Saint Thomas Monastery Of Agulis
History
According to tradition, St. Thomas Monastery was founded by St. Bartholomew the Apostle in the 1st century, and his pupil, Kums (hy), was appointed its priest. It was probably a small chapel-like building that was rebuilt and expanded after the conversion of Armenia to Christianity. It was the centre of Goghtn parish, from the early Middle Ages to 1838. In the monastery there were some relics: right hand of Thomas the Apostle donated by Catholicos Yeprem I in 1821, relic of St. Gayané (fr) and right hand of Hakop Hayrapet. The monastery had a cemetery belonging to the 13th to 19th centuries. It was located about 250 m northeast of the complex.
Architecture
St. Thomas Monastery consisted of a temple, bell towers, a wall and auxiliary buildings. The church of the monastery was probably damaged by the earthquake of 1679 and in 1694 a completely new church was built, with polished basalt, reddish felsite, a seven-sided tabernacle on the inside and a dome-shaped basilica with four crosses.
Current status
In 1919, Turkish troops destroyed Agulis, massacred the Armenian population and looted the monastery, which was later abandoned and deserted. The monastery was still standing in the 1990s. Large structures in the monastery were in the process of being dismantled in February 2000. The complete destruction and erasure of the monastery was already complete by June 28, 2009. On May 15, 2014, a mosque was constructed on the place of the monastery complex.
See also
- List of Armenian churches in Azerbaijan
- St. Kristapor Church (Yukhari Aylis)
- St. Shmavon Church (Yukhari Aylis)
- St. Hakob-Hayrapet Church (Yukhari Aylis)