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Emergency Restorations Completed On St. Thaddeus Church

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  • Emergency Restorations Completed On St. Thaddeus Church

    EMERGENCY RESTORATIONS COMPLETED ON ST. THADDEUS CHURCH
    Maryam Tabeshian

    Cultural Heritage News, Iran
    Dec 8 2006

    Photo: St.Thaddeus Cathedral, known as Qara Kelisa (Black Church),
    West Azarbaijan provice, northwest Iran St. Thaddeus Cathedral,
    also known as Qara Kelisa (The Black Church), northwest Iran, was
    renovated by experts in an attempt to register this 1700-year-old
    church in UNESCO's list.

    Tehran, 8 December 2006 (CHN Foreign Desk) -- Renovation experts
    ended their emergency restorations on the Church of Saint Thaddeus,
    locally known as Qara Kelisa (The Black Church), built 1700 years
    ago in the Iranian northwestern province of West Azarbaijan, in an
    attempt to inscribe this ancient monument in UNESCO's list of World
    Heritage Sites in 2008.

    Qara Kelisa had previously been put up by Iran for UNESCO world
    registration in 2007, but the international organization turned down
    the application due to lack of substantial documents including those
    pertaining to the value of the building and maps of its precincts.

    Experts of Iran's Cultural Heritage and Tourism Organization (ICHTO)
    are now working on the Church's dossier to be forwarded to UNESCO
    for a final review in 2008.

    According to Qara Kelisa project manager, Mehdi Shoja-del, an
    equivalent of 60,000 US dollars had been allocated to the Church's
    initial restorations which recently came to an end.

    Heavy rains had washed away the mortar gluing the stones on the
    dome of the St. Thaddeus Church, causing cracks on the dome and its
    columns which, according to Shoja-del, were restored by experts during
    the initial phase of this project. He also said that the Church's
    surrounding site was reorganized, the northern fortified tower was
    restored and the southwestern one was strengthened during the recent
    restoration works by experts.

    This expert further added that the next phase of the project will
    begin once its plan is approved by the Council for the Management
    of Churches in Iran and will include restoration of stones on the
    Church's facade, renovation of its museum, and construction of a
    center for archiving documents close to the Church.

    Northwest Iran is home to the oldest churches in the country among
    which Qara Kelisa, St. Stepanous, and Zoorzoor stand out because of
    their antiquity.

    The Thaddeus Church, locally known as Qara Kelisa or the Black
    Church, is considered one of the oldest churches in the world, whose
    construction began 1700 years ago. Historians believe that the Church
    is the tomb of Thaddeus who is said to have been one of Christ's
    disciples who traveled to Armenia, then part of the Persian Empire,
    for preaching the teachings of Christ.

    Armenians, an ethnic group living in the Persian Empire, followed
    Thaddeus' teachings and converted to Christianity in 300 AD. Thaddeus
    was later martyred and buried in present-day West Azarbaijan
    province. A tomb was erected on his burial place by his followers who
    turned it into a small prayer house. The building was later changed
    into a cathedral in the seventh century AD.

    According to the inscriptions remained there, the Church was ruined
    in by a devastating earthquake but was later restored in its current
    form by a Christian religious figure.

    Today the church is known as Qara Kelisa and belongs to the Armenian
    community of Iran. It has an international reputation and hosts annual
    meetings of world Armenians each year in July-August.

    Initially, this church comprised of a small hall with a pyramid-shaped
    dome on the top and 12 crevices similar to the Islamic dome-shaped
    buildings from the Mongol era. The main part of this pyramid structure
    followed Byzantine (Eastern Roman) architecture, including the
    horizontal and parallel fringes made of white and black stones in
    the interior and black stones on the exterior facing.

    The monument has two sections: The old one which is made of black
    stones, hence the name Qara (black) Kelisa (church) was given to it
    by the locals, and the new one which is made of white stones, each
    with its specific engravings.

    Special features, antiquity, architectural style, decorations, its
    religious importance among the world Armenians, and the celebrations
    held annually in Qara Kelisa make the Church worthy of inscription
    in UNESCO's list.

    Experts from Iran's Cultural Heritage and Tourism Organization are
    also intending to have other famous churches in the province such
    as St. Stepanous Cathedral in Khoy and Zoorzoor Church in Chaldoran
    included as annexes to St. Thaddeus Cathedral after its registration.

    View images of Qara Kelisa here
    http://www.chnphoto.ir/gallery.php?lang=en&am p;gallery_uid=262
    http://www.chnpress.com/news/?se ction=2&id=6853
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