Zoopigi

Zoopigi

Nama or Commandaria...

Zoopigi is a village in the Limassol province that belongs to the Pitsilia geographical district and it is built about 24 kilometres north of the city of Limassol at an average altitude of 885 meters.

The landscape of the area that is divided by the tributaries of the river Germasogeia and the river Limnati (Xylourikos).
Photo: Maria Kiriakou

The village of Zoopigi is adjacent to the village of Kato Mylos in the north, with the village of Agios Theodoros in the northeast, in the south with the villages of Kalo Chorio and Louvaras and in the east with the village of Agios Mamas.
Photo: Costas Mageiroudes

Population:
Zoopigi has experienced large fluctuations in population over time. More specifically in 1881 its population was 172 and increased to 215 in 1891. In 1901 it decreased to 212 to rise again to 254 in 1911. In 1946 it increased to 307 to decrease to 265 in 1960. In 1976 it decreased to 261 and to 214 in 1982. In 2001 the population of the village was 198. According to the 2011 census, Zoopigi had 140 permanent residents.

Crops and Occupations:
Zoopigi grows vineyards, wine-growing varieties such as Xynisteri and native dark coloured grapes, olives, almond trees, vegetables and fruit trees. Since ancient times, from the variety Xynisteri and from the local black grape, produced sweet Cyprus wine called Nama, which later on, during the era of the Crusades was named Commandaria.
Photo: Stelios Nikolaou‎

The Name of the Village: 
According to folk tradition, the village was originally called "Zoodochos Pigi", which after the combination of these two words was named Zoopigi. This version is also evidenced by the fact that the village church is dedicated to Zoodochos Pigi.

Historical Data: 
According to Nearchos Clerides, Zoopigi is one of the youngest villages in Cyprus that was created during the Venetian occupation of Cyprus. In the 16th century it is marked on the Ortelius map of 1573 under the name "Zopy". On the same map Orongou, a settlement near Zoopigi, is marked but does not exist today.

Orongou was an earlier settlement and it is probable that its inhabitants gradually moved a few kilometres northwest and created a new village, Zoopigi. Orongou existed until the mid-19th century and was then abandoned completely for unknown reasons. It seems more likely that there was water and more fertile land in the area of the new village.
Photo: Costas Kamenos

Sights and churches of the village:
Walking through Zoopigi, a visitor will find that the settlement is not compact due to the fragmentation of the area. However, the visitor will be impressed by the preservation of the traditional folk architecture of the houses with the tiled roofs, picturesque small courtyards and vineyards.

Also in the village you can see the church of "Zoodochos Pigi" which is a single-aisled wooden roof with a protruding an apse on the east, five-sided exterior and semicircular interior, possibly of the 13th century, with its 16th-century fragments preserved inside. You can also see the chapel of St. Nectarios. It is noteworthy that in the 1930s, the school of Zoopigi was housed in an old church dedicated to Agia Marina, according to Gunnis.

It would be a mistake not to mention, the monument dedicated to Antonis Antoniou and the Monument to Michael Georgallas hero of 1955-1959, existing in the village as well as the hideout of the area. Also in the village there is the Commandaria Museum, which was founded in 1940 and the exhibits are organised by chronological periods.
Photo: Παναγιώτα Κωνσταντίνου

For the map of the area click HERE

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