翻訳と辞書 ・ Church of St Michael, Tilehurst ・ Church of St Morwenna and St John the Baptist, Morwenstow ・ Church of St Nicholas and St Peter ad Vincula, Curdworth ・ Church of St Nicholas and the Blessed Virgin Mary, Stowey ・ Church of St Nicholas of Myra Without, Dublin (Roman Catholic) ・ Church of St Nicholas Without, Dublin (Church of Ireland) ・ Church of St Nicholas, Barton le Clay ・ Church of St Nicholas, Bathampton ・ Church of St Nicholas, Bradfield ・ Church of St Nicholas, Brushford ・ Church of St Nicholas, Burnage ・ Church of St Nicholas, Charlwood ・ Church of St Nicholas, Combe St Nicholas ・ Church of St Nicholas, Hulcote, Bedfordshire ・ Church of St Nicholas, Mavesyn Ridware ・ Church of St Nicholas, Melnik ・ Church of St Nicholas, Norton ・ Church of St Nicholas, Sapareva Banya ・ Church of St Nicholas, Siġġiewi ・ Church of St Nicholas, Swineshead, Bedfordshire ・ Church of St Nicholas, Tingrith ・ Church of St Nicholas, Valletta ・ Church of St Nicholas, Vukovo ・ Church of St Nicholas, West Pennard ・ Church of St Nicholas, Wilden, Bedfordshire ・ Church of St Nicholas, Withycombe ・ Church of St Nikola (Dobrelja) ・ Church of St Nonna ・ Church of St Nonna, Bradstone ・ Church of St Olaf, Wasdale
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Church of St Nicholas, Melnik : ウィキペディア英語版 | Church of St Nicholas, Melnik
The Church of St Nicholas ((ブルガリア語:църква „Свети Никола“), ''tsarkva „Sveti Nikola“'') is a partially preserved medieval Eastern Orthodox church in the town of Melnik in Blagoevgrad Province, southwestern Bulgaria. Dating to the late 12th century, it stands on top of an ancient Thracian sanctuary and a 5th-century basilica. In the Middle Ages, the church served as the cathedral of Melnik's bishop. The interior of the church features frescoes of rarely depicted scenes, as well as a 13th-century inscription. Its bell tower used to house one of the oldest extant church bells in Europe, discovered by archaeologists in the 2000s. ==History== The Church of St Nicholas lies on top of the eponymous hill of Sveti Nikola ("Saint Nicholas") just south of the town of Melnik. The church occupies a location which hosted other sacred buildings in Antiquity. A Thracian sanctuary devoted to the goddess Bendis, the Thracian variant of Artemis, stood at the place before a Christian basilica was built in the 5th century. However, the older church did not survive for long, as it was ruined by the end of the 6th century.〔 The Church of St Nicholas is generally dated to the late 12th century, a time when Melnik was ruled by both Byzantium and the Second Bulgarian Empire. There is a single opinion which links the building of the church with the rule of Prince Boris I of Bulgaria (r. 852–889) and the period shortly after the Christianization of Bulgaria, though the evidence for this is not accepted by most scholars. A second stage of construction followed in the first half of the 13th century, when the Church of St Nicholas was elevated to the seat of a bishop.〔〔 In order for the church to better fulfil that purpose, a fence and additional buildings were constructed around it to form a compound.〔 The church served as the town's cathedral until the construction of the similarly named Church of St Nicholas the Wonderworker in the 18th century. Although the medieval Church of St Nicholas was in use as late as the 19th century as a monastery church, it is only partially preserved today, with all but the eastern part entirely in ruins. After the Balkan Wars (1912–1913), Melnik was deserted by much of its population and the lack of maintenance resulted in the church's rapid structural decay.〔
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