Mount Athos (Agion Oros) is the
last prong and the most beautiful of all. Civilization has not intruded
into the Holly Mountain, which is inhabited solely by monks. Rising
majestically out of the sea to a height of 2,033 m, Athos is covered
with virgin forests; its physical beauty is almost overwhelming.
The magnificent peninsula has been the sole province of men dedicated
to the workship of God and the Virgin for well over a thousand years.
In 885, the Byzantine emperor Basil I, proclaimed it the exclusive
domain of monks and hermits.
In 963, the first organized monastery was founded. A century later
it was decreed that "no smooth faced person" be permitted
to violate its sanctity. This prohibition is still enforced, and
no female may set foot on Mt. Athos. Centuries of isolation and
devotion to the Orthodox religion have endowed the Holy Mountain
with a unique mystical atmosphere.
In its prime, in the 15th century, Athos boasted 40 monasteries
and about 40,000 monks. Nowadays the number of functioning monasteries
has dwindled to 20 with a population of approximately 1,700 brethren.
Surrounded by an incalculable wealth of ecclesiastical treasures,
rare icons and libraries stocked with precious manuscripts, they
live simply according to a strict regime of prayer and labor untouched
by modern frivolities. Men wishing to visit the Holy Mountain are
admitted by special permit only. The rest must be content to end
their journey at Ouranoupolis, Heaven's City, where they can be
consoled with a cruise around the extraordinary peninsula. Known
for its aquamarine waters and delightful beaches, Ouranoupolis may
be as close to paradise as we will ever get.
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