1. Location The village of Kurşunlu is situated on the southern shore of the Sea of Marmara, of the Gulf of Gemlik. The monastic church of St. Abercius is located on the seashore, a short distance east of the village of Kurşunlu. The Greek names of Kurşunlu were Λιγμούς (Ligmous) or Λιγουμούς (Ligoumous), a corruption of its Byzantine name Ελεγμούς (Elegmi).1 2. History The Church of St. Abercius dates to the Komnenian period, that is, to the 11th or 12th centuries.2 The church was erected on the remains of an older church, which was probably a small 5th- or 6th-century .3 Recent excavations have revealed ruins of the older church on the north side of the present edifice. All the main architectural features of the Komnenian church point to that date: the articulation of the west facade, the , the scalloped and the , themain one protruding more than the side ones. Also there is some litteral evidence on the chronology of this church. The Church of St. Abercius has been plausibly identified with the monastery of the Theotokos of Heliou Bomoi or Elegmi, («της υπεραγίας Θεοτόκου των Ηλίου Βωμών ήτοι των Eλεγμών).4 It is known that a monastery by this dedication was reorganized by Nikephoros Mystikos, under Manuel I. Nikephoros also provided the monastery with a , dated to 1162 and preserved in the Monastery of St. John the Theologian in Patmos, under no. 265.5 Also a broken marble slab, which was bearing an epitaph, was found underneath the bema arch and was dated to 1196; while two intact bowls, dated to the late Komnenian period, have been found in the .6 The Monastery of Elegmi is frst mentioned in the early 9th century, in the Vita of St. Ioannikios, where the hegoumenos (abbot) of the monastery Antonios and the Basil are mentioned with regard to some events around 826.7 However, the Acta of the Seventh Ecumenical Council in Nicaea (787) were signed by a certain hegoumenos by the name of Philip of Beomon, which may be a corruption of the word «Bomon». If this view holds any truth, then there is evidence that the monastery existed, in fact, already in the 8th century. Patriarch Methodios was exiled to this monastery in 842.8 Also the monastery gave refuge to the deposed emperor Michael V Kalaphates, in April, 1042.9 There are many open questions on the history of the Church of St. Abercius. In the typikon of Nikephoros, the monastery was dedicated to the Mother of God, and there is no mention on the new monastic church that he allegedly built. Still, the existing ruined church was known as St. Abercius in the 19th century. One explanation might be, that the monastery was abandoned for some time, and then revived under a new dedication.10 3. Architectural description and archaeological evidence The remains of the Church of St. Abercius do not show any traces of it being used as a mosque. It was never been converted to a mosque by the sultan, and it is possible that it served as a church until 1922 or 1923.11 When Cyril Mango examined the monument in the 1960's, it was in a ruined condition and partly covered by vegetation, but lately, recent excavations have been carried out, and their results have been published in 1996 and 1998.12 The monastic church of St. Abercius is a single-nave building, consisting of the , the nave and the tripartite sanctuary, which is slightly broader than the nave (see ground-plan).This plan can be also a variant of the type, or even of the . Whatever its origin, this plan with a single nave and a scalloped bema is extremely rare. The central part of the nave was covered by a , carried on , but the dome has not been preserved. The diameter of the dome was 5 m.13 Above the , that is the prothesis and the , there were small cupolas. The north and south tympana are semicircular in form, as were the tympana in the Middle Byzantine churches of Constantinople. Besides, the western facade consists of a semicircular tympanum. The sets of three windows, which pierce the tympana, as well as the of the main apse, are also common features of the religious architecture in the Byzantine capital. Different lights of the main apse window were separated by two, crowned by very broad impost blocks which were simply adorned with crosses. Those blocks must have been re-used, because they seem to be earlier than the material of church in general. Because the prothesis and the diakonikon are small chambers, there is only one window on their eastern side, but in their lateral walls, there are other openings. The main apse is five-sided externally, while the flanking apses are three-sided. The inner walls of the bema are slightly scalloped, forming what resembles shallow and therefore imitating a triconch-type arrangement. The cupolas above the prothesis and diakonikon were elliptical with eight segment each. Sometimes this shaping is also visible from the exterior of the dome.14 Pumpkin-domes were often constructed in the Middle Byzantine churches of Constantinople, as was the case in the Monastery of Myrelaion, in the church of Pammakaristos, in some parts of the Pantocrator-complex, and in the Late Byzantine narthex of the so-called Vefa Kilise Camii, as well as in the later phase of the Chora church. The narthex has irregular shape and is covered by a . The ruins of the church reveal that the semidome of the bema-apse was constructed of brick, laid in a very peculiar way, both in horizontal and pitched courses.15 The church is mostly constructed of alternate courses of stone and brick. Mostly the masonry of this church consists of single brick bands, which are visible on the surface of the wall, and which are set between the stone layers. At intervals there are three or more successive courses of brick. This kind of masonry is found e.g. in the Church of St. Saviour Pantocrator in Constantinople, now known as Zeyrek Camii. A proof of the dating of the Church of St. Abercius within the chronological framework of the 11th or 12th centuries is the, which was used then. In St. Abercius, the mortar joints are broad, about 11 cm thick.16 Some marble slabs have been inserted into the brickwork. Part of the original pavement was , which has been partly replaced by large marble slabs.17 One proof of that the Church of St. Abercius was in Christian use also in the seventeenth or eighteenth century, are the post-Byzantine frecoes inside, dated around this period. Earlier paintings have not been preserved. Already by the 1960's, the frescoes had suffered serious damages. On the northwest pier, two figures of unidentified male saints were depicted standing. Above them we find the scene of the Parable of the Publican and the Pharisee, with thw latter been judged lower then the tax-collector. St.George was depicted on the north wall, and a medallion portrait of St. Thomas is preserved in the passage leading from the main apse to the diakonikon.18 Some remnants of sculpture were still preserved in 1960's, dating to the 6th century, such as two impost capitals, the one with relief crosses, the other being Ionic and adorned by eagles; also a part of the decorative survives.19 |
1. Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), pp. 169-176, figs. 1-15. 2. Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 172; Eyıce, S., “Monuments byzantins anatoliens inedits ou peu connus,” Corsi di Cultura sull´Arte Ravennate e Bizantina, Ravenna 21 Marzo - 3 Aprile 1971 (1971), pp. 309-332, 316; Buchwald, H., “Western Asia Minor as a Generator of Architectural forms in the Byzantine period, provincial back-wash or dynamic center of production?” in Form, Style and Meaning of Byzantine Church Architecture, VARIORUM, V ( Aldershot 1999), pp. 199-234, Pl. 1-30, 220 (73). 3. Tunay M.,- Erdoğan, E., Güzel, T.M.,-Yılmaz, H.F., “Recent Excavations in the Church of Hagios Aberkios, Kurşunlu, Province of Bursa, (Turkey)”, Cahiers Archéologiques 46 (Paris 1998), pp. 65-72, 68. 4. Ramazanoglu M., “ Eine kleine Kirche in Bithynien “, Actes du IXe Congrès International d´Études Byzantines, Salonique, 1953, I (Athènes, 1955), pp. 440-442, Pl. 107-111, 441; Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 172; Eyıce, S., “Monuments byzantins anatoliens inedits ou peu connus,” Corsi di Cultura sull´Arte Ravennate e Bizantina, Ravenna 21 Marzo - 3 Aprile 1971 (1971), pp. 1971, 316. As for the name «Heliou Bomon» (mean. «the Altars of Sun»), it implies a christianization of a Pagan site. The interpretation of «Hλίου Βωμών, or Βωμών or Eλαιοβωμών or τών Eλεγμών» after the Altars of Elijah, (with reference to the Old Testament, Kings´ 18: 31 ff.) does not seem very probable, see Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 173-4. 5. Ramazanoglu M., “ Eine kleine Kirche in Bithynien “, Actes du IXe Congrès International d´Études Byzantines, Salonique, 1953, I (Athènes, 1955), p. 441; Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 172. 6. Tunay M.,- Erdoğan, E., Güzel, T.M.,-Yılmaz, H.F., “Recent Excavations in the Church of Hagios Aberkios, Kurşunlu, Province of Bursa, (Turkey)”, Cahiers Archéologiques 46 (1998), p. 67; figs. 8, 9 and 10. 7. Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 174 (25). 8. Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 174Ramazanoglu M., “ Eine kleine Kirche in Bithynien “, Actes du IXe Congrès International d´Études Byzantines, Salonique, 1953, I (Athènes, 1955), p. 441. 9. Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 175; Ramazanoglu M., “ Eine kleine Kirche in Bithynien “, Actes du IXe Congrès International d´Études Byzantines, Salonique, 1953, I (Athènes, 1955), p. 441. 10. Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 173. 11. Ramazanoglu M., “ Eine kleine Kirche in Bithynien “, Actes du IXe Congrès International d´Études Byzantines, Salonique, 1953, I (Athènes, 1955), p. 441. 12. Ousterhout, R., Master Builders of Byzantium, (Princeton University Press - Singapore 1999), pp. 164, 164 (25); Tunay M.,- Erdoğan, E., Güzel, T.M.,-Yılmaz, H.F., “Recent Excavations in the Church of Hagios Aberkios, Kurşunlu, Province of Bursa, (Turkey)”, Cahiers Archéologiques 46 (Paris 1998), pp. 65-72. 13. Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 170. 14. Ousterhout, R., Master Builders of Byzantium, (Princeton University Press - Singapore 1999), p. 232, figs.198; 233. 15. Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 170; fig.9. 16. Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 172. 17. Tunay M.,- Erdoğan, E., Güzel, T.M.,-Yılmaz, H.F., “Recent Excavations in the Church of Hagios Aberkios, Kurşunlu, Province of Bursa, (Turkey)”, Cahiers Archéologiques 46 (Paris 1998), p. 65; figs. 6 and 7. 18. Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 172; figs. 14, 15. 19. Mango, C., “The Monastery of St. Abercius at Kurşunlu (Elegmi), Bithynia,” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 22, Notes (1968), p. 170; figs. 10-13. |