedroom of the emperors.

The church of the Roman senators and people, Santa Maria in Aracoeli has been used to celebrate many triumphs over adversity. Its ceiling, with naval motifs, commemorates the Battle of Lepanto (1571), and was built under Pope Gregory XIII Boncompagni, whose family crest, the dragon, can be seen towards the altar end.

Many other Roman families and individuals are honoured by memorials in the church. To the right of the entrance door, the tombstone of archdeacon Giovanni Crivelli, rather than being set into the floor of the church, stands eternally to attention, partly so that the signature "Donatelli" (by Donatello) can be read at eye-level.

The frescoes in the first chapel on the right, painted by Pinturicchio in the 1480s in the beautifully clear style of the early Renaissance, depict St Bernardino of Siena. On the left wall, the perspective of The Burial of the Saint slants to the right, taking into account the position of the viewer just outside the chapel.

The church is most famous, however, for an icon with apparently miraculous powers, the Santo Bambino, a 15thcentury olive-wood figure of the Christ Child which was carved out of a tree from the garden of Gethsemane. Its powers are said to include resurrecting the dead, and it is sometimes summoned to the bedsides of the gravely ill.

The original figure was stolen in 1994 but has been replaced by a replica.

At Christmas the Christ Child takes its place in the centre of a picturesque crib but is usually to be found in the sacristy, as is the panel of the Holy Family from the workshop of Giulio Romano.




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Wednesday, 12 January 2011

Georgian churches in Tao-Klarjeti Turkey - Rome Greece Italy Persia

Viodeo created by Jilveloy kartuli eklsiebi Tao-klarjetshi romlebis misakutrebats stsades somxebma, ertertma istorikosma amotsera saxelebi somxurad da tsingi gamostsa Aseve Somxebma miisakutres kartuli salotsavebi Ierusalimshi Tamar mepis mier ashenebuli Jvris Monasteri Ierusalimshi berdznebis xelshia Erevanshi 200 000 kaci gamovida tbilishi eklesias gvingreveno rats aris propaganda da imis gagrdzeleba titkos kartuli ekleseibi somxebis shekmnilia ar mesmis rato unda ikos chveni mtrebis eklesiebi sakartveloshi da rato unda mivtset upleba iboginon sakartveloshi ???!!!

Wednesday, 8 September 2010

Alonissos Island(Greece) Little Churches :Panagia Vounou & Profitis Ilias.

In the beautiful little Greek island of Alonissos, one can see many old little churches either by the sea or on the highest tops of the mountains.Here you can see 2 examples.The little church of Panagia Vounou and the little church of Profitis Ilias.The inhabitants of Alonissos take care of these churches, painting them and cleaning them.They are part of the history of the island which is very rich in traditions.Alonissos Island is a jewel in the middle of the Aegean Sea.The churches shown in this video are from the XVIIth and XIXth centuries.