Mavrochori

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox Greek Dimos

Mavrochori (Template:Langx), meaning "black village"; before 1928: Μαύροβον – Mavrovon)[1] is a village on the shores of Lake Orestiada in Kastoria regional unit of Macedonia, Greece.[2]

Today Mavrochori is a tourist destination for a quiet vacation near the lake of Kastoria.[3] In addition to the trade fair, festive events take place on the 13th - 15 August of the Assumption of Mary, where the Monastery of Panagia Mavriotissa celebrates (it was built by General George Palaiologos in commemoration of the victory against the Normans in 1083).[4] The Mavrochori Nautical Club also operates in the village.[5]

History

It was in existence at least from 1380[4] and is denoted, under the name Mavrobo, in the British Baldwin & Craddock Map of Greece which was published on 1 January 1830.[6] The name Mavros, together with the name Krepeni, is found in a title deed executed by Serbian nobleman Nikola Bagaš.[7]

In the end of the 18th century the patriarch of the Mavrovitis family moved his people from the nearby Krepeni village to Mavrovo in order to avoid a plague pandemic, and it is believed that people were frequently moving between Krepeni and Mavrovo.[4]

The Monastery of Panagia Mavriotissa, originally named Mesonisiotissa (meaning "in the middle of the island"), was built near the village.[4]

Mavrochori had a historical relationship with both the Mavriotissa monastery as well as with the nearby village of Krepeni.[4]

During Ottoman rule, Mavrovo was populated by Christians and Muslims, it had one Greek school and one Muslim school and five inns.[8] The 1920 Greek census recorded 1,062 people in the village, and 450 inhabitants (45 families) were Muslim in 1923.[9] Following the Greek–Turkish population exchange, Greek refugee families in Mavrovo were from Asia Minor (55), Pontus (19) and one other from an unidentified location in 1926.[9] The 1928 Greek census recorded 1,065 village inhabitants.[9] In 1928, the refugee families numbered 72 (320 people).[9] There were two mosques and two Muslim cemeteries in the village, later all destroyed.[10]

Notable people

References

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  7. Nicholas K. Moutsopoulos, Kastoria, the Virgin of Mavriotissa (Athens: Friends of Byzantine and Ancient Monuments of Kastoria, 1967), 85. Cited in http://www.pahh.com/mavrovitis/ch2/chapter2b.html
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