Ruins of Kumurdo cathedral stand on the background of an ill-favored and barren landscape of Javakheti plateau, in a distance of 12 km from Akhalkalaki.
The extensive inscription curved on the stone slab that fortunately preserved up to now tells that the threshold of the cathedral was placed in May, 964 AD. According to that inscription the Bishop of Kumurdo John has initiated church construction. Name of an architect was Sakotsari. After reconsideration of the six-apse design five-apse configuration of the church was obtained, with lateral apses placed parallel, instead of being situated radial.
Western rectangular arm of the church is three-nave, with internal narthex and three-sided gallery arranged in its western end. External layout of the church is crossshaped; in response to tree-partite sanctuary two triangular niches are arranged on western façade, coupled with two others, one at each lateral facade. A porch-chapel is erected in front of the main entrance – the eastern one, with a tiny shrine arranged in the thickness of the load-bearing wall.
Despite of the relative simplification of the design Sakotsari has managed to preserve all integral elements of the six-apse construction and provide sufficient dynamics through trapezoidal bemas running along the lateral apses and column-like protrusions that support sub-dome sagittal arches. All the aforementioned provides general elevation of the internal space and creates strong impression of motion and charge of life.
All elements of decoration – window headers and framings adorned with light, open-work-type fretwork, a complex, large frame of the sanctuary window, cornices decorated with different images are scattered over the vast surfaces of the building exterior, faced with most accurately hewn stones. Adornment is so perfect, clear and clean that they may be perceived as the embroidery incrusted on the metal surfaces. Several risings still well noticeable on eastern sub-dome tromps include images of the church construction donors – Queen Gurandukht, her brother King Leon of Abkhazs and her spouse – King Gurgen of Georgians.
All of those images coupled with those incorporated in the sanctuary window decoration are plain and tabular, while the heads or possibly the faces of archangels placed in the niches and over the southern porch, on the contrary, are rounded and volumetric. Motion is sensible even in symmetrical elements – inscription over the western façade is slanted northwards, interlocked tromp-like spaces are arranged on the corners of the church arm exteriors. Even today, with missing dome and western arm the monument is perhaps as gorgeous and splendid as it was upon the completion of its construction.
The temple has got several sections that were added to its body at later times the most important of which is southern porch constructed along the western arm. This attachment of the first third of XI c was initiated by Queen Marry of Georgia. All preserved fragments of wall painting, for instance within the sanctuary are relatively younger then the building itself. It seems, frescoes of the north-western apse were performed sometime in XIII c. Western porch of the cathedral bears footprints of XVI c refurbishment. Two X c steles are erected close to the temple.