Hagios Georgios

Department Archive
Collection Byzantine Research Fund
Reference No. BRF/01/01/14/041
Level Item
Place Hagios Georgios chapel
Mystras
Dates 1890
Donor/Creator Weir Schultz, Mr Robert
Barnsley, Mr Sidney Howard
Scope and Content Ground plan. This is a preliminary drawing. It is annotated in pencil.
Further information Mistras, one of the most important medieval cities of Morea, lies four miles north-west of present-day Sparta on the summit of a Taygetos hill. The first building to be erected by William II Villehardouin, the Frankish Prince of Achaia in the location was the castle (1249). Soon, a settlement was established outside the citadel- most of the churches and chapels stand outside it too. After the recapture of Morea by the Byzantines in 1262 Mistras became the headquarters of the Byzantine general and, later, the seat of the Lakedaimonian bishopic. During the 14th c. it was the capital of the Despotate of Mistras and flourished under the Kantakouzenoi and the Palaiologoi reign until its fall to the Turks in 1460.

The Mistras chapels (around twenty in total) are small, usually, single cell private buildings principally funerary in character: numerous constantly re-used tombs have been excavated both inside and outside these monuments. Their identification is arbitrary: some are known by the names assigned to them by the local community in modern times.

The small but gracefully proportioned barrel-vaulted chapel of Hagios Georgios lies near Perivleptos. It is a double-nave church with lateral adjoining narthex and engaging zigzag brick patterns and dentil courses on the exterior walls. An apsed propylon stands on the north side. The monument and its fresco decoration that dates to the 15th c. has been restored and cleaned of earth and debris.