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Hodos bodrog pricesne
Hodos bodrog pricesne












Az Árpád-kori Magyarország történeti földrajza, I: Abaújvár, Arad, Árva, Bács, Baranya, Bars, Békés, Bereg, Beszterce, Bihar, Bodrog, Borsod, Brassó, Csanád és Csongrád megye (in Hungarian). Christianization and the Rise of Christian Monarchy: Scandinavia, Central Europe and Rus', c. Berend, Nora Laszlovszky, József Szakács, Béla Zsolt (2007).In Kristó, Gyula Engel, Pál Makk, Ferenc (eds.). Because of the proximity of the monastery to the river, the monastery is now inside the natural park. However, in 2004 the Mureş Floodplain Natural Park was officially declared to protect and preserve the landscapes along the Mureş River. The land and monastery are still owned by the Romanian Orthodox Church. Today, the monastery is within the boundaries of the Mureş Floodplain Natural Park, in the village of Bodrogu Nou (Arad County). Since then the monastery has added a new church, an outdoor summer chapel, and other buildings. Several sacred objects dating from earlier centuries add new values to the artistic treasure of the monastery, including the skull of a bull that found an icon of the Virgin Mary at the current site of the church. The frescoes in the monastery date from the first decades of the 17th century. After the 17th-century restoration, a baroque helmet was added to the dome. The original structures were altered to some extent. The church underwent several restorations throughout the centuries. Among these were Sofronie, who visited Russia in 1651, and Isaija Đaković, who stayed at Hodoș-Bodrog around 1694 (he would later establish the Hodoș-Bodrog as the seat of the diocese of Ineu and Timișoara).įrom the last decade of the 17th century until 1864, the monastery was under the jurisdiction of the metropolitans of Karlowitz, Serbia and was the only contemporary Orthodox monastery of the Arad diocese that faced great difficulties. In the following decades, although continuing to suffer under the Ottoman rule, and even the hardships induced by the Transylvanian nobility, the monastery housed the residence of the bishops who shepherded this area. The monastery was rebuilt at the very beginning of the 18th century, thanks to bishop Sava I Branković (oldest brother of Đorđe Branković), who resided in Lipova and later in Ineu (towns in what is now Arad County, Romania). It is likely that, during the military operations, the monastery suffered serious damages. The Ottoman rule was briefly interrupted for a short time by the struggle for the independence and unification of the Romanian countries, led by Michael the Brave (1595). The Hodoș-Bodrog Monastery was also under Ottoman domination between 15. The present church of the monastery was built around 1370, according to a triconch plan (having apses with semi-domes on three sides of a square chamber), at a time when this architecture was spreading to Moldavia and Wallachia, the other Romanian provinces. The new Orthodox monastery was built near the ruins of the former abbey in the late 14th or early 15th century. ( March 2015) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message) Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources.














Hodos bodrog pricesne