Sümela Monastry
RELIGIOUS
MONUMENTS
Sumela
Monastry
The
ruins of a monastery can be seen on the slopes of the Zigana Mountains to the
south of Trabzon and at the foot of the mountain at the bottom of a wooded valley
flows one of the tributaries of Değirmen Creek, which terminates at Trabzon.
This place is known as “Meryem Ana”, or “the Virgin Mary” by the local people.
Its old name is “Sumela Monastery”. Many people consider its origins to be extremely
old, and this opinion is widely held among the Byzantine Greek community of
the Black Sea coast. According to legends about the foundation of the monastery
in books about Trabzon printed in Greek, the monastery was originally founded
in the reign of Theodosius and rebuilt in the sixth century in the reign of
Justinian by Belisarios, one of his commanders. However, foreign experts who
have conducted on-site investigations consider that there is nothing to substantiate
this hypothesis. The Monastery's main source of income is an icon of the Virgin
Mary, which is reputed to be of great age and believed by many to possess miraculous
properties. According to the legend, the icon is the work of Saint Luke, one
of the disciples of Jesus Christ and it was sent to Athens after the death of
Luke. However, in the reign of Theodosius (4th century) the icon
declared its desire to leave Athens and was borne to this hollow in the mountains
around Trabzon by angels and placed upon a stone. It was at that time that two
hermits by the name of Barnabus and Sophronius, who were then travelling from
Athens to Trabzon, happened to find the icon in this deserted spot. Thus, buildings
which are the subject of such legends are automatically regarded as being exceptionally
old. Sumela is not the only example of this type, it is only one of a number.
It is said that
“Sumela” (the Greek name of this monastery, founded in the name the Virgin Mary),
comes from the word “melas”, which means “dark” or “black”. Many consider that
this stems from the dark hues of the mountain valley in which the Monastery
is situated. However, in the opinion of the author the word “sumela” could be
an adjective used to refer to the icon of the Virgin Mary. The colour of the
icon, which is so dark that it could be described as black, was one of the things
that struck the eminent historian J.P Fallmerayer (1790-1861) when he visited
the Monastery in 1840 and could well be the origin of the name. It is known
that l2th century Georgian art produced a number of icons of the Virgin Mary
known as Black Madonnas, and these icons found their way into a number of monasteries.
Black was used in order to emphasise the mysterious expression on the Virgin's
face. It is also considered that the origins of this Georgian style could be
traced to ancient Indian art. If the close proximity of the Sumela Monastery
to the Caucasus is considered, then it would be reasonable to assume that this
icon is a Black Madonna from which the Sumela Monastery gained its name. Thus,
the mountain also became known as Oros Mela (Kara Dağ) because of the Monastery.
It has not been
possible to conduct much research into the age and nature of this Black Madonna.
It is clear from a good photograph of the icon taken a number of years ago that
it has a cracked black wooden surface with a split down the middle on which
no lines or paint, in short, anything resembling a picture can be seen. The
silver frame surrounding the icon, judging by the motifs and inscriptions adorning
it, dates from circa 1700 and its workmanship is commonplace. According to the
information we gain from the photograph it is questionable whether the icon
of the Virgin Mary in the Sumela Monastery is a true Black Madonna.
Black Madonnas
are more common in Eastern Europe. They are always kept in places of worship
high up in forested mountains, especially those that are a place of pilgrimage
for Christians. There are usually healing springs in these locations as well.
It is believed in France that such icons arrived there by miraculous means.
It is interesting to note that religious beliefs as far as this phenomenon is
concerned are very similar in a number of widely scattered locations.
To put it in a
nutshell, the Sumela Monastery at Trabzon was first referred to by this name
in the Komnenos period. Sumela was founded in what must be the most beautiful
spot in the magnificent scenery of this area, in which there are a number of
monasteries, places of worship and other buildings of a religious nature. Sumela
expanded over the centuries of Ottoman rule and became a complex of considerable
size. The centre of the complex is a cave, or rather a hollow almost 1200 m
above sea level and about 300 m above the river at the bottom of the valley,
in the middle of a slope so steep it could be said to be almost vertical. The
narrow head of rock jutting out in front of the cave, access to which is tiring and difficult in the extreme, formed the foundation of the Monastery, which
grew in size and accumulated wealth over the centuries. Sumela is the most
famous of the old monasteries in and around Trabzon.
It is known that
mountains, high ground and caves have been invested with religious significance
ever since ancient times. It is possible that there was once an altar in the
cave and that as Christianity began to spread a group of monks set up a retreat.
Of course, this hypothesis is based on information gained about similar cases.
Only a detailed study and excavations carried out in and around the cave itself
could cast light on its accuracy. However, no exact information can be gained
at present. Although it is obvious that the legend about the Monastery having
been founded by Barnabas and Sophronios in the reign of Theodosius (4th-5th
century) and repaired by Belisarios, one of Justinian's commanders, does not
rest on concrete fact, like many legends it survives. If the foundation legend
is ignored, then the existing monastery buildings point to its having been built
some time after the thirteenth century. At that time the Principality of Trabzon,
under the Komnenos Dynasty, was developing as an entirely separate state within
the Byzantine Empire and its capital, Trabzon, dominated the area. The title
held by the princes, who saw themselves as the true heirs of the Byzantine Empire
and described themselves as emperors was not accepted by the true Byzantine
Empire when, in 1261, it regained control of Istanbul and revitalised the old
Byzantine state. It was Alexios Komnenos III (1349-1390) who maintained an intricate
system of contacts with the neighbouring Turkish beyliks (the equivalent of
principalities) who should be considered as the true founder of this monastery.
Historical sources and documents point to the fact that Alexios III, whose two
sisters and four daughters were married to Turkish beys (rulers of beyliks),
took a special interest in the Sumela Monastery. It also emerges that Alexios's
great grandfather, grandfather and father had made donations to the monks, which
would indicate that Sumela had been a religious centre since the reign of Ioannes
II (1280-1285), great grandfather of Alexios. According to another legend Alexios
III, who was saved from certain death in a storm by the intervention of the
Virgin Mary, had the monastery rebuilt and endowed it with rich foundations,
the conditions of which were set out in a Krysobullos, or decree. A verse consisting
of five lines inscribed on a tablet dated 1360, which was over the monastery
gates until 1650 states that “Alexios III, founder (ktetor) of this place,
is emperor of East and West (Iberia)”. In 1361 Alexios witnessed an eclipse
of the sun here at Sumela and the sun depicted on coins minted by Alexios is
considered to refer to this event. In the Deed of Foundation, dated 1365, apart
from references to the administration, land and income of the monastery there
is also a warning about the “danger of a Turkish invasion of Trabzon” and the
monks are urged to be “always on the alert”. Manuel III (1390-1417), son of
Alexios III, like his father, took an active interest in buildings of a religious
nature. In the year of his succession he presented an ornate cross believed
to contain a holy relic (stavrotek), in this case a piece of the cross on which
Jesus Christ was crucified, to the Sumela Monastery. The last members of the
Trabzon Komnenos dynasty issued decrees endowing the monastery with great wealth
or sanctioning its deeds of foundation. After the conquest of Trabzon and the
surrounding area by the Ottomans, the sultans issued decrees protecting the
ancient rights of the Sumela Monastery, just as they had for the monasteries
on Mount Athos and at Sina, in fact they even granted certain privileges to
Sumela and presented gifts as well. Thus the two candlesticks once in the Monastery
are known to have been presented by Selim I (1512-1520). A decree issued by
Mehmet II, conqueror of Trabzon, acknowledging the rights of the monastery exists.
Local publications inform us that other, similar decrees were kept in the monastery;
these include the decrees of Bayezid II, Selim II, Selim III, Sultan Murad and
Ibrahim, Mehmed II, Süleyman the Magnifıcent, Mustafa and Ahmet III. It has
been established that the Voivodas of Wallachia took a close interest in Sumela
from the second half of the l8th century onwards, constantly despatching letters
and aid. Among these rulers was Ghikas (1755), Stephan (1764), and Hypsilantes
(1775). Naturally, all the correspondence between the Patriarchate in
Istanbul and the monastery throughout the Ottoman period was kept in the archives
of the monastery. Sumela both expanded and grew richer under the aegis of the
Voivodas in the l8th century and many parts of it were rebuilt. Archbishop
Ignatios had the surfaces of all the walls adorned with frescos in 1749. The
golden age of this monastery was unquestionably the l9th century, when rebuilding
and magnificent decorations were carried out with gifts sent in a wave of enthusiasm
by Greek Orthodox communities all over Anatolia.
According to what
Fallmerayer wrote in 1840, the monks of Sumela travelled the whole of Anatolia,
the Caucasus, the Balkans and even Russia to collect money by selling rather
poor copies of the icon referred to above. This money would then be taken back
to the monastery. One of these monks , who was carrying the sum of forty thousand
kuruş, a fortune in those days, was robbed and murdered in Kayseri. The Ottoman
state had the murderers arrested and executed and the stolen money was returned
to the monastery. The interior of the monastery was sumptuously appointed and
around 1860 new structures were added, forming a large complex of buildings.
A number of foreign travellers visited the monastery in the l9th century and
wrote about it.
One of the most
detailed descriptions of the Sumela Monastery is that of G.Palgrave
(1826-1888). In an article published in February, 1871 he provides a great deal
of interesting information, among which is a statement to the effect that the
popular legend about an army led by Sultan Murat firing cannon at its walls
is entirely lacking in foundation because Murat's army could not have been anywhere
near the monastery. When Palgrave made his visit a large, barrack-like structure
referred to as “the new building” had been completed three years previously.
According to what Palgrave saw, the structure consisted of seven storeys including
the arches in the abyss itself; the actual living quarters had four rows of
windows and there was a set-back storey on top. There were single rows of eight
rooms on each floor and the structure was an extremely sound one. Palgrave,
too, refers to the gifts made by Murat and Selim I and states that he saw a
miniature of the decree issued by Alexios III. According to a decree issued
by Selim II, which Palgrave saw in the monastery, it is stated openly that the
sultan was displeased by unfavourable remarks made about himself by the monks.
The Russian invasion
of Trabzon, which lasted from 18 April 1916 until 24 February 1918 aroused hopes
that a Christian Pontus state would be reborn in Trabzon. The doors were finally
slammed on this hope in 1923 after the War of National Liberation, when all
Byzantine Greeks in Türkiye were sent to Greece and the Sumela Monastery was
closed down. Those who migrated founded a new monastery at Verria (formerly
Kara Ferye) in Macedonia. Their reluctance to part with their old memories and
desire to keep traditions alive were signified by a modern icon of the Virgin
Mary placed in the monastery.
The deserted monastery
swiftly deteriorated and a fire which broke out in 1930 destroyed all the wooden
parts of the buildings. A great deal of needless destruction was inflicted by
persons supposedly searching for treasure, this time the stone part of the structure
being destroyed. The first thing to attract one's attention here is the ruined
state of the walls, together with the fact that all the frescos have been expertly
removed and obviously taken away. This task could not have been carried out
successfully by the local population. It is obvious that it was done by foreign
souvenir-hunters with some knowledge of the subject.
The Sumela Monastery
is reached by means of a steep path through the forest. Its entrance was evidently
designed with security in mind and final access to the building was via a long,
narrow flight of steps. A large aqueduct abutting the mountainside at the side
of the steps brought water to the monastery. Old photographs reveal a structure
with ten wide arches which is in extremely good condition, but it is now in
ruins. As you pass through the main entrance, where there is accomodation for
the doorkeeper and other rooms you descend a flight of steps into an inner courtyard.
In the centre on the left is a church built on to the cave containing the sacred
spring, opposite which are a number of monastery buildings laid out in a random
fashion. On the left side of the courtyard is a comparatively new fountain where
the waters of the sacred spring oozing from the mountainside collect. It is
now half ruined and full of rubble. On the left, inside the cave, is the church-which
is the oldest part of the monastery. The church juts out at right angles into
the courtyard. And its walls are covered with frescos, both inside and out.
However, a close examination of the frescos reveals that they are of comparatively
recent origin and that beneath them are layers of much older and more valuable
murals. The existence of the latter is also recorded in various sources. On
the right side of the courtyard are a number of rooms for the accommodation
of guests known to have been built circa 1860, together with a library and there
are a number of small chapels around the courtyard. In old photographs taken
before the monastery reached its present stage of dilapidation we see that the
walls of all the buildings facing the courtyard have wooden balconies and verandahs.
Rice describes the fine wood-carving on some of the above. In one of the now
extremely dilapidated chapels are murals considered to date from the fourteenth
or fifteenth centuries. At the far end of the courtyard a narrow corridor extends
above a narrow, jutting rock and from this point an impressive building contiguous
with the cliff face extends in the other direction. This part of the complex,
which is most striking when viewed from a distance, is the main monastery building
where the monks once lived. Apart from the three main floors there are several
rows of cellars below and a set-back storey at the top. The rows of arches and
galleries under the eaves endow the building with a stately air. This barrack-like
building, which is visible as a whiteness on the darker background of the cliff
when viewed from afar was built in 1860 in the course of the major repairs and
renewal referred to above. However, apart from its size and location the building
does not possess any really noteworthy artistic or architectural features. There
was once a wooden roof with wide overhanging eaves but this, together with the
timber structure of the building has collapsed, leaving only four walls, in
the middle of which is the vast, empty well of the building. When one looks
downwards from the tower that juts from the front wall the dizzying height of
its location becomes clear.
In spite of the
fact that the architectural and artistic value of this structure is disputable
it has been regarded in recent years as the most important part of Sumela. However,
it is the church in one corner of the inner courtyard that is the most important.
The church was formed by hewing away the rock of the cave interior to create
a smoother surface and closing the mouth of the cave with a straight wall. Abutting
the latter is a small chapel which juts out from the wall. The inside and outside
walls of the chapel were adorned with layer upon layer of frescos from the l8th
century onwards and in some places three layers can be clearly discerned. The
bottom layer is superior to the others in terms of colour and quality. The change
in subject-matter discernable in each layer is interesting and inscriptions
stating that these works were executed in 1710 and 1732 have been discovered.
On the other hand, on the courtyard-facing wall of the rockface church frescos
dating from the reign of Alexios III were once found. There, on either side
of Alexios III stood his sons, Manuel III and Andronikos. Unfortunately, however,
no trace of these portraits remains today. Outside, parts of a huge Apocalypse
scene, of which only the upper bands remain, can be seen on the rock-face and
underneath its flaking plaster other scenes are visible. On the wall of the
small chapel a dragon and two mounted figures, St George and St Demetrios, are
discernable and we discovered the existence of a further two layers of paintings
beneath this top layer. Thus, on top of the bottom layer, where the figure of
an emperor wearing a diadem is depicted is yet another figure of the same kind
also wearing a diadem-and on top of this, a Transfiguration scene. On the other
hand, in the older parts of the monastery, there are correspondingly valuable
paintings in places where the plaster has not flaked off completely, in the
lower layers, but this would be the subject of a separate study.
Works of Turkish
art, too, are in evidence in some of the buildings around the courtyard. For
example, details such as the cupboards, nooks and fireplaces in the rooms gave
the interior a positively Turkish air. The pointed arches of the fountain where
the water of the sacred spring accumulates are also Turkish in character. However,
possibly the most striking features are the painted designs in dark red on some
of the walls, these being an imitation of the brick pointing designs encountered
in l8th century Turkish buildings. There is also said to be a rockface chapel
where there are a number of frescos hewn into the mountain side about one hundred
metres to the north of the monastery.
Sixty six of the
mainly l7th and l8th century manuscripts from the monastery library, which had
been previously catalogued, are now in Ankara Museum. A further one thousand
tetraevangeliums (the Four Gospels), adorned with minia- tures and dating from
Byzantine times, are kept in the Ayasofya (Haghia Sophia) Museum in Istanbul.
There are also 150 printed books. Of the plate and other valuables from the
treasury of the church is a silver cross (stavrotek) presented by Manuel III,
Prince of Trabzon, a handwritten manuscript and a large number of documents,
which are now in the Museum of Byzantine Works in Athens. The icon of this monastery,
known as “Our Lady of the Roses”, is now in the National
Gallery in Dublin.
The silver candlesticks presented by Sultan Selim were stolen in 1877. Another
icon belonging to the monastery is in a private , collection in Oxford. In
the Benaki Museum, Athens, is a silver medallion on which the Holy Trinity is
depicted and another ornate medallion dated 1438, together with an altar cloth
(epitaphios) dated 1438.
A report concerning
the restoration of Sumela Monastery was recently prepared and relief plans of
the eight map sections covered by the monastery drawn up.
THE HEALING
WATERS OF THE SUMELA MERYEM ANA MONASTERY (The Monastery of the Virgin Mary)
This short note
has been taken from an article by Sabahattin Eyuboğlu entitled “Anadolu'da Halk
Hekimliği” (Folk Medicine in Anatolia), published in Tıpta Yenilikler, No:6,
February, 1961, pps 76-77.
We visited the
Sumela (Meryem Ana) Monastery and its environs. This monastery resembles an
eagle's nest which has been half hewn into the steep cliff face above a pine
forest at the foot of the Zigana Mountains. Apart from its narrow entrance there
is no other possible access to this place. Its known history stretches back
as far as the l6th century and most of the frescos on its crumbling walls date
from the l7th and l8th centuries. It looks as if a number of repairs and additions
have been made to its bold architecture. Into a sacred pool in the centre of
the Monastery large drops of water drip at irregular intervals from thirty or
forty metres above. It is these drops of water which have offered hope to sufferers
of incurable ailments over the centuries and made the Monastery rich. In the
old days both Christians and Muslims came here from far and wide to take the
cure, first offering impressive gifts and sacrifices. Twenty or so sick persons
arrived within the half hour or so that we were inside the Monastery, among
them a father who had brought his crippled son from Izmit. The sick people undressed
and stood waiting for the healing drops to fall on them. Due to the fact that
the drops did not fall in the same places, a cure consisting of seven, eleven
or twenty drops of water could last quite a long time, thus, drops of water
falling frequently and regularly were regarded as auspicious. A drop suddenly
falling on a sick person after a long wait must have been an exciting experience.
The colourful and impressive scenery visible on the climb up to the Monastery
and on the descent, the sound of countless waterfalls in the valley and the
fragrance of the forest enhanced the awe-inspiring atmosphere of the Monastery.
It is worth dwelling on the fact that in many parts of Anatolia the Virgin Mary
is regarded as a source of health by Muslims, too. Perhaps the Virgin Mary filled
the place once occupied by the pagan deities of ancient times.