Lakkoskiti
Lakkoskiti is the short name of a small monastic village of no more than 15 houses consisting of the idiorrhythmic skete of Agiou Dimitriou tou Lakkou. It is situated in the north foothills of Mount Athos, in Greece, in the Morfonou River valley and surrounded by a forest of chestnut trees. The summit of Antiathonas is located southwest of the skete. Lakkoskiti is inhabited by Romanian monks.
Lakkoskiti belongs to Agiou Pavlou Monastery. Spiritually, through its mother monastery, and like the entire Athos peninsula, it is under the jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.
History
Very little is known about the history of Romanian Lakkoskiti. Monks were living there since the 10th century, belonging to the old Amalfinon Monastery which was soon abandoned and ruined, after the Schism between Eastern Orthodox and Western Roman Catholic Church in 1054 AD. In the 14th century some Serbs borrowed money from Vatopediou Monastery to revive the place but failed to pay it back. So later Vatopediou Monastery, after a deal with Agiou Pavlou Monastery, exchanged the land with other properties. Inscriptions of 1606 AD show that there were Slavs living there while in 1754 the monks are documented as Moldavians. In 1760, Moldavian monk Daniel from Neamț Monastery organized it as Skete.After the Greek Revolution of 1821 Moldavians and Wallachians stopped coming to Greece, as the situation was dangerous, while older monks returned home or died. Later new monks started coming again and Lakkoskiti received up to 90 monks in 24 huts. A new wider Kyriako of Saint Demetrios was built on the expenses of monk Ioustinos, along with a second church at the cemetery and a water-mill. Although receiving ongoing financial assistance from their governments, the Moldavian and Wallachian monks managed to live in peace and harmony without causing any political or ethnic unrest.
Lakkoskiti, being in a place hardly approachable, declined again slowly. In mid 1990s, when only one old monk was left, a new effort started with a new brotherhood, coming partially from the Romanian coenobitic Timiou Prodromou Skete and partially from Romania. Kyriakon and the huts were slowly rebuilt, the forest dirtroad was improved and more monks were added, under the guidance of geron Stefanos. As Lakkoskiti is far from the main roads, pilgrims-visitors are rare and the Romanian monks are really very attentive to them.
List of cells
Some cells in the main area of the skete include:- Kyriakon of Saint Demetrius
- Cell of the Annunciation
- Cell of the Entrance of the Theotokos
- Cell of the Life-Giving Spring
- Cell of All Athonite Saints
- Cell of Saint Anthony the Great
- Cell of the Protection of the Theotokos
- Cell of Saint Nicholas
- Cell of the Dormition of the Theotokos
- Cell of the Ascension of the Lord
- Cell of Saint Artemios
- Cell of the Holy Archangels
- Cell of the Nativity of the Theotokos
- Cell of Prophet Elijah
- Cell of the Presentation of Christ