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Metropolis of Argolis

The Metropolis of Argolis (Greek: Ιερά Μητρόπολις Αργολίδος, "Holy Metropolis of Argolis") is a diocese of the Church of Greece, with its seat at Nafplio, covering the historical Argolid (Argolis). It occupies the current boundaries of the modern Prefecture of Argolis, except for the municipality of Ermionida.

Metropolis of Argolis

Ιερά Μητρόπολις Αργολίδος
St. George Metropolitan Cathedral
Location
CountryGreece
Ecclesiastical provinceArgolis
Archdeaconries
8
  • Nafplio
  • Argos
  • Agia Triada
  • Asini
  • Achladokampos
  • Prosymna
  • Lygourio
  • Lyrkeia
HeadquartersNafplio
Statistics
Parishes78
Churches76 churches, 98 chapels, 270 exoklessia (chapels-of-ease used for designated saints' days), 95 memorial shrines, 8 monastic chapels, 59 private chapels.
Information
Formation1189
CathedralSaint George Metropolitan Cathedral, Nafplio
Current leadership
BishopNektarios Antonopoulos
Website
https://imargolidos.gr

The see's original name was the Bishopric of Argos, and according to Paulinus the Deacon, it was founded by Saint Andrew. The early bishops of Argos were suffragan to the Metropolis of Corinth. It was separated from Corinth renamed the Metropolis of Argos and Nafplio in 1189, confirming an earlier de facto merger with Nauplion. In 1833, it was renamed the Metropolis of Argolis. Its cathedra was originally Argos, but it moved around the Argolid several times due to political factors.

Its incumbent is Metropolitan Nektarios Antonopoulos (b. 1952). The previous metropolitan, from 1985 until his death, was Metropolitan Iakovos ("James") II (1932-2013), who died 26 March 2013. (In Greek, the late metropolitan, like other deceased Orthodox faithful, he is referred to as makaristos — "of blessed memory.") The current metropolitan was chosen on 18 October 2013.

Saint Nicholas Church in Nafplio

History and ecclesiastical administration edit

According to the article "Argos and Orthodoxy Through the Passage of the Ages", written by the Archimandrite Kallinikos D. Korobokis, the diocesan homilist (published in the periodical "Eyes on Argolis", Volume 10, May–June 2002), the history of the metropolitan see is recorded as follows:

Paulinus (354-431 AD) relates that the Apostle Andrew first proclaimed the Gospel at Argos, and thus he is traditionally held to be the founder of the Church there. It is also likely that the Apostle Paul came to Argos, some time around 50-60 AD; he remained in Corinth for a considerable number of months and, it is also thought, all around the neighboring provinces of Corinth. Argos acclaimed a bishop fairly early on, separate from that of the bishopric of Nauplia (Nafplio), with both under the jurisdiction of the Metropolis of Corinth.

The first known Bishop of Argos is Perigenes. At the end of the 9th century, the Bishop of Argos was Saint Peter the Wonderworker, who became the town's patron saint. The sees of Argos and Nauplion were unified in 1166. According to other sources, the unification of Argos and Nauplion had already occurred a few years after 879. Throughout the minutes of the Council of 879 in Constantinople, written by the members, the Bishop of Argos is recorded as Theotimos, and that of Nauplion as Andreas, which establishes a terminus post quem, but not a precise date for the unification. In 1189 the unified diocese of Argos and Nauplion was extracted from the Metropolis of Corinth and converted into a metropolitan see sui juris, with one John serving as its first metropolitan.

According to the Argolic Calendar of 1910, which was produced by the Bishops of Argos and Nauplion, the Eparchy (Bishopric) of Argos was led under the Metropolis of Corinth:

— Bishops of Argos and Nauplion, Argolic Calendar of Saints

According to the anonymous hand-written chronicle published in Δελτίω Ιστορ. Εθνολ. Εταιρίας Τ.Β΄ σελ. 32, ed. Io. Sakellionos (Bulletins of the Historical and Ethnological Society of Greece 303, p. 32), there are 23 recorded Bishops of Argos and Nauplion. Their names are as follows:

  • Peter the Wonderworker
  • Constantine
  • Christopher
  • Peter
  • John
  • Nicholas
  • Sisinius
  • Andrew
  • Theodore
  • Sisinius
  • Peter
  • Basil
  • Theophylact
  • Sisinius
  • Gregory
  • Nicholas, the ktitor (donator) of Agios Andreas (Saint Andrew's Church)
  • John, the ktitor (donator) of the new church
  • Gregory
  • Constantine
  • Theodore Leon
  • Nicitas John, who led the diocese down to its new title of Nauplion and Argos.

In 1212, the local Orthodox hierarchy was replaced by Latin hierarchs during the period of Frankish rule in which the two towns formed part of the Lordship of Argos and Nauplia. This state of affairs lasted until 1540, with the withdrawal of the Venetians after the Third Ottoman-Venetian War.

Afterwards, the diocese returned to the control of Greek Orthodox hierarchs, but in 1686, the seat of the bishop moved from Argos to Nafplio. Shortly after the Venetians returned, and with them, a Roman Catholic hierarchy, and the Orthodox administration re-located to the village of Merbaka, returning to Argos in 1770 in the wake of attacks by Albanian irregulars.

At the outbreak of the Greek War of Independence, the seat moved again to Nafplio. The bishop, Grigorios Kalamaras was killed in the Siege of Tripolitsa, and is consequently termed an ethnomartyr a national martyr, Greek: ἐθνομάρτυρας. This designation is a popular one, and has no canonical status making the bishop a saint, as death in battle does not necessarily qualify one for martyrdom.

After the creation of the Greek state but before the creation of the new autocephalous Church of Greece in 1850, the diocese underwent a brief period of successive reorganizations as the Patriarchate of Constantinople adjusted to having large numbers of faithful outside the Ottoman millet system. It was briefly merged with the Metropolis of Corinth (1841), with the addition of the Bishopric of Hydra in 1842, before its present jurisdiction was created between 1850 and 1852.

Currently, the Bishop of Epidavros (Epidaurus) is suffragan to the Metropolitan Bishop of Argolis, and serves as the auxiliary bishop for the metropolis; he is sui juris the bishop of the See of Epidavros, and is subordinate to the Metropolitan only in his capacity as auxiliary in the See of Argolis and the metropolitan synod, over which the metropolitan presides. The General Hierarocratic Commissioner — akin to a western vicar general or archdeacon — is Archpriest Vasileios (Basil) Soulandros.

The Roman Catholic name for the diocese was Dioecesis Argolicensis . It is currently listed as suppressed, but in the past was used as the name of a titular see. Prior to 1882, the term used by the Catholic Church to describe this and other Orthodox dioceses formerly governed by Latin clergy was in partibus infidelium ("in the parts of the infidels"), but the term was changed by the papacy of Pope Leo XIII, reportedly in response to complaints by King George I of Greece over its offensive nature.[2]

List of bishops and metropolitans edit

According to the French theologian and scholar Michel Le Quien, these are the earliest bishops of Argos, as recorded in Greek and Latin sources:[3]

  1. Perigenes
  2. Genethlius
  3. Onesimus
  4. Thales
  5. John
  6. Theotimus
  7. Peter the Wonderworker
  8. Leo
  9. John
  10. ? (Name lost; recorded only in a Greek source in which he is addressed by the Patriarch of Constantinople as "The most holy Bishop of Nauplia and Argos, in the Holy Spirit..."
  11. Dionysius I, "Bishop of Nauplion and Argos" in a Greek source; "Bishop of the Nauplians and the Argives" in a Latin source
  12. Dionysius II, also Bishop of Nauplia
  13. ? (name lost to history, recorded only as "& Metropolitan of Patras"; possibly also holding the bishopric of Anaplia (a medieval name for Nauplia.)
  14. Meletius
  15. Gabriel
  16. Basil
  17. Theophanes
  18. Macarius
  19. Benedict (1767), in the time of the Patriarch Samuel of Constantinople
  20. Neophyte
  21. Dorotheus
  22. James Armogavles
  23. Gregory of Sitsovis

Monasteries edit

 
The Monastery of Agia Marina at Argos from the road to Castle Larissa.

Total monastics, 121.

Within geographical boundaries of the Metropolis of Argolis there exists a further monastery, the Monastery of Avgou (Saint Demetrius), which is placed under the jurisdiction of the Metropolis of Hydra, Spetses, and Aegina.

People edit

  • Peter the Wonderworker (Saint, Bishop of Argos)
  • Grigorios Kalamaras (Ethnomartyr, Bishop of Argos and Nauplion)
  • Athanasius (Metropolitan of Argos, 1869-1925)
  • Agathonicus (Metropolitan of Argos, 1898-1956)
  • Chrysostomos I (civil name, Tavladorakis, 1909- 6 August 1977). He was Metropolitan of Argos from 1945 to 1965, and concurrently Metropolitan of Piraeus from 1965 to his death.
  • Iakovos (James) II, (civil name, Damianos Pakhis, 1932-26 March 2013). Metropolitan from 23 November 1985 to his death.

Media edit

References edit

  1. ^ The corpse is not held to have stood up and walked around, rather, the face appeared to briefly come to life again and was briefly surrounded by an apparently supernatural light. Άγιος Πέτρος ο Θαυματουργός Αρχιεπίσκοπος Άργους και Ναυπλίου (Saint Peter the Wonderworker Archbishop of Argos and Nafplio (in Greek, available at [1]. Accessed 14 May 2015.
  2. ^   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Corrigan, Owen B. (Oct 1920). "Titular sees of the American hierarchy". The Catholic Historical Review. 6 (3). Washington DC: The Catholic University Of America: 322–324. ISSN 0008-8080.
  3. ^ Le Quien, Michel (1740). "Ecclesia Argi". Oriens Christianus, in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus: quo exhibentur ecclesiæ, patriarchæ, cæterique præsules totius Orientis. Tomus secundus, in quo Illyricum Orientale ad Patriarchatum Constantinopolitanum pertinens, Patriarchatus Alexandrinus & Antiochenus, magnæque Chaldæorum & Jacobitarum Diœceses exponuntur (in Latin). Paris: Ex Typographia Regia. cols. 183–186. OCLC 955922747.

Sources edit

This page is a translation-in-progress from the Greek Wikipedia article, which relies upon the following sources written in the Greek language.

  • "Αργολικόν Ημερολόγιο 1910". Εκδιδόμενων υπό του εν Αθήναις συλλόγου των Αργείων. Εν Αθήναις, εκ του τυπογραφείου Δημ. Τερζόπουλου 1910. ("Argolic Calendar 1910". Published in Athens by the Society of Argives. At Athens, by the publisher Demetrios Terzopoulos 1910.)
  • "Άργος και Ορθοδοξία στο διάβα των αιώνων", αρχιμανδρίτης Καλλίνικος Δ. Κορομπόκης, ιεροκήρυκας της Ιεράς Μητροπόλεως Αργολίδος, (δημοσιεύθηκε στο Περιοδικό “Ματιές στην Αργολίδα”, τευχ. 10, Μάιος – Ιούνιος 2002) ("Argos and Orthodoxy through the Progress of the Ages." Archimadndrite Kallinikos D. Korobokis, Diocesan Homilist of the Holy Metropolis of Argolis. Published in the periodical "Eyes on Argolis," Vol. 10, May–June, 2002)
  • Εκκλησία της Ελλάδος (για Μητροπόλεις) (Church of Greece webpage for the metropolises)
  • Στοιχεία στην Αργολική Αρχειακή Βιβλιοθήκη Ιστορίας και Πολιτισμού (Records of the Argolic Archival Library of History and Culture)

metropolis, argolis, greek, Ιερά, Μητρόπολις, Αργολίδος, holy, diocese, church, greece, with, seat, nafplio, covering, historical, argolid, argolis, occupies, current, boundaries, modern, prefecture, argolis, except, municipality, ermionida, Ιερά, Μητρόπολις, . The Metropolis of Argolis Greek Iera Mhtropolis Argolidos Holy Metropolis of Argolis is a diocese of the Church of Greece with its seat at Nafplio covering the historical Argolid Argolis It occupies the current boundaries of the modern Prefecture of Argolis except for the municipality of Ermionida Metropolis of ArgolisIera Mhtropolis ArgolidosSt George Metropolitan CathedralLocationCountryGreeceEcclesiastical provinceArgolisArchdeaconries8Nafplio Argos Agia Triada Asini Achladokampos Prosymna Lygourio LyrkeiaHeadquartersNafplioStatisticsParishes78Churches76 churches 98 chapels 270 exoklessia chapels of ease used for designated saints days 95 memorial shrines 8 monastic chapels 59 private chapels InformationFormation1189CathedralSaint George Metropolitan Cathedral NafplioCurrent leadershipBishopNektarios AntonopoulosWebsitehttps imargolidos gr The see s original name was the Bishopric of Argos and according to Paulinus the Deacon it was founded by Saint Andrew The early bishops of Argos were suffragan to the Metropolis of Corinth It was separated from Corinth renamed the Metropolis of Argos and Nafplio in 1189 confirming an earlier de facto merger with Nauplion In 1833 it was renamed the Metropolis of Argolis Its cathedra was originally Argos but it moved around the Argolid several times due to political factors Its incumbent is Metropolitan Nektarios Antonopoulos b 1952 The previous metropolitan from 1985 until his death was Metropolitan Iakovos James II 1932 2013 who died 26 March 2013 In Greek the late metropolitan like other deceased Orthodox faithful he is referred to as makaristos of blessed memory The current metropolitan was chosen on 18 October 2013 Saint Nicholas Church in Nafplio Contents 1 History and ecclesiastical administration 2 List of bishops and metropolitans 3 Monasteries 4 People 5 Media 6 References 7 SourcesHistory and ecclesiastical administration editAccording to the article Argos and Orthodoxy Through the Passage of the Ages written by the Archimandrite Kallinikos D Korobokis the diocesan homilist published in the periodical Eyes on Argolis Volume 10 May June 2002 the history of the metropolitan see is recorded as follows Paulinus 354 431 AD relates that the Apostle Andrew first proclaimed the Gospel at Argos and thus he is traditionally held to be the founder of the Church there It is also likely that the Apostle Paul came to Argos some time around 50 60 AD he remained in Corinth for a considerable number of months and it is also thought all around the neighboring provinces of Corinth Argos acclaimed a bishop fairly early on separate from that of the bishopric of Nauplia Nafplio with both under the jurisdiction of the Metropolis of Corinth The first known Bishop of Argos is Perigenes At the end of the 9th century the Bishop of Argos was Saint Peter the Wonderworker who became the town s patron saint The sees of Argos and Nauplion were unified in 1166 According to other sources the unification of Argos and Nauplion had already occurred a few years after 879 Throughout the minutes of the Council of 879 in Constantinople written by the members the Bishop of Argos is recorded as Theotimos and that of Nauplion as Andreas which establishes a terminus post quem but not a precise date for the unification In 1189 the unified diocese of Argos and Nauplion was extracted from the Metropolis of Corinth and converted into a metropolitan see sui juris with one John serving as its first metropolitan According to the Argolic Calendar of 1910 which was produced by the Bishops of Argos and Nauplion the Eparchy Bishopric of Argos was led under the Metropolis of Corinth Bishops of Argos and Nauplion Argolic Calendar of Saints According to the anonymous hand written chronicle published in Deltiw Istor E8nol Etairias T B sel 32 ed Io Sakellionos Bulletins of the Historical and Ethnological Society of Greece 303 p 32 there are 23 recorded Bishops of Argos and Nauplion Their names are as follows Peter the Wonderworker Constantine Christopher Peter John Nicholas Sisinius Andrew Theodore Sisinius Peter Basil Theophylact Sisinius Gregory Nicholas the ktitor donator of Agios Andreas Saint Andrew s Church John the ktitor donator of the new church Gregory Constantine Theodore Leon Nicitas John who led the diocese down to its new title of Nauplion and Argos In 1212 the local Orthodox hierarchy was replaced by Latin hierarchs during the period of Frankish rule in which the two towns formed part of the Lordship of Argos and Nauplia This state of affairs lasted until 1540 with the withdrawal of the Venetians after the Third Ottoman Venetian War Afterwards the diocese returned to the control of Greek Orthodox hierarchs but in 1686 the seat of the bishop moved from Argos to Nafplio Shortly after the Venetians returned and with them a Roman Catholic hierarchy and the Orthodox administration re located to the village of Merbaka returning to Argos in 1770 in the wake of attacks by Albanian irregulars At the outbreak of the Greek War of Independence the seat moved again to Nafplio The bishop Grigorios Kalamaras was killed in the Siege of Tripolitsa and is consequently termed an ethnomartyr a national martyr Greek ἐ8nomartyras This designation is a popular one and has no canonical status making the bishop a saint as death in battle does not necessarily qualify one for martyrdom After the creation of the Greek state but before the creation of the new autocephalous Church of Greece in 1850 the diocese underwent a brief period of successive reorganizations as the Patriarchate of Constantinople adjusted to having large numbers of faithful outside the Ottoman millet system It was briefly merged with the Metropolis of Corinth 1841 with the addition of the Bishopric of Hydra in 1842 before its present jurisdiction was created between 1850 and 1852 Currently the Bishop of Epidavros Epidaurus is suffragan to the Metropolitan Bishop of Argolis and serves as the auxiliary bishop for the metropolis he is sui juris the bishop of the See of Epidavros and is subordinate to the Metropolitan only in his capacity as auxiliary in the See of Argolis and the metropolitan synod over which the metropolitan presides The General Hierarocratic Commissioner akin to a western vicar general or archdeacon is Archpriest Vasileios Basil Soulandros The Roman Catholic name for the diocese was Dioecesis Argolicensis It is currently listed as suppressed but in the past was used as the name of a titular see Prior to 1882 the term used by the Catholic Church to describe this and other Orthodox dioceses formerly governed by Latin clergy was in partibus infidelium in the parts of the infidels but the term was changed by the papacy of Pope Leo XIII reportedly in response to complaints by King George I of Greece over its offensive nature 2 List of bishops and metropolitans editAccording to the French theologian and scholar Michel Le Quien these are the earliest bishops of Argos as recorded in Greek and Latin sources 3 Perigenes Genethlius Onesimus Thales John Theotimus Peter the Wonderworker Leo John Name lost recorded only in a Greek source in which he is addressed by the Patriarch of Constantinople as The most holy Bishop of Nauplia and Argos in the Holy Spirit Dionysius I Bishop of Nauplion and Argos in a Greek source Bishop of the Nauplians and the Argives in a Latin source Dionysius II also Bishop of Nauplia name lost to history recorded only as amp Metropolitan of Patras possibly also holding the bishopric of Anaplia a medieval name for Nauplia Meletius Gabriel Basil Theophanes Macarius Benedict 1767 in the time of the Patriarch Samuel of Constantinople Neophyte Dorotheus James Armogavles Gregory of Sitsovis This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Monasteries edit nbsp The Monastery of Agia Marina at Argos from the road to Castle Larissa The Monastery of Holy Photeine the Samaritan Woman 9 Male The Monastery of the All Great Taxiarchs of Southern Epidaurus Named for the archangels Ss Michael and Gabriel generals of the heavenly host 21 Female The Monastery of the Naive for the naive Virgin Mary glebe or abbey farm attached to Taxiarchs above The Monastery of Blessed Theodosius the Neomartyr 17 Female The Monastery of Saint Demetrius at Karakala 13 Female The Monastery of the Dormition of the Theotokos at Kalamios 29 Female The Monastery of Saint Marina at Argos 6 Female The Monastery of The Venerable Forerunner at Borsa 5 Female The Monastery of Life giving Spring silent cloister 10 Female The Monastery of Saint Macrina silent cloister 10 Female Total monastics 121 Within geographical boundaries of the Metropolis of Argolis there exists a further monastery the Monastery of Avgou Saint Demetrius which is placed under the jurisdiction of the Metropolis of Hydra Spetses and Aegina People editPeter the Wonderworker Saint Bishop of Argos Grigorios Kalamaras Ethnomartyr Bishop of Argos and Nauplion Athanasius Metropolitan of Argos 1869 1925 Agathonicus Metropolitan of Argos 1898 1956 Chrysostomos I civil name Tavladorakis 1909 6 August 1977 He was Metropolitan of Argos from 1945 to 1965 and concurrently Metropolitan of Piraeus from 1965 to his death Iakovos James II civil name Damianos Pakhis 1932 26 March 2013 Metropolitan from 23 November 1985 to his death Media editRadio The diocese maintains an FM radio station 105 2 which began broadcasting in 1991 2 Internet The official website is http users otenet gr imargol1 References edit The corpse is not held to have stood up and walked around rather the face appeared to briefly come to life again and was briefly surrounded by an apparently supernatural light Agios Petros o 8aymatoyrgos Arxiepiskopos Argoys kai Nayplioy Saint Peter the Wonderworker Archbishop of Argos and Nafplio in Greek available at 1 Accessed 14 May 2015 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Corrigan Owen B Oct 1920 Titular sees of the American hierarchy The Catholic Historical Review 6 3 Washington DC The Catholic University Of America 322 324 ISSN 0008 8080 Le Quien Michel 1740 Ecclesia Argi Oriens Christianus in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus quo exhibentur ecclesiae patriarchae caeterique praesules totius Orientis Tomus secundus in quo Illyricum Orientale ad Patriarchatum Constantinopolitanum pertinens Patriarchatus Alexandrinus amp Antiochenus magnaeque Chaldaeorum amp Jacobitarum Diœceses exponuntur in Latin Paris Ex Typographia Regia cols 183 186 OCLC 955922747 Sources editThis page is a translation in progress from the Greek Wikipedia article which relies upon the following sources written in the Greek language Argolikon Hmerologio 1910 Ekdidomenwn ypo toy en A8hnais syllogoy twn Argeiwn En A8hnais ek toy typografeioy Dhm Terzopoyloy 1910 Argolic Calendar 1910 Published in Athens by the Society of Argives At Athens by the publisher Demetrios Terzopoulos 1910 Argos kai Or8odo3ia sto diaba twn aiwnwn arximandriths Kallinikos D Korompokhs ierokhrykas ths Ieras Mhtropolews Argolidos dhmosiey8hke sto Periodiko Maties sthn Argolida teyx 10 Maios Ioynios 2002 Argos and Orthodoxy through the Progress of the Ages Archimadndrite Kallinikos D Korobokis Diocesan Homilist of the Holy Metropolis of Argolis Published in the periodical Eyes on Argolis Vol 10 May June 2002 Ekklhsia ths Ellados gia Mhtropoleis Church of Greece webpage for the metropolises Stoixeia sthn Argolikh Arxeiakh Biblio8hkh Istorias kai Politismoy Records of the Argolic Archival Library of History and Culture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metropolis of Argolis amp oldid 1145780241, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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