Defensive arrangements in Coptic architecture
Alexandria Engineering Journal • 2011
Publication Information
Authors
Nelly Shafik Ramzy
Keywords
Coptic architecture;
Monasticism;
Keeps;
Monastic cells
Journal
Alexandria Engineering Journal
Publisher
Elsevier
Volume
50
Issue
3
Pages
257-268
publication.type
International
Paper Link
Open Link
Supplementary Materials
Not Available
Abstract
Roman persecution to Copts started as early as the first century. Even after Christianity had become official religion in Egypt, as they refused to espouse the Emperor’s sect.
Another critical relation was arising in Eastern and Western Deserts between the monks and the Bedouins, who started to regularly attack them.
For four centuries following the Arab conquest, Moslem rulers retained relatively peaceful relations with the Copts, but at the beginning of the second millennium, Copts started to live in some expectation of hostility, which periodically flared into violence.
Therefore Coptic architects developed peculiar religious architecture with exceptional defensive arrangements and this research is an attempt to overview those peculiar arrangements inside churches as well as in monasteries. It concluded that -unlike any other religious architecture- safekeeping was a determining factor in Coptic buildings’ design and …
Another critical relation was arising in Eastern and Western Deserts between the monks and the Bedouins, who started to regularly attack them.
For four centuries following the Arab conquest, Moslem rulers retained relatively peaceful relations with the Copts, but at the beginning of the second millennium, Copts started to live in some expectation of hostility, which periodically flared into violence.
Therefore Coptic architects developed peculiar religious architecture with exceptional defensive arrangements and this research is an attempt to overview those peculiar arrangements inside churches as well as in monasteries. It concluded that -unlike any other religious architecture- safekeeping was a determining factor in Coptic buildings’ design and …
Staff Members - Benha University