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Mor Gabriel Monastery
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Key Information
The Monastery of Saint Gabriel (Syriac: ܕܝܪܐ ܕܡܪܝ ܓܒܪܐܝܠ; Dayro d-Mor Gabriel),[1] also known as Monastery of Qartmin, Deir el-ʿUmr,[2] Deyrulumur, and in Turkish, Mor Gabriel Manastırı, is a Syriac Orthodox monastery located near Midyat in the Tur Abdin region of southeastern Turkey. Founded in 397 AD by the ascetics Mor Shmuel of Qartmin and Mor Shemʿun of Qartmin, it is one of the oldest surviving Assyrian monasteries in the world and one of the oldest continuously active Christian monasteries in existence.[3]
The monastery has elaborate decorations that have been added over the centuries, starting when the location served as a Zoroastrian temple and continuing to this day. It comprises several structures, including the main church, the Dome of Theodora, a mausoleum, and other buildings; it also houses the relics of its namesake, Gabriel of Beth Qustan. The monastery remains a popular pilgrimage site and functions as a religious and social centre for the remaining Christian Assyrians.
Throughout its history, it has served for centuries as a major centre of Syriac monasticism, theology and cultural preservation for the Syriac‑speaking Christian community. From Turco‑Mongol raids, to Byzantine imperial persecution, to contemporary land and legal disputes with the Turkish state, it has endured many periods of conflict and persecution, yet survives today as a monastic centre; legal disputes brought by the Turkish state and local Kurdish authorities against the indigenous community, however, are ongoing. The monastery currently serves as the seat of the metropolitan of Tur Abdin.
History
[edit]The Monastery of Mor Gabriel is situated in the heart of Tur Abdin, on a caldera formed by an ancient meteorite impact, evidenced by the presence of broken quartz fragments. Like many other monasteries in the region, it was constructed using stone blocks from a pre-Christian temple, with its eastern wall preserved from the original Zoroastrian sanctuary. Architectural slits in the one-metre-thick walls are aligned with the summer solstice, reflecting the solar cult practices of that earlier tradition.[4]
According to the Life of Shmuel, the origins of the monastery date back to the late 4th century. Shmuel (Samuel), a disciple of the martyred Bishop Karpos who had been killed by Persian raiders, fled into the hills and came to the village of Qartmin. There he acquired a disciple, Shem‘un (Simon), and together they lived in a temple that is now identified with the "Arches of Mor Gabriel". Simon experienced a vision of an angel commanding him to build a Beth Slutho (open-air enclosure for prayer) further west, marked by three large stone blocks. When they located the spot, they began the foundation of what became the Monastery of Mor Gabriel. Around forty years later, in 397, the Roman emperor formally recognised and endowed the institution.[5]
By the 6th century the monastery's reputation had grown considerably, and its community swelled to over 1,000 monks, including both local Assyrians and Copts. Its fame was such that it attracted donations and benefactions from Eastern Roman emperors Arcadius, Honorius, Theodosius II and Anastasius.[6] Toward the end of the century, Simeon of the Olives, a former monk of Mor Gabriel who later became bishop of Harran, renovated the monastery with funds discovered in a buried treasure.[7]

Following the Council of Chalcedon in 451, the staunchly Miaphysite stronghold of Tur Abdin, including Mor Gabriel, rejected the council's decrees and forfeited the benefactions of Emperor Marcian, a determined supporter of Chalcedon. Later, Emperor Anastasius, who opposed the council, restored imperial patronage. He financed the construction of a new church with a large prayer hall that still functions as the monastery's main church today, and added the "Dome of Theodora", an octagonal structure originally built as a baptistery and later repurposed as a kitchen. Empress Theodora, revered as a saint in the Syriac Orthodox Church, maintained a close friendship with the monks and visited Qartmin, after which the dome was named in her honour following her visit.[5]
Emperor Anastasius also supported the growth of the monastic community after hearing of its renown, which at the time numbered some 300 monks. He provided extensive resources for its expansion and renovation, including blacksmiths and building materials. Throughout its history, the monastery has been home to numerous high-ranking clerics and scholars, including four patriarchs, a maphrian, and 84 bishops. Among those who later studied at Mor Gabriel are four patriarchs of the Syriac Orthodox Church: Theodosius Roman, Dionysius III, Basilius V, and Ignatius Behnam of Hidl.[8]
During the Islamic conquests, Bishop Gabriel of Beth Qustan, then overseeing two dioceses, negotiated a peace treaty with Arab forces that protected the rights of Christians in Tur Abdin. His reputation endured for generations, especially after a devastating plague in 774 killed 94 monks at Qartmin. The body of Gabriel was placed upright in the church as an intercessor, and his right arm was carried to Hah to end the outbreak there. From this point onward, it began to be called the Monastery of St. Gabriel.[5]
Despite its prominence, the monastery endured repeated devastations. In 580 it was attacked and burned by Persian forces. In 1100 both the monastery and its neighboring village were pillaged by Turkish raiders, who massacred locals, destroyed manuscripts, and looted precious metals and furniture. Further destruction followed in 1296 at the hands of the Tatars. In the 14th century, Mongol forces invaded, killing 440 monks.[7] In 1394, the armies of Tamerlane besieged the monastery. Many clergy sought refuge in the Cave of Ibn Siqi, but Tamerlane set it aflame, killing over 500 people by suffocation. The monastery was later rebuilt in 1502 with assistance from the local community of Basibrina.[8]
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By the 13th century, Eli of Qartmin had become the monastery's patron saint. Though little is known of his life, he is remembered as a monastic author who composed a metrical biography of Philoxenus of Mabbug.[5]
The monastery also became an important site of scholarship and manuscript preservation. Nearly 450 ancient manuscripts had been digitised from its collection at the beginning of the 21st century.[5] During recent renovations, relics were uncovered, including the remains of the martyred Bishop Karpos and a piece of the True Cross embedded in the altar.[9] The monastery was the heart of Syriac religion, culture, and education in seminaries.[10]
Modern history
[edit]During the Assyrian genocide of 1915, the monastery of Mor Gabriel suffered severe losses when Kurdish tribes killed all the monks who lived there and occupied the monastery for four years. In 1919 the monastery was returned to the Syriac Orthodox Church, though the trauma of the events persisted in communal memory. A Kurdish family from a nearby village, whose members were directly involved in the massacres of the monastery inhabitants, had settled inside the monastery during this period. They were expelled in 1922 after a siege by the Assyrians, and in 1925 a new bishop was appointed. In 1936, under the new Republic of Turkey, the monastery was officially registered as a religious foundation.[4][11]
The monastery continued to face ongoing persecution long after the establishment of the Turkish Republic. In the late 1960s, a new wave of attacks and harassment by local Kurds began. The Assyrians filed numerous lawsuits in an attempt to mitigate the violence but later withdrew them when they realised that the attacks had behind-the-scenes support from the government. In 1978, the Turkish government attempted to close the monastery on accusations of sheltering members of ASALA, an Armenian militant group. Only protests from diaspora Assyrians prevented its closure. In the 1980s, similar accusations arose, this time alleging shelter for PKK militants. In 1997, the local governor ordered the closure of the monastery's school, claiming that religious education for Assyrians was illegal because the Syriac Orthodox were not recognised as a protected minority under the Treaty of Lausanne, unlike Armenians, Greeks, and Jews.[11]
Legal pressures have continued into the 21st century. In 2010, the monastery faced five separate lawsuits contesting its right to retain land it had occupied for over a millennium. Church leaders attributed these disputes to bureaucratic stonewalling, while some of the claims came from neighboring Kurdish villages dominated by the Celebi tribe, which had participated in the genocides of 1915. Members of the tribe later provided recruits for the state-run "village guard" militia, which fought against PKK rebels.[12]
From 1962 to 1971, the monastery underwent extensive renovation. A new road allowed vehicles access, a generator was installed to provide electricity, and a seminary for the formation of clergy was opened. Since 1971, the abbot has been Mor Timotheos Samuel Aktas, who has overseen major building projects. Today, the monastery has electricity, running water, and telephone connections, serving as a living centre of monasticism in Tur Abdin.[4]
Despite the relocation of the Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate to Damascus, the monastery remains the centre of Syriac religious education and is regarded by the community as the cultural and linguistic heart of Syriac heritage. It is sometimes described as the "second Jerusalem" of the Syriac Orthodox. The monastery continues its centuries-old role in preserving the Syriac language, culture, and liturgy. Currently, it is inhabited by Mor Timotheos Samuel Aktash, three monks, eleven nuns, and thirty-five boys receiving education in the monastery's teachings, including the Syriac language.[13]
Monastery architecture
[edit]The Monastery of Mor Gabriel is composed of two main parts, the lower historic section and the upper annexes constructed in the last century. Within the complex are several significant structures, including the House of Saints (Beth Qadishe), a burial chamber; the Church of the Mother of God; the House of Martyrs in the lowest part of the burial chamber; the House of the Apostles, a prayer hall; the Temple of the Forty Martyrs, a small chapel; the main church, completed under Emperor Anastasius I; and the Dome of Theodora.[14]
Main church
[edit]The main church of the monastery, also known as the Anastasius Church, was begun in 397 by the founders, Mor Samuel and Mor Simon, as a modest house of prayer, and completed in 512 with the patronage of the Byzantine Emperor Anastasius I.[15] Architecturally, the church is a barrel-vaulted structure oriented along a north–south axis. It is notable for its transverse style of construction, a departure from the more typical longitudinal basilica design, as well as for its mosaics. These mosaics are aniconic, containing no human or animal figures.[16] Where the mosaics have been lost, the missing areas are covered with white mortar.[17]
Also known as the Anasthasian church was begun in 397 by the founders of the monastery of Mor Samuel and Mor Simon(Mor Gabriel monastery) as a simple house of prayer and completed with the support of the Byzantine Emperor Anasthasius I in 512.[15] The main[15] church is a barrel-vaulted church with a north-south accent, also the church is well known for its transverse style of architecture and the mosaics in the sanctuary of the main church. the Mosaics are aniconic which means that there is no human or animal in the mosaics.[16] The missing parts of the mosaic are covered with white mortar.[17] The mosaics in Saint Catherine's Monastery on Mount Sinai and those in Mor Gabriel are the only surviving 6th-century Byzantine mosaics located to the east of Constantinople.
Dome of Theodora
[edit]
The Dome of Theodora, constructed in the early 6th century, rises to 17 metres and is composed of radially layered bricks supported by ashlar masonry and a mortar core. The dome is traditionally associated with Empress Theodora (497–548), wife of Emperor Justinian I, who was a Miaphysite and a supporter of the non-Chalcedonians. Records indicate that she visited the monastery of Qartmin and donated funds for the construction of the dome, despite Justinian's imperial policy favoring Chalcedon. The building, located at the northwestern corner of the main church, is thought originally to have functioned as a baptistery.[18]
Its structure contains eight arches, a feature laden with symbolic meaning in Christian architecture. Ambrose of Milan wrote "the number eight contains the integrity of rebirth", as the number eight was a symbol of eternity and of the Resurrection.[19]
Virgin Mary Church
[edit]The Church of the Virgin Mary was originally built in the 5th century, though it was destroyed and looted several times throughout its history. The church is reached by passing through a long abbara (vaulted passage) in front of the Dome of Theodora. Its design consists of three arches and three barrel-vaulted naves. The present altar was rebuilt in 1991. An inscription over the entrance records the visit of Patriarch Ignatius Yaqub III in 1965. At times when the greater church was closed, services were conducted in this smaller church.

Beth Qadisheh
[edit]Beth Qadisheh (Syriac: ܒܝܬ ܩܕܝܫܗ, lit. 'House of Saints') serves as the monastery's burial chamber. Originally known as the House of Martyrs, it was first used for the interment of Christians martyred in the early centuries of the faith in the region, when Assyrians were adopting Christianity. Over time, it became the burial place of metropolitans, abbots, and priests. The tomb of St. Gabriel himself is located here.
The clergy were buried in a seated position, facing east, in anticipation of the Resurrection, which was believed to come from the east. The tombs are barrel-roofed, made of marble, with one side left open.[19] Tradition holds that as many as 12,000 relics of saints and martyrs are preserved in this chamber.[20]
Legal disputes
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In modern times, Mor Gabriel Monastery became the centre of a decades-long legal struggle over its very right to exist. The dispute, instigated largely by local Kurdish villagers in the surrounding area, revolved around the monastery's land and property rights. In 2008, one villager filed a complaint to the Midyat prosecutor accusing the bishop of being 'engaged in illegal religious and reactionary missionary activities', invoking the words of Mehmed the Conqueror: "cut off the head of anybody who cuts down even a branch from my forest." The complaint targeted forested land near the monastery, which the villagers claimed did not belong to it. Soon after, state surveyors — using old maps and aerial photographs — were dispatched to redraw boundaries. They declared parts of the monastery's wall illegal and reassigned significant tracts of land to three nearby Muslim villages with whom the monastery had long-standing disputes: Yayvantepe, Çandarlı, and Eğlence. The monastery was established hundreds of years before these villages were founded.[21] Surveyors also redrew village borders, expanding the territory of three Muslim villages with which the monastery had long feuded.[22]
As land registration was being implemented in southeastern Turkey, the monastery reached an agreement with neighboring villages regarding its borders, but it remained in conflict with another village on the northwest border. The Kurds frequently changed the terms of the agreement by increasing the so-called "charity" fee they were supposed to receive from the Assyrians in exchange for the disputed land, which amounted to bribery for being left alone, in addition to the ongoing economic and psychological abuse that local Assyrians had to endure. The monastery soon faced escalating accusations beyond land ownership. Backed by local representatives of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), villagers submitted petitions alleging 'missionary activities', 'illegal education of children under the age of 12', 'sheltering unidentified people', and even 'attempts to destroy national unity by inciting revolt'. Another reason they gave was that the monastery has 'too much' land for prayer and that land is needed as a meadow for these villages.[21] These claims echoed older tropes of anti-Christian hostility, but prosecutors chose to pursue only the charge relating to the monastery wall.[23][11]
Although official records had consistently confirmed the monastery's boundaries since 1938, and reaffirmed them in 1950, the cadastral officers succumbed to pressure from surrounding villages and moved the border. Villagers and Kurdish headmen disputed the monastery's ownership, even though the monks produced a signed 1937 agreement supporting their claim. Despite paying taxes on its property for 70 years, the monastery found its claims dismissed by local courts.[24][25]
In 2008, cadastral officers visited the land, and Kurdish men and children from nearby villages gathered with axes and knives to cut down trees on the disputed property. Witnesses from the villages arrived, with one side claiming that the monastery wall marked the border between their village and the monastery (Keferbe), while the Kurdish headman of Keferbe argued that the border was 5 kilometres away from the wall. Despite representatives from the monastery presenting a signed 1937 agreement from the villages supporting their claim, the cadastral officers registered the border 2 kilometres away from the wall. The Assyrians contested this decision in local courts, but their appeal was quickly rejected. The charges against the monastery spread panic in the Assyrian diaspora, prompting activists to launch the "Action Mor Gabriel" movement across European cities to highlight the plight of Assyrians in Turkey.[23]
The ultimate goal of the "Action Mor Gabriel" movement was not only to challenge the feudal system of the Kurdish aghas that the Assyrians had to endure, but also to enhance their rights in Turkey by being recognised as equal citizens with full agency and as a minority with special rights under the Lausanne Treaty. While the Lausanne Treaty would eventually come to include the Syriac/Assyrian people, they still do not enjoy full agency regarding their Turkish citizenship to this day.[11] Archbishop Samuel Aktas toured several local Assyrian villages urging residents to maintain peaceful relations with their Muslim neighbours to avoid further tensions.[26]
By 2009, the case had moved from local courts to municipal courts, and ultimately to the Turkish Supreme Court. At one point, the court ruled in favour of the villages, claiming the monastery land was state forest, and even claiming that the sanctuary was built over the ruins of a mosque — despite the fact that Mor Gabriel was founded in 397, nearly two centuries before the birth of Muhammad.[27][28]
The dispute, however, took on broader significance as Assyrians began to rebuild their homes in Tur Abdin after decades of diaspora caused by the Assyrian genocide of 1915. Assyrians have been returning to their homeland in southeastern Turkey from the diaspora, particularly to the Tur Abdin region, which includes the Mor Gabriel monastery. Kafro, a village bordering the monastery, had no Assyrian residents in 1994, but by 2023 it housed around 50 families who left established lives in Europe to resettle in this underdeveloped area of Turkey.[29] Several hundred Assyrians returned from exile in Western Europe and resettled in Tur Abdin, primarily around the Mor Gabriel monastery. The return migration further inflamed the current conflict, as while returnees spent decades trying to reclaim their abandoned homes and land, neighbouring Kurdish villagers had been grazing their livestock on those properties in the meantime.[30]

Conversely, the growing Assyrian presence in Europe gave the monastery's defenders international visibility, and politicians from Germany and Sweden publicly visited the site in solidarity. Assyrians aim to use the organisational capacity developed during decades in Europe, along with their educational and cultural experiences, to improve living conditions for Assyrians in their homeland and to strengthen prospects for future generations in the event of further return migration.[31] Kurdish villagers reacted with hostility, accusing the monks of 'secret gatherings' and 'illegal activities', and Ankara's leadership grew uneasy with the increased diaspora activism around the recognition of the 1915 massacres as genocide. Then-Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and President Abdullah Gül, after meeting with Syriac representatives, criticised the diaspora for about the issue and hinted at continued altercations if genocide-recognition efforts do not stop: "Your community abroad is talking," they complained to Mor Aktas.[32] The British government, through its embassy in Ankara, has been monitoring the issue after it was raised by Assyrian organisations.[33]
Erol Dora, the first Syriac Orthodox member of the Turkish parliament, was elected in Mardin in 2011 for the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP). A former lawyer for minority foundations, he said: "As the BDP and as the Assyrian people we will do all we can to support the monastery at the international level, because we believe that in this trial we have justice on our side."[34] The monastery eventually took its case to the European Court of Human Rights, transforming the issue from a local property dispute into an internationally discussed minority rights case. This compelled Erdoğan himself to intervene, lest the matter draw further international scrutiny. As part of his 2013 'democratization package', the government announced that the monastery's lands would be restored. In September 2013, the Assembly of Foundations, the top decision-making body of the General Directorate for Foundations, officially approved the return of the confiscated lands.[35][36] Although the government agreed to return 240,000 square metres of land to the Mor Gabriel monastery, approximately 270,000 square metres remain confiscated.[37]
The Mor Gabriel case has become a symbol of the difficult situation for Assyrians in southeastern Turkey, who are caught between conflicts with Kurdish villages and the government's long history of not recognising Assyrians as a separate minority under the Treaty of Lausanne. While the return of land was a significant win, it also showed the ongoing challenges that the Syriac Orthodox Church and its communities face in their ancestral homeland. Assyrian organisations in Western Europe have raised the issue with relevant political bodies in several countries, including submitting appeals to members of the European Parliament. Meanwhile, Turkey continues to receive more than €500 million for preparatory measures related to EU candidacy, while the Christian Assyrian minority continues to report harassment and distress.[21]
The issues extend beyond the monastery. Assyrians continue to face difficulties with property and land registration. Numerous court cases involving both individuals and religious institutions are ongoing. Similar tactics were used to expropriate other lands — often belonging to Assyrian owners living abroad and thus less able to contest the seizures — by Kurdish municipal authorities with backing from the AKP-controlled government.[38][39]
Modern-day significance
[edit]Mor Gabriel Monastery is the world's oldest continuously active Assyrian monastery and remains the residence and administrative centre of the Tur Abdin Metropolitan Bishop.[26] Long regarded by Assyrians as "the sun of eastern monasteries",[3] it helped give Tur Abdin the epithet "the second Jerusalem"[3] and "the heartbeat of Assyrian Orthodoxy for the region".[26] It serves as a religious and social centre for the remaining Christian Assyrians.[21]
The monastery receives tens of thousands of visitors annually (81,897 in 2013), the vast majority non‑local given there were only about 4,000 Assyrians in Mardin that year.[3] It serves as both a religious and social hub for the remaining Christian Assyrians and has been described as a "talisman for Assyrian Christians worldwide".[37] Annual celebrations are held in honour of St. Gabriel. Pilgrims — many Syriac Orthodox — come to venerate St. Gabriel's relics and visit saints' tombs; a miracle is traditionally attributed to St. Gabriel in which three people were raised from the dead. Muslims and Yazidis also visit seeking cures for illnesses or problems.[3]
Life at Mor Gabriel has preserved a remarkable continuity. The monastery is described as "where for over a millennium and a half life has barely changed except that the bishop's secretary now types on a laptop".[40] Visitors are often permitted to stay overnight; accommodation may consist of a simple camp bed on the terrace in summer, with a basic meal in the evening. The heavy steel gates of the fortress-like monastery are locked at sunset and only opened at dawn, except in life-or-death emergencies. At dawn, visitors are invited to attend the liturgy celebrated in the underground church beneath the belfry.[4] The monastery welcomes visitors from 09:00 to 11:30 in the morning and from 13:00 to 16:30 in the afternoon, where it closes at 16:00 in winter.[41]
Gallery
[edit]-
Towers of the monastery near Midyat
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Portal inscription
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Staircase within the monastery with a Droste effect
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Interior of the Mor Gabriel Monastery
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Yard of the monastery
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Large metal gate at the entrance
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A star of Shamash on the floor of a large hall
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In the Virgin Mary Church
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Graveyard on the monastery's grounds
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Monks' cells
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Grape vines are common in Syriac art, representing the blood of Christ and His passion
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The Last Supper replica
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Thomas A. Carlson et al., “Mor Gabriel — ܕܝܪܐ ܕܩܪܛܡܝܢ ” in The Syriac Gazetteer last modified February 6, 2014, http://syriaca.org/place/226.
- ^ Dinno, Khalid S. (2017). The Syrian Orthodox Christians in the late Ottoman period and beyond: crisis then revival. Gorgias Eastern Christian studies. Piscataway (N.J.): Gorgias Press. p. 106. ISBN 978-1-4632-0575-1.
The Monastery of Mor Gabriel, historically known as the monastery of Qart-min and also as Deir el-ʿUmr (a shortened version of Dayro-d-Umro d-Mor Shemun Qartmoyo, the monastery of the abode of Mor Shamoun of Qartmin), is...
- ^ a b c d e Toprak, Lokman (December 2014). "Significance of Dayro D-Mor Hananyo and Mor Gabriel Monasteries within the scope of belief tourism". European Journal of Science and Theology – via ResearchGate.
- ^ a b c d "Eglise syriaque orthodoxe d'Antioche". cso-france.voila.net. Archived from the original on 26 February 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2025.
- ^ a b c d e Brock, Sebastian P.; Butts, Aaron M.; Kiraz, George A.; Van Rompay, Lucas (2011). "Gorgias Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Syriac Heritage". Beth Mardutho. ISBN 9781593337148 – via Academia.edu.
- ^ "Mor Gabriel Monastery". www.morgabriel.org.
- ^ a b "WSJ" – via online.wsj.com.
- ^ a b Ephrem I Barsoum (2008). Mor Cyril Aprhem Karim (ed.). The History of Tur Abdin. Translated by Matti Moosa (1st ed.). New Jersey: Gorgias Press LLC. ISBN 978-1-59333-715-5.
- ^ Johnson, Dale A. (2004). Monks of Mount Izla. ISBN 978-1-4116-1949-4.
- ^ Üngör, Ugur Ümit (1 March 2012). The Making of Modern Turkey: Nation and State in Eastern Anatolia, 1913-1950. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-164076-6.
- ^ a b c d Gambetti, Zeynep; Jongerden, Joost, eds. (2015). The Kurdish issue in Turkey: a spatial perspective. Routledge studies in Middle Eastern politics. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-82415-7. OCLC 883648720.
- ^ "Wooing Christians". The Economist. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 25 August 2025.
- ^ OCP (13 July 2012). "Oldest Christian Monastery at Risk". News | Orthodoxy Cognate PAGE. Retrieved 25 August 2025.
- ^ "The Monastery of Mor Gabriel". Orígenes de Europa (in Spanish). Retrieved 15 June 2025.
- ^ a b c "Mor Gabriel". www.eichinger.ch. Retrieved 15 June 2025.
- ^ a b "Viewing information about Kartmin, Monastery of Mar Gabriel (6AD) | Medieval Mosaics". medievalmosaics.com. Retrieved 15 June 2025.
- ^ a b "Mosaic Decoration, Monastery of Mar Gabriel, Tur Abdin, Turkey". The A. G. Leventis Foundation. Retrieved 15 June 2025.
- ^ SyriacPress (27 May 2020). "The 1600-Year History of the Monastery of Qartmin (Mor Gabriyel) — Andrew Palmer". Syriac Press. Retrieved 15 June 2025.
- ^ a b tarafından, VoyageTurkey (21 September 2019). "Mor Gabriel Monastery, Mardin, Turkey". VoyageTurkey (in Turkish). Retrieved 15 June 2025.
- ^ "The Monastery of Mor Gabriel". Orígenes de Europa (in Spanish). Retrieved 15 June 2025.
- ^ a b c d BarAbrahem, Abdulmesih (16 September 2008). "Turkey Attempting to Confiscate Assyrian Monastery's Land".
- ^ Higgins, Andrew (7 March 2009). "Turkey's Battle Over Christian Monastery Mor Gabriel". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ a b "An outpost of Aramaic speakers". The Economist. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ "Qantara.de - A Cold Wind Sweeping the Tur Abdin". en.qantara.de. Archived from the original on 4 October 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ DHA, M. Halis İŞ / (24 May 2009). "Mor Gabriel Manastırı ilk davayı kazandı". www.hurriyet.com.tr (in Turkish). Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ a b c Starr, Stephen (26 July 2017). "How the world's oldest Assyrian monastery came under threat". The Irish Times.
- ^ OCP (13 July 2012). "Oldest Christian Monastery at Risk". News | Orthodoxy Cognate PAGE. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ "An outpost of Aramaic speakers". The Economist. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ "Assyrian Christians increasingly move back to Turkey after more than 40 years". Middle East Eye. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ "Monastery in Turkey: The endangered servants of God". Assyrian Democratic Organization. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ ARIKAN, BURÇAK. "ASSYRIAN TRANSNATIONAL POLITICS: ACTIVISM FROM EUROPE TOWARDS HOMELAND" (PDF). The Graduate School of Social Sciences of Middle East Technical University.
- ^ "An outpost of Aramaic speakers". The Economist. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ "Written questions and answers - Written questions, answers and statements - UK Parliament". questions-statements.parliament.uk. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ "This Is Simply Our Home". Православие.RU. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ "Syriacs to regain Mor Gabriel's land, no move on Halki Seminary in 'democratization package' - Türkiye News". Hürriyet Daily News. 30 September 2013. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ "Return of Mor Gabriel Monastery lands to Syriacs officially approved - Türkiye News". Hürriyet Daily News. 8 October 2013. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ a b "In eastern Turkey, a rare renaissance for Middle East Christians". Christian Science Monitor. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ intern (2 April 2020). "Defending Human Rights in Turkey: Evgil Türker". Netherlands Helsinki Committee. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ "Turkish Supreme Court Rules Against Assyrian Monastery". www.aina.org. Archived from the original on 17 September 2017. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ "Qantara.de - A Cold Wind Sweeping the Tur Abdin". en.qantara.de. Archived from the original on 4 October 2009. Retrieved 25 August 2025.
- ^ tarafından, VoyageTurkey (21 September 2019). "Mor Gabriel Monastery, Mardin, Turkey". VoyageTurkey (in Turkish). Retrieved 15 June 2025.
Sources
[edit]- Barsoum, Aphrem (2008). Moosa, Matti (trsl.) (ed.). The History of Tur Abdin. Gorgias Press. ISBN 978-1-59333-715-5. Retrieved 17 January 2025.
- Üngör, Uğur Ümit (2011). The Making of Modern Turkey: Nation and State in Eastern Anatolia, 1913–1950. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-965522-9.
External links
[edit]Mor Gabriel Monastery
View on GrokipediaLocation and Geography
Site and Surrounding Region
The Mor Gabriel Monastery is located in the Tur Abdin region of Mardin Province, southeastern Turkey, on a limestone plateau at an elevation of approximately 960 meters above sea level. Its geographic coordinates are approximately 37°19′ N latitude and 41°32′ E longitude.[7] The site integrates with the local topography by occupying a elevated plateau that overlooks surrounding valleys, including the Azat Valley to the south.[8] The underlying geology consists of limestone bedrock characteristic of the Tur Abdin plateau, which extends eastward from Mardin toward the Tigris Valley.[9] This karstic limestone facilitates subsurface drainage, where rainwater percolates through the rock and emerges as springs primarily at the escarpment's base, contributing to water scarcity on the plateau itself.[10] Situated about 23 kilometers southeast of Midyat, the monastery benefits from modern road access but lies within a historically remote area defined by the plateau's rugged terrain and proximity to ancient Syriac Orthodox villages in Tur Abdin.[11]Environmental and Historical Context
The Tur Abdin region, where Mor Gabriel Monastery is situated, features an arid semi-desert climate characterized by hot, dry summers and mild winters with annual rainfall typically below 400 mm, concentrated in winter months, which has historically constrained agriculture and settlement to terraced fields and olive groves reliant on seasonal streams.[12] This scarcity prompted the development of ancient water management systems, including large cisterns excavated in the late 4th century to capture and store rainwater, essential for sustaining monastic communities in an otherwise parched landscape with limited groundwater access.[2] [13] Seismically, the area lies proximate to active fault systems, including branches of the East Anatolian Fault, which have generated recurrent earthquakes throughout history, posing ongoing risks to stone structures built on rocky plateaus and necessitating adaptive construction techniques like robust limestone foundations for long-term preservation.[14] The monastery's location on an elevated caldera site, possibly formed by ancient meteorite impact, further underscores its vulnerability to tectonic stresses amid broader regional instability.[15] Historically, Tur Abdin functioned as a Syriac Christian stronghold amid successive migrations and conquests, from Aramean and Assyrian settlements predating the monastic era—evidenced by pre-Christian ruins and inscriptions—to Byzantine defenses against Arab incursions in the 7th century and later Ottoman expansions, where the monastery provided refuge for displaced communities fleeing invasions that disrupted local demographics.[16] These dynamics embedded the site in a landscape of causal disruptions, including Arab-Byzantine frontier warfare that shifted populations eastward. In the 20th century, Syriac Christian numbers in Tur Abdin plummeted from approximately 40,000 around 1915 to fewer than 3,500 by the early 21st century, driven by emigrations triggered by World War I massacres, mid-century Kurdish tribal pressures, and insurgencies, reducing the community from a regional majority to a marginalized minority without reversal despite sporadic returns.[17] [18] This shift correlates with verifiable conflict-related casualties and economic displacements, underscoring causal links between violence and exodus rather than isolated factors.[19]History
Founding and Early Development (4th-7th Centuries)
The Monastery of Qartmin, later known as Mor Gabriel, was established in the Tur Abdin region by the ascetics Shmuel (Samuel) of Eshtin and his disciple Shemʿun (Simon) of Qartmin, with roots tracing to Shmuel's flight from a Persian raid around 350 AD.[1][2] Initially a hermitage on the site of a ruined pagan temple, it transitioned into a structured coenobitic community following Shemʿun's reported angelic vision directing the construction of a beth slutho (house of prayer).[1][2] Official foundation occurred in 397 AD, supported by benefactions from Roman Emperors Arcadius and Honorius, which funded initial buildings, cisterns, and liturgical vessels.[2] These developments are documented in Syriac manuscripts, including the Qartmin Trilogy comprising the lives of Shmuel, Shemʿun, and later abbot Gabriel.[2] Under Syriac Orthodox patronage, the monastery expanded rapidly in the 5th and 6th centuries, attracting monks displaced by theological conflicts, particularly after the Council of Chalcedon in 451 AD, which promulgated a dyophysite Christology of two natures in Christ—divine and human—rejected by the community's miaphysite adherence to a single united divine-human nature.[1][2] In 534 AD, persecuted non-Chalcedonian clergymen sought refuge there amid Emperor Justinian I's enforcement of Chalcedonian orthodoxy.[2] Further growth came via imperial support from miaphysite-leaning emperors: Theodosius II added a church dedicated to the Mother of God and a martyrs' house around 410 AD, while Anastasius I funded a main church and baptistery in 512 AD after reversing pro-Chalcedonian policies.[1][2] By the early 7th century, Qartmin had emerged as a key ecclesiastical hub, serving as a diocesan center under Bishop Daniel 'Uzzoyo by 613 AD and filling multiple sees vacated by the Sasanian Persian conquest.[2][1] The community endured setbacks, including destruction by Persian forces in 570 AD, yet persisted as a bastion of miaphysite doctrine, with Abbot Gabriel of Beth Qustan managing regional dioceses and negotiating terms with invading Arab forces around 639–640 AD.[1] These events underscore the monastery's role in preserving Syriac Orthodox traditions amid imperial and invasive pressures, as attested in its internal chronicles.[2]Medieval Expansion and Challenges (8th-15th Centuries)
The Monastery of Mor Gabriel underwent notable expansion from the 8th to 12th centuries, marked by construction activities documented in dated inscriptions and supported by imperial patronage. A large stone slab in the main church, used for bread dough preparation, dates to the 8th century, reflecting infrastructural development amid the monastery's role as a regional ecclesiastical hub.[1] Byzantine emperors provided resources for building enlargements, enabling the complex to accommodate growing monastic communities and scholarly pursuits.[3] This period also saw donations of relics, such as those of Apostles Andrew and John in the 12th century, alongside contributions of land and funds from pilgrims, bolstering economic self-sufficiency.[20] As a center of Syriac Orthodox learning, the monastery hosted scriptoria that produced and safeguarded theological texts, with over 250 surviving manuscripts digitized from its holdings, many composed or copied during the medieval era. These works preserved Syriac linguistic traditions alongside Greek influences, evident in bilingual elements and Antiochene artisanal techniques in mosaic inscriptions. Architectural features, including opus sectile pavements and wall mosaics with Greek text, illustrate a synthesis of Syriac, Byzantine Greek, and local Aramaic cultural strands, without evidence of uniform ideological fusion but rather pragmatic adaptations to regional patronage networks.[21][16] The 13th and 14th centuries introduced existential threats from nomadic incursions, severely curtailing population and resources. Mongol invasions in the 14th century resulted in the deaths of 440 monks, whose remains were later unearthed in subcomplex caves, indicating targeted violence against monastic sites in Tur Abdin. Timur's forces besieged the monastery in 1394, prompting evacuations and further attrition, with chronicles noting widespread clergy flight to safer regions. Recovery hinged on localized rebuilding, as attested by persistent inscriptions into the 10th century and structural reinforcements, though overall monastic numbers remained diminished compared to prior peaks.[22][23][2]Ottoman Period and Decline (16th-19th Centuries)
The Monastery of Mor Gabriel, situated in the Tur Abdin region, came under Ottoman control following the empire's expansion into southeastern Anatolia in the early 16th century. As part of the Syriac Orthodox community, it was integrated into the Ottoman millet system, whereby non-Muslim groups were administered as semi-autonomous religious communities under their clerical leaders, subject to dhimmi status that imposed the jizya poll tax and other obligations in exchange for protection.[24] Syriac Orthodox Christians, lacking an independent millet until the late 19th century, were initially administered under the Armenian Patriarchate's jurisdiction, which limited their direct access to imperial firmans and fostered dependency on Armenian intermediaries for tax and legal matters.) This arrangement provided nominal exemptions for religious institutions like Mor Gabriel from certain local levies, as evidenced by sporadic imperial decrees affirming monastic properties, but practical enforcement waned amid decentralized provincial governance, allowing local aghas and Kurdish tribes to impose irregular tributes and encroach on lands.[25] By the mid-16th century, Tur Abdin faced despoliation by marauding bands, leading to the plundering of Mor Gabriel's silver, gold, and silk liturgical items, which depleted resources and signaled early erosion of security despite dhimmi protections.[26] Over the subsequent centuries, the monastery's role diminished from a regional patriarchal hub to a marginalized outpost, causally attributable to Ottoman centralization efforts under sultans like Selim III and Mahmud II, which recentralized tax collection and judicial authority in Istanbul, bypassing local Syriac structures and exacerbating vulnerabilities to tribal raids without consistent imperial intervention.[27] This shift was compounded by the minority status of Syriacs, who comprised a dwindling proportion of the population amid Islamic demographic dominance and intermittent persecutions, rather than inherent religious isolation. The 19th century accelerated decline through episodic violence, including Kurdish-led attacks in the 1840s and culminating in the Hamidian massacres of 1895–1896, which targeted Christian communities across Diyarbakir province, including Tur Abdin, resulting in thousands of Syriac deaths and flight from the region.[28] Consular dispatches from European observers documented sharp reductions in monastic inhabitants at sites like Mor Gabriel, from several hundred residents in the early 1800s to mere dozens by century's end, as monks and lay affiliates emigrated or perished.[29] Partial restorations occurred via philanthropy, including funds from Syriac diaspora networks in Europe and Russia, which supported repairs and novice recruitment, though these proved insufficient against ongoing land disputes and tax arrears enforced by Tanzimat reforms.[30] By the late 1800s, the monastery's autonomy had contracted significantly, reflecting broader Syriac Orthodox marginalization under intensified Ottoman fiscal demands and local power imbalances.Modern Era and Revival Attempts (20th Century-Present)
The Sayfo genocide of 1915, involving mass killings and deportations of Syriac Christians by Ottoman forces and Kurdish tribes, inflicted severe losses on Mor Gabriel Monastery, where all resident monks were reportedly slain.[31] This event, compounded by ongoing persecutions and forced migrations, triggered a sharp demographic collapse in Tur Abdin; the region's Syriac Orthodox population, estimated at around 20,000 in the early 20th century, dwindled to approximately 2,000-3,000 by the late 20th century due to repeated emigrations amid economic pressures and insecurity.[32] Church records and demographic studies indicate no uninterrupted continuity, with villages depopulated and monastic life nearly extinguished, challenging claims of seamless persistence.[24] Post-World War II revival initiatives sought to reinvigorate the monastery, including structural renovations starting in the 1950s and the reopening of a seminary in the 1960s that initially attracted a small number of diaspora monks and novices.[25] However, these efforts were hampered by Turkish government closure of the seminary in 1980 amid broader restrictions on religious education, leaving resident numbers capped at around 20 monks and nuns today, limited by mandatory military conscription for males and pull factors like overseas employment opportunities.[33] From the 2010s onward, partial demographic recovery has occurred through modest returns of Syriac families to nearby villages—such as Kafro elapsing from zero residents in 1994 to about 50 families by 2023—and integration of refugees fleeing Syrian conflicts, bolstering local Christian presence to roughly 2,500-3,000 in Tur Abdin.[34] Complementary preservation measures include the digitization of nearly 450 ancient Syriac manuscripts from the monastery's library, completed between 2008 and 2010 by the Hill Museum and Manuscript Library, enabling global access and safeguarding against further cultural erosion.[21] These steps reflect targeted revival amid persistent challenges, with empirical data from church censuses underscoring fragility rather than robust resurgence.[35]Architecture and Buildings
Overall Layout and Materials
The Mor Gabriel Monastery complex features a fortress-like enclosure with high walls that secure the site, enclosing numerous structures such as churches, crypts, guest rooms, and barns across its grounds.[36][37] The layout is organized around two primary courtyards, with two large blocks of buildings interconnected by long vaulted passageways, facilitating movement between key areas like the main church atrium and auxiliary spaces.[37] This zonal arrangement positions the central church core amid peripheral monastic cells and service buildings, with outer elements including cemeteries, reflecting organic development from the 4th to 6th centuries onward.[37][1] Construction employs local limestone and stone masonry, combined with brick in vaulted roofs and domes, such as the 10.5-meter-diameter brick-and-stone dome in associated structures.[37][15] Barrel vaulting and ashlar techniques predominate, enabling load distribution that has supported the site's survival through regional seismic events over 1,600 years.[37][16] Recent repairs adhere to traditional methods, rebuilding vaults on ancient stone walls to preserve structural integrity.[37]