Hagia Sophia

Department Archive
Collection Byzantine Research Fund
Reference No. BRF/02/01/13/045
Level Item
Place Andravida
Dates 1905-1909
Donor/Creator Traquair, Mr Ramsay
Scope and Content Central vault over east end. Further annotation in pencil survives at the back of the photograph.
Further information Andravida, which is located at the very heart of the Morea plain, was the capital of the Frankish barony which was established in the region after the fall of Peloponnese to the Franks in the early 13th c.

The church (Dominican cathedral) of Hagia Sophia at Andravida was the seat of the Frankish bishop of Olena. Two arched colonnades divide the interior into three aisles. Two side cross-vaulted chapels with impressive Gothic ribs and relief decoration were attached to the main square-shaped apse of the building. The arches and apses in both these chapels are of purely Gothic style. The church was a mosque during the Turkish period: the ruins of a Turkish minaret still survive at the north-west corner. Byzantine masonry was used only partly in the walling. The monument has been dated to the end of the 13th/beginning of the 14th c.
Reference 1924. Journal of the Royal Institute of British Architects. 31 (2): 75, fig.23.