Photographer's Note
This is the legend of Curtea de Arges monastery.
The legend has it that one day, a very wealthy and religious Wallachian prince, the Black Prince, rode with nine masons and their master Manole to find a place and build a church more beautiful than anyone may have seen before. The masons started to work, but whenever they reached to the top, the walls would colapse before they could ever finish it. They decided that the first human being they would lay their eyes upon was to be sacrificed in order to see their work done. And it so happened the Manole 's wife showed up to bring her husband's lunch, so that he had to keep his vow and immure his own wife alive within the church walls. The place of this immolation can still be seen between two walls of the southern front side of the church. This is how the monastery could be finished, and the prince was pleased to find that it was as beautiful as it could be. But the prince would not want Manole to build another church that could match his own. So he ordered the scaffolding removed, which left Manole stranded on the roof. In an attempt to escape, Manole made himself a pair of wings from shingles, but they were of no avail, and he would crash to the ground like Icarus and die. Upon his crash, on that very spot, a spring would gush forth, which is now called Manole's well. Today people would throw coins in its basin, to make their wishes come true.
Indeed Neagoe Basarab (1512-1521) would be known in history as the Black Prince, and it is a real fact that the church master builder's name whom he had brought from Nicosia was Manole. Again it is no less true that the prince himself supervised the construction of the monastery all the way, from the beginning to the end. The church one can see today is not Manole's original creation of 1517, but a recreation of 1875-1876 by the Frenchman Lecomte de Nouy, who grafted on all the pseudo-moorish accretions.
Like with so many other cultural sites of the world, at Curtea de Arges Monastery legend and truth intermingle and form up an inseparable whole, lending a special flavour to the flow of historic facts and figures.
The Monastery Curtea de Arges, built in Albesti stone along with marble and mosaic brought from Constantinople by Neagoe Basarab (1512-1521), has the classical harmonious aspect of an Orthodox church: the pronaos (also a necropolis), the nave and the altar have a peculiar architecture and rich ornaments: a boxy structure enlivened by whorls, rosettes and fancy trimmings rise into two octogonal belfries, each having eight narrow windows frames, each festooned with little spheres and the three armed cross of Orthodoxy. The roofs of the four belfries seem to have been made by a goldsmith, whereas the chains which support the crosses seem to be large pieces of jewelry.
A belt carved in stone as a rope twisted in four goes all around the church dividing its exterior walls into two sides, namely the lower side, decorated with rectangular tall panels framed in carved stone, with narrow windows, and the upper side, with a range of largely opened arches which encircle the church. The decorations of the disks which link the arches have Arabian, Persian and Georgian motifs, in green, in blue and golden colours.
Prince Neagoe's secretary, Gavriil Protul would describe the monastery as outshining in beauty the monasteries of Sion and St. Sofia built by Emperor Justinian. It was Neagoe Basarab's hope that his achievement might be a piece of "God's Heaven". In 1654, a foreign traveller would rank the monastery among "the wonders of the world".
Prince Neagoe Basarab died before he saw his "temple" finished. His son-in-law Radu from Afumati (1522-1529) took over and brought Dobromir of T�rgoviste to paint the interior walls (1526). Unfortunately, the paintings restored in 1875 by Emile Lecomte de Nouy's brother are inferior to the original ones. Fragments of the genuine frescoes made by Dobromir can still be seen at the Art Museum and at the National Museum of History in Bucharest.
Along time, the church was successively damaged by wars, plundering, earthquakes, fires and was restored during the rules of Princes Matei Basarab (1632-1654), Serban Cantacuzino (1678-1688) and Bishop Iosif Sevastis at the end of the 18th century.
Whatever the patrons and artists who designed this church, it remains impressive by its votive paintings, by its marble gilted bronze, by its onyx iconostasis, by its twelve columns with floral ornaments representing the twelve apostles. In the pronaos there are the tombs of its founders, Neagoe Basarab and Radu from Afumati, as well as of the first couples of Romanian kings and queens (Carol I and Elisabeta, Ferdinand and Maria) which render this church not only a princely, but also a royal necropolis, alongside a splendid monument of Romanian art and history.
In WS is a diffrent view.
ptiza, ines8, papagolf21, Budapestman, kordinator, jhm, edcone ha puntuado esta nota como útil.
Critiques | Translate
mauro61
(53411) 2011-05-23 10:00
ciao Ovidiu,
bella inquadratura del monastero con una grande ricchezza di particolari nella sua architettura.
Luce difficile ben gestita,
saluti
maurizio
lakshmip1949
(19081) 2011-05-23 12:17
Hello Ovidiu,
What a lovely monastery. I like that warm colors. Nice architectural details with superb clarity. I like the way you have managed the light and shadow. Superb composition.
Lakshmi
ines8
(6128) 2011-05-23 13:09
Buna, Ovidiu,
Ce lumina frumoasa, manastirea este o adevarata bijuterie, splendida poza, imi place mult atmosfera aceasta chiar de legenda. De fapt eu cred ca legenda este de fapt adevarata....
Toate cele bune,
ines
papagolf21
(152605) 2011-05-23 13:46
Bonsoir, cher Ovidiu,
La note d'accompagnement permet de mieux apprécier cette spectaculaire architecture religieuse.
Je reconnais que cette architecture dépasse l'entendement.
Une image qui a vraiment toute sa place sur le site.
Amitiés.
Philippe
pajaran
(114781) 2011-05-23 14:05
Pozdrav.
Vrlo interesantan i dobar tekst sa istorijom manastira ...
Lep manastir, dobar prikaz ostrim snimkom kojim ste naglasili lepotu detalja na fasadi, lepa fotografija.
Dobar rad sa lepom fotografijom u radionici.
Sve najbolje u novoj nedelji koja je pocela.
Paja.
Guugle.
Hello.
Very interesting and a good text with the history of the monastery ...
A beautiful monastery, a good sharp view that you expressed the beauty of detail on the facade, beautiful photos.
Good work with the beautiful photography in the workshop.
All the best in the new week that has begun.
Paja.
Budapestman
(82620) 2011-05-23 14:06
Hi Ovidiu,
a beautiful photo of this splendid architecture, the composition is very nice, superb lights and beautiful details, Tfs! Have a nice evening! Kellemes estét kívánok!
György
kordinator
(8738) 2011-05-23 14:35
Hello Ovidiu
Fantastic architecture from romania.
Lovely monasteri,wonderful greenery all around.
Superb colors and light.
Very interesting legend.
Great job.
Best regards
Saša
Nicou
(193806) 2011-05-24 1:39
Hello,
fantastique architecture et iamge, superbe quelle vue et iamge, le tons sont doux et agréables le ciel limpide bien entouré par la végétation super.
Bravo et amitié
Nicou
alex4ndru
(1418) 2011-05-24 7:10
intr-adevar arhitectura este minunata, foarte frumos ai surprins acest lacas de cult
numai bine!
jemaflor
(146168) 2011-05-24 11:58
Hi Ovidiu,
Well framed from this pov, good warm light and interesting monument, tfs.
jhm
(211734) 2011-05-25 0:55
Hello Ovidiu,
Thank you very much for your 100th picture on TE, also for your excellent notes.
Splendid architecture image.
You play nice with light and shadows.
Very well done, TFS.
Best regards,
John.
dkmurphys
(79209) 2011-05-26 1:12
Bine surprins soarele pe fatada si pe gard. Un loc frumos, devenit prea comercial, din pacate.
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Ovidiu Sotiriu (Schnappilic)
(9692)
- Genre: Lugares
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2011-05-07
- Categories: Arquitectura
- Camera: Canon EOS 450D, 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS EF-S, RAW, 58mm Hoya Circular Polarizer
- Exposición: f/11, 1/30 segundos
- Details: Tripod: Yes
- More Photo Info: view
- Versión de la foto: Versión original, Workshop
- Date Submitted: 2011-05-23 9:13