Tekor Church Explained

Building Name:Church of Saint Sarkis, Tekor
Map Type:Turkey
Map Size:300
Geo:40.3714°N 43.4147°W
Religious Affiliation:Armenian Apostolic Church
Functional Status:completely destroyed by local Turkish municipality
Architecture:yes
Architecture Style:Armenian
Groundbreaking:5th century
Year Completed:10th century

The Church of Saint Sarkis in Tekor (also known as the Tekor Basilica Armenian: Տեկորի տաճար) was a 5th-century Armenian church built in historical Armenia.[1] It was located facing the town of Digor in the Kars Province of Turkey, about 16 kilometers west of the Armenian border. Tekor was a three aisled basilica with a dome. It was severely damaged by earthquakes in 1912 and 1936, and later damaged by vandalism. Now only the lower parts of the rubble and concrete core of the walls remain, the facing stone apparently removed to build the town hall (now itself demolished) in the 1960s. The inscription dating the building to the 480s was the oldest known writing in the Armenian language.[2]

Architectural significance

The Basilica of Saint Sarkis is significant in Armenian architectural history because its stone dome was among the earliest to be constructed in Armenia. Until its destruction, Tekor was the oldest extant domed church in Armenia.

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Edwards. Robert W., "Tekor" . The Eerdmans Encyclopedia of Early Christian Art and Archaeology, ed., Paul Corby Finney . 2016 . William B. Eerdmans Publishing. Grand Rapids, Michigan . 978-0-8028-9017-7. 572–573.
  2. http://www.virtualani.org/tekor/index.htm THE TEKOR BASILICA