Online Encyclopedia

METEORA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 262 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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METEORA  , a

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group of monasteries in
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Thessaly, in the
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northern side of the Peneius valley, not quite 20 M . N.E. of Trikkala, and near the
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village of Kalabaka (the ancient Aeginium,
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medieval Stagus or Stagoi) . From the Cambunian chain two masses of rock are thrust southward into the plain, surmounted by isolated columns from 85 to 30o ft. high, " some like gigantic tusks, some like
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sugar-loaves, and some like vast stalagmites," but all consisting of iron-grey or reddish-brown conglomerate of
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gneiss,
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mica-slate,
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syenite and green-stone . The monasteries stand on the
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summit of these pinnacles; they are accessible only by aid of rope and
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net worked by a windlass from the top, or by a series of almost perpendicular ladders climbing the cliff . In the case of St Stephen's, the
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peak on which it is built does nor rise higher than the ground behind, from which it is separated by a deep, narrow chasm, spanned by a drawbridge . Owing to the confined
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area, the buildings are closely packed, together; but each monastery contains beside the monks' cells and
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water-cisterns, at least one church and a refectory, and some also a library . At one time they were fourteen in number, but now not more than four (the
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Great Monastery,
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Holy Trinity, St Barlaam's and St Stephen's) are inhabited by more than two or three monks . The
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present church of the Great Monastery was erected, according to Leake's
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reading of the
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local inscription, in 1388 (Bjornstahl, the
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Swedish traveller, had given 1371), and it is one of the largest and handsomest in
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Greece . A number of the
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manuscripts from these monasteries have now been brought to the
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National Library at Athens: Aeginium is described by Livy as a strong place, and is frequently mentioned during the
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Roman
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wars; and Stagus appears from time to time in
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Byzantine writers . See W . M . Leake, Northern Greece (4 vols.,
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London, 1835) ; Professor Kriegk in Zeitschr. f. allg .

Erdk . (

Berlin, 1858) ; H . F . Tozer, Re-searches in the Highlands of
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Turkey (1869) ; L . Heuzey and H . Daumet,
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Mission archeologique de Macedoine (Paris, 1876), where there is a map of the monasteries and their surroundings; Guide-Joanne; Grece, vol. ii . (Paris, 1891) .

End of Article: METEORA
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