TOPOGRAPHIC POSITION
Upon a panoramic mountaintop of Cyprus,
like a giant eyrie placed by the hand of Hod, for centuries
now at the top of the elevated and precipitous mount
Olympus, the renowned since old times and exclusive
Holy Monastery of Stavrovouni imposingly rises. It is
also located in the Troodos mountain range where many
and the most beautiful monasteries of Cyprus are.
It is built on a rough mountain, at the centre of south-east Cyprus and upon an isolated mountaintop as if at the peak of a steeple, no other neighbouring top being able to overshadow it with its height or with its volume. This mountaintop, with an average altitude of about 700 meters, makes the Monastery prominent, providing to every visitor an excellent and majestic view toward every direction.
Gazing over to the north-east and
beyond, to the East, the eye embraces the fertile valley
of Mesaoria, with its picturesque villages glowing under
the hot sun of Cyprus and -a bit further down -the city
of Ammochostos (Famagusta) surrounded by the sea. Other
times, when the fog gathers its dim veil, you are able
to see the boundaries of outer Karpasia in the background.
 |
| The Holy Monastery
of Stavrovouni |
You can indulge in the sun-drenched
valley that spreads clearly from the foothills of Stavrovouni
and extends up to Larnaca and the Salt-lakes, and going
up to the limits of the Limassol district further west.
In the background one's glance toys in the deep blue
Mediterranean sea up to the mountains of Lebanon.
The West holds a different perspective:
The mountaintops of the massive Troodos mountain range
"bathing" in the island's opulent light, folding
away and pulling back, leading the eye toward the mountains
of Machairas.
 |
| The Holy and
Life-giving Cross |
It is in this wonderful location that the Holy Cross wanted to stand and be erected as an altar for the Crucified Jesus; and the Cross permanently stands upon this height, having its Monastery as its favourite footstool. Up here the quadripartite Cross of Christ uninterruptedly blesses the four corners of the "Island of Saints" and shields the blessed inhabitants of this blissful land with its immaculate Grace.
THE MONASTERY'S HISTORY IN PERIODS
The historical course of the Stavrovouni
Monastery was -from the very beginning -tightly interwoven
with the fate of the much-afflicted island of Cyprus.
The Monastery, renowned, prestigious, and situated close
to the great harbour of the Salt-lakes (of Larnaca),
has always been a target for the island's various invaders
and conquerors.
It is established in 327/328 AD -with
the onset of the Byzantine era -by the queen mother
"Agia Eleni" (St. Helen), during her journey
of return from Jerusalem to Constantinople when she
moored in Cyprus; it gets inhabited by Orthodox Monks,
keepers of the venerable relics that the saint and empress
dedicated to it.
 |
The recovery
of the Holy and
Life-giving Cross in Jerusalem |
During the Frank Domination era, the Monastery comes
under the papal Benedictine Monks for about two centuries.
The Monastery suffers great damages with the island's occupation by the Turks, being inhabited by Orthodox Monks once again a bit later.
When the British Domination era begins
it is manned by Cypriot Monks from Mount Athos, which
recondition it and convey to it the "coenobitic"
(communal monastic) institution in accordance to the
standards of Mount Athos's Monks.
 |
| The foundation
of the Church of the Holy Cross by Saint Helen |
Therefore, according to the historical data above, the division of the Monastery's history in the following periods is deemed reasonable:
First Period: Byzantine Years (327-1191 AD)
Second Period: a) Frank Domination era (1192-1570 AD)
b) Turkish Domination era (1570-1878 AD)
3. Third Period: a) British Domination era (1878-1960 AD)
b) Independence (1960-today)
THE ANCIENT STATUETTE IN TODAY'S MOUNTAIN OF STAVROVOUNI. THE NAME OF THE MOUNTAIN.
According to tradition, there was a pre-Christian pagan
temple at the top of the Stavrovouni Mountain and in
the position of the Church of today's Monastery. This
tradition is reinforced both by the mountain's original
name, Olympus (a name that will be discussed further
below), as well as by the habit of the days that Christianity
prevailed, to raise Christian Churches in the place
of pagan idols.
Two limestone statuettes found in the Monastery's area are an additional testimony in favour of this fact.
 |
| A view of the
Monastery of Stavrovouni in the beginning of our
century |
Furthermore, the presence of humans
during the pre-Christian times in the region, a region
which the Monastery today occupies, is witnessed by
a recent discovery: A copper-made ploughshare of the
Later Bronze era, which dates back to 1200 BC (Photo
pg. 12), identical to corresponding ploughshares that
were found in Egkomi of Famagusta.
The name Olympus, which is a pre-Hellenic,
Pelasgic word, evidently originates from the name of
the famous mountain in Greece and is imported in Cyprus
during the descend of the Greek Tribes.
The pen of the -inspired by God -St. Neophytos the Recluse (Neophytos o Englistos), while writing his book "Typiki Diathiki", while referring to the mountain of Stavrovouni, which is geographically placed right across from his village, Lefkara, calls it "mount of Olympus". He is the first to make the connection of the mountain's name with the existence of a Monastery on it, in the Church of which a piece from the Holy Cross was kept.
 |
| A view of the
Monastery of Stavrovouni in the beginning of our
century |
The naming of Stavrovouni as Olympus continues through the Mediaeval times.
At the same time, at least since the beginning of the Frank Domination era, because of the venerable relic in the Monastery, the name Oros tou Agiou (or Timiou) Stavrou (Mount of the Holy Cross) begins to coexist. However, in order to justify the ancient name of mount Olympus, the name "Olympas" was fabricated as that of the Thief that was placed in the right side of Christ; his Cross was also granted by St Helen to the Church that she founded there.
THE FOUNDING OF THE CHURCH OF THE HOLY CROSS BY ST. HELEN IN THE MOUNT OF OLYMPUS.
The founding of the Church of the Holy Cross in the mountain of Olympus (Stavrovouni) is tightly interwoven, according to tradition, with the queen mother St. Helen's journey for the purpose of recovering the Holy Cross and the raising of Churches in the Holy Land.
That was also the desire of her son, Constantine the Great, although Helen herself also had seen a vision urging her to this purpose.
Despite her age -she was then 78 years old -she begins the mission of locating, re-erecting, and making known the Holy Land with the zeal of a young person.
After many adventures St Helen discovers the three Crosses,
that of the Lord and the ones of the two thieves, as
well as the nails with which the Lord was crucified
upon the Cross. The recognition of the Holy Cross was
made possible through this miracle: A dead woman was
being carried to her place of burial. The Archbishop
St. Makarios ordered the cortege to pause. After fervent
prayer and by placing the three Crosses upon the dead
successively and separately, she was resurrected after
being touched by the third Cross. The Lord's Cross!
St Helen then ordered to split the Cross in two -vertically
-so as to create two Crosses. The one she left in Jerusalem,
the other she carried with her in a journey from Jerusalem
to Constantinople. Tradition has it that it is pieces
out of that second Cross that she left in places.
 |
| A view of the
Monastery |
As far as the two other Crosses that
belonged to the thieves, because the Saint could not
distinguish which of the two belonged to the Good Thief
"on the right" and which to the one "in
the left", thinking that by being buried along
with Christ's Cross for so long they must have also
been blessed and should not be neglected, she ordered
their disassembly and then formed two new Crosses by
exchanging their horizontal wooden parts. In that way
each of them comprised a segment from the Good Thief's
Cross. If this version is considered correct then we
must conclude that St. Helen granted one of those two
Crosses to the Church of Stavrovouni.
According to tradition, Cyprus was plagued by a terrible drought at the time (it had not rained for 36 consecutive years), which caused infectious diseases while the island had filled with deadly snakes. This calamity drove many of inhabitants to migration in other places so as to be able to survive.
 |
| A view of the
Monastery |
An Angel of God appeared while the
Saint was sleeping and told her that it was the will
of God that she would also raise Churches in Cyprus,
to which she should grant pieces of the Holy Cross so
that the Lord's Cross would be honoured here as well.
A miracle then occurred and through divine force the
Holy Cross was transported to the top of the Olympus
mountain, today's Stavrovouni, indicating to the Saint
the position where she should a Church in its honour.
Indeed, the humble empress came to
the mountaintop personally and -with the aid of some
inhabitants from the surrounding regions as well as
her own people -she abolishes the pre-existing pagan
temple and raises a Church for the glory of the true
God. To this original Church she dedicated the one of
the two Crosses of the thieves, placing in its centre
a piece from the Holy Cross's wood, as well as a sanctified
nail.
 |
| The mountain
of Stavrovouni as seen from the plains |
According to the same tradition,
St. Helen raised other Churches in the island (e.g.
the one in Tochni), also endowing them with pieces of
the sanctified Symbols of the Lord's Passion. Also,
after her initiative, a ship full of cats is transferred
from Asia Minor (since then, the bay in which the ship
moored was called Cape of the Cats or "Kavo Gata"),
which were let loose in the arid land so as to wipe
out the many snakes. Later on, from Constantinople,
she showed interest and achieved the return to their
island of the Cypriots that had emigrated because of
the drought.
 |
| The mountain
of Stavrovouni as seen from the Larnaca Salt Lakes |
The memory of the Queen Mother St. Helen's passage through Cyprus and the founding by her of the Monastery of the Holy Cross in Stavrovouni is also perpetuated by the inscription upon a stone plate of the Monastery's "Catholicon" (meaning main Temple, nave).
Frank Domination era (1192 -- 1570). During the period of the Frank Domination some of the darkest pages of the History of the much-afflicted Cyprus were written: Captivity, oppression, poverty, infectious diseases, calamities, and deadly epidemics… The Monastery of Stavrovouni, which always took pride in the symbol of Passion and Martyrdom, also suffered along and was tested with the tormented island more than ever before.
Turkish Domination era (1570 --1878). With the capture of Constantinople by the Ottomans (1453) and their various conquests in the regions by the Mediterranean, Cyprus remained like an "outpost" of the Christian West's conquests in the East. Although the Venetian authorities of Cyprus paid an annual homage to the Ottomans, the island's conquest by the latter was a question of time. The Ottoman attack against Cyprus in 1570, after an atrocious war that lasted an entire year and with the fall of Famagusta in August of 1571, completed the occupation of the unfortunate island through a nightmarish atmosphere of massacres, plunders, villainies, and catastrophes. For Cyprus, the dark period of Turkish Domination was beginning.
British Domination era (1878 -- 1960). In the Summer of 1878, completely unexpectedly, Cyprus's ruler was changing once again. The declining Ottoman empire, being in dire need of the aid and support of Great Britain, sold the Greek big island to the British. Great Britain, which took possession of the Island with relatively great ease, certainly has many reasons for and abundant interests in this conquest.
As far as the wretched Cypriots were concerned, which of course were not asked at all about this transmission, they initially viewed this event with joy and optimism. The delight and hope of the Greek-Cypriots for a better tomorrow and for the much desired union with the Greek motherland was clearly expressed through Bishop of Kition, Kyprianos Economides, and Archbishop Sofronios, when in July of 1878 they were welcoming the first British Governor of the island. Unfortunately these hopes were soon disproved and the wretched Cypriots understood -quite early -that the conquest by the British meant the beginning of new ordeals for the land.
Period of Independence (1960 -- today).
With the end of the struggle for liberation
of the Cypriot people in 1959 and the sign up of the
Zurich - London accord, Cyprus gains its independence
and the Republic of Cyprus is established in 1960.
 |
| The Prior Archimandrite
Athanasios |
For the first time after eight whole
centuries, Cyprus gained its freedom. The -small in
number -order of the Monastery, with the guidance of
Gerontas Germanos , continues "witnessing the Lord"
despite the hardships they dealt with due to lack of
men.
The fall of the great rock in the east end of the Monastery (1963) and the repair operations from the Antiquities Department in various segments of the Monastery were significant events.
Widening of the old, narrow road between Agia Varvara and Stavrovouni and its asphalt paving is done in 1979--80.
In 1976 the fathers of the historical Monastery of Apostle Varnavas, after the known catastrophic consequences of the Turkish invasion and being chased away by Attila (the occupation military forces), find refuge in the Stavrovouni Monastery. In 1982 the sudden death of Gerontas Germanos plunges the monastic fraternity into heavy mourning and creates a void that's hard to fill.
In that same year, through a common vote by the fraternity and the consent of the Metropolitan Bishop of Kition, Chrysostomos, Archimandrite (Dean) Athanasios is enthroned in the Monastery as the new prior.
Since the beginning of his term and because of the order's steady growth, he provided for and supported the construction of new premises in the Monastery.
Until 1983 the Monastery did not have a connection via telephone line and no electricity either. So he provided for the supply of a telephone network and electric power. Through the supply of electric power it was made possible to also provide water through a drill in the Monastery. The water supply has solved several problems and has aided the realisation of construction operation.
Under the guidance of Prior Athanasios, the 25 members of the Monastery's fraternity are struggling there best for the achievement of the monastic ideal, having the sense of responsibility toward the valuable, spiritual heritage of the previous fathers.
The Monastery of Stavrovouni is parochial and ecclesiastically it comes under the Holy See of Kition.
 |
Crossed pine-tree |
|
Agia Eleni |
|