Monastery of St. George of Jubin
Cistercian Abbey of St. George of Jubin | |
---|---|
location | Turkey Hatay |
Coordinates: | 36 ° 12 ′ 0 ″ N , 36 ° 9 ′ 0 ″ E |
Serial number according to Janauschek |
564 |
Patronage | St. George |
founding year | 1214 |
Year of dissolution / annulment |
1268 |
Mother monastery | Lucedio Monastery |
Primary Abbey | La Ferté Monastery |
Daughter monasteries |
The monastery of St. George of Jubin (San Giorgio di Iubino) was a Cistercian abbey in what is now Turkey . It was near Antakya , the former Antioch , in today's Turkish province of Hatay , in the "Black Mountains".
history
The existing monastery, which did not yet belong to any order, was transferred to the Cistercian order in 1214 after the exabbot of Lucedio in Piedmont , Pietro II, had become Latin Patriarch of Antioch in 1209 . It was a subsidiary of the Lucedio Monastery from the filiation of the La Ferté Primary Abbey . Around 1215 Jubin founded the priory of St. Blaise in Nicosia . With the conquest of Antioch by the Mamluks in 1268, the monastery came to an end; the monks first moved to Beaulieu Monastery in Cyprus . It was continued in 1302 in the monastery of S. Maria di Iubino (or dello Zerbino) near Genoa in Liguria . In any case, this fell into the future before 1600 and was sold in 1618.
literature
- Balduino Gustavo Bedini: Le abazie cistercensi d'Italia , Casamari 1964, pp. 11-12, 181.
- Andrew Jotischky: The Perfection of Solitude. Hermits and Monks in the Crusader States . University Park, Pennsylvania State University Press 1995, ISBN 0-271-01346-X (pp. 58-59 on the founding circumstances of the monastery of St. George of Jubin).
Web link
Individual evidence
- ↑ Jotischky: The Perfection of Solitude. Hermits and Monks in the Crusader States pp. 60-61, with reference to Hamilton, The Cistercians in the Crusader States , in One Yet Two, Monastic Tradition East and West , Cistercian Studies 26 (1976), 420.