Jorgucat


Jorgucat is a village in Gjirokastër County, southern Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became part of the municipality of Dropull. It is inhabited solely by Greeks.

Demographics

According to Ottoman statistics, the village had 449 inhabitants in 1895. The village had 1,015 inhabitants in 1993, all ethnically Greeks. The village today has a permanent population of roughly 500 inhabitants, notably due to migration to Greece or other countries. Despite this, the population doubles in Easter, Summer and Christmas, as most people return to their village to celebrate or have holidays with their families.

Location

The village Jorgucat is one of the main settlements in the southern part of Dropull valley. It's located between the villages of Zervat to the south and Grapsh to the north. Jorgucat is situated at a cross-road which joins Ioannina, Gjirokastër and Sarandë.

Name

The village received its name Jorgucat as the result of the conversion of a surname to a toponym. In particurlar the name Georgoutsates applies to the descendants of a certain Georgoutsos.

History

According to a local tradition Jorgucat was once called Gonates, a village mentioned in the Chronicle of Gjirokastër during the reign of Byzantine Emperor Alexios Komnenos. However, this theory remains disputed. Other accounts claim that the foundation of the settlement dates back to the first years of Ottoman rule. The village under its current name is recorded in an Ottoman document of 1520. That year it consisted of 62 households.
Jorgucat suffered dramatic population decline from the 17th to the first half of the 19th century.

Monastery of Prophet Elias

The Monastery of the Prophet Elias next to the village is situated on a natural elevation in the mountain range of Mali i Gjerë named Hilomodhi, on the Marantoraq peak. According to a local tradition the monastery was founded in the 12th century, supposedly built by giants. Documentary and architectural evidence, however, supports that the year of its foundation was 1545. The monastery was repaired and enlarged several times between the 17th and 19th centuries. In the 20th century it was closed down by the authorities of the Albanian state.

Notable individuals