Panagia Episkopi

Panagia Episkopi
  • Panagia tis Episkopis (Παναγία της Επισκοπής)
  • Church of Episkopi Thiras (Ναός Επισκοπής Θήρας)
Παναγία Επισκοπή
West side of the church
Panagia Episkopi
Location of the church in Greece
36°22′39″N 25°27′51″E / 36.37750°N 25.46417°E / 36.37750; 25.46417
LocationMesa Gonia, Santorini
CountryGreece
LanguageGreek
DenominationGreek Orthodox
Previous denominationRoman Catholic (1207–1537)
History
Status
  • Cathedral:
  •  – (c. 11th – c. 12th-centuries–1207)
  •  – (1537–1827)
  • Church:
  •  – (1207–1537)
  •  – (since 1827– )
FounderAlexios I Komnenos
DedicationPanagia (Virgin Mary)
Relics heldIcon of the Panagia Glykofilousa
EventsFeast of the Assumption
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Architectural typeChurch
StyleByzantine
Completedc. 11th – c. 12th-centuries
Specifications
Length14 m (46 ft)
Width11.1 m (36 ft)
MaterialsStone; tiles; marble; timber
Administration
ProvinceConstantinople
MetropolisSantorini (it)

The Panagia Episkopi (Greek: Παναγία Επισκοπή) is a middle-Byzantine Greek Orthodox former cathedral, now church, on the island of Santorini (Thira), in the Cyclades region of Greece. It is also called Panagia tis Episkopis (Παναγία της Επισκοπής) or Church of Episkopi Thiras (Ναός Επισκοπής Θήρας). According to an old, now almost completely destroyed inscription, the building of the church was commissioned by the Byzantine Emperor Alexios I Komnenos at the end of the 11th century, and took the place of a previous three-aisled early Byzantine-era basilica. The church was dedicated to the Panagia ("All-holy"), a Greek Orthodox appellation for the Virgin Mary. The second part of the name (Episkopi) means "episcopal". The Panagia Episkopi was the seat of the Orthodox diocese of Santorini until 1207 and again from 1537 to 1827.