Metropolis of Eleutheroupolis
The Holy Metropolis of Eleutheroupolis is one of the metropolises of the New Lands in Greece that is within the jurisdiction of the Church of Constantinople but de facto is administered for practical reasons as part of the Church of Greece under an agreement between the churches of Athens and Constantinople. The metropolis is located in northern Greece in the eastern part of Greek Macedonia.
History
An episcopal see in the area of the present metropolis existed in the ninth century identified as the Diocese of Alektoropoleos, the evidence of which survives in the present day area of New Peramos near Kavala. The Diocese of Alektoropoleos is first mentioned in the ranking list of the bishops in 901 wherein the diocese is listed as the sixth diocese under the jurisdiction of the Metropolis of Philippi.
As the population around the seat of the diocese decreased in the fourteenth century, the seat of the diocese was moved to the present day village of Eleutherai. Another move of the seat occurred about the second half of the eighteenth century, to old Pravi. In 1889, Patriarch Dionysius V elevated the Diocese of Eleutheroupoleos to a metropolis with Bishop Dionysios Stavridis as its first Metropolitan. In 1929, the metropolis was renamed "Pravi Eleutheroupoli".[1]
Metropolitans
- Chrysostomos (Avagianos) 2004 - Present
- Evdokimos (Kokkinakis) 1984 - 2003
- Ambrose (Nicholas) 1958 - 1984
- Sophronius II (Stamoulis) 1927 - 1958
- Emilianos (Dragoulas) 1924 - 1927
- Constantine (Megkrelis) 1922 - 1924
- German (Sakellaridis) 1909 - 1917
- Petrides (Panaretos 1900 - 1909
- Dionysios II (Stavridis) 1888 - 1900
- Dionysios I 1875 - 1885
- Agathangelos 1872 - 1875
- Neophytos (Papakonstantinou) 1867 - 1872
- Meletius 1864 - 1867
- Anthimos (Gryparis) 1826 - 1863
- Joseph (Zambelis) 1814 - 1826
- Paisios 1808 - 1814
- Timothy 1787 - 1790
- Geradimos 1766 - 1787
- Parthenios c. 1624
- Damianos c. 1615
- Sophronius c.1580
- Nicander 1351
- George 11th century
- Theodore c. 879
Monasteries
- Monastery of St. John the Baptist (Prodromos) at Nikisiani For Men
- Monastery of St. Dimitrios at Nikisiani For Women
- Monastery of St. Panteleimon at Chrysokastro For Women
- Monastery of the Virgin Panagia at Chartokopio For Women
Reference
- ↑ Emiliou D. Mavroudis, The story of Metropolis Eleftheroupoleos, Thessaloniki, 2006)