Origins A few years after the death of Saint Anthony, his followers settled around the place where the
hermit lived. The Monastery of Saint Anthony was built between 298 and 300 during the reign of
Constantius Chlorus. In the original settlement, his followers established only the most essential buildings. Isolation was stressed. They lived in solitary cells surrounding a communal worship center where they performed the
Divine Liturgy. They took their daily meals in a basic
refectory. As time passed, the focus on
asceticism diminished, and St. Anthony's followers began to develop closer relationships with one another in order to foster safety, convenience, and mutual fellowship. These Melkite monks then continued to oversee the monastery until the late 8th century. In 790 Coptic monks from the
Monastery of Saint Macarius the Great in the Desert of Scetis disguised themselves as Bedouins in an attempt to steal the earthly remains of
St. John the Short, who had lived and died in the Monastery of St. Anthony in the 5th century.
The Ethiopian Synaxarium describes how they deceived the Melkite monks to accomplish this task:
Peace and persecution (800–1300) Although the monastery of St. Anthony enjoyed relative peace and security in its remote area, there were short periods of intense persecution. The monastery itself was plundered a number of times by the Bedouins of the
Eastern Desert, who partly destroyed it in the 11th century. There was also a
rebellion by the
Kurds and the Turks during this time. When their leader
Nasir al-Dawla was defeated, the remains of his army invaded and pillaged the Monastery of St. Anthony as well as the nearby
Monastery of Saint Paul the Anchorite. The monastery was restored in the 12th century, and it flourished throughout the next few centuries. A fortress-like structure was also built around the monastery for protection from invaders.
Abu al-Makarim describes the unparalleled excellence of the monastery in the beginning of the 13th century:
Early European visitors (1300–1800) During the later
crusades, European priests and diplomats began to tour Egypt as a part of their pilgrimage to the
Holy Land.
Ludolph of Suchem, a parish priest in the
diocese of
Paderborn, mentions his visits to the “many cells and hermitages of holy fathers,” many of which live under St. Anthony. In his “Description of the Holy Land”, he describes the miraculous fountain of St. Anthony: “In this desert there is a place beneath an exceeding tall and narrow rock, wherein St. Anthony used to dwell, and from out of the rock there flows a stream for half a stone’s throw, until it is lost in the sand… this place is visited by many for devotions and pleasure, and also by the grace of God and in honor of St. Anthony many sicknesses are healed and driven away by the fountain.” In 1395, during the
Crusade of Nicopolis,
Ogier VIII d'Anglure journeyed to Egypt with several French
pilgrims. By the early 15th century, the monastery had become an established pilgrimage destination and it was commonplace for pilgrims to inscribe their name,
coat-of-arms, and date of arrival on the walls of the monastery. It then followed that Syrian monks began to occupy the monastery, and helped in the rebuilding of the monastery at the beginning of the 16th century. After the restoration of the monastery, Ethiopian and Egyptian monks co-inhabited the monastery for some time. However, the monastery slowly fell completely into ruin and the few monks that lived there greatly relied on the support from the nearby village of Bush. From then until the 19th century, there are various accounts of travelers who stopped by the monastery, but the monastery is only briefly mentioned in passing. It is known that
Franciscan missionaries sometimes used the monastery as a base to prepare missionaries in the 17th century. However, the monastery was in such disarray that it lacked even a door, and travelers had to enter via a rope and basket operated with a
pulley system.
Modern history (from 1900) Before the dawn of the 20th century, the only way to get to the monastery was by way of the monthly camel
caravans which brought in food and other necessities from the nearby village of Bush. A journey along the desert path that extended from Kuraymat, a city along the Nile in between
Beni Suef and
Helwan, to the monastery used to take three to four days. The monastery became much more accessible after the opening of the
Suez–
Ras Gharib Road in 1946, and can now be reached from Cairo in just five to six hours. During the first decade after construction, the number of foreigner visitors greatly increased, with about 370 visitors between 1953 and 1958. Since then, the monastery has become a more popular destination for Egyptians, offering Egyptian Christians religious retreats as well as family excursions. Now on holiday weekends there are typically more than a thousand visitors. ==Structure==