Neoclassical and eclectic buildings of Old Xanthi
This route is about 3 km, about 80 minutes and of moderate difficulty. It starts from Antikas Square and ends at the border of the old town with the modern city to the west. Through this route, the visitor has the opportunity to get to know the practice of neoclassicism and eclecticism, as expressed in about 50 buildings of old Xanthi.

Neoclassicism appeared in the 18th and 19th centuries and is strongly influenced by the principles governing the architecture of classical antiquity. The buildings are distinguished for the simplicity of their geometric forms, the Doric detail, the simplicity, the absolute symmetry, the dividing lines of the vertical spreads and the pilasters with false capitals at the corners.

Eclecticism, on the other hand, is the architectural style of the 19th and 20th centuries, in which a variety of elements from various eras and styles are selected and used, in a single building. The eclectic buildings in Xanthi are influenced by neoclassicism (e.g. absolute symmetry, verticality), while individual elements are influenced by Art Deco (e.g. strong decorative mood), central Europe (e.g. turret roof configuration or turret development), English Baroque (e.g. the use of red brick) and Romanesque style (e.g. arched openings and curved arches).

17. Kougioumtzoglou Mansion – Folklore and Historical Museum of F.E.X.

Brief documentation:

The original owner of this double building was the wealthy tobacco merchant Vasilios Kougioumtzoglou. He built it around 1870 for his two sons, Pantelis and Dimitrios, so it consists of two identical sections. The right part of the building was donated in 1971 by Anna Kougioumtzoglou-Kaloudi, daughter of Pantelis Kougioumtzoglou, to the Municipality of Xanthi. The left part was bought by the Progressive Union of Xanthi (F.E.X.) from the descendants of Dimitrios Kougioumtzoglou. Since 1974 it has housed the Folklore Museum of F.E.X.
It is a large two-storey building with a semi-basement, which is distinguished for its absolute symmetry in appearance. It follows eclecticism, i.e. the architecture that dominated Central Europe at that time. Its main features are the many openings and the exterior decoration of the main façade, which is made with solid red bricks, but also with the local stone of Mandra. The openings on the ground floor end in triangular pediments, while the corresponding ones on the first floor in semicircular arches. The gabled roofs of the building form triangular pediments, in the middle of which hexagonal skylights open.
The typical cast ironwork, made in local workshops of the time, protect the windows on the elevated ground floor, create the balconies of the first floor and protect the small garden in front of the building. The rich interior decoration, different in each room, includes frescoes of the 1880s, works of Bavarian artists with landscapes, floral decoration and female allegorical figures.
In the courtyard of the building there are two small individual hammams, namely the men's and women's bath of the house.
The building, after its maintenance, houses, until today, the Folklore and Historical Museum of Xanthi. It contains rich exhibits from life in a city mansion as well as artifacts and tools from the rural economy of the area and the life of the working class.


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


History:

The original owner of this double building was the wealthy tobacco merchant Vasilios Kougioumtzoglou. He built it around 1870 for his two sons, Pantelis and Dimitrios, so it consists of two identical sections. The right part of the building was donated in 1971 by Anna Kougioumtzoglou-Kaloudi, daughter of Pantelis Kougioumtzoglou, to the House of Letters and Fine Arts of the Municipality of Xanthi. The left part was bought by the Progressive Union of Xanthi (F.E.X.) from the descendants of Dimitrios Kougioumtzoglou. Since 1974 it has housed the Folklore Museum of F.E.X. The building was restored in 2000.


Elements of architecture:

It is a large two-storey and twin building (built in a row) with a semi-basement, a representative sample of a residence of the late Ottoman period in Xanthi. This twin building is distinguished for its absolute symmetry in appearance and for the eclecticism, i.e. the architecture that dominated Central Europe at that time. Its main features are the many openings and the exterior decoration of the main façade.
All this decoration is done with solid red bricks, but also with the easy-to-work, local stone, the sandstone of Mandra. The openings on the ground floor end in triangular pediments, while the corresponding ones on the first floor in semicircular arches. The reverse is done at the doors on the ground floor and on the first floor. The gabled roofs of the twin building form triangular pediments, in the middle of which hexagonal skylights are opened, which serve to illuminate and ventilate the attic.
The typical cast ironworks, made in local workshops of the time, protect the windows on the elevated ground floor and create the balconies of the first floor. In front of the building, a small garden is created, which is also protected by cast iron rail.


Description of other elements:

It is a very large and unique building. The rich interior decoration, different in each room, includes frescoes of the 1880s, works of Bavarian artists with landscapes, floral decoration and female allegorical figures.
In the courtyard of the building there are two independent, small, one-roomed, vaulted rooms that function as two small individual hammams, namely the male and female bathroom of the house. The building, after its maintenance, houses, until today, the Folklore and Historical Museum of Xanthi. It contains rich exhibits from life in a city mansion as well as artifacts and tools from the rural economy of the area and the life of the working class.


Purpose - Use: Residence, Cultural space


Characterization: Preserved, Institution of the Ministry of Culture, Decision DILAP/C/11/63051, Government Gazette 73/86


Dating (period): Last quarter of the 19th century


Year of construction: Around 1870


Monument location: 41.14355, 24.88776


Bibliographic references:

•    Katsari-Vafiadis, J. Ed. 2023. "History and recording of the neoclassical buildings of the traditional settlement". Xanthi: Municipality of Xanthi, p. 42


 Address: Antikas 7


Visitable: Yes


Construction Manager: Probably a Russian architect

 

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