European and Byzantine art in 19th century Xanthi (60')
The route is about 2 km long, lasts about 60 minutes and is of moderate difficulty. This route will give the visitor with artistic interests and quests to get to know European and Byzantine art, as expressed in buildings of old Xanthi in the 19th century.

Starting from the church of Agios Vlasios and ending at the Stavropoulos House, you will visit the churches of old Xanthi with the wood carvings on the iconostasis, the portable icons, the miniature objects, representative samples of the post-Byzantine period. In the buildings of secular architecture you will admire the European style ceiling paintings and frescoes, of the so-called Belle Époque (1871-1914).

In the old churches it is worth observing the Byzantine portable icons that bear strong western iconographic influences, mixed with traditional Byzantine standards and follow theological concepts after the 1453 conquest. They are created either by workshops active in Thrace or northern Greece (e.g. the workshop of Ainos), or by the Mount Athos workshop (e.g. the painters Nikiforos and his student Ioasaf), or by individual painters (e.g. Nikolaos from Hasköy in Constantinople, Thassios M. Evangelidis, Patrinos Takis Prionas).

It is also worth noting the crucifix in the Church of Agios Georgios, a work of Fotis Kontoglou (1959), the embroidered icon of Archangel Michael in the Church of the Taxiarchs, the marble relief candlestand in the Church of Agios Vlasios.

On the other hand, in the rich neoclassical residences one can see works of Bavarian or German painters, such as the frescoes in the Houses of Kougioumtzoglou, Stavropoulos and Michaloglou or the goddesses from the twelve Gods, which adorn the staircase of the Metaxas House. Of interest are the ceiling paintings with decorative and floral motifs in the Daniel Mansion and the Moses Mansion, while a unique example of neoclassical sculpture in the city is the statue in the courtyard of the Church of St. George.

79. Hamdi Bey Mansion – Democritus University of Thrace Building

Brief documentation:

It was built at an unknown date by the wealthy tobacco merchant Hamdi Hussein Fehmi, who was a prominent figure of the Muslim community of the city. In the elections of 1935, 1936 and 1951 he was elected MP with the People's Party. In 1931, together with Osman Nouri Fetaoglu, he published the local newspaper Milliet. During the Bulgarian occupation of 1913-1919 the building was used as the headquarters of a division of the Bulgarian army. Today it belongs to the Democritus University of Thrace and houses its services.
It is an imposing two-storey tiled mansion of bourgeois character, which is built according to the standards of neoclassicism. The architectural style of the building results from a combination of neoclassicist and eclectic elements. The building is developed on three levels, as it includes a semi-basement, an elevated ground floor and an upper floor.
The exterior of the building is constructed with absolute symmetry and includes a number of decorative elements, such as false pillars with false capitals, cornice between the floors, as well as in the coronation of the masonry, cornice with decorative sculptural elements on the upper and lower side of the window frame.
The main entrance of the building supports with two imposing pillars the extension of a part of the interior of the floor, while the windows located in the basement are covered with the characteristic type of local ironwork.
There is an imposing marble staircase that leads to the ground floor. On the protrusion of the floor above the entrance there are decorative rosettes under the windows.


Category of thematic interest:  ΑARCHITECTURAL/HISTORICAL/CULTURAL/FOLKLORE INTEREST


History:

The building was built by the wealthy tobacco merchant Hamdi Hussein Fehmi (1900-1965), to function as a residence. His two sons who inherited the mansion sold the building to the Democritus University of Thrace. After its restoration, it is used today to house services of the Democritus University of Thrace.
Tobacco merchant Hamdi Hussein Fehmi was a prominent figure in the city's Muslim community.
He was the son of one of the leaders of the Tamra uprising and the Autonomous Republic created in the region of the Rhodope Mountains in the period 1878-1886, who later fled to the region of Western Thrace. In the elections of 1935, 1936 and 1951 he was elected MP with the People's Party. In 1931, together with Osman Nouri Fetaoglu, he published the local newspaper Milliet. During the Bulgarian occupation of 1913-1919 his residence building was used as the headquarters of a division of the Bulgarian army.


Elements of architecture:

It is an imposing two-storey tiled mansion of urban character. The architectural style of the building is influenced by neoclassicism with strong elements of eclecticism. The building is developed on three levels, as it includes a semi-basement, ground floor and first floor. The exterior of the building is constructed with absolute symmetry and includes a number of decorative elements, such as false pillars with false capitals, cornice between the floors, as well as in the coronation of the masonry, cornice with decorative sculptural elements on the upper and lower side of the window frame. The main entrance of the building supports with two imposing pillars the extension of a part of the interior of the floor. The windows located in the semi-basement are covered by the characteristic type of local ironwork. There is an imposing marble staircase that leads to the ground floor.


Description of other elements:

On the protrusion of the floor above the entrance there are decorative rosettes under the windows.


Purpose - Use: Residence, University building


Characterization: ΥMATH/633/19-02-1991, ΦΕΚ 116/Δ/1991


Dating (period): Unknown


Year of construction: Unknown


Location of the monument: 41.14080392578772, 24.883418300525328


Bibliographic references:

•    Dimitris Mavridis, Angelophylaktos Xanthi, Holy Metropolis of Xanthi and Peritheoriou, Xanthi 2007
•    Dimitris Mavridis, Houses of Xanthi, Holy Metropolis of Xanthi and Peritheoriou – DEAX, Xanthi 2009
•    K. Featherstone, D. Papadimitriou, A. Mamarelis, G. Niarchos, The Last Ottomans. The Muslim minority of Western Thrace, 1940 – 1949, Alexandria, Athens 2013
•    Elias Nikolakopoulos, "Political forces and electoral behavior of the Muslim minority in Western Thrace: 1923 – 1955" in the Bulletin of the Center for Asia Minor Studies, 8 (1990), pp. 171 – 204
•    Katsari-Vafiadis, J. Ed. 2023. "History and recording of the neoclassical buildings of the traditional settlement". Xanthi: Municipality of Xanthi, p. 200


 Address: 42 4th Oktovriou Street


Visitable: No

 

Print
image
Terms Of UsePrivacy StatementCopyright 2024 by Municipality of Xanthi
Back To Top