The benefactors of the Greek Orthodox community of Xanthi
The route is about 2 km long, lasts about 80 minutes and is of moderate difficulty. In it, the visitor will be able to tour buildings of architectural or religious interest, which were either built thanks to the funding/donation of a Xanthi benefactor, or are related to the residence/shop of the benefactor's family.

The role of benefactors was particularly important for the Greek Orthodox Christian populations during the Ottoman period, since they took care of the construction of schools, churches and buildings of public character (e.g. clubs) and preserved through them the ethnic and religious identity of the community.

The visitor, starting from the chapel of Zoodochos Pigi on Lefkou Pyrgou Street and ending at Kavaki, will learn about the tobacco merchants-benefactors Sigalas, Stalios, Matsinis, Kougioumtzoglou, Chasirtzoglou, Michael Floris who rebuilt the Church of Agios Vlasios and the metropolitans of Xanthi and Peritheoriou Eugenios and Ioakeim Sgouros, who rebuilt or renovated churches, the Metropolitan mansion and the monasteries in the suburban forest.

Important were the donations of icons of professional guilds to churches, such as the union of cobblers and shoemakers, or the Epirote Georgios Kagialidis or the elders of the Velios family. There are many more known and unknown benefactors, whose donations and work we can admire today through their material remains.

05. Matsinis School – 1st Primary School

Brief documentation:

Today's 1st Primary School of Xanthi was founded from the beginning as a school and even as a mutual instruction school for boys, sponsored by the benefactor tobacco merchant Michael Matsinis. The construction of the building took place in 1863 and the founder in his will in 1874 provided the necessary resources for the maintenance and operation of the school.

The school had 6 classes with 4 teachers and 200 students paying tuition. In 1896 the administration of the School passed to the Metropolitan of Xanthi and the Greek Community Council, amid conflicts with Matsinis' heirs, whom he had appointed as responsible for the School in his will.

This school occasionally operated under various names such as Urban School, Xanthi Schools. The school since 1920 and the liberation operates as the 1st Primary School of Xanthi. For this contribution, the people of Xanthi honored Matsinis as a National Benefactor.

At the main entrance of the school there are two marble dedicatory inscriptions that were destroyed in 1942 by the Bulgarians and were restored in 2005. These inscriptions indicate the years of construction and renovation of the building. The renovation was carried out in 1903 by the Greek Orthodox community of Xanthi.

The building is two-story and symmetrical in its plan, with a central corridor along its long axis, with halls on either side. The classrooms are located on two floors and in the basement, while on the ground floor there is an open plan event space. The building is built in neoclassical style, with large windows on both floors.

The building is made of stonework and consists of one floor, ground floor and basement. The basement was used as storage rooms and the other two floors as classrooms and offices. On the facades of the building there are many openings surrounded by decorative frames.


Category of thematic interest:  ARCHITECTURAL / HISTORICAL INTEREST


History:

Today's 1st Primary School of Xanthi was founded from the beginning as a school and even as a mutual instruction school for boys, sponsored by the benefactor tobacco merchant Michael Matsinis, who in his will in 1874 also provided the necessary resources for its maintenance and operation. The construction of the building took place in 1863.

The school had 6 classes with 4 teachers and 200 students paying tuition. In 1896 the administration of the School passed to the Metropolitan of Xanthi and the Greek Community Council, amid conflicts with the heirs of Michael Matsinis, whom he had appointed as responsible for the School in his will.

This school occasionally operated under various names such as Urban School, Xanthi Schools. The school since 1920 and the liberation operates as the 1st Primary School of Xanthi. For this contribution, the people of Xanthi honored him as a National Benefactor.


Elements of architecture:

The building is two-storey and symmetrical in its plan, with a central corridor along its long axis, with halls on either side. The classrooms are located on two floors and in the basement, while on the ground floor there is an open plan event space. The building is built in neoclassical style, with large windows on both floors.

The building is made of stonework and consists of one floor, ground floor and basement. The basement was used as storage rooms and the other two floors as classrooms and offices. On the facades of the building there are many openings surrounded by decorative frames.


Description of other elements:

At the main entrance of the school there are two marble dedicatory inscriptions that were destroyed in 1942 by the Bulgarians and restored in 2005. These inscriptions indicate the years of construction and renovation of the building. The construction was done in 1863 by Michael Matsinis and the renovation was carried out in 1903 by the Greek Orthodox community of Xanthi.


Purpose - Use: School building


Characterization: Preserved, Institution of the Ministry of Culture, Decision DILAP/C/11/63051, Government Gazette 73/86 - Preservable, Institution of the Ministry of Culture, Decision DILAP/C/1592/25502, Government Gazette 455/87


Dating (period): Second half of the 19th century


Year of construction: 1863


Monument location: 41.144345271959736, 24.88758392064405


Bibliographic references:

•    Papadopoulou-Houhou, Al. 2023. Education in Xanthi 1856-1912. Xanthi: PAKETHRA.
•    Alexopoulos, A. 2012. "The Organization and the Work of the Elders of Xanthi during the Period 1892-1912." Aristotle University of Thessaloniki.
•    Mavridis, D., eds. 2008. Xanthi, the city with a thousand colors. Xanthi: PAKETHRA.
•    Aivaliotis, V. 2007. Xanthi, sweet stepmother. Xanthi: PAKETHRA.
•    Katsari-Vafiadis, J. Ed. 2023. "History and recording of the neoclassical buildings of the traditional settlement". Xanthi: Municipality of Xanthi, p. 38.


 Address: Michael Matsini 1


Visitable: No


 

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