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Historic Conservation Project by World Monuments Fund Begins in East

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  • Historic Conservation Project by World Monuments Fund Begins in East

    Art Daily
    May 4 2011


    Historic Conservation Project by World Monuments Fund Begins in Eastern Turkey


    Ani Cathedral southwest corner.


    ISTANBUL.- Bonnie Burnham, President of World Monuments Fund (WMF),
    today announced that WMF and the Turkish Ministry of Culture and
    Tourism have embarked on a historic partnership to conserve the Ani
    Cathedral and the Church of the Holy Savior, in Ani, a medieval city
    in northeastern Turkey. Once the site of hundreds of religious
    buildings, palaces, fortifications, and other structures, Ani was, in
    the tenth century, one of the world's great cities. Today, however, it
    stands abandoned, and its celebrated historic buildings are in a
    precarious state. Support for these conservation projects has been
    provided by the U.S. Department of State's Ambassadors Fund, the
    Turkish General Directorate of Cultural Heritage and Museums, and
    World Monuments Fund.

    Ertu��rul G�¼nay, Minister of Culture and Tourism in Turkey, has stated
    about the project: "This partnership with World Monuments Fund is a
    milestone in Turkey's efforts to conserve its many important
    cultural-heritage sites. Among these, Ani, which is of global
    significance, presents particularly complicated challenges. We hope
    that giving new life to the remains of once-splendid buildings, such
    as the Ani Cathedral and Church, will bring new economic opportunities
    to the region."

    Ms. Burnham added, "There has long been international concern about
    the fragile condition of the many extraordinary ruins at Ani, and the
    site has been listed on the World Monuments Watch on multiple
    occasions, beginning in 1996. In conserving these two important
    structures, WMF and Turkey's General Directorate of Cultural Heritage
    and Museums will develop methods that can be applied to the other
    buildings still standing in this seismic area. We hope that this work
    will usher in a new era in the life of this important site."

    Ani
    Situated on a plateau in northeastern Turkey, next to the border with
    Armenia, Ani was strategically located along a prosperous east-west
    caravan route. While the origins of settlement in the area date to the
    Iron and Bronze Ages, Ani reached its cultural golden age in the
    second half of the tenth century, when it became the political and
    commercial center of the Bagratid Armenian kingdom. Most of its
    surviving structures, which include seven churches (one later
    converted to a mosque), a city wall, commercial and residential
    buildings, and underground passages, are ruins of edifices dating from
    the medieval era, when the city changed hands several times and was
    ruled by successive Christian and Islamic dynasties.

    At its height, Ani's population numbered well over 100,000, including
    Armenians, Muslim Kurds, and Turks, and the city was filled with
    artistically and architecturally sophisticated buildings. However, by
    the mid-eleventh century, it had begun to decline, due to factors
    including internal strife, invasions by various groups, earthquakes,
    and the redirection of important trade routes away from the city. By
    the fifteenth century, Ani was in terminal decline; by the seventeenth
    century, it was a small village; and by the eighteenth century, it was
    in ruins and abandoned.

    Today, Ani is a haunting presence on the windswept steppe. Long
    isolated in a militarized area, since the collapse of the Soviet Union
    the border has been gradually demilitarized and has become more
    accessible through the recent opening of the region to tourism.

    Ani Cathedral
    With its pointed arches, four interior columns, and cruciform plan
    with clustered piers, Ani Cathedral, completed in 1001, is a
    masterpiece of medieval Armenian architecture. It was designed by the
    renowned architect Trdat, who had rebuilt the dome of Hagia Sophia
    following an earthquake in the late tenth century.

    Although Ani Cathedral is still standing, over the course of its
    history it has suffered greatly from harsh weather conditions and
    innumerable earthquakes. The latter have resulted in damage that
    includes the complete collapse of the building's central dome and the
    partial collapse of its northwest corner.

    Surp Amenap'rkitch Church (Church of the Holy Savior)
    Completed in 1035, the Surp Amenap'rkitch Church (Church of the Holy
    Savior) was built as a reliquary for a fragment of the True Cross. It
    was a two-part rotunda in form, comprising a lower portion capped by a
    smaller one above. Each portion of the exterior comprised 19 sides.
    Inside, the lower portion was divided into eight sections, each capped
    by a conch, or semi-dome, while the smaller upper portion was a smooth
    surface regularly punctuated by windows and capped by a dome.

    Like the Ani Cathedral, the Church has suffered earthquake damage
    throughout its history. In addition, in 1930 a lightning strike caused
    the southeast side of the building to collapse.

    http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=47061




    From: A. Papazian
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