6 Christian Sites Armenia Fears It Has Lost to Azerbaijan

Christianity Today
Jan 5 2021
Photo gallery captures cultural heritage that concerns Armenians most after ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Location: Togh/Tugh

The ancient church of Ktchavank, from between the ninth and 10th centuries, was one of the large spiritual centers of eastern Armenia. Located at the foot of Mount Toghasar, near the ancient residence of Arstakh princes, the church bears a close resemblance to the architectural style of Ani, the capital city of Bagratid, Armenia.

Image: Hrair Hawk Khatcherian

Ktich Monastery in Nagorno-Karabakh

Location: Shushi/Shusha

Commonly known as Kanach Jam (“Green Dome”) and built in 1818 on the site of a wooden church, its interior is a graceful, unified, and light-filled space dominated by a dome on pendentives (triangular construction devices that allow round domes to soar over square rooms). Over the entrance to the chapel is an inscription from 1847: “Babayan Stepanos Hovhannes. In the memory of his deceased brother Mkrtych.”

Image: Hrair Hawk Khatcherian

Kanach Jam in Nagorno-Karabakh

Location: Shushi/Shusha

Completed in 1887 and known as Ghazanchetsots in honor of the people who built it, this cathedral is considered a modern architectural masterpiece. Missile fire pierced its rooftop during the first two weeks of fighting during the 2020 war. Sheathed in stone, capped with tall umbrella roofs, and ornamented with crosses, angels, and other sculptures, it is a beautifully coherent synthesis of age-old Armenian building traditions. Rising some 115 feet from its base to the tip of its cupola, it is also one of the largest Armenian churches constructed in the world.

Image: Hrair Hawk Khatcherian

Ghazanchetsots in Nagorno-Karabakh

Location: Berdzor/Lachin

Dating from the fifth or sixth century, this church in the province of Lachin is an extraordinary example of an intact Early Christian basilica. The inscriptions found around the church—bearing the names of parents, children, and other individuals patrons—chronicle a veritable history book of the region. A khachkar (cross-stone) from before the 10th century has an Armenian inscription asking Christ to “Remember the prayers of your servant, the undeserving Grigor, for his beloved brother Azat.”

Image: Hrair Hawk Khatcherian

Tzitzernavank Church in Nagorno-Karabakh

Location: Karvarjar/Kalbajar

Also known as Khutavank—the “monastery on the hill”—this is the burial site of Saint Dadi, one of the disciples of Thaddeus, who together with Bartholomew evangelized in Armenia during the first century. The constructions at the site date from the ninth to 13th centuries and are not only important examples of medieval architecture but also preserve more than 100 Armenian inscriptions, as well as bas-relief sculptures and frescoes. The monastic complex is extensive, one of the largest known from medieval Armenia.

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Image: Hrair Hawk Khatcherian

Dadivank Monastery in Nagorno-Karabakh

Christina Maranci is professor of Armenian Art and Architecture at Tufts University.

CT’s previous coverage of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict can be found here.

Christina Maranci is professor of Armenian Art and Architecture at Tufts University.

CT’s previous coverage of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict can be found here.