Monastery of Saint John of Dailam
Ruins of the monastery in the 1960s | |
Monastery information | |
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Other names | ܕܝܪܐ ܢܩܘܪܬܝܐ |
Established | 7th century AD |
Disestablished | 19th century |
Dedicated to | Mar Yoḥannan Daylamáyá |
Diocese | Syriac Orthodox Diocese of Mosul |
People | |
Founder(s) | Mar Yoḥannan Daylamáyá |
Site | |
Location | Bakhdida, Nineveh Province, Iraq |
Coordinates | 36°17′59″N 43°22′24″E / 36.29972°N 43.37333°ECoordinates: 36°17′59″N 43°22′24″E / 36.29972°N 43.37333°E |
Visible remains | the altar and a baptismal font |
Public access | yes |
Dayra d'Mar Yoḥannan Daylamáyá (Monastery of Saint John of Dailam) also known as Naqortaya and Muqurtaya (Syriac: ܕܝܪܐ ܢܩܘܪܬܝܐ dayrá naqortáyá, literally "chiseled monastery"), is a Syriac Orthodox monastery that lies 3 km north of Bakhdida in Northern Iraq.
History
The monastery is traditionally attributed to Mar Yoḥannan Daylamáyá, who was active in the region in the 7th century and was responsible, according to an ahistorical legend, of converting its people from the Church of the East to the Syrian Orthodox Church. The oldest attested mention of the monastery dates back to the late 9th century. A Syriac manuscript mentions the consecration of the monastery in 1115. Bar Hebraeus records that the Kurds raided the monastery in 1261, burning it and killing its monks.[1]
The monastery was rebuilt in 1563. The majority of the inhabitants of Bakhdida started converting to Catholicism in the 18th century; the monastery, however, remained under the control of the Syriac Orthodox Church but was left deserted. The monastery was again rebuilt in 1998.
John of Dailam feast
The Naqurtaya monastery is visited by thousands of Syriac Orthodox pilgrims from the Nineveh Plains region during the feast of Yoḥannan Daylamáyá the last Friday of March.
Notes
- ↑ Bar Hebraeus. Chronicon Ecclesiasticum.
References
- القديس مار يوحنا الديلمي، تاريخ الدير (in Arabic). moryouhanon.com. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
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