Ayia (Saint) Marina Chapel
At a distance of about three to four kilometres
from the new village of Ayia Marina lies the old church of Ayia Marina,
which was built in 1890. Today it serves as the community’s chapel.
Nearby the chapel there used to be a small village called
Leivadi. In 1952, the English government moved the inhabitants of this
village to Morfou, building a house for each family. This is how the area
of Neo Leivadi Morfou was formed. The area of Palaio Leivadi Pafou was
disappropriated and deserted. Few inhabitants, however, who did not wish
to move to Morfou, took what was rightfully theirs and built the area where
the new village of Ayia Marina lies today. About 45 families moved from
the mountain slope of the old village of Ayia Marina to wards the sea,
to a beautiful low land where the village lies today. In the old village,
the only things left to see are the church, which serves as a chapel today
and the priest wife’s kiln.
The chapel, which was built at the centre of the village,
is now 3-4 kilometres away from the new village of Ayia Marina. The village’s
cemetery is located in the parvis of the church and funerary services are
still carried out. The cemetery has a rectangular shape and an arched roof.
It is built out of stone and it is painted white on the outside. The width
of the external walls is about 60-70 centimetres. The belfry is new, and
it is really high and vaulted. At a distance of about 100 metres from the
chapel, you come across to the holy water of Ayia Marina.
Internally, the church is flat and it is divided from the
main church by a wooden iconostasis, which was recently made. The iconostasis
is framed by six icons. Above these icons, a narrower cincture includes
miniatures of ten other icons. The iconostasis has two portals, the so-called
beautiful portal and the north portal. The chapel has four icons that are
very old. These icons used to decorate the chapel since 1890 and were transferred
to the new church of Ayia Marina.
Mass takes place 4-5 times a year. On the 17th of July,
Ayia Marina is celebrated and the whole community comes to the chapel to
honour the patron Saint. The vespers on the 16th of July are celebrated
at the new church of Ayia Marina.
New Church of Ayia Marina
The new village of Ayia Marina is located in a plain and
it is about 3-4 kilometres away from the sea at Polis Chrisohous. Because
of its privileged location, the village has developed during the last years
and today it has eight hundred inhabitants.
The church dedicated to Ayia Marina was built at the centre of the village
with the help and contribution of all the inhabitants. The church was dedicated
to Ayia Marina in 1959. It is quite big and it can receive up to three
hundred people. It has a rectangular shape and an arched roof.
Externally, the church is built out of stone and it is painted
white. The parvis is quite big and its floor has been recently paved with
slabs. The church is surrounded by a wall. The belfry is high and vaulted
and it is built at the east side of the church, abutting on the church.
Once you get in the church, you will admire the frescoes
decorating the whole church. The frescoes depict Saints, Christ and Virgin
Mary. The iconostasis adds to the church’s splendour. It is engraved in
a unique way and it is made out of walnut-wood. It has two portals the
so-called beautiful portal and the northern portal. The iconostasis is
decorated by eight icons. A second, narrower cincture includes fourteen
miniature-icons. There are four icons, which are very old, possibly a hundred
years old and are kept in the church’s sanctuary. The church also has two
wooden Psalters, which were recently made. The icon depicting Ayia Marina
is stands in a special iconostasis that is at the end of the left side
of the church’s iconostasis.
The church is built on one level, thus it does not have
a women’ loft. The feast day of Ayia Marina is celebrated on the 16th of
July and either the eparch or the bishop is present. During this day, the
whole community arranges for a blood-donation to take place in the church’s
hall.
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