The Issyk-Kul Holy Trinity Monastery
The Holy Trinity Monastery stood on Tyup Bay at the eastern end of Lake Issyk-Kul, in what is now Kyrgyzstan. Russian sources record its foundation in 1881 near the village of Ak-Bulun, with the site chosen by Archbishop Alexander (Kulchitsky); it was conceived not only as a house of prayer but as a center of agriculture and culture among the settlers and local population of the Semirechye.
During the uprising of 1916 — tied to the wartime conscription of Central Asians — the monastery was attacked and a number of its monks were killed, with substantial loss of property. Having survived the devastation of his community, Meletius moved on to pastoral work elsewhere in the Semirechensk region; the monastery itself never recovered and was closed at the end of the decade.