Pantokratoros Monastery
Pantokratoros monastery (Greek: Μονή Παντοκράτορος) is a Greek Orthodox monastery in the monastic state of Mount Athos in Greece. It stands on the north-eastern side of the Athos peninsula, and is dedicated to the Transfiguration of Our Lord. The monastery ranks seventh in the hierarchy of the Athonite monasteries.
Παντοκράτορος | |
External view of the monastery. | |
Location within Mount Athos | |
Monastery information | |
---|---|
Full name | Holy Monastery of Pantokratoros |
Order | Ecumenical Patriarchate |
Dedicated to | Transfiguration of Our Lord |
Diocese | Mount Athos |
People | |
Founder(s) | Alexios and John |
Prior | Archimandrite Elder Gabriel |
Site | |
Location | Mount Athos, Greece |
Coordinates | 40°17′00.86″N 24°15′59.58″E |
Public access | Men only |
It was founded in around 1360 by the megas stratopedarches Alexios and the megas primikerios John.
After a long period as an idiorrhythmic monastery, it reverted to the coenobitic system in 1992, the last monastery on Mount Athos to do so. Thirteen fathers from the Athonite monastery of Xenophontos were permitted to move in, and priestmonk Vissarion was elected as abbot. He died shortly after resigning the abbacy in 2001, and priestmonk Gabriel was elected to succeed him.
The library houses c. 350 manuscripts, and 3,500 printed books. The monastery's documents are written in Greek and Turkish. Today the monastery has about 30 monks.
A notable monk was Benjamin of Lesbos, who was ordained as a monk in the monastery in the late 1770s and went on to become a significant figure in the Modern Greek Enlightenment[1].
Some manuscripts
References
- E. Theodossiou; V.N. Manimanis; M.S. Dimitrijevic. "The theory of Pantachekineton of Benjamin Lesvios". Cite journal requires
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