Cherepish Monastery
Home
Sitemap
Search
Contact Us
 
Explore Bulgaria
Travel Guide
Bulgarian Vacation and Holiday Ideas
Tourist Services
Travel News and Announces
 Readers Support
Photogallery
   
Cherepish Monastery
 Special Tours

Related Topics
 Monasteries
 Icons

    Cherepish Monastery

village History links the name of Sophronius of Vratsa also with another monastery quite remote from the Kapinovo one - the Cherepish Monastery. Like all other Bulgarian monasteries, it also rises above a river - the Iskar, more precisely in its pass through the Balkans.
Throughout centuries, it was inhabited by men of letters, translators and calligraphers who have left us with such valuable works as the Cherepish Gospel of the 16th century, bound in 1512 with gold covers and depicting scriptural scenes; the Gospel of the Monk Danail, Jacob's Book of Apostles (both dating from the 17th century), and the Margarit collection of sermons and precepts compiled by Priest Todor of Vratsa in 1762.
The approximate date of the monastery's emergence is certified in wilting: a deed recorded between 1390 and 1396 is kept today at Sofia's Church Historical and Archaeological Museum. Some of the murals in the old church were possibly painted about the mid-19th century by Tryavna artists, but are badly damaged. The loss is somewhat compensated by the skilfully carved iconostasis and bishop's throne.

 

 
 
   
 
   
 
     
 
© 1997-2006 TETRACOM. All rights reserved