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				|  | St. Georgi Zograph Monastery – Aton (Greece) |  | 
  According to the legend, the St. Georgi Zograph monastery was 
established back in 919 by three brothers – Moses, Aaron and Ivan 
Selima from Ohrid. When they built the cloister, the monks didn’t 
know which one of all the saints to choose as their patron. 
Therefore, they prepared a wooden board, on which they were to 
paint the portrait of their patron and, leaving it in the church, they 
went into deep prayer, asking God to reveal the name of the Saint. 
In the morning, the monks were astonished to see the face of St. 
Georgi on the board. They called him “Izograph” (which means 
“self-portrayed"). The legend says that the moment this 
miracle happened, the image of St. Georgi on an icon in a Syrian 
monastery, attacked by Arabs, disappeared. In the yard of the 
monastery, there is a monument of 22 monks and 4 lay brothers, 
who were burnt alive on 10 October 1275 in the tower, built by Ivan 
Asen II. These martyrs refused to give up their religion and were 
murdered by crusaders, who attacked and destroyed the 
monastery. The monument was built in the place of the tower in 
1873.
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