The Nechit Monastery
The Nechit Monastery

The Nechit Monastery

COUNTY ATTRACTIONS

About

What is known today as the Nechit Monastery was, at the beginning, a place of retreat for monks who wanted to perfect their union with Christ.

As the name suggests, the first inhabitant of these lands was Nichita the Hermit. He was followed by a host of other hermits whose names inspired the entire toponymy of the place: Samson's stream, Jacob's river, the springs of Saint Chiriac.

Almost 800 years later, God's providence fulfills with the old Zenovie Ghidescu the prophecy of his great-grandmother: "If something happens to you, go to the foundation of our nation, to Nechit." And so we get a little closer to the way the monastery looks today...

Similar Suggestions

COUNTY ATTRACTIONS
Open
The "Alexandru Vlahuță" house in Agapia is a small memorial museum established in the house where the writer Alexandru Vlahuță lived (1858-1919). The house was built of wood in 1885, near the Agapia Monastery (Neamț County). The Mitropoly of Moldavia and Suceava carried out consolidation and restoration works of the house where the writer lived. In 1963, a memorial exhibition was organized in this house that includes original furniture and personal items of the Vlahuță family, as well as photographies, letters and books that reveal significant aspects of the life and work of the well-known writer. Currently, literary gatherings are organized on the porch of the house.
594, Agapia 617010, Romania
COUNTY ATTRACTIONS Most popular locations
5.0 1 review
The monastery is located on the valley of the stream Agapia and is surrounded everyway by high mountains and secular forests and on the bottom by orchard, flowers gardens that adorn nuns yards and houses creating a unique landscape. Agapia Monastery is adorned with painted saints made by Nicolae Grigorescu between years 1858-1861.
DN15F, Agapia 617010, Romania
COUNTY ATTRACTIONS Most popular locations
5.0 2 reviews
It is the biggest nuns monastery from Romania, founded by nun Olimpiada in year 1785.
Văratec 617013, Romania