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Caturday: Cats of Mount Athos

by 1389AD ( 48 Comments › )
Filed under Caturday, Open thread, Orthodox Christianity at April 23rd, 2011 - 8:00 pm

Thumbnail: PAVEL13's Fotothing - Cats at Mount Athos (Agion Oros) Greece
Cats at Mount Athos (Agion Oros) Greece by PAVEL13 – click thumbnail to see original

A trip back — way back — to Mt. Athos and the 10th century

Written by a non-Orthodox pilgrim – a good article from an outsider’s perspective.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007
By Neil Averitt, Chicago Tribune

Welcome to the Monastic Republic of Holy Mt. Athos. Please set your calendar back a thousand years.

Clocks here run on Byzantine time, which starts at sunset. Dates are calculated according to the Julian calendar of the Roman Empire, which differs by 13 days from the modern Gregorian calendar you’re used to. Some settlements are supplied solely by mule teams, and the flag of Byzantium still flies.

Radio? Television? Newspapers? Paved roads? If they didn’t exist in the year 972, you probably won’t find them here.

And if you’re a woman, you’d better make other plans. Females have been strictly forbidden here for a thousand years. Not even female animals are permitted.

[The author is unaware that there is an exception for cats, “who seem to prove useful in controlling the rat population”.]

Mt. Athos is an Eastern Orthodox monastic republic and, astonishingly, a surviving administrative unit of the Byzantine Empire — a fully functioning mini-state with roads, settlements and a capital city, all operating under a charter granted by the Byzantine emperor at Constantinople in 972.

That world is preserved here in great detail and texture. Clothes, music, roads, public fountains, aqueducts, arched stone bridges, vegetable plots — all are from another age. Even the shiniest new chapel is built with traditional Byzantine-style brickwork, the product of a living culture.

Legally speaking, Mt. Athos is an autonomous region in northeast Greece, with most characteristics of an independent state. Visitors must show passports on the way in and undergo customs inspections on the way out.

Psychologically and geographically speaking, it’s a world apart. It’s perched on a hilly, heavily forested peninsula — 6 miles wide and 35 miles long — which terminates in the peak of Mt. Athos itself, a sharply pointed, bare rock, 6,700 feet high, that drops steeply into the Aegean. Scattered over this rugged landscape are 20 large monasteries, a dozen smaller communities, innumerable hermitages and 2,000 monks. The whole place is reachable only by boat.

Read the rest.

Where is Mount Athos?

Map of Greece with Mount Athos shown in red
Map of Greece with Mount Athos shown in red

Satellite map of Mount Athos - click for larger image
Satellite map of Mount Athos – click to view larger image

Click these tiny thumbnails to view some truly magnificent photostreams:

Tiny thumbnail - click to view morkmouse's Mount Athos photostream on Flickr

Tiny thumbnail - click to view DimitriS' Mount Athos photostream on Flickr

More:


Originally published on 1389 Blog.


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