In the neighborhoods of Agios Vlasios and Agios Georgios
The route is about 2 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 the Michaloglou Mansions, the Karabetsis Mansion with its painted exterior decoration and the majestic Mansion of Hilmi Pasha.

The development of these districts around religious and at the same time social centers, in a multicultural regime, led to the diverse urban landscape that the visitor will encounter. The route starts from shops that existed in the commercial part of these districts, passes by mansions, such as the mansion of Hamdi Bey, and ends by highlighting various points around G. Ladas or Antikas Square.

30. Two-storey traditional mansion

Brief documentation:

It is a building of traditional architecture, built in the late 19th-early 20th century. It is a large mansion, a two-storey building of large dimensions with a mezzanine. The building has a "Π" shape and two symmetrical wings. It has a decorative triangular pediment on the roof of the façade and a symmetrical interior layout.
The building is a typical construction built based on the traditional, folk architecture, with a stone ground floor made of thick stone walls (with stones without prior processing) in which wooden beams were inserted, horizontally and intermittently, for their reinforcement, for the distribution of loads and for reasons of earthquake protection. The corners of the walls have square stones (cornerstones) and the floors are made of thinner and lighter walls made of tsatma (with a wooden frame where diagonal wooden elements were placed, while the gap between them was filled
with small stones, ceramic elements, braided branches, etc.). A characteristic feature of the building is the many windows on the upper floor, which were intended for use mainly during the summer months, as well as the pedimented end of the roof above the main entrance, which has painted decoration. The building has recently been successfully renovated.


Category of thematic interest:  ARCHITECTURAL / HISTORICAL INTEREST


History:

It is a large mansion of traditional architecture, built in the late 19th-early 20th century.


Elements of architecture:

t is a large mansion of traditional architecture, a two-storey building of large dimensions with mezzanine. The building has a "P" shape and two symmetrical wings. It has a decorative triangular pediment on the roof of the façade and a symmetrical interior layout. The building is a typical construction built based on the traditional, folk architecture, with a stone ground floor made of thick stone walls (with stones without prior processing) in which wooden beams were inserted, horizontally and intermittently, for their reinforcement, for the distribution of loads and for reasons of earthquake protection. The corners of the walls have square stones (cornerstones) and the floors are made of thinner and lighter walls made of tsatma (with a wooden frame where diagonal wooden elements were placed, while the gap between them was filled with small stones, ceramic elements, braided branches, etc.). A characteristic feature of the building is the many windows on the upper floor, which were intended for use mainly during the summer months, as well as the pedimented end of the roof above the main entrance, which has painted decoration.


Description of other elements:

The building has recently been successfully renovated.


Purpose - Use: Residence


Characterization: ΔPreservable, Institution of the Ministry of Culture, Decision DILAP/C/13633/180, Government Gazette 128/83


Dating (period): Late 19th-early 20th century


Year of construction: Late 19th-early 20th century


Location of the monument: 41.14235, 24.8864


Bibliographic references:

•    D. Mavridis (ed.). Xanthi, the city with a thousand colors. Xanthi, PAKETHRA 2008, p. 185


 Address: Taxiarchon 3


Visitable: No

 

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