Agios Simeon
Famagusta, North Cyprus
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Agios Simeon Church |
Agios Simeon is one of three Byzantine churches remaining in the
south east corner of Famagusta, the others being Ayia Zoni and
St
Nikolas. It is attached to the southern wall of the much larger
Greek St George church. (Or to be more accurate, the Greek St
George is attached to the north wall of Agios Simeon!) It is thought
that the church was built towards the end of the Byzantine rule of the
island, perhaps around 1150.
An orthodox Bishopric was established at an early date, and Agios
Simeon became the Orthodox Cathedral when the citizens of Salamis moved
to Famagusta. It is reputed that the remains of St Epiphanios,
Bishop of Salamis, were enshrined here. (Although the same claim is made
for the Epiphanios Basilica at Salamis)
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Agios Simeon Interior View |
The cathedral was cruciform in shape, and would have supported a
dome. There were two aisles, each having a semi-circular apse. These
apses each would have had an alter, one of which would have been the
alter proper, and the other an alter for the preparation of the bread
and wine for the Eucharist. Both alters would have been out of site
behind a decorated iconostasis.
When the Lusignans arrived in 1191, they brought with them a subtle
change in the style of ecclesiastical buildings in the form of
grand buildings in the Latin and European style. Not to be outdone, the
Orthodox community built a new cathedral alongside the old, and more in
the style of the new masters of the island. Hence, Agios Simeon was
abandoned after the new church was built.
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