Mor Gabriel Monastery

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The prominent towers of Deyrulumur Monastery
The functional main accommodation block of the Deyrulumur Monastery, emphasising its role as a working community
Star symbol in the Mor Gabriel monastery, which later was added on the Assyrian flag.

Deyrulumur Monastery (also known as Dayro d-Mor Gabriel; ) (Aramaic: ܕܝܪܐ ܕܡܪܝ ܓܒܪܐܝܠ; The Monastery of St. Gabriel) is the oldest surviving Syriac Orthodox monastery in the world. It is located on the Tur Abdin plateau near Midyat in the Mardin Province in Southeastern Turkey, the motherland of the Assyrian/Syriac people.[1]

Founded in 397, Deyrulumur is the most vital Syriac Orthodox monastery in Turkey, with around fifteen nuns and two monks occupying separate wings, as well as a fluctuating number of local lay workers and guests from overseas. It is also the seat of the metropolitan bishop of Tur Abdin.

Deyrulumur is a working community set amongst gardens and orchards, and somewhat disfigured by 1960s residential accommodation. The monastery's primary purpose is to keep Syriac Orthodox Christianity alive in the land of its birth by providing schooling, ordination of native-born monks. On occasions it has provided physical protection to the Christian population.

Deyrulumur is open to visitors, and it is possible to stay with permission, but is closed, firmly, after dark.

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Coordinates: 37°19′18.4″N 41°32′18.6″E / 37.321778°N 41.5385°E / 37.321778; 41.5385

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