"The Second Bethlehem, where the infant Christ dwelt longest during the Holy Family's flight into Egypt"
Monastery of The Blessed Virgin Mary (Al Muharraq)
El Quseya (Al-Qusiyah), Asyut, Egypt
At the foot of Mount Koskam in Upper Egypt, Deir el-Muharraq holds the most sacred distinction in Coptic Christianity. Here, tradition holds, the Holy Family lived for six months during their flight from Herod. It was here that the angel appeared to Joseph announcing their return to Israel. For Copts, pilgrimage to this monastery equals pilgrimage to Jerusalem in spiritual merit.
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Quick Facts
Location
El Quseya (Al-Qusiyah), Asyut, Egypt
Coordinates
27.3845, 30.7789
Last Updated
Jan 12, 2026
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The culmination of the Holy Family's Egyptian journey, established as a monastery in the fourth century and maintaining continuous worship ever since.
Origin Story
According to Coptic tradition based on ancient manuscripts and oral tradition, the Holy Family fled to Egypt to escape King Herod's massacre of infants in Bethlehem. After traveling through various sites where miracles occurred, they came to rest in a cave at Mount Koskam. Here they lived for 185 days, the longest stay of their journey. The infant Jesus blessed this place, and the cave where He rested became the altar of the first church. An angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream, saying: 'Arise, take the young Child and His mother, and go to the land of Israel, for those who sought the young Child's life are dead.'
The monastery's Arabic name, Al-Muharraq (meaning 'burned'), has two traditional explanations. One holds that it was partially burned by foreign invaders during the medieval period. Another tradition states that the surrounding area was used for burning harmful weeds and crops.
Key Figures
The Holy Family
Virgin Mary, the infant Jesus, Joseph the Carpenter, and their helper Salome
Pachomian Monks
Fourth-century founders of the monastic community
Queen Mentowab of Ethiopia
Eighteenth-century Ethiopian monarch
Spiritual Lineage
The monastery belongs to the Coptic Orthodox Patriarchate of Alexandria. Approximately 100 monks practice Koinonia (community) monasticism in the Pachomian tradition. Ethiopian Orthodox Christians have maintained a presence here since the fourth century, building their own churches within the complex.
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