Metropolis of Argolis


The Metropolis of Argolis is a diocese of the Church of Greece, with its seat at Nafplio, covering the historical Argolid. It occupies the current boundaries of the modern Prefecture of Argolis, except for the former municipality of Ermionida.
The see's original name was the Bishopric of Argos, and according to Paulinus the Deacon, it was founded by Saint Andrew. The early bishops of Argos were suffragan to the Metropolis of Corinth. It was separated from Corinth renamed the Metropolis of Argos and Nafplio in 1189, confirming an earlier de facto merger with Nauplion. In 1833, it was renamed the Metropolis of Argolis. Its cathedra was originally Argos, but it moved around the Argolid several times due to political factors.
Its incumbent is Metropolitan Nektarios Antonopoulos. The previous metropolitan, from 1985 until his death, was Metropolitan Iakovos II, who died 26 March 2013. The current metropolitan was chosen on 18 October 2013.

History and ecclesiastical administration

According to the article "Argos and Orthodoxy Through the Passage of the Ages", written by the Archimandrite Kallinikos D. Korobokis, the diocesan homilist, the history of the metropolitan see is recorded as follows:
Paulinus relates that the Apostle Andrew first proclaimed the Gospel at Argos, and thus he is traditionally held to be the founder of the Church there. It is also likely that the Apostle Paul came to Argos, some time around 50-60 AD; he remained in Corinth for a considerable number of months and, it is also thought, all around the neighboring provinces of Corinth. Argos acclaimed a bishop fairly early on, separate from that of the bishopric of Nauplia, with both under the jurisdiction of the Metropolis of Corinth.
The first known Bishop of Argos is Perigenes. At the end of the 9th century, the Bishop of Argos was Saint Peter the Wonderworker, who became the town's patron saint. The sees of Argos and Nauplion were unified in 1166. According to other sources, the unification of Argos and Nauplion had already occurred a few years after 879. Throughout the minutes of the Council of 879 in Constantinople, written by the members, the Bishop of Argos is recorded as Theotimos, and that of Nauplion as Andreas, which establishes a terminus post quem, but not a precise date for the unification. In 1189 the unified diocese of Argos and Nauplion was extracted from the Metropolis of Corinth and converted into a metropolitan see sui juris, with one John serving as its first metropolitan.
According to the Argolic Calendar of 1910, which was produced by the Bishops of Argos and Nauplion, the Eparchy of Argos was led under the Metropolis of Corinth:
According to the anonymous hand-written chronicle published in Δελτίω Ιστορ. Εθνολ. Εταιρίας Τ.Β΄ σελ. 32, ed. Io. Sakellionos, there are 23 recorded Bishops of Argos and Nauplion. Their names are as follows:
In 1212, the local Orthodox hierarchy was replaced by Latin hierarchs during the period of Frankish rule in which the two towns formed part of the Lordship of Argos and Nauplia. This state of affairs lasted until 1540, with the withdrawal of the Venetians after the Third Ottoman-Venetian War.
Afterwards, the diocese returned to the control of Greek Orthodox hierarchs, but in 1686, the seat of the bishop moved from Argos to Nafplio. Shortly after the Venetians returned, and with them, a Roman Catholic hierarchy, and the Orthodox administration re-located to the village of Merbaka, returning to Argos in 1770 in the wake of attacks by Albanian irregulars.
At the outbreak of the Greek War of Independence, the seat moved again to Nafplio. The bishop, Grigorios Kalamaras was killed in the Siege of Tripolitsa, and is consequently termed an ethnomartyr a national martyr, Greek: ἐθνομάρτυρας. This designation is a popular one, and has no canonical status making the bishop a saint, as death in battle does not necessarily qualify one for martyrdom.
After the creation of the Greek state but before the creation of the new autocephalous Church of Greece in 1850, the diocese underwent a brief period of successive reorganizations as the Patriarchate of Constantinople adjusted to having large numbers of faithful outside the Ottoman millet system. It was briefly merged with the Metropolis of Corinth, with the addition of the Bishopric of Hydra in 1842, before its present jurisdiction was created between 1850-52.
Currently, the Bishop of Epidavros is suffragan to the Metropolitan Bishop of Argolis, and serves as the auxiliary bishop for the metropolis; he is sui juris the bishop of the See of Epidavros, and is subordinate to the Metropolitan only in his capacity as auxiliary in the See of Argolis and the metropolitan synod, over which the metropolitan presides. The General Hierarocratic Commissioner — akin to a western vicar general or archdeacon — is Archpriest Vasileios Soulandros.
The Roman Catholic name for the diocese was Dioecesis Argolicensis. It is currently listed as suppressed, but in the past was used as the name of a titular see. Prior to 1882, the term used by the Catholic Church to describe this and other Orthodox dioceses formerly governed by Latin clergy was in partibus infidelium, but the term was changed by the papacy of Pope Leo XIII, reportedly in response to complaints by King George I of Greece over its offensive nature.

List of bishops and metropolitans

According to the French theologian and scholar Michel Le Quien, these are the earliest bishops of Argos, as recorded in Greek and Latin sources:
  1. Perigenes
  2. Genethlius
  3. Onesimus
  4. Thales
  5. John
  6. Theotimus
  7. Peter the Wonderworker
  8. Leo
  9. John
  10. ?
  11. Meletius
  12. Gabriel
  13. Basil
  14. Theophanes
  15. Macarius
  16. Benedict, in the time of the Patriarch Samuel of Constantinople
  17. Neophyte
  18. Dorotheus
  19. James Armogavles
  20. Gregory of Sitsovis

    Monasteries

Total monastics, 121.
Within geographical boundaries of the Metropolis of Argolis there exists a further monastery, the Monastery of Avgou, which is placed under the jurisdiction of the Metropolis of Hydra, Spetses, and Aegina.

People