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              Perched
              on the Kasakh gorge rim, Hovhannavank
              is a major monument from the 7th c. and later, the best
              documented of the major Armenian monasteries due to a manuscript
              of pious history compiled in 1686 by the Archdeacon Zakaria.
              The monastery was dedicated to John the Baptist, and has a
              12th c. fortification wall with towers to the W, a 13th
              c. church and gavit (a rebuilding financed in part by Kurd Vachutian), and an
              early single-aisle church.
              The monastery has rich stone decoration, and many
              inscriptions. 
              According to one high on the N wall of the so-called “tapanatun”,
              “By the grace of beneficent God, in the reign of Queen Tamara
              daughter of the great George, in the year 642 (AD 1200), of the
              race of Torgom, we the brothers Zakaria and Ivane, sons of Sargis
              the great, son of Avag Zakaria, when the light of God’s grace
              rose and entered Armenia and strengthened our weakness in the
              battle against the enemies of Christ’s cross and destroyed their
              power and quenched their violence and the country of Ararat was
              delivered from the heavy yoke of their servitude, we wished to
              make offering and gave the tribute of grace to the Holy Forerunner
              of Hovhannavank...”  |