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Lurji Monastery

Lurji Monastery
ლურჯი მონასტერი
Churches of St. Andrew and of John the Apostle, Tbilisi (Photo A. Muhranoff, 2011).jpg
The Lurji Monastery and the Church of St. John the Theologian in Tbilisi
Basic information
Location Tbilisi,  Georgia
Geographic coordinates 41°25′22″N 44°28′19″E / 41.4228°N 44.4720°E / 41.4228; 44.4720Coordinates: 41°25′22″N 44°28′19″E / 41.4228°N 44.4720°E / 41.4228; 44.4720
Affiliation Georgian Orthodox
Country Georgia
Architectural description
Architectural type Church
Completed 12th-19th century

The Lurji Monastery (Georgian: ლურჯი მონასტერი), that is the "Blue Monastery", is a 12th-century Georgian Orthodox church built in the name of Saint Andrew in the Vere neighborhood of Tbilisi, Georgia. The popular historical name lurji ("blue") is derived from its roof, adorned with glazed blue tile.

The church stands in the central part of Tbilisi, at the Vere Park, on the right bank of the Mtkvari, not far from the mouth of the Vere River. The original edifice of the Lurji Monastery was built in the 1180s, in the reign of Queen Tamar. It was a domed cross-in-square design, with a pair of dome-bearing columns and an extended apse. A lengthy inscription in the southern tympanum, in the medieval Georgian asomtavruli script, identifies a sponsor, Basil, the former archbishop of Kartli. The heavily damaged church was restored as a three-nave brick basilica, without a dome, in the 17th-century. In the 18th century, the church was in possession of the Gabashvili noble family. In 1873, under the Russian rule, the church was reconstructed, according to Aleksandr Chizhov's project, with new brick walls attached and a new round dome, alien to the Georgian architectural forms, was added. A new church, that of St. John the Theologian, a typical Russian design, was built south to the Lurji Monastery, under the viceroy Grigory Galitzine from 1898 to 1901.


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