Neoclassical houses of Georgios Chatzidimitriou in Karlovasi

Neoclassical houses of Georgios Chatzidimitriou in Karlovasi

Neoclassical houses of Georgios Chatzidimitriou in Karlovasi

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The descendant of one of the great families of Karlovasi, Georgios Chatzidimitriou was an attorney, a cooperative member, and the representative of UWC Samos at PASEGES (Pan-Hellenic Confederation of Unions of Agricultural Cooperatives).

Georgios Chatzidimitriou studied in France and was very erudite, he served cooperative ideals, and he aimed at more broadly promoting Samos wines in France and the Netherlands.

The family’s homes are in the neoclassical architectural style and are located on Agiou Nikolaou Street, near the church with the same name, they are well preserved and are excellent examples of the architecture and prosperity of the area from the trading of Samos wine.

Neoclassical houses of Georgios Chatzidimitriou in Karlovasi

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Home of the agriculturalist of the Principality Ar. Mantafounis, Karlovasi

Home of the agriculturalist of the Principality Ar. Mantafounis, Karlovasi

Home of the agriculturalist of the Principality Ar. Mantafounis, Karlovasi

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The home of Ar. Mantafounis (Agriculturalist and Supervisor of Agriculture and Forests of the Principality of Samos) is located near Valaskatzis central square in Karlovasi. Visitors can get there on foot from the square in the upper side of West Samos Town Hall, if they follow the alley to the right.  The neoclassical two-storey building with its unique architecture and garden is now being used by the University of the Aegean.

Young Samiot Aristotle G. Mantafounis came from a family of wine merchants who were at the helm of the economic, trade, and political life of Samos at the time. He was sent to France at the expense of the Principality government to study and, upon returning, teach the farmers the most productive vine-growing methods. After returning he was appointed agriculturalist and Supervisor of Agriculture and Forests during the era of the Principality. He co-signed and issued a series of instructions for vine-growing and vintage.

Home of the agriculturalist of the Principality Ar. Mantafounis, Karlovasi

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Kioulafa Kalyvi

Kioulafa Kalyvi

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The Samos kalyvi in the Kioulafides area is an ancestral, hospitable cottage built by hand using the materials available, which covers the needs for housing vine-growers. It offers protection from the elements, a place to store tools and supplies for agricultural work, and during periods of intense agricultural activity, it was used as a place where the entire family stayed.

Due to the distance from Vourliotes village, it became more spacious, gained a first floor, and included an additional space for animals, horses, dogs, chickens, and sheep. The two brothers that occasionally stay there are very hospitable and hard-working people, who offer tourists local cheese, Samos wine, and souma (local raki, a distillate). On the ground floor of the hut there is a stone grape stomping vat (lenos) as well as ypolenia collection tanks from old times.

Kioulafa Kalyvi and private grape treading vat (lenos and ypolenia collection tanks) within

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Jewish Merchant Homes, Vathy

Jewish Merchant Homes, Vathy

Jewish Merchant Homes, Vathy

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Along the Samos seafront avenue and just after the Gefyraki area heading towards Malagari, one can see the mainly neoclassical buildings that belonged to Jewish Wine Merchants.

Seafront zones and hamlets in Samos for the trading of wine and raisins were developed in the late 18th century and the early 19th century, at which time the Jewish presence was mainly in the area of Vathy.

After the Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca (1774), a fleet of numerous small ships was developed, which traded the local production of mainly muscat wines to the commercial centres of the times. Jewish merchants traded Samos wine with Thessaloniki, the Black Sea, and even Russia.

After the Asia Minor Catastrophe, many members of the Jewish community of Vourla in Asia Minor settled in Samos. The development of vine-growing provided the Jews of Samos with the opportunity of new commercial partnerships, with the support of the Jewish Community of Thessaloniki.

Most of what used to be luxurious mansions in Vathy, Samos, are now privately owned, while others are abandoned.

Jewish Merchant Homes, Vathy

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