
PANAGIA SOUMELA
PONTOS AND PONTIANS
By
GEORGE DION. DRAGAS, DD PhD
Protopresbyter
Prolegomena. September is a month embroidered with many particularly important
feasts, as indeed is the case with all the months of the ecclesiastical year.
If we cast a glance at the Calendar of the Metropolis of Boston we shall see
that these particularly important feasts are notified by a proceeding cross and
bold letters. Among these feasts the one that appears to be most important is
written in capitals, “The Elevation of
the Holy Cross” (Sept. 14). This is due to the fact that this feast,
like the similar feasts that relate to the “Holy Cross” in the ecclesiastical
calendar of our Church (i.e. March 6, the 3rd Sunday in Lent, May 7 and August
1) is considered to be a royal feast because it is directly related to the
person of our Lord Jesus Christ.
In the second place, so to speak, we find
in the calendar two feasts that relate to the Blessed Virgin Mary, “The Birth
of the Theotokos” (Sept. 8) and “The feast of the Panagia Myrtidiotissa. The
first celebrates the miraculous birth of the Panagia and the second the
discovery of Panagia’s holy icon in a forest of myrtles in the island of Kythera (hence the title
“Myrtidiotissa,” that is, “of the Myrtles” (Sept. 24) and is today kept in a
Monastery in Chios (in the area of Brodathes) that bears its name. In our tradition the
Panagia has numberless names because she is associated with many local and
miraculous icons that have transmitted the grace of Christ to the believers.
Such an icon is that of Panagia Soumela, an exact copy of which (one of three)
is kept in our parish. Since, then, Panagia has an eminent place in this
month’s feasts and because there is in our church the sacred jewel of her icon
of Soumela this years September article will be dedicated to this miraculous
icon. The original icon is kept in a monastery in Macedonia that
bears its name, but it came from the famous Monastery of Soumela in Pontos of
Asia Minor. The fact that there is an exact copy of it at St. John’s, where
there is also a sizeable Greek Pontian community, provides the opportunity to
remind all of certain basic facts regarding the icon of Panagia Soumela and of
Pontos and the Greek Pontians. The Greek Pontians as a heroic group of Hellenism
have achieved great things in history and continue with the rest of the
Hellenes to preserve their heritage not only in Greece but also here in America
and in every other corner of the earth where they have been dispersed and
survive by divine providence.
Panagia Soumela. According
to church tradition the icon of Panagia Soumela took its name from the
Monastery of Soumela in Pontos of Asia Minor. The name “Soumela” comes from
“Stou Mela”, i.e. “at the mount Melas” and consequently signifies a particular locality in Pontos. The icon
of Panagia that bears the name of this historic Monastery had been kept there
for centuries. Yet, according to ancient tradition, it was more ancient than
the Monastery. It was painted by St Luke the Evangelist and was originally kept
in Athens being called “Atheniotissa.” It was brought to Pontos for the sake of
safe keeping by two monks who are also said to be the founders of the Monastery
of Soumela, St. Barnabas and St. Sophronios and hence its new name.
There are two views concerning the time of
this event. In the first view it occurred in the 4th century. In the second
view it happened in the 10th or 9th century. Recently a compromise has been
propounded. This icon of St. Luke was kept in the Monastery of Osios Lukas in
Biotia. It was carried to Athens by Ananias, the student of Osios Lukas, after the death of his
teacher. Then later, when the Saracenes destroyed the city of Athens in the 10th (or
9th) century the holy monks Barnabas and Sophronios brought the icon to the
Monastery of Soumela in Pontos for safe keeping.
The Monastery of Soumela, which had been
founded in the 4th century by a Pontian Monk Christopher of Trepizond, suffered
destructions and renovations through the long and turbulent history of Pontos,
but the icon of Panagia remained intact. The heyday of the Monastery was in the
era of the Byzantine empire of Trepizond, when it became the spiritual center of Orthodox
Hellenism (see the historical section below) acquiring special privileges from
the Komnenoi emperors. These privileges were preserved during the Turkish
occupation by means of firmans granted by the Sultans and thus at that time
also it stood as a notable center of Hellenic paideia for the enslaved
Christian nation.
During the First World War the Monastery
was destroyed, but the holy icon of Panagia remained intact.When in 1922 the
Greek Pontians were violently expelled from Pontos the monks hifd the icon with
other valuable vessels in the rocks of mount Mela. Later on the Turks allowed,
following conversations of the governments of Greece and Turkey (Benizelos and
Inonou), the monk Ambrosios to visit the ruined monastery of Soumela and
retrieve the holy icon and the rest of church valuables and bring them to Athens. In 1951, the holy
icon of Panagia Soumela, that had been kept in the Byzantine Museum of Athens,
was transferred to the new Monastery of Soumela that was constructed on one of
the slops of mount Bermion of Macedonia where it is kept today.
As we noted above, one of the three equally historical exact copies of
the original icon of Panagia Soumela is kept in our parish which bears the name
of St. John the Baptist. This alone is an amazing fact, if one bears in mind that
the original Monastery of Soumela in Pontos had been constructed in the 4th
century with the assistance of an older neighboring Monastery that ore the name
of John the Forerunner and Baptist.
Pontos and Pontians. The history of Pontos and the Pontians can be subdivided into five
main periods as follows: a) the Greek-Persian, b) the Roman-Greek, c) the
Greco-Roman or Byzantine, d) the Turkish occupation and e) the Pontian
Diaspora.
A) The First
Greek-Persian Period (6th-1st c. B.C.) begins around
600 B.C. when Greek immigrants settled in the coastal region of Cappadocia and
founded important Greek cities, which became the starting point for the
Hellenization of the Barbarian indigenous tribes of that region and their entry
into civilization –such were the Chalyves, Mossynoikoi, Makrones, Tzanoi or
Skythians, Kerkites, Taouchoi, Kurds, Kolchians, Abasgians, Tibarians,
Paphlagonians, etc. These Hellenic Pontian cities included Sinope, Amisos,
Kotyora, Kerasous, Trapezous (Trepizond), etc. All of them became strong
centers that ruled the surrounding regions, liberating them from the feudal
suzerainty of the Persians.
There was, of course, a prehistory of
Hellenic presence in the Pontian region, which is connected with the known
mythology about Frixos and Helle and the legend of Argonauts and the Golden
Fleece. There was also the epic history of the Myriad of Greek soldiers with
Xenophon who passed through the Greek cities of Pontos in 400 B.C. (the
Gymnias, Trapezous, Kerasous, Kotyora, Sinope, Herakleia etc.) and is described
in Xenophon’s Anabasis.
The first independent Pontian king- dom
was founded by Mithridates I (337-302) who delivered the land from Persia and
wedded the Persian with the Hellenic civilization that had been introduced into
the region by the Greeks. The successors of this king extended his program of
Hellenization and the borders of this kingdom by annexing other neighboring
lands. Mithridates II (302-266 B.C.) annexed Cappadocia and Paphlagonia and transferred the capital of the Pontian kingdom
from Amaseia to Sinope. Mithridates III (255-222 B.C.) married the daughter of
Seleucid, Alexander’s General and ruler of Syria. The
daughter of Mithridates IV (222-184 B.C.) became queen of Syria through marrying
Antiochos, another General of Alexander and ruler of Syria. The
Pontian kingdom enjoyed its greatest expansion and glory under Mithridates VI
Eupator (160-63 B.C.), following two victorious wars against the Romans.
Finally, however, the Romans subdued Mithridates and his kingdom in a third
war.
B) The Second
Roman-Greek Period (1st c. B.C. – 4th c. A.D.) begins
in 64 B.C. when Pompey conquered the kingdom of Pontos. Pompey
reorganized the kingdom by dividing it into two parts, the Western which
included Galatia and was named Galatian Pontos, and the Eastern which included Bithynia and
was named Polemoniakos Pontos (from king Polemon). Another successful action of
Pompey was the creation of new cities in the interior, such as Nikopolis,
Pompeioupolis, Diospolis, Magnopolis, etc. Further administrative arrangements
were made by Pompey’s successors.
In 48 B.C. Pharnakes, the son of
Mithridates VI tried to revive the Greco-Persian domination in the region but
without results and was defeated by Caesar. In 39 B.C., however, the Roman
Anthony entrusted the administration of the old Pontian kingdom to Darius, the
grand-son of Mithridates VI. Since then a number of Pontian kings continued to
administer the kingdom for the Romans, among whom we find Polemon I and Polemon
II. This lasted until 64 A.D., when Eastern
Pontos was united with the Western to form
one Roman province that was named Mesogeiakos Pontos in 166 A.D. Later on the
Roman Emperor Diocletian (284-305 A.D.) granted Pontos independent status and
subdivid- ed it into three eparchies, Diospontos, Polemoniakos and Lesser
Armenia.
This period of the Roman domination
enhanced even more the Pontian Hellenism, and it can rightly be called
Roman-Greek. At the same time this is a period of Christianization of the Greek
Pontiac population and the rise of great church Fathers, such as Gregory of
Neocaesarea, who wedded the Christian faith with Hellenism and unified the
peoples of Pontos on this basis, contributing to the creation of a new
political and religious establishment, which is called Greco-Roman or
Byzantine.
C) The Third Graeco-Roman or Byzantine Period (4th-15th
c. A.D.) is the greatest and brightest in Pontian
history. In the proto-Byzantine era, which begins with Constantine the Great,
Pontos became a Perfecture with Caesarea of Cappadocia as its capital and took
the name Helenopontos (from St. Helen). The city of Caesarea had become the center of a
new Christian-ized Hellenism, which transmitted Christianity to Armenia and the wider region
in the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea.
In 325 several Pontian Bishops
participated at the first Ecumenical Synod of Nicaea, such as Domnos of
Trapezous and the Bishops of Amaseia, Komana, Zelon, Neocaesarea and Pityous.
In 381 at the second Ecumenical Synod of Constantinople, it was St. Basil of Caesarea’s theology that triumphed,
while St. Gregory the Theologian was the president and other Pontian Bishops
participated such as St. Gregory of Nyssa. At the end of the 4th century
(380-386) the great Monastery of Panagia Soumela was established on the mountain of Melas in the region
of Trapezous. This great monastery was destroyed in the 6th century and was
restored in 644. It became famous since the 9th century, when the two Athenian
monks Sophronios and Barnabas brought to it the miraculous icon of the Panagia
Atheniotissa – a work of St. Luke. This holy icon survived the destruction of
the Monastery in the 20th c., and rests today in the new Panagia Soumela
Monastery on a slope of mount Vermion near Kastania of Beroia in Northern
Greece.
The 4th c. was one of the most glorious
periods of Pontian history thanks to the great Fathers of the Church who
appeared in the Church there, such as St. Basil the Great, St. Gregory the
Theologian, St. Gregory of Nyssa and a multitude of fathers and saints. These
Fathers enlightened the entire Christian world and left a lasting legacy of
orthodox faith. In the 5th c. the Pontian bishop Atarvios presided at the
fourth Ecumenical Synod of Chalcedon (451), and was escorted by many other
Pontian bishops. The celebrated Canon 28 of this Synod placed the Pontian
Perfecture under the jurisdiction of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, where
it remained until recent times.
From the 5th to the 7th century the region
of Pontos suffered from Persian invasions which were intercepted by the Byzantine
armies of Justinian and Herakleios. Then in the 8th c. the Arab invaders
appeared on the scene and that was the time when Pontos, like the other regions
of Asia Minor,
was organized on the basis of autonomous Roman Themes, e.g. Koloneia,
Armeniacum, Chaldia, etc., which sustained their own armies and restrained the
Arabs and later on (11th c. onwards) the Turks. In the later Byzantine era the
Pontian region brought forth great leaders such as the Komnenian dynasty of
emperors, the Gavras leaders and many others. When Constantinople was sacked by
the papal Western Crusaders in 1204 Alexios III Komnenos established an
autonomous Byzantine empire in Pontos with Trapezous (Trebizond) as its capital, in which
20 kings reigned during its life time (1204-1461). At that time the Archbishop
of Trapezous received the title All-Holiness as the Patriarch of
Constantinople. This empire was the last to fall to the Turks (1461) having
outlived the fall of Constantinople (1453).
The glorious Byzantine period of the
Pontian history raised great figures in the church and in the empire of Constantinople. In the middle
Byzantine era, several Metropolitans from Pontos became prominent, especially
those of Trapezous, who even presided over Ecumenical Synods. In the 9th/10th
c. we see St. Nikon Metanoeitai and St. Athanasios the Athonite, founder of the
Great Lavra; in the 11th c. the great Patriarch Ioannis Xiphilinos. In the
later Byzantine era there are new eminent figures; in the 14th c. George
Trapezountios and in the 15th c., the erudite Bessarion of Nicaea. The
Monasteries, the churches, the icons, the saints of Byzantine Pontos constitute
one of the greatest treasures of the Byzantium and the Orthodox Church.
d) The Fourth
Period of the Turkish occupation (15th-20th c. AD) is
a period of persecutions and gradual decline through different stages, but also
witnessed times of glory. The first
stage (15th-16th century) was marked by oppression. As the last one to
submit to the Turkish invaders, the region of Pontos paid dearly by suffering
great decimation. The land was mercilessly ruined. Violent persecutions forced
many to become Islamized or to leave the country. In spite of this, the heroic
people of Pontos survived the ordeal. Their vigor and hard work enabled them to
regroup and enter into a reconstructive second
stage (end of the 16th and 17th c.) which put them above their local
Turkish land-lords to the point that they could no longer be easily controlled.
This, unfortunately, gave rise to a third
stage of new persecutions. It was the time when many of the Pontians
withdrew to the mountains, having left the lowlands and costal lands, or
immigrated beyond Pontos to Northern
territories as many had done
during the past stages. On the mountains of Pontos a new fourth stage of reconstruction began. Here the Pontians took over
the old steel mines and became masters of steelworks that enabled them to rise
once again above the Turks. Thus in the 18th century the Greek Pontian populace
of the mountainous regions tripled! The crisis came when the steelworks came to
an end, whereupon a fifth stage of
new trials dawned. Many took the road to exile and departed northwards to Russia. The
population diminished considerably, but the ethnic Pontian consciousness was
retained. Even those who were forced to accept Islam remained secretly
Christians (crypto-Christians), faithful to the religious convictions of their
ancestors.
What should be stressed here is the
attachment of the Pontians of this period to the Greek language and Christian
education. The “Tutorial School” of Trapezous, which in 1683 the great Pontian teacher Sevastos
Kyminites (from Kymina) founded, became most renowned. The same happened with
the Hellenic Academy in Bucharest that he also founded by the above to support the same cause. This
period saw many Pontian Greek teachers traveling all over the Turkish occupied
territories and spreading Greek education and Christian paideia. In 1722 there
were important Greek schools in Argyroupolis (Chaldia), Sinope, Theodosioupolis,
Soumela and Kerasous. Among the most renowned leaders of the Greeks were the
Pontian families of Hypselantes and Mourouzes who played important leadership
roles in the survival and revival of the Greek Orthodox nation.
In the 19th century the Greek Pontians had
ameliorated their situation. The Russo-Turkish war of 1828 was beneficial to
them. Some 90.000 Pontians had relocated to Argyroupolis (Chaldia) which was
under Russian control. Thus when the “Hatti Humayun” was signed (1856) the Pontians
regained their religious freedom. Some 20.000 crypto-Christians returned at
that time to the Orthodox Church with the help of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.
Countless schools churches and villages were rebuilt and there was generally an
amazing revival of the Greek Christian population of Pontos. Trade to and from Russia
increased and the new prospects that had been created led to a considerable
prosperity among the Pontian communities. As a result of these changes the
population increased. In 1865 the Greek speaking Pontians were estimated to be
330.000 (there were as many Turkish speaking), while in 1913 they reached
697.000. This sixth stage of
renaissance was decisively and tragically interrupted at the dawn of the 20th
c. through the 1st World War and the Asia Minor Disaster of 1922. The drafting
of Pontians by the Turkish Army for the 1st WW between 1914 and 1918 displaced
235.000 Pontians, while some 80.000 escaped to Russia. The
final blow came in 1922 when, without any warning, the Pontians were persecuted
and expelled from their ancestral lands and escaped to Greece and the
West as refugees.
E) The Fifth Period of
Pontian Diaspora (1922-the Present) is the current
period, when the Pontians have been seeking to establish new home-lands. In Greece and in
the West, they have revealed once again their ability to survive and their
indomitable character which is rooted in the Greek Orthodox faith and heritage.
Here in America, where people of all backgrounds enjoy many freedoms and opportunities
all Pontians are obliged, along with the entire Greek homogeneia, to continue
the work that their heroic and indefatigable ancestors have assigned to them.
They have a special obligation, again with all their fellow Greek and other
ethic Orthodox Americans, to continue the work that Christ has entrusted to
them when he included them among the first heralds of the Gospel of
reconciliation and salvation of the world.
The Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, with its Metropolises, under the aegis
of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople guarantees the continuous
progress of all the Pontians of America along with the rest of the Greek
Orthodox and other Orthodox brothers.
The
parish of St. John the Baptist with its inestimable icon of Panagia Soumela is something
special that all who belong to it or have been associated with it are obliged
to maintain in gratitude to the Lord of Glory who has granted them such a
special blessing.
September of 2005 opens a new liturgical
year in which our parish completes 80 years of existence since its foundation.
The church council of our community will organize celebrations for this
anniversary in February 2006. Let us support generously the fund raising of our
Parish so that we may succeed in carry out all our obligations entrusted to us
by Christ the Lord and our Lady Panagia Theotokos.