Architectural tour in Old Xanthi (50')
The route is about 1 km, about 50 minutes and of low difficulty. The visitor has the opportunity to get a small taste of the architectural trends, as expressed in Old Xanthi, but also of the morphological characteristics that each building had depending on its function.

Thus, walking through the alleys of old Xanthi, one will observe the way in which the mansions and houses, the shops, the schools, the churches and the metropolitan mansion, the inns, buildings of community character, are built, as well as the way in which all these are integrated into the urban fabric of the city. At the same time, he will be initiated into the architectural trends of neoclassicism, eclecticism and traditional architecture that coexist harmoniously in Old Xanthi.

94. D. Chasirtzoglou Building – Folk Art Store

Brief documentation:

The building originally belonged to Dukas Chasirtzoglou and must have been built in the late 19th century, as well as the diagonally opposite mansion of Moses. Chasirtzoglou was a teacher in Xanthi, trustee of the Monastery of Panagia Archangeliotissa with many benefactions to it.
The building was sold in 1930 to Efrosini (Frosinoula) Koulakloglou, a legendary seamstress of the interwar period in Xanthi, who was declared Miss Xanthi in 1929. Today it still belongs to the Koulakloglou family and operates as a folk art store.
It is a building with neoclassical elements, such as the false pilasters with the surfaces that barely protrude on the façade, the rough stepped base, which defines the level of the ground floor on the sloping ground of the area, the cornice that defines the upper end of the ground floor and the first floor as well as the false pilasters that frame the front door.
The building is on a corner and has two entrances, one on each street. It is built entirely with Mandra stone, a yellowish local stone from the quarries of the homonymous area, located in the south of Xanthi and was a stone mining site since antiquity.
In this shop the stone reliefs with various representations (animal, anthropomorphic, vegetable) are impressive, crown the arched openings of the ground floor (doors and windows) and are the so-called "keys". On the first floor the windows are fewer in number and rectangular.


Category of thematic interest:  ARCHITECTURAL / HISTORICAL INTEREST


History:

The building originally belonged to Dukas Chasirtzoglou and must have been built in the late 19th century, as was the diagonally opposite building of Moses. Chasirtzoglou was a teacher in Xanthi, trustee of the Monastery of Panagia Archangeliotissa with many benefactions to it.
The building was sold in 1930 to Efrosini (Frosinoula) Koulakloglou, a legendary seamstress of the interwar period in Xanthi, who was declared Miss Xanthi in 1929. Today it still belongs to the Koulakloglou family and operates as a folk art store.


Elements of architecture:

It is a building with neoclassical elements, such as the false pilasters with the surfaces that protrude slightly on the façade, the rough stepped base, which defines the level of the ground floor on the sloping ground of the area, the cornice that defines the upper end of the ground floor and the first floor as well as the false pilasters in the frame of the front door. The building is on a corner and has two entrances, one on each street.


Description of other elements:

 The building is built entirely with Mandra stone, a local stone from quarries of the homonymous area located south of Xanthi and was a stone mining site since antiquity.
In this shop the stone reliefs with various representations (animal, anthropomorphic, vegetable) are impressive, crown the arched openings of the ground floor (doors and windows) and are the so-called "keys". On the first floor the windows are fewer in number and rectangular.


Purpose - Use: Commercial space


Characterization: YPO/YPO/DILAP/G/1895/30606/11-08-1987, Government Gazette 483/Β/04-09- 1987


Dating (period): Late 19th century


Year of construction: Late 19th century


Location of the monument: 41.1426, 24.8873


Bibliographic references:

•    Katsari-Vafiadis, J. Ed. 2023. "History and recording of the neoclassical buildings of the traditional settlement". Xanthi: Municipality of Xanthi, p. 89


 Address: F. Amiridi 11 & Mavromichali


Visitable: Yes

 

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