St Paul's Monastery

 

St Paul's Monastery, the oldest Coptic monastery in Egypt after St Antonio’s, lies in a magnificent mountain setting in a Cirque at the head of the Wadi el-Deir, which in places contracts into a narrow gorge. It is similar in general plan to St Antonio’s Monastery, but is considerably smaller and more modest and accordingly looks older. Its grandiose situation, however, makes it in some respects more impressive than Saint Antonio’s.

St Paul of Thebes, also known as St Paul the Hermit, is honored as the patron saint of hermits. His life, richly embroidered with legend, was written by St Jerome (347-419/420) in his "Vita Pauli". According to this account, Paul was born about 228, the son of well-to-do parents, and received a good education. During the persecutions of Christians in the time of Decius, fearing that his father would denounce him in order to gain control of his property, he withdrew at the age of 16 into the solitude of the Lower Thebaid, and later into the Eastern Desert, in order to pursue an ascetic life. There, it is said, he at first lived on dates from the palms, and later was fed by a raven which brought him bread every day. In 340 St Antonio, who found him dying and after his death buried him with the help of two lions that dug his grave, visited him. St Paul, however, never achieved the same celebrity or attracted such a host of disciples as St Antonio. He is depicted with a palm and a raven, or sometimes two lions, and frequently appears with St Antonio; his feast day is on January 15.

About 460 had built a church over the Saint's grave, and in the sixth C., this became a place of pilgrimage.

The monastery buildings date mainly from the medieval period. Laid out in the form of a rectangle, they cover an area of 33 acres and have widely scattered plots of land and plantations. There are some 20 monks.
The Monastery
the walls surrounding the monastery, with a total length of 490yds/450m, were originally built in the fifth C. and were rebuilt during the middle Ages. From the top of the walls, there is a magnificent view, extending as far as Gebel Musa in Sinai.