![The image captures an indoor display of three aged historical documents or books, likely within a museum or exhibition setting in Nea Filadelfia, Greece. The items are protected by glass, which reflects overhead lighting.
The uppermost document is a handwritten record from the "ΙΕΡΑ ΕΚΚΛΗΣΙΑ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗΣ ΚΟΙΝΟ[ΤΗΤΟΣ] ΘΥΑΤΕΙΡΩΝ" (Holy Church of the Greek Community of Thyateira), dated "1813", with some additional English handwriting.
The document on the left is a "ΔΙΠΛΟΤΥΠΟΝ ΙΕΡΟΤΕΛΕΣΤΙΩΝ" (Duplicate of Sacraments/Services) from the "ΙΕΡΟΣ ΝΑΟΣ ΤΟΥ ΤΙΜΙΟΥ ΠΡΟΔΡΟΜΟΥ" (Holy Church of St. John the Baptist), with a visible date "1665" and a table containing handwritten numerical entries. A label to its left reads "Τα Καραμανλίδικα. Δωρεά Βάγιας" (Karamanlidika. Gift of Vayias), indicating its content or provenance.
The item on the right is an open, handwritten book, showing two columns of text per page in Greek script. The content appears religious, including phrases like "Νοσούντα τὸ σώμα καὶ τὴν ψυχές" (Sick in body and soul), "Ο Ειρμός" (The Irmos), and "Τροπάρια" (Troparia). Consistent with the adjacent label, some text may be Karamanlidika (Turkish written in Greek characters).
All documents exhibit signs of age, including yellowed paper and faded ink, highlighting their historical significance.](https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/patr-3a75e.appspot.com/o/uploads%2Fimage_picker_2fa6ebbb-d37a-4896-8.jpg?alt=media)
Stake attention in this memory
The image captures an indoor display of three aged historical documents or books, likely within a museum or exhibition setting in Nea Filadelfia, Greece. The items are protected by glass, which reflects overhead lighting. The uppermost document is a handwritten record from the "ΙΕΡΑ ΕΚΚΛΗΣΙΑ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗΣ ΚΟΙΝΟ[ΤΗΤΟΣ] ΘΥΑΤΕΙΡΩΝ" (Holy Church of the Greek Community of Thyateira), dated "1813", with some additional English handwriting. The document on the left is a "ΔΙΠΛΟΤΥΠΟΝ ΙΕΡΟΤΕΛΕΣΤΙΩΝ" (Duplicate of Sacraments/Services) from the "ΙΕΡΟΣ ΝΑΟΣ ΤΟΥ ΤΙΜΙΟΥ ΠΡΟΔΡΟΜΟΥ" (Holy Church of St. John the Baptist), with a visible date "1665" and a table containing handwritten numerical entries. A label to its left reads "Τα Καραμανλίδικα. Δωρεά Βάγιας" (Karamanlidika. Gift of Vayias), indicating its content or provenance. The item on the right is an open, handwritten book, showing two columns of text per page in Greek script. The content appears religious, including phrases like "Νοσούντα τὸ σώμα καὶ τὴν ψυχές" (Sick in body and soul), "Ο Ειρμός" (The Irmos), and "Τροπάρια" (Troparia). Consistent with the adjacent label, some text may be Karamanlidika (Turkish written in Greek characters). All documents exhibit signs of age, including yellowed paper and faded ink, highlighting their historical significance.
No transactions found



