Mor Dimet Church | |
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Mor Dimet Kilisesi | |
ܥܝܬܐ ܕ ܡܪ | |
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37°30′47″N 41°32′14″E / 37.51314°N 41.53717°E | |
Location | İzbırak |
Country | Turkey |
Language(s) | Syriac language |
Denomination | Syriac Orthodox |
History | |
Status | Church |
Dedication | Saint Dimet |
Architecture | |
Completed | Early Christianity |
Administration | |
District | Midyat |
Province | Mardin |
The Mor Dimet Church ( Turkish: Mor Dimet Kilisesi, Syriac: ܥܝܬܐ ܕ ܡܪ, romanized: ʿyta d mr) is a Syriac Orthodox church in Midyat, Mardin Province, southeastern Turkey. The Early Christianity church was restored, and reopened in 2021. [1]
The Mor Dimet Church is a Syriac Orthodox church built in Early Christianity and located at the village (administratively: a neighborhood) of İzbırak (in Syriac: Zāz) in Midyat district, Mardin Province, southeastern Turkey.
Once, around one hundred Assyrian Turkish families lived in the village. [1] In the early 1990s, the Assyrians of the last Zaz village in the Tur Abdin region left their village due to terrorist attacks. [2] Following the emigration of the villagers to Europe and the United States, [3] the village turned into a ghost town in 1993. [2] A priest and a nun have been living in the church for years, and protected the village. In 2001, a house and a bell tower were built in the church courtyard. The government decided the demolition of these additional structures in 2012. [3]
The Assyrians, who returned home when peace was established in the region, started a project for the restoration of the church. After two years of work, the church was reopened for worship on 26 September 2021. [1] [2] A ceremonial worship took place on 11 October 2021 attended by the Midyat Metropolit and guest priests from various European countries. [1]
There are various dates about when the church was built. Some sources give the date of completion as the 4th century, [1] the 5th century, the time when the Assyrians accepted Christianity, [3] or 7th century. [4]
Gabriel Rabo from the University of Göttingen in Germany, a former village resident, states that "there are also Akkadian cuneiform reliefs on the church building's outer walls, dating back to pre-Christian times. The name of Zaz village was mentioned as 'Zazabukha' in other tablets, and that this region was used as a military headquarters in a tablet dating back to 879 BC." [3]