New Athos ( , Afon
Tshyts, , Akhali Athoni, , Novyy Afon) is a
town in the Gudauta
raion of Abkhazia
, the
breakaway republic of Georgia
, situated
some 22 km from Sukhumi
by the
shores of the Black
Sea
. The town was previously known under the
names Nikopol, Acheisos, Anakopia, Nikopia, Nikofia, Nikopsis,
Absara, Psyrtskha.
New Athos Cave is
one of the tourist attractions of Abkhazia.
History
A large ancient port town of
Anacopia was recorded
there in the 3rd century. Its ruins are still visible.
In the 5th century,
Georgians built a fortress on the top of
the Iverian
Mountain
.
Anacopia was the capital of the Abkhazian princedom in the orbit of
the
Byzantine Empire and then of
the
Abkhazian Kingdom after the
Abkhazian
archon Leon II declared himself a king in the
late 8th century.
Later, the capital was moved to Kutaisi
.
Anacopia
was ceded to Byzantine Empire by
Demetre in 1033 but was
retaken by Georgians in 1072 among the other territories Georgia
gained as a result of the Empire's defeat at Manzikert
at the hands of Seljuks.
Monastery
In 1874
Russian monks from the overcrowded Rossikon
Monastery on
Mount Athos arrived to the Caucasus in order to find a place for possible
resettlement. They feared that the
Ottoman Empire would oust the Russians from
Athos after the outbreak of the
impending Russo-Turkish
War.
They selected Psyrtskha, and the Neo-Byzantine New Athos Monastery
, dedicated to St. Simon the Canaanite, was
constructed there in the 1880s with funds provided by Tsar Alexander III
of Russia. Eventually Russian monks were permitted to
stay in the "old" Athos, and the New Athos monastery had much less
occupancy than anticipated.
In 1924, during the Soviet persecution of religion, the monastery
was closed. It was later used as a storage facility, tourist base,
hospital and museum. Its return to the Orthodox Church began in
1994, after the end of the war.

Psyrtskha railway station
The scenic setting of the New Athos monastery by the sea has made
it a popular destination with Russian tourists visiting
Abkhazia.
See also
References
- Georgia in Antiquity: A History of Colchis and Transcaucasian
Iberia, by David Braund, p. 54