The Elders’ council of Xanthi and its representatives
The route is about 2 km long, lasts about 60 minutes and is of moderate difficulty. It starts from the district of Agios Vlasios and ends at the district of Akathist Hymn. In it, the visitor will have the opportunity to learn through the buildings about the Greek Orthodox community, the Elders of Xanthi, the most important elders, as well as about buildings related to the activity of the community.

The Elders’ council was the administrative system of the Greek Orthodox community during the Ottoman Empire. The elders, otherwise known as provosts or kodjabashis, were unpaid or salaried representatives, elected by Christians with the approval of the Ottomans. On the one hand, they facilitated the administration and collection of taxes on behalf of the Ottomans and, on the other, they administered the community, took care of its schools, managed the revenues of churches, monasteries and community property, resolved court issues and imposed penitentiary penalties. President of the Elders’ council was the Metropolitan of Xanthi and Peritheoriou. Active metropolitans were Eugenios (1792-1848) and Ioakeim Sgouros (1864-1912). In Xanthi, the Elders met at the Church of Timios Prodromos and later at the Metropolitan Mansion. The schools of the Elders’ council consisted of the Stalios Kindergarten, the Matsinis School, while a school also operated in the courtyard of Agios Vlasios. Well-known names who served as Elders are Michaloglou, Valixoglou, Karabetsis, Chasirtzoglou, Stalios, Sigalas, Matsinis, Velios, Ladas, Stavropoulos etc. Many of them served as ecclesiastical commissioners in the various churches of the city, as curators/teachers of schools, while their benefactions and donations to the Greek Orthodox community of Xanthi were important.

03. Stalios Kindergarten – 1st Kindergarten of Xanthi

Brief documentation:

The 1st Kindergarten of Xanthi was built in 1881, thanks to the donation of the city's benefactor, the important tobacco merchant Panagiotis Stalios and his wife Fotini. Their names are also engraved on the marble dedicatory inscription above the entrance gate. The building originally functioned as a Kindergarten of the Greek Orthodox Community while it was under Ottoman administration, and as a Kindergarten it operates until today.

The building is in the Mitropoleos district, in an area that formed the core of the Greek Orthodox Community of Xanthi during the 19th century. Several important institutions were gathered there, such as the Metropolis, the Metropolitan Mansion, the Greek Consulate and the community schools (Matsinios Urban School, Girls' School).

The kindergarten is built in the neo-renaissance style, probably designed by an Italian architect. The entrance of the courtyard includes fake pillars made of local granite. The exterior of the building is simply formed.

Around the windows located on the central and side facades of the building there are frames of local sandstone, while those on the ground floor are covered with elaborate ironwork. The building is decorated with corbels, which can be found both at the coronation of the entrance of the courtyard and at the coronation of the masonry.


Category of thematic interest:  ARCHITECTURAL / HISTORICAL INTEREST


History:

It was built in 1881 with a donation by the tobacco merchant Panagiotis Stalios and his wife Fotini, as shown in the marble dedicatory inscription above the entrance gate. It is in the district of Mitropoleos, in the area, which was the core of the Greek Orthodox Community of the city in the 19th century, as a number of its important institutions were concentrated there, such as the Metropolis, the Metropolitan Mansion, the Greek Consulate and the community schools (Matsinios Urban School, Girls' School).


Elements of architecture:

The kindergarten is built in the neo-renaissance style, probably designed by an Italian architect. The entrance of the courtyard includes false pillars made of local granite. The exterior of the building is simply formed. Around the windows located on the central and side facades of the building there are frames of local sandstone, while those on the ground floor are covered with elaborate ironwork.


Description of other elements:

The building is decorated with corbels, which can be found both at the coronation of the entrance of the courtyard and at the coronation of the masonry.


Purpose - Use: School building


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: 1881


Monument location: 41.14468986852862, 24.886915068523884


Bibliographic references:

•    Dimitris Mavridis, Houses of Xanthi, Holy Metropolis of Xanthi and Peritheoriou – DEAX, Xanthi 2009
•    Dimitris Mavridis, Angelophylaktos Xanthi, Holy Metropolis of Xanthi and Peritheoriou, Xanthi 2007
•    "Benefactor of Xanthi", Thrakika, 3 (1932), pp. 391 – 392


 Address: Michael Matsini 1


Visitable: No


Construction Manager: Probably an Italian architect

 

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