Maramures, Moldavia and Transylvania are regions which have retained an almost medieval simplicity and beauty. In secluded valleys bordered by the Carpathian Mountains and shaded by clouds of plum blossom lie villages with wooden churches and houses where ancient rituals, festivities, clothes and crafts are cherished. To educate this illiterate world the outer walls of late medieval monastic churches were covered with colourful religious frescoes. Here you can read excerpts of this feature.
[ROMANIA.MOLDAVIA 23.928] The siege of Constantinople.
Moldovita Monastery was founded as a stronghold to resist the Ottoman advance after the fall of Constantinople in 1453. To raise morale this fresco shows an earlier failed siege of the city where the enemy is detered with the help of miraculous icons being paraded around the ramparts. Photo Mick Palarczyk.
[ROMANIA.MOLDAVIA 23.928] The siege of Constantinople.
Moldovita Monastery was founded as a stronghold to resist the Ottoman advance after the fall of Constantinople in 1453. To raise morale this fresco shows an earlier failed siege of the city where the enemy is detered with the help of miraculous icons being paraded around the ramparts. Photo Mick Palarczyk.
All rights reserved. No permission for reproduction, including copying or saving of digital image files or text, is granted without prior written authorisation from the author.