Brontochion Monastery


Brontochion Monastery is a former Eastern Orthodox monastery, located in Mystras, in the Peloponnese region of Greece.
The former monastery is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Mystras, inscribed in 1989.

Overview

The abbot Pachomius incorporated into the monastery the small church of the Hodegetria, or "Aphentikon", as the monastery's katholikon. The church was reconstructed and completed around 1310, with some scholars giving 1308-1312 as the construction dates and others 1310–1322. The despot Theodore I Palaiologos, who died in 1407, is buried in the church.
The Hodegetria Church is the first example of what's called the "Mystras type" design. The lower floor is a three-aisled basilica, whereas above is a traditional Byzantine cross-in-square church plan. The cross-in-square, five-domed gallery is encircled by a portico that has a belfry. There are also features more typical of Constantinople, such as the use of blind arches.
On the lower level the walls are covered by marble revetment, a luxurious feature, and there is also a surviving fresco of the Virgin Mary as Zoodochos Pege in the lunette above the so-called royal door.
During Ottoman rule, the monastery was converted into a mosque.