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Pitsunda Cathedral

Coordinates:43°09′36″N40°20′20″E/ 43.159889°N 40.339°E/43.159889; 40.339
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St. Andrew the Apostle Cathedral
Religion
Affiliationde facto:Abkhazian Orthodox Church
de jure:Georgian Orthodox Church[a]
DistrictGagra District
RegionCaucasus
StatusActive
Location
LocationPitsunda,Gagra District,Georgia/Abkhazia[b]
Pitsunda Cathedral is located in Georgia
Pitsunda Cathedral
Shown within Georgia
Geographic coordinates43°09′36″N40°20′20″E/ 43.159889°N 40.339°E/43.159889; 40.339
Architecture
TypeTriple-nave, domed cruciform plan
StyleGeorgian;Byzantine
Funded byKingBagrat III of Georgia
CompletedEnd of 10th century
Specifications
Length37
Width25
Height (max)29
Dome(s)1
Website
Pipe organ of Pitsunda

TheCathedral of St. Andrew the Apostle(Russian:Собор в честь Апостола Андрея Первозванного,romanized:Sobor v chest' Apostola Andreya Pervozvannogo), also known as thePitsunda Cathedral(Abkhaz:Пицундатәи ауахәама,romanized:Ṗicundaṭ°i awax°ama) orBichvinta Cathedral(Georgian:ბიჭვინთის ტაძარი,romanized:bich'vintis t'adzari) is anEastern OrthodoxCathedrallocated inPitsunda,in theGagra Districtof thede factoindependentRepublic of Abkhazia,internationally recognised as constituting a part ofGeorgia.The cathedral is currently used by the schismaticAbkhazian Orthodox Churchand serves as that body's seat, although this usage is disputed by theGeorgian Orthodox Churchand is considered irregular by theEastern Orthodoxcommunion generally.

Pitsunda Cathedral was built at the end of the 10th century by KingBagrat III of Georgia.It served as the seat of theGeorgian OrthodoxCatholicate of Abkhaziauntil the late 16th century when Abkhazia came under theOttomanhegemony. According to 17th century French travellerJean Chardin,Catholicos, who no longer lived in Pitsunda, visited the cathedral once a year with the retinue of bishops and princes to perform the sanctification ofchrism.[1]The cathedral was reconsecrated in 1869 when Abkhazia was already a part of Russian Empire.[1]

It is a cross-domed cathedral with three naves and three apses, shaped as a rectangle with extending semicircular apses. It holds a pipe organ from theAlexander Schukefactory inPotsdam,Germany, installed in 1975.[2]The cathedral is notable for its impressive size, reaching 29 m high (including the dome), 37 m long and 25 m wide; the walls are up to 1.5 m thick. The building rests on heavy slabs of grey sandstone; the walls are made up of alternating rows of stone and brickwork, a typical technique for lateByzantine architecture.The cathedral contains vestiges of wall-painting from the 13th and the 16th centuries. A 12th-century Georgianmanuscript of the Four Gospels,found at the cathedral in 1830, is now preserved at theGeorgian National Center of ManuscriptsinTbilisi.

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Notes

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  1. ^See here:Orthodoxy in Abkhazia
  2. ^The political status of Abkhazia is disputed. Having unilaterally declared independence fromGeorgiain 1992, Abkhaziais formally recognised as an independent stateby 5 UN member states (two other states previously recognised it but then withdrew their recognition), while the remainder of the international community recognizes it as asde jureGeorgian territory. Georgia continues to claim the area as its own territory, designating it asRussian-occupied territory.

References

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  1. ^abАкты собранные Кавказскою Археографическою Комиссиею (Acts of Caucasian Archeographic Commission), v. 5, pp. 1069-1070, cited byЭкзеков, Мусса (2012).По обе стороны Большого Кавказа. Сборник документов (1-я половина XIX века). Том II.Питер. pp. 574–575.ISBN9785459008906.
  2. ^Schuke."Complete List of Organs since 1820"(PDF).Schuke / Internet Archive.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2016-01-15.Retrieved3 April2023.
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