Videos by Angeliki Strati
Αφορά την ανακοίνωσή μου στο επιστημονικό συνέδριο, που έγινε ψηφιακά, με τίτλο " Ζωγράφοι και ... more Αφορά την ανακοίνωσή μου στο επιστημονικό συνέδριο, που έγινε ψηφιακά, με τίτλο " Ζωγράφοι και εργαστήρια του 18ου και των αρχών του 19ου στη Μακεδονία και το Άγιο Όρος" που οργάνωσε το Μουσείο Βυζαντινού Πολιτισμού στη Θεσσαλονίκη στις 21 Νοεμβρίου 2010. 22 views
Papers by Angeliki Strati
The unpublished bilateral icon is exhibited in the Byzantine Museum in Kastoria and comes from th... more The unpublished bilateral icon is exhibited in the Byzantine Museum in Kastoria and comes from the church of Hagios Alypios in the Oikonomou parish.
Κυπριακαί Σπουδαί Τ207όμος ΟΗ΄ -ΟΘ΄ 2 , 4 2016-20177), 2019
Αγγελική Στρατή, "Αμφίγραπτη εικόνα με τη Σταύρωση (14ος αιώνας) και την Παναγία Ελεούσα (1828) α... more Αγγελική Στρατή, "Αμφίγραπτη εικόνα με τη Σταύρωση (14ος αιώνας) και την Παναγία Ελεούσα (1828) από τον Άγιο Αλύπιο Καστοριάς", ανάτυπο από το Δελτίον της Χριστιανικής Αρχαιολογικής Εταιρείας, περίοδος Δ΄, τόμος ΜΓ΄, Μνήμη Cyril Alexander Mango , Αθήνα 2022
Οι οδηγίες προς τους συγγραφείς για τη συστηματοποίηση της μορφής των άρθρων που υποβάλλουν στο π... more Οι οδηγίες προς τους συγγραφείς για τη συστηματοποίηση της μορφής των άρθρων που υποβάλλουν στο περιοδικό βρίσκονται στην ιστοσελίδα: www.kbe.auth.gr Formatting guidelines for contributors to the journal can be found at: www.kbe.auth.gr
Οι οδηγίες προς τους συγγραφείς για τη συστηματοποίηση της μορφής των άρθρων που υποβάλλουν στο π... more Οι οδηγίες προς τους συγγραφείς για τη συστηματοποίηση της μορφής των άρθρων που υποβάλλουν στο περιοδικό βρίσκονται στην ιστοσελίδα: www.kbe.auth.gr Formatting guidelines for contributors to the journal can be found at: www.kbe.auth.gr
This paper concerns the historical and structural aspects, and the proposed restoration of the th... more This paper concerns the historical and structural aspects, and the proposed restoration of the three remaining late-ottoman monuments in the town of Florina. These are the ottoman bath, part of a minaret and part of a defensive tower (kule). The presentation includes the historical data, the analysis of the typology and construction of the monuments, the building phases, the determination of their dating, the description of their pathology and, finally, the restoration proposal.
Deltion of the Christian Archaeological Society, 2011
Examined are examples of twelfth-century wall-paintings identified to date in the region of Easte... more Examined are examples of twelfth-century wall-paintings identified to date in the region of Eastern Macedonia: in a church excavated in the Strymon estuary near Amphipolis, in the church of St Nicholas at Elaion Serres, and an isolated foliate cross in a ...

ΠΡΑΚΤΙΚΑ -ΔΙΕΘΝΕΣ ΕΠΙΣΤΗΜΟΝΙΚΟ ΣΥΜΠΟΣΙΟ ΠΡΟΣ ΤΙΜΗΝ ΤΟΥ ΟΜΟΤΙΜΟΥ ΚΑΘΗΓΗΤΗ ΓΕΩΡΓΙΟΥ ΒΕΛΕΝΗ, 2021
Elements of Urban Planning in Byzantine Mystras
Mystras was an important administrative, militar... more Elements of Urban Planning in Byzantine Mystras
Mystras was an important administrative, military and urban centre of the Peloponnese for a considerable part of the Middle Ages. The upper city of Mystras, which developed across a natural plateau below the Frankish fortress and was fortified in the 14th-15th century, presents the basic characteristics of a Byzantine city. The main ʽMiddle Streetʼ connects the two gates, the one of Monemvasia in the east with the Nauplion Gate in the west, crosses the central square known as the Foros and proceeds past the Palaces of the Despots, churches and monasteries, mansions and derelict housing.
Special features of the houses along the narrow streets south of the Foros and the Palaces include ground-floor vaults used for storage and trade, with the living quarters or triklinos above and part of the upper storey -the diavatikon- often built on arches spanning the street. They may be seen in i. mansion A (the “Palataki” of Orlandos); ii. the house adjacent to it; iii. house B of Orlandos; iv.the house next to it; v. the house next to the compound of Aghia Sofia; vi. the three-storey house Δ of Orlandos, below Aghia Sofia; vii. the house at a lower level near the Foros; viii. the house to its westward; and ix. house Γ of Orlandos, near the Nauplion Gate.
Thus, the vaulted passageways along the narrow streets provided shelter for economic activity, functioning in ways similar to the emvoloi of the main streets in major Byzantine cities, such as Constantinople. Of course, the layout was adapted to the mountainous landscape, with streets following the contours of the hillside south of the area of the Palaces. The economic activity that took place there complemented the commercial aspect of the Foros and periodic markets in ways not unlike those of European medieval towns and modern open-air markets.
Δελτίον Χριστιανικής Αρχαιολογικής Εταιρείας
Δελτίον Χριστιανικής Αρχαιολογικής Εταιρείας
Δελτίον Χριστιανικής Αρχαιολογικής Εταιρείας, 2005
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Videos by Angeliki Strati
Papers by Angeliki Strati
Mystras was an important administrative, military and urban centre of the Peloponnese for a considerable part of the Middle Ages. The upper city of Mystras, which developed across a natural plateau below the Frankish fortress and was fortified in the 14th-15th century, presents the basic characteristics of a Byzantine city. The main ʽMiddle Streetʼ connects the two gates, the one of Monemvasia in the east with the Nauplion Gate in the west, crosses the central square known as the Foros and proceeds past the Palaces of the Despots, churches and monasteries, mansions and derelict housing.
Special features of the houses along the narrow streets south of the Foros and the Palaces include ground-floor vaults used for storage and trade, with the living quarters or triklinos above and part of the upper storey -the diavatikon- often built on arches spanning the street. They may be seen in i. mansion A (the “Palataki” of Orlandos); ii. the house adjacent to it; iii. house B of Orlandos; iv.the house next to it; v. the house next to the compound of Aghia Sofia; vi. the three-storey house Δ of Orlandos, below Aghia Sofia; vii. the house at a lower level near the Foros; viii. the house to its westward; and ix. house Γ of Orlandos, near the Nauplion Gate.
Thus, the vaulted passageways along the narrow streets provided shelter for economic activity, functioning in ways similar to the emvoloi of the main streets in major Byzantine cities, such as Constantinople. Of course, the layout was adapted to the mountainous landscape, with streets following the contours of the hillside south of the area of the Palaces. The economic activity that took place there complemented the commercial aspect of the Foros and periodic markets in ways not unlike those of European medieval towns and modern open-air markets.
Mystras was an important administrative, military and urban centre of the Peloponnese for a considerable part of the Middle Ages. The upper city of Mystras, which developed across a natural plateau below the Frankish fortress and was fortified in the 14th-15th century, presents the basic characteristics of a Byzantine city. The main ʽMiddle Streetʼ connects the two gates, the one of Monemvasia in the east with the Nauplion Gate in the west, crosses the central square known as the Foros and proceeds past the Palaces of the Despots, churches and monasteries, mansions and derelict housing.
Special features of the houses along the narrow streets south of the Foros and the Palaces include ground-floor vaults used for storage and trade, with the living quarters or triklinos above and part of the upper storey -the diavatikon- often built on arches spanning the street. They may be seen in i. mansion A (the “Palataki” of Orlandos); ii. the house adjacent to it; iii. house B of Orlandos; iv.the house next to it; v. the house next to the compound of Aghia Sofia; vi. the three-storey house Δ of Orlandos, below Aghia Sofia; vii. the house at a lower level near the Foros; viii. the house to its westward; and ix. house Γ of Orlandos, near the Nauplion Gate.
Thus, the vaulted passageways along the narrow streets provided shelter for economic activity, functioning in ways similar to the emvoloi of the main streets in major Byzantine cities, such as Constantinople. Of course, the layout was adapted to the mountainous landscape, with streets following the contours of the hillside south of the area of the Palaces. The economic activity that took place there complemented the commercial aspect of the Foros and periodic markets in ways not unlike those of European medieval towns and modern open-air markets.
Frescoes and Icons in the Holy Monastery of Timios Prodromos near Serres (14th-19th c.), 161-166