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{{Short description|Architecture of the Copts}}
<nowiki></nowiki>{{Redirect|Coptic Churches|the bodies of the Coptic religion|Coptic Church|church buildings|List of Coptic churches (disambiguation){{!}}List of Coptic churches}} {{Redirect|Coptic Churches|the bodies of the Coptic religion|Coptic Church|church buildings|List of Coptic churches}}{{More citations needed|date=December 2022}}] in Cairo]]
] and section of ] inside the ] in Cairo]]
{{copts}}
]
'''Coptic architecture''' is the ] of the ], who form the majority of ] in ].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.sis.gov.eg/En/History/Coptic/080500000000000001.htm |title=Egypt state info |access-date=2007-08-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090515180702/http://www.sis.gov.eg/En/History/Coptic/080500000000000001.htm |archive-date=2009-05-15 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
{{copts}}
'''Coptic architecture''' is the ] of the ]s, who form the majority of ] in ].<ref></ref>


Coptic churches range from great ]s like ] to the smallest churches in rural villages. Many ancient monasteries like ] survive. Ancient churches like the ] in ] carry important historical value to the ] and the Copts in general. Coptic churches range from great ]s such as ] to the smallest churches in rural villages. Many ancient monasteries like ] also exist. ] like the ] in ] carry important historical value to the ] and the Copts in general.


==Origin and influence== == Origin and influence ==
] church first built in the 3rd or 4th century|alt=]]
Some authorities trace the origins of Coptic architecture to ], seeing a similarity between the plan of ancient ], progressing from an outer courtyard to a hidden inner ] to that of Coptic churches, with an outer ] or porch, and (in later buildings) a sanctuary hidden behind an ]. Others see the earliest Coptic churches as progressing, like those of the Byzantine and Roman churches, from the Graeco-Roman ]. The ruins of the Cathedral at ] (c.430–40) are the major survival of the single brief period when the Coptic Church represented the official religion of the state in Egypt.


Some authorities trace the origins of Coptic architecture to ], seeing a similarity between the plan of ancient ], progressing from an outer courtyard to a hidden inner ] to that of Coptic churches, with an outer ] or porch, and (in later buildings) a sanctuary hidden behind an ]. Others see the earliest Coptic churches as progressing, like those of the ] and ] churches, from the ] ]. The ruins of the ] at ] (c.430–40) are the major survival of the single brief period when the Coptic Orthodox Church represented the official religion of the state in Egypt.
Thus, from its early beginnings Coptic architecture fused indigenous Egyptian building traditions and materials with Graeco-Roman and Christian Byzantine styles. The fertile styles of neighbouring Christian ] had a greatly increased influence after the 6th century, including the use of stone ].<ref>V.I. Atroshenko and Judith Collins, ''The Origins of the Romanesque'', p. 120, Lund Humphries, London, 1985, ISBN 0-85331-487-X</ref>

Thus, from its early beginnings Coptic architecture fused indigenous Egyptian building traditions and materials with Graeco-Roman and Christian Byzantine styles. The fertile styles of neighbouring Christian ] had a greatly increased influence after the 6th century, including the use of stone ].<ref>V.I. Atroshenko and Judith Collins, ''The Origins of the Romanesque'', p. 120, Lund Humphries, London, 1985, {{ISBN|0-85331-487-X}}</ref>

] sanctuary interior]]


Over a period of two thousand years, Coptic architecture incorporated native ], ], ] and Western European styles. Over a period of two thousand years, Coptic architecture incorporated native ], ], ] and Western European styles.


After the ], the influence of Coptic art and architecture on Egyptian Islamic architecture and the incorporation of some Coptic features in Islamic building in Egypt can be seen.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0018814.html |title=Tiscali |access-date=2007-09-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080624080152/http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0018814.html |archive-date=2008-06-24 |url-status=dead }}</ref> This can be explained by the fact that the early Muslim rulers of Egypt, much like the ] and Byzantine rulers before them, recruited native ] to undertake the building labor. In later centuries, Coptic art and architecture also incorporated motifs inspired by Islamic styles.<ref>Kamil, p. 68</ref> In particular, very early examples of the pointed arch appear in Coptic churches from the 4th century onwards, and this became a notable feature of ], and may have spread from there to European ], though this whole area remains controversial among architectural historians, with many now seeing the origins among the ]ns, from whom it spread to ], where it joined the Islamic style.<ref>See: "Arch (pointed)", in ''A Concise Dictionary of Architecture''; Frederic Hicks Jones; 1991; Thomson Crisp Learning, {{ISBN|1-56052-066-3}}</ref>
] church first built in the AD 3rd or 4th century]]


== Features ==
After the ], the influence of Coptic art and architecture on Egyptian Islamic architecture and the incorporation of some Coptic features in Islamic building in Egypt can be seen.<ref></ref> This can be explained by the fact that the early Muslim rulers of Egypt, much like the ] and Byzantine rulers before them, recruited native ] to undertake the building labor. In later centuries, Coptic art and architecture also incorporated motifs inspired by Islamic styles.<ref>Kamil, p. 68</ref> In particular, very early examples of the pointed arch appear in Coptic churches from the 4th century onwards, and this became a notable feature of ], and may have spread from there to European ], though this whole area remains controversial among architectural historians, with many now seeing the origins among the ]ns, from whom it spread to ], where it joined the Islamic style.<ref>See: "Arch (pointed)", in ''A Concise Dictionary of Architecture''; Frederic Hicks Jones; 1991; Thomson Crisp Learning, ISBN 1-56052-066-3</ref>
The ] broke from the other ]es and the ] Church in 451 AD. After that date, the Copts, then a great majority of the Egyptian population, were shunned and often persecuted by their Byzantine rulers until the conquest of Egypt by Islam, after which the slowly declining Coptic population was in a rather precarious position. Coptic architecture therefore lacked the lavish patronage of rulers and the Court, which was directly responsible for most of the important buildings of Byzantine and medieval Catholic architecture. Most buildings are small, conservative in design, and remain closer to vernacular styles. They also have a tendency to massive construction, which is partly a surviving Egyptian taste from the Pharaonic period, partly reflects the need to semi-fortify buildings, partly is an inevitable result of ] construction of large structures, and is also partly to keep them cool in the Egyptian climate.


].|alt=|left]]
==Features==
The ] broke from the other ]es in 451 AD. After that date, the Copts, then a great majority of the Egyptian population, were shunned and often persecuted by their Byzantine rulers until the conquest of Egypt by Islam, after which the slowly declining Coptic population was in a rather precarious position. Coptic architecture therefore lacked the lavish patronage of rulers and the Court, which was directly responsible for most of the important buildings of Byzantine and medieval Catholic architecture. Most buildings are small, conservative in design, and remain closer to vernacular styles. They also have a tendency to massive construction, which is partly a surviving Egyptian taste from the Pharaonic period, partly reflects the need to semi-fortify buildings, partly is an inevitable result of ] construction of large structures, and is also partly to keep them cool in the Egyptian climate.


Well before the break of 451, Egyptian Christianity had pioneered ], with many communities being established in deliberately remote positions, especially in Southern Egypt. The relatively large number of buildings surviving from the early periods of monasticism, from about the 5th century onwards, are one of the most important groups of early Christian buildings to remain, and offer a useful corrective to the Court art of ] or ]. Many very early wall-paintings also survive. Even the ruins of monasteries in many places have survived in a good enough condition to impress the visitor and inform the art historian. Early Coptic architecture is therefore of great importance in the study of Early Christian architecture in general. Well before the break of 451, Egyptian Christianity had pioneered ], with many communities being established in deliberately remote positions, especially in Southern Egypt. The relatively large number of buildings surviving from the early periods of monasticism, from about the 5th century onwards, are one of the most important groups of early Christian buildings to remain, and offer a useful corrective to the Court art of ] or ]. Many very early wall-paintings also survive. Even the ruins of monasteries in many places have survived in a good enough condition to impress the visitor and inform the art historian. Early Coptic architecture is therefore of great importance in the study of Early Christian architecture in general.
]]]


Despite the break with the other churches, aspects of the development of the arrangement of Coptic churches have paralleled those in Orthodoxy, such as the emergence of a solid ] to separate the ], and the West, such as the movement over the centuries of the place of baptism from the ] or outer porch into the rear of the nave. However the existence of three altars in the sanctuary, sometimes in separate ]s, is typically and distinctively Coptic. The altars themselves are always free-standing. Despite the break with the other churches, aspects of the development of the arrangement of Coptic churches have paralleled those in Orthodoxy, such as the emergence of a solid ] to separate the ], and the West, such as the movement over the centuries of the place of baptism from the ] or outer porch into the rear of the nave. However the existence of three altars in the sanctuary, sometimes in separate ]s, is typically and distinctively Coptic. The altars themselves are always free-standing.


Especially between the Muslim conquest and the 19th century, the external facade of Coptic urban churches is usually plain and discreet, as is the roof-line. Equally the monasteries were often enclosed with high blank walls to defend them from desert raiders during the Middle Ages. However, internally the churches can be ornately decorated, although monumental sculpture of holy figures is avoided as in Orthodoxy. Especially between the Muslim conquest and the 19th century, the external facade of Coptic urban churches is usually plain and discreet, as is the roof-line. Equally the monasteries were often enclosed with high blank walls to defend them from desert raiders during the Middle Ages. However, internally the churches can be ornately decorated, although monumental sculpture of holy figures is avoided as in Orthodoxy.
Many Coptic monasteries and churches scattered throughout Egypt are built of ] on the basilica plan inherited from Graeco-Roman architectural styles. They usually have heavy walls and columns, ]s and barrel-vaulted roofs, and end in a tripartite ], but many variant plans exist.<ref></ref> Domes are small compared to Byzantine churches, and from the 10th-century naves are often roofed with domed ]s. The dome raised on a circular supporting wall, which is so characteristic of later ], is rarely used. Massive timber is often used across the nave, sometimes to support a flat roof, and sometimes to give structural strength to the walls. Inside the churches are richly decorated with ]ed murals and reliefs.<ref>{{cite web|title=encarta|url=http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761575254/Coptic_Art_and_Architecture.html|work=|archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/5kwRLzdm8|archivedate=2009-10-31|deadurl=yes}}</ref>


Many Coptic monasteries and churches scattered throughout Egypt are built of ] on the basilica plan inherited from Graeco-Roman architectural styles. They usually have heavy walls and columns, ]s and barrel-vaulted roofs, and end in a tripartite ], but many variant plans exist.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.touregypt.net/featurestories/churchtypology.htm|title=Typology of Ancient Egyptian Christian Churches|website=www.touregypt.net|language=ru|access-date=2018-03-14}}</ref> Domes are small compared to Byzantine churches, and from the 10th-century naves are often roofed with domed ]s. The dome raised on a circular supporting wall, which is so characteristic of later ], is rarely used. Massive timber is often used across the nave, sometimes to support a flat roof, and sometimes to give structural strength to the walls. Inside the churches are richly decorated with ]ed murals and reliefs.<ref>{{cite web|title=encarta |url=http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761575254/Coptic_Art_and_Architecture.html |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20091030034711/http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761575254/Coptic_Art_and_Architecture.html |archivedate=2009-10-30 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
==Iconostasis==

] in ]]]
=== Iconostasis ===
] and section of ] inside ] in Cairo|alt=]]

The screen known as the ] separating the sanctuary from the main body of the church is one of the main features of any Coptic church. The Coptic iconostasis is usually less completely composed of ]s than the Eastern Orthodox one, although there will always be several. It is very often an open-work screen, usually made of ] and sometimes inlaid with ivory like that in ]. These may be in geometrical patterns comparable to the secular screens which are a feature of traditional Egyptian houses. The screen known as the ] separating the sanctuary from the main body of the church is one of the main features of any Coptic church. The Coptic iconostasis is usually less completely composed of ]s than the Eastern Orthodox one, although there will always be several. It is very often an open-work screen, usually made of ] and sometimes inlaid with ivory like that in ]. These may be in geometrical patterns comparable to the secular screens which are a feature of traditional Egyptian houses.


The ] of Saint Mary Church in Harat Zewila in ], rebuilt after 1321, shows the mixture of stylistic elements in Coptic architecture. The basic plan is that of the ], and recycled ancient columns are used. The older woodwork is Islamic in style, as are the ] in the ]s, and a Gothic revival ] cross surmounts the iconostasis. This uses Islamic abstract motifs, which is also common. Some screens are pierced rather than solid. The ] of Saint Mary Church in Harat Zewila in ], rebuilt after 1321, shows the mixture of stylistic elements in Coptic architecture. The basic plan is that of the ], and recycled ancient columns are used. The older woodwork is Islamic in style, as are the ] in the ]s, and a Gothic revival ] cross surmounts the iconostasis. This uses Islamic abstract motifs, which is also common. Some screens are pierced rather than solid.


There are many examples of Coptic iconostasis that predate the earliest surviving Eastern and Western counterparts.<ref></ref> There are many examples of Coptic iconostasis that predate the earliest surviving Eastern and Western counterparts.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BUl6v71PXVoC&dq=coptic+iconostasis&pg=PA32|title=The Ancient Coptic Churches Of Egypt|last=Butler|first=Alfred J.|date=2004|publisher=Kessinger Publishing|isbn=978-0-7661-9007-8|language=en}}</ref>


==Khurus or Choir== === ''Khurus'' ===
] in Aswan]]
Between the 7th and 12th centuries, many churches were built or modified with a distinctive Coptic feature, the ''khurus'', a space running across the whole width of the church separating the ''naos'' or ] from the sanctuary, rather as the ] does in ]. Between the 7th and 12th centuries, many churches were built or modified with a distinctive Coptic feature, the ''khurus'', a space running across the whole width of the church separating the ''naos'' or ] from the sanctuary, similar to the ] in Western ].
]


==Decorative carving== === Decorative carving ===
Early Coptic buildings contain elaborate and vigorous decorative carving on the capitals of columns, or friezes, some of which include ], confronted animals, and other motifs. These are also related to Coptic ]s and fabrics, and are often regarded as significant influences both on early Islamic art, like the ] and on the ] of the British Isles (which appears to have been in contact with Coptic monasteries.<ref>Hugh Honour and John Fleming, A World History of Art, 1982, Macmillan, London, p. 259</ref> From Insular art these motifs developed into European ].<ref>Atroshenko and Collins, op cit, p. 120-139</ref> Early Coptic buildings contain elaborate and vigorous decorative carving on the capitals of columns, or friezes, some of which include ], confronted animals, and other motifs. These are also related to Coptic ]s and fabrics, and are often regarded as significant influences both on early Islamic art, like the ] and on the ] of the British Isles (which appears to have been in contact with Coptic monasteries).<ref>Hugh Honour and John Fleming, A World History of Art, 1982, Macmillan, London, p. 259</ref> From Insular art these motifs developed into European ].<ref>Atroshenko and Collins, op cit, p. 120-139</ref>


==Examples== == Examples ==
], with ancient egyptian style elements]]
The architecture of many Coptic buildings remains poorly documented, as they become more at risk for abandonment, vandalism, and destruction. Time sensitive architectural and cultural research projects are awaiting initiation. The architecture of many Coptic buildings remains poorly documented, as they become more at risk for abandonment, vandalism, and destruction. Time sensitive architectural and cultural research projects are awaiting initiation.


Examples of significant Coptic architecture include: Examples of significant Coptic architecture include:
*Cathedral ruins at ], built c. 430—440, in the ] (]). * Cathedral ruins at ], built c. 430—440, in the ] (]).
*The ] and ], near ] in the ] (]), with buildings from the 5th century and onwards. * The ] and ], near ] in the ] (]), with buildings from the 5th century and onwards.
*The "]" of ] (Lower Egypt), with numerous churches from the 7th century and onwards, including "]" and ]. * The "]" of ] (Lower Egypt), with numerous churches from the 7th century and onwards, including "]" and ].
*The ] (the Burned Monastery), near ] in the ] (]). Established in the 4th century, with a 6th-7th century fortress, and churches from the 12th, 16th, 19th, and 20th centuries. * The ] (the Burned Monastery), near ] in the ] (]). Established in the 4th century, with a 6th-7th century fortress, and churches from the 12th, 16th, 19th, and 20th centuries.

==Modern Coptic architecture==
]
].]]
European architectural styles began to influence Coptic churches in the eighteenth century. Examples of modern Coptic churches that have features of European churches are St. Mary (El Marashly) Church in ], ] designed by famous Coptic architect ], other examples of modern Coptic architecture are the ] consecrated in 1968 and ] consecrated in 2006.<ref></ref>


== Modern Coptic architecture ==
The coptic churches maintained the tradition of being built in the same shapes as older churches yet it is noticeable that modern Coptic churches are in general bigger than older ones.
] in ], ], inaugurated in 1969]]


European architectural styles began to influence Coptic churches in the eighteenth century. Examples of modern Coptic churches that have features of European churches are St. Mary (El Marashly) Church in ], ] designed by famous Coptic architect ], other examples of modern Coptic architecture are the ] consecrated in 1968 and ] consecrated in 2006.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090305153931/http://www.copticpope.org/downloads/eng_keraza/engkeraza31-03-2006.pdf |date=2009-03-05 }}</ref>
The mark for the beginning of the revival of Coptic architecture was in the late eighteenth century by the building of the ] in Azbakeya, Cairo, that became the seat of the Coptic Pope in 1800 A D.


Regulations preventing building new churches, which were put by the ], were eased in the following years by the rulers of Egypt; allowing many churches to be rebuilt and new churches were also permitted after more than three hundred years of prevention. The mark for the beginning of the revival of Coptic architecture was in the late eighteenth century by the building of the ] in Azbakeya, Cairo, that became the seat of the Coptic Pope in 1800. Regulations preventing the building of new churches, which were put in place by the ], were progressively eased in the following years by successive governments of Egypt, allowing many churches to be rebuilt and new churches to be built after more than three hundred years of restrictions.


Modern Coptic churches generally follow similar architectural traditions as that of older churches, but are generally larger as well and may carry modern amenities and features. The ], inaugurated in 2019, is the largest church in the Middle East.
Many of the rebuilt churches carried the old features of the Coptic architecture with the addition of modern features.


==See also== == See also ==
* ]
<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->
*] * ]
*] * ]
*] 20th century Coptic architecture
*]
*]
*] (1970)
*]
*] (current building — 1819)
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]


==References== == References ==
{{reflist}} {{reflist}}


==Further reading== == Further reading ==
* {{cite book | last=Kamil | first=Jill | title=Coptic Egypt: History and a Guide | publisher=American University in Cairo | location=Cairo | year=1990 | edition=2nd ed. | isbn=977-424-242-4}} * {{cite book | last=Kamil | first=Jill | title=Coptic Egypt: History and a Guide | publisher=American University in Cairo | location=Cairo | year=1990 | edition=2nd | isbn=977-424-242-4}}


==External links== == External links ==
* *
* *
* *
* *
* *


{{African architecture styles}}
{{Archhistory}} {{Archhistory}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Coptic Architecture}}
] ]
] ]
] ]
] ]
] ]
] ]

Latest revision as of 19:36, 17 November 2024

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Coptic architecture is the architecture of the Coptic Christians, who form the majority of Christians in Egypt.

Coptic churches range from great cathedrals such as Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral to the smallest churches in rural villages. Many ancient monasteries like Monastery of Saint Anthony also exist. Ancient Churches like the Hanging Church in Coptic Cairo carry important historical value to the Coptic Orthodox Church and the Copts in general.

Origin and influence

The Hanging Church is Cairo's most famous Coptic church first built in the 3rd or 4th century

Some authorities trace the origins of Coptic architecture to Ancient Egyptian architecture, seeing a similarity between the plan of ancient Egyptian temples, progressing from an outer courtyard to a hidden inner sanctuary to that of Coptic churches, with an outer narthex or porch, and (in later buildings) a sanctuary hidden behind an iconostasis. Others see the earliest Coptic churches as progressing, like those of the Byzantine and Roman churches, from the Greco-Roman basilica. The ruins of the cathedral at Hermopolis Magna (c.430–40) are the major survival of the single brief period when the Coptic Orthodox Church represented the official religion of the state in Egypt.

Thus, from its early beginnings Coptic architecture fused indigenous Egyptian building traditions and materials with Graeco-Roman and Christian Byzantine styles. The fertile styles of neighbouring Christian Syria had a greatly increased influence after the 6th century, including the use of stone tympani.

Red Monastery sanctuary: north apse
Conserved ancient Red Monastery sanctuary interior

Over a period of two thousand years, Coptic architecture incorporated native Egyptian, Graeco-Roman, Byzantine and Western European styles.

After the Muslim conquest of Egypt, the influence of Coptic art and architecture on Egyptian Islamic architecture and the incorporation of some Coptic features in Islamic building in Egypt can be seen. This can be explained by the fact that the early Muslim rulers of Egypt, much like the Ptolemaic and Byzantine rulers before them, recruited native Egyptians to undertake the building labor. In later centuries, Coptic art and architecture also incorporated motifs inspired by Islamic styles. In particular, very early examples of the pointed arch appear in Coptic churches from the 4th century onwards, and this became a notable feature of Islamic architecture, and may have spread from there to European Gothic architecture, though this whole area remains controversial among architectural historians, with many now seeing the origins among the Assyrians, from whom it spread to Persia, where it joined the Islamic style.

Features

The Coptic Church broke from the other Eastern Orthodox Churches and the Roman Catholic Church in 451 AD. After that date, the Copts, then a great majority of the Egyptian population, were shunned and often persecuted by their Byzantine rulers until the conquest of Egypt by Islam, after which the slowly declining Coptic population was in a rather precarious position. Coptic architecture therefore lacked the lavish patronage of rulers and the Court, which was directly responsible for most of the important buildings of Byzantine and medieval Catholic architecture. Most buildings are small, conservative in design, and remain closer to vernacular styles. They also have a tendency to massive construction, which is partly a surviving Egyptian taste from the Pharaonic period, partly reflects the need to semi-fortify buildings, partly is an inevitable result of mudbrick construction of large structures, and is also partly to keep them cool in the Egyptian climate.

The Monastery of St. Anthony in Germany.

Well before the break of 451, Egyptian Christianity had pioneered monasticism, with many communities being established in deliberately remote positions, especially in Southern Egypt. The relatively large number of buildings surviving from the early periods of monasticism, from about the 5th century onwards, are one of the most important groups of early Christian buildings to remain, and offer a useful corrective to the Court art of Ravenna or Constantinople. Many very early wall-paintings also survive. Even the ruins of monasteries in many places have survived in a good enough condition to impress the visitor and inform the art historian. Early Coptic architecture is therefore of great importance in the study of Early Christian architecture in general.

Despite the break with the other churches, aspects of the development of the arrangement of Coptic churches have paralleled those in Orthodoxy, such as the emergence of a solid iconostasis to separate the sanctuary, and the West, such as the movement over the centuries of the place of baptism from the narthex or outer porch into the rear of the nave. However the existence of three altars in the sanctuary, sometimes in separate apses, is typically and distinctively Coptic. The altars themselves are always free-standing.

Especially between the Muslim conquest and the 19th century, the external facade of Coptic urban churches is usually plain and discreet, as is the roof-line. Equally the monasteries were often enclosed with high blank walls to defend them from desert raiders during the Middle Ages. However, internally the churches can be ornately decorated, although monumental sculpture of holy figures is avoided as in Orthodoxy.

Many Coptic monasteries and churches scattered throughout Egypt are built of mudbrick on the basilica plan inherited from Graeco-Roman architectural styles. They usually have heavy walls and columns, architraves and barrel-vaulted roofs, and end in a tripartite apse, but many variant plans exist. Domes are small compared to Byzantine churches, and from the 10th-century naves are often roofed with domed cupolas. The dome raised on a circular supporting wall, which is so characteristic of later Byzantine architecture, is rarely used. Massive timber is often used across the nave, sometimes to support a flat roof, and sometimes to give structural strength to the walls. Inside the churches are richly decorated with frescoed murals and reliefs.

Iconostasis

Pulpit and section of iconostasis inside The Hanging Church in Cairo

The screen known as the iconostasis separating the sanctuary from the main body of the church is one of the main features of any Coptic church. The Coptic iconostasis is usually less completely composed of icons than the Eastern Orthodox one, although there will always be several. It is very often an open-work screen, usually made of ebony and sometimes inlaid with ivory like that in Saint Mary Church (Harat Zewila). These may be in geometrical patterns comparable to the secular screens which are a feature of traditional Egyptian houses.

The iconostasis of Saint Mary Church in Harat Zewila in Old Cairo, rebuilt after 1321, shows the mixture of stylistic elements in Coptic architecture. The basic plan is that of the basilica, and recycled ancient columns are used. The older woodwork is Islamic in style, as are the Muqarnas in the pendentives, and a Gothic revival rood cross surmounts the iconostasis. This uses Islamic abstract motifs, which is also common. Some screens are pierced rather than solid.

There are many examples of Coptic iconostasis that predate the earliest surviving Eastern and Western counterparts.

Khurus

Archangel Michael's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral in Aswan

Between the 7th and 12th centuries, many churches were built or modified with a distinctive Coptic feature, the khurus, a space running across the whole width of the church separating the naos or nave from the sanctuary, similar to the choir in Western church architecture.

Decorative carving

Early Coptic buildings contain elaborate and vigorous decorative carving on the capitals of columns, or friezes, some of which include interlace, confronted animals, and other motifs. These are also related to Coptic illuminated manuscripts and fabrics, and are often regarded as significant influences both on early Islamic art, like the Mshatta facade and on the Insular art of the British Isles (which appears to have been in contact with Coptic monasteries). From Insular art these motifs developed into European Romanesque art.

Examples

The White Monastery, with ancient egyptian style elements

The architecture of many Coptic buildings remains poorly documented, as they become more at risk for abandonment, vandalism, and destruction. Time sensitive architectural and cultural research projects are awaiting initiation.

Examples of significant Coptic architecture include:

Modern Coptic architecture

The Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral in Abbassia, Cairo, inaugurated in 1969

European architectural styles began to influence Coptic churches in the eighteenth century. Examples of modern Coptic churches that have features of European churches are St. Mary (El Marashly) Church in Zamalek, Cairo designed by famous Coptic architect Ramses Wissa Wassef, other examples of modern Coptic architecture are the Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral, Cairo consecrated in 1968 and Archangel Michael's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral consecrated in 2006.

The mark for the beginning of the revival of Coptic architecture was in the late eighteenth century by the building of the Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral in Azbakeya, Cairo, that became the seat of the Coptic Pope in 1800. Regulations preventing the building of new churches, which were put in place by the Ottomans, were progressively eased in the following years by successive governments of Egypt, allowing many churches to be rebuilt and new churches to be built after more than three hundred years of restrictions.

Modern Coptic churches generally follow similar architectural traditions as that of older churches, but are generally larger as well and may carry modern amenities and features. The Cathedral of the Nativity in Cairo, inaugurated in 2019, is the largest church in the Middle East.

See also

References

  1. "Egypt state info". Archived from the original on 2009-05-15. Retrieved 2007-08-30.
  2. V.I. Atroshenko and Judith Collins, The Origins of the Romanesque, p. 120, Lund Humphries, London, 1985, ISBN 0-85331-487-X
  3. "Tiscali". Archived from the original on 2008-06-24. Retrieved 2007-09-02.
  4. Kamil, p. 68
  5. See: "Arch (pointed)", in A Concise Dictionary of Architecture; Frederic Hicks Jones; 1991; Thomson Crisp Learning, ISBN 1-56052-066-3
  6. "Typology of Ancient Egyptian Christian Churches". www.touregypt.net (in Russian). Retrieved 2018-03-14.
  7. "encarta". Archived from the original on 2009-10-30.
  8. Butler, Alfred J. (2004). The Ancient Coptic Churches Of Egypt. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7661-9007-8.
  9. Hugh Honour and John Fleming, A World History of Art, 1982, Macmillan, London, p. 259
  10. Atroshenko and Collins, op cit, p. 120-139
  11. Elkeraza English Archived 2009-03-05 at the Wayback Machine

Further reading

  • Kamil, Jill (1990). Coptic Egypt: History and a Guide (2nd ed.). Cairo: American University in Cairo. ISBN 977-424-242-4.

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