Lykhny Church

10th century church in Georgia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lykhny Churchmap

The Church of Dormition of Lykhny (Georgian: ლიხნის ტაძარი, romanized: likhnis t'adzari) is a medieval Orthodox Christian church in the village of Lykhny in Abkhazia/Georgia, built in the 10th century.[2]

Quick Facts Church of Dormition of Lykhny ლიხნის ტაძარი (in Georgian), Religion ...
Church of Dormition of Lykhny
ლიხნის ტაძარი (in Georgian)
Thumb
Church of Dormition of Lykhny
Religion
AffiliationGeorgian Orthodox
ProvinceAbkhazia[1]
Location
Location Bombora, Gudauta Municipality, Abkhazia, Georgia
Thumb
Shown within Abkhazia
Thumb
Lykhny Church (Georgia)
Geographic coordinates43°08′23″N 40°37′04″E
Architecture
TypeChurch
Completed10th century
Close

History

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
A 14th-century fresco depicting Abraham and the Holy Trinity with a Georgian inscription.

Its 14th-century frescoes are influenced by the contemporary Byzantine art and adorned with more than a dozen of Georgian and Greek inscriptions.

The Lykhny church is a domed cross-in-square design, built of straight rows of well-refined ashlar stone. The small dome, with a low drum and a sloping roof,[3] is based on four freely standing piers. The western portion of the building includes an upper gallery. The façades are simple, apertured with windows and marked with three protruding apses protruding from the east wall. There are traces of the 10th-11th-century wall painting, but the extant cycle of frescoes date to the 14th century. They are characterized by neatly colored, dynamic, and expressive paintings of somewhat elongated human figures.[4][5]

The antiquities of Lykhny, then also known as Souk-Su, were first studied and published, in 1848, by the French scholar Marie-Félicité Brosset,[6] who also copied several medieval Georgian and Greek inscriptions from the Lykhny church. Of note is the Georgian inscription, in the asomtavruli script, relating the apparition of Halley's Comet in 1066, in the reign of Bagrat IV of Georgia.[4][5]

Efforts at conservation have been launched by the de facto Abkhaz authorities in 2010. The works, according to Georgian specialists, carry the risk of authenticity infringement. The Lykhny church is inscribed on Georgia's list of Monuments of National Significance.[5]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.