St. Catherine's
Monastery


Located at the
foot of Mount Moses, St.
Catherine's Monastery was constructed by order of the Emperor Justinian between
527 and 565. It is built around what is thought to be Moses' Burning Bush,
which has a chapel built atop it.
It is a spectacular natural setting for priceless works of art, including Arab mosaics, Greek and
Russian icons, Western oil paintings, paintings on wax, fine sacerdotal
ornaments, marbles, enamels, chalices, reliquaries, including one donated by
Czar Alexander II in the 19th century, and another by Empress Catherine of
Russia in the 17th century. But of perhaps even greater significance is that it
is one of the largest and most important collection of illuminated manuscripts in the world
(The Vatican has the largest). The collection consists of some 4,500 volumes in
Greek, Coptic, Arabic, Armenian, Hebrew, Slavic, Syriac, Georgian and other
languages.

The Fatimid Mosque, which lies within the walls of St. Catherine's Monastery
St. Catherine's
has a rich history indeed. So rich that it is a sparkling example of an
undiscovered jewel of travel. It has been called the oldest working Christian
monastery and the smallest diocese in the world. The Chapel of the Burning Bush
was originally ordered built by Empress Helen, the mother of Constantine the
Great, but the monastery itself was actually built by Emperor Justinian to
protect the monks in the region and to honor the site of the Burning Bush. St.
Catherine, whose body was reportedly carried away by angels, was discovered
five hundred years later at the top of the peak that now bears her name. Her
relics are stored in a marble reliquary in the Basilica. We have additional
pictures of this church, and of its
interior.
St. Catherine's
is also a formidable fortification, with granite walls measuring 8 to 35 meters
tall, surrounded by gardens and cypresses. Prior to probably the twentieth
century, the only entrance to St. Catherine's was a small door 30 feet high,
where provisions and people were lifted with a system of pulleys, and where
food was often lowered to nomads. It has withstood numerous attacks over its 14
hundred year existence, thus protecting a rich store of art. Today, while it is
one of the oldest monasteries in the world, its original, preserved state is
unmatched.

Though
patronized during much of its history by the Russian Orthodox Church, it is now
under the auspices of the Greek Orthodox Church. Most of its monks are also of Greek origin, though
their ranks include an international flavor.
See also: