In the neighborhoods of Agios Vlasios and Agios Georgios
The route is about 1 km long, lasts about 60 minutes and is of moderate difficulty. In it, the visitor will discover the influence of the Greek Orthodox community on the urban fabric of old Xanthi.

Focusing on the two Orthodox churches of Agios Vlasios and Agios Georgios, two homonymous districts were developed, with buildings of rich tobacco merchants, who benefited the two churches respectively.

These neighborhoods were inhabited by members of the rising class of tobacco merchants, who built large mansions such as those of Michaloglou and Karabetsis. The development of these neighborhoods around religious and at the same time social centers, in a multicultural context, led to the diverse urban landscape that the visitor will encounter, starting from the Mansion of Hamdi Bey and highlighting various points around G. Ladas or Antikas Square.

99. Mehmet Soukri Pasha - Domtzidis Building

Brief documentation:

The building is built very close to Antikas Square, at the beginning of Pygmalionos Christidis Street. It originally belonged to Mehmet Soukri Pasha, while it was bought in 1925 by pharmacist Sotiris Kokmadis and in 1972 by Athanasios Domtzidis.
The building was built during the late Ottoman period, when this street was known as Uzun Sokak (meaning long street). According to scholars, it is even identified with the Byzantine "middle or royal road".
It is a three-storey building built in neoclassical style. It is distinguished for the symmetry in its façade, for the central door with the skylight above it and the protrusion of the floors, supported by iron corbels.
The floors are separated by stepped cornices and have five windows each with simple frames that have a stepped cornice. On the second floor there is in the center an iron balcony supported by iron curved corbels. At the corners of the building, false pilasters with false capitals are formed.
The ground floor of the building is used as a shop.


Category of thematic interest:  ARCHITECTURAL / HISTORICAL INTEREST


History:

The building is built very close to Antikas Square, at the beginning of Pygmalionos Christidis Street. It originally belonged to Mehmet Soukri Pasha, while it was bought in 1925 by pharmacist Sotiris Kokmadis and in 1972 by Athanasios Domtzidis.
The building was built during the late Ottoman period, when this street was known as Uzun Sokak (meaning long street). According to scholars, it is identified with the Byzantine "middle or royal road", a main road that may have existed before and led through the settlement to the interior of the fortress facilities, located on the acropolis north of the old city.
The road crosses the city from Antikas Square, where it has been assumed that the area of the main gate of the walls of Byzantine Xanthia was located, to the fortifications of the Acropolis, where the center of power would be located, serving defensive functions.
During the Ottoman period the road was used for commercial transport from the region of Xanthi to the mainland to its north.


Elements of architecture:

The building is a three-storey building built in neoclassical style. It is distinguished for the symmetry in its façade, for the central door with the skylight above it and the protrusion of the floors, supported by iron corbels.
The floors are separated by stepped cornices and have five windows each with simple frames that have a stepped cornice. On the second floor there is in the center an iron balcony supported by iron curved corbels. At the corners of the building, false pilasters with false capitals are formed.


Description of other elements:

The ground floor of the building is used as a shop.


Purpose - Use: Residence, Commercial space


Characterization: ΥMATH/5385/24-11-1995, ΦΕΚ 1097/Δ/1995


Dating (period): Late Ottoman period


Year of construction: Late Ottoman period


Location of the monument: 41.14256, 24.88692


Bibliographic references:

•    Katsari-Vafiadis, J. Ed. 2023. "History and recording of the neoclassical buildings of the traditional settlement". Xanthi: Municipality of Xanthi, p. 119


 Address: Pygmalionos Christidi 1


Visitable: No

 

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