Showing posts with label Bakhchysarai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bakhchysarai. Show all posts

Sunday, August 18, 2013

A Crimean Mountain Monastery

Although I'm now home in America, I'm going to keep posting as if we recently had these adventures around Europe. I'll post the dates we actually visited these locations at the start of each posts in an attempt to keep things straight. 

The Crimean Mountains
Visited: April 6th, 2013

I've written a few times about how the area around Kharkiv was geographically similar to the farm lands where we lived in Lawrence, Kansas.  I'm afraid that doesn't give a 100% accurate picture of the topography we have run into in our travels.  During one trip we made our way to the beginning of the Carpathian Mountains in the southwest side of Ukraine and while in Crimea we actually found some mountains.  These are a little outside Bakhchysarai and are a pretty impressive change of pace.  


On some of the cliffs people could hike up to the cliff wall and actually mountain climb up towards the top.  
 

As a person who doesn't speak Russian, the sign on the cliff would either be telling me about the hiking park or that if a person isn't too careful on their hike they could fall off the side of the cliff.


Into the side of one of the mountains is located the Assumption Cave Monastery.  It is said that a monastery existed there as early as the 8th century with the current monastery dating back to the 15th century.  The monastery was also closed down during communism and reopened in the 1990's.  



Photography wasn't allowed right near the site so I had to surreptitiously take some photos of it without angering the monks.  There is also a holy spring at the site and many, many school children were filling up their water bottles for the ride home.  


The Khan's Palace

Although I'm now home in America, I'm going to keep posting as if we recently had these adventures around Europe. I'll post the dates we actually visited these locations at the start of each posts in an attempt to keep things straight. 

The Khan's Palace
Visited: April 6th, 2013

Continuing on our tour of the Crimea we visited Bakhchysarai which is located in the dead center of the peninsula.  The main tourist site is The Khan's Palace which is a mosque and palace originally constructed in the 16th century.


I had never seen such beautiful minarets before.


While I didn't go into the mosque side, we did explore the palace.  I enjoyed these stained glass windows in what is called the summer pavilion which has a fountain that is flowing in the summer.


Another glorious stained glass window this one with a triangle and hexagon shapes.  


Here is the chandelier in one of the palace's larger rooms.  The palace was built by the Crimean Khan dynasty and is one of the few examples of the Crimean Tartar style of architecture.  


The Russian poet Pushkin visited the palace in 1820 and was so inspired by the beauty of one of the fountains there that he wrote a poem about it called "The Fountain of Bakhchysarai."  You can read the entire poem here.  


They have placed a small bust of Pushkin near the fountain that was his inspiration.  I don't know about you but I'm not quite feeling the level of inspiration that he felt.  On the other hand, give me a baseball card and I'm writing thousand word essays on the topic so you can take your inspiration where you can.  


After seeing so many Orthodox churches around Ukraine it was a nice change of pace to see the minarets of a mosque on a lovely spring day.


After leaving the palace and heading down the road that runs in front of it we found an even larger monument to Alexander Pushkin. It made telling the cabby where we were located a whole lot easier.