. . . "Ceased functioning as a monastery in 1840"@en . . . . "Monastero di Sant'Hakob di Akori"@it . "Northeastern slope of Mount Ararat"@en . . . . . "Saint Hakob of Akori monastery"@en . . . . . . . . . . "39.71891784667969"^^ . . . . . "Saint Hakob of Akori Monastery"@en . . "Saint Hakob of Akori Monastery"@en . "Das Kloster Sankt Hakob von Akori (armenisch \u0531\u056F\u0578\u057C\u056B\u056B \u054D\u0578\u0582\u0580\u0562 \u0540\u0561\u056F\u0578\u0562 \u057E\u0561\u0576\u0584, Akori Surb Hakob Vank) war ein mittelalterliches armenisches Kloster im s\u00FCd\u00F6stlichen Teil der Provinz I\u011Fd\u0131r in der heutigen T\u00FCrkei, das sich 4,7 km s\u00FCdwestlich von Akori (heute ) befand, einem Dorf am Nordosthang des Bergs Ararat."@de . . . "5583"^^ . "44.37341690063477"^^ . . "341"^^ . "Kloster Sankt Hakob von Akori"@de . . . . "275"^^ . . . "1011742071"^^ . "Church"@en . "275"^^ . "39.718916666666665 44.373416666666664" . "POINT(44.373416900635 39.71891784668)"^^ . . "32461662"^^ . . . . . . "Saint Hakob of Akori Monastery (Armenian: \u0531\u056F\u0578\u057C\u056B\u056B \u054D\u0578\u0582\u0580\u0562 \u0540\u0561\u056F\u0578\u0562 \u057E\u0561\u0576\u0584; pronounced Akori Surb Hakob Vank; also sometimes referred to as Saint James), was an Armenian monastery located in the southeastern part of the historic region of Surmali (today the I\u011Fd\u0131r Province of modern Turkey). The monastery was located 4.7 kilometers southwest of Akori, a village at the northeastern slope of Mount Ararat. Destroyed by an earthquake and avalanche in 1840, Akori was later rebuilt. It is known today as Yenido\u011Fan and remains a small Kurdish village. In 1829, Baltic German explorer Friedrich Parrot, Armenian writer Khachatur Abovian, and four others reached the top of Mount Ararat in the first recorded ascent in history. They used St. Hakob as their base."@en . "\u0531\u056F\u0578\u057C\u056B\u056B \u054D\u0578\u0582\u0580\u0562 \u0540\u0561\u056F\u0578\u0562 \u057E\u0561\u0576\u0584"@en . . . . . . . "--07-02"^^ . . . . . . . . "Saint Hakob of Akori Monastery (Armenian: \u0531\u056F\u0578\u057C\u056B\u056B \u054D\u0578\u0582\u0580\u0562 \u0540\u0561\u056F\u0578\u0562 \u057E\u0561\u0576\u0584; pronounced Akori Surb Hakob Vank; also sometimes referred to as Saint James), was an Armenian monastery located in the southeastern part of the historic region of Surmali (today the I\u011Fd\u0131r Province of modern Turkey). The monastery was located 4.7 kilometers southwest of Akori, a village at the northeastern slope of Mount Ararat. Destroyed by an earthquake and avalanche in 1840, Akori was later rebuilt. It is known today as Yenido\u011Fan and remains a small Kurdish village."@en . . . . . . . "\u0531\u056F\u0578\u057C\u056B\u056B \u054D\u0578\u0582\u0580\u0562 \u0540\u0561\u056F\u0578\u0562 \u057E\u0561\u0576\u0584"@en . . "Turkey"@en . . . . . . . . "Il monastero di Sant'Hakob di Akori (in armeno: \u0531\u056F\u0578\u057C\u056B\u056B \u054D\u0578\u0582\u0580\u0562 \u0540\u0561\u056F\u0578\u0562 \u057E\u0561\u0576\u0584?; pronunciato Akori Surb Hakob Vank; talvolta chiamato San Giacomo) \u00E8 stato un monastero armeno situato nella parte sud-orientale della storica regione di (oggi nella provincia di I\u011Fd\u0131r, in Turchia). Il monastero era situato a circa 4,7 chilometri a sud-ovest di Akori, un villaggio sito sul versante nord-orientale del monte Ararat, a circa 1700 m di altezza. Distrutto da un terremoto e da una conseguente valanga il 2 luglio 1840, Akori fu poi ricostruito, cosa che invece non accadde per il monastero, ed oggi \u00E8 un piccolo villaggio curdo conosciuto come , nell'odierno distretto di Aral\u0131k. Durante la prima ascesa del monte Ararat registrata dalla storia ed effettuata nel 1829 dall'esploratore baltico tedesco Friedrich Parrot, dallo scritto armeno Kha\u010Datur Abovjan e da altri quattro alpinisti, i sei scalatori utilizzarono proprio il monastero di Sant'Hakob come base."@it . . "Il monastero di Sant'Hakob di Akori (in armeno: \u0531\u056F\u0578\u057C\u056B\u056B \u054D\u0578\u0582\u0580\u0562 \u0540\u0561\u056F\u0578\u0562 \u057E\u0561\u0576\u0584?; pronunciato Akori Surb Hakob Vank; talvolta chiamato San Giacomo) \u00E8 stato un monastero armeno situato nella parte sud-orientale della storica regione di (oggi nella provincia di I\u011Fd\u0131r, in Turchia). Il monastero era situato a circa 4,7 chilometri a sud-ovest di Akori, un villaggio sito sul versante nord-orientale del monte Ararat, a circa 1700 m di altezza. Distrutto da un terremoto e da una conseguente valanga il 2 luglio 1840, Akori fu poi ricostruito, cosa che invece non accadde per il monastero, ed oggi \u00E8 un piccolo villaggio curdo conosciuto come , nell'odierno distretto di Aral\u0131k."@it . "Turkey"@en . . . "Das Kloster Sankt Hakob von Akori (armenisch \u0531\u056F\u0578\u057C\u056B\u056B \u054D\u0578\u0582\u0580\u0562 \u0540\u0561\u056F\u0578\u0562 \u057E\u0561\u0576\u0584, Akori Surb Hakob Vank) war ein mittelalterliches armenisches Kloster im s\u00FCd\u00F6stlichen Teil der Provinz I\u011Fd\u0131r in der heutigen T\u00FCrkei, das sich 4,7 km s\u00FCdwestlich von Akori (heute ) befand, einem Dorf am Nordosthang des Bergs Ararat."@de . . . . .