Saint Hakob of Akori monastery
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Saint Hakob of Akori Monastery (Armenian: Ակոռիի Սուրբ Հակոբ վանք; pronounced Akori Surb Hakob Vank; also sometimes referred to as Saint James), was an Armenian monastery located in the southeastern part of the historic region of Surmali (today the Iğdır Province of modern Turkey). The monastery was located 4.7 kilometers southwest of Akori, a village at the northeastern slope of Mount Ararat. Destroyed by an earthquake and avalanche in 1840, Akori was later rebuilt. It is known today as Yenidoğan and remains a small Kurdish village.[1]
Saint Hakob of Akori Monastery Ակոռիի Սուրբ Հակոբ վանք | |
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Religion | |
Affiliation | Armenian Apostolic Church |
Province | Iğdır Province |
Region | Eastern Anatolia Region |
Ecclesiastical or organizational status | Destroyed on July 2, 1840 |
Status | Ceased functioning as a monastery in 1840 |
Location | |
Location | Northeastern slope of Mount Ararat |
State | Turkey |
Geographic coordinates | 39°43′08.1″N 44°22′24.3″E |
Architecture | |
Type | Church |
Style | Armenian |
Completed | 341 A.D. |
In 1829, Baltic German explorer Friedrich Parrot, Armenian writer Khachatur Abovian, and four others reached the top of Mount Ararat in the first recorded ascent in history. They used St. Hakob as their base.[2]