Thirty five years after the first scaffolding was erected
to fix earthquake damage, the Athens Metropolitan
Cathedral is completely scaffolding-free.
A 1981 earthquake caused damage, leading to almost four
decades of construction, red tape, a second earthquake in
1999 which caused even more damage and years of wrangling
between Church and government officials.
The Cathedral, known as the “Mitropoli” to
worshipers and tourists alike, is a major city landmark
and the scaffolding has been a contentious eyesore for
decades.
See above video from the Royal Wedding of King Juan Carlos
of Spain and Princess Sophia at the Athens Cathedral in
1962. Sophia is the sister of Greece’s then-King
Constantine and a member of the now-deposed Greek Royal
Family.
The Athens Metropolitan Cathedral was completed in May of 1862 and dedicated to the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary. (Photo from 1869)
Construction of the Cathedral began on Christmas Day, 1842 with the laying of the cornerstone by King Otto and Queen Amalia. (Photo: Installation of King George)
The Cathedral contains the tombs of two Greek Orthodox saints, killed by the Turks during the Ottoman occupation: Saint Philothei and Patriarch Gregory V.
Gregory V, Patriarch of Constantinople, was hanged and his body thrown into the Bosphorus in 1821, in retaliation for the Greek uprising on March 25. His body was rescued by Greek sailors and eventually enshrined in Athens.
Saint Philothei built a convent, was martyred in 1559, and her bones are still visible in a silver reliquary. She is honored for ransoming Greek women enslaved in Ottoman Empire's harems.
Restoring the church to its former glory as an important part of the city skyline. (Photo: Nick Politakis via Instagram)