«A grand and most worthy library…»
Public Historical Library of Andritsaina
Address: Andritsaina Ilias 270 61
Tel.: 2626022242
Εmail: [email protected]
Public Historical Library of Andritsaina
History. The history of the Public Library of Andritsaina, or Nikolopoulios Library, begins in 1838 with the donation of the book collection of Konstantinos Agathofronas Nikolopoulos (1786–1841), an important philologist and scholar of the Greek Diaspora.
The continued enrichment of his collection was a large part of Nikolopoulos’ life’s work. Especially after he settled in Paris, in 1806, it went beyond the narrow confines of an individual collection that served exclusively the interests of its collector. Nikolopoulos’ ambition was much broader and took on a national dimension. The great books, in terms of intellectual and collectible value, that he collected, were aimed at contributing to the revival of Hellenism, which, in 1838, was still struggling to acquire national, state and cultural status.
Moreover, the fact that this collection did not come from a rich man, a noble or a patron, added even more value to the already remarkable library of Nikolopoulos, both in comparison with the past and in relation to the present: on the one hand because it was one of the most important in Europe for its time, and on the other hand because it is one of the few Greek libraries of the 18th and 19th centuries that have survived in their entirety until today.
On July 1, 1838, K. A. Nikolopoulos addressed a letter to the Municipality of Andritsaina, announcing his desire to donate his personal library. As expected, the municipal authority of Andritsaina gratefully accepted the donation and in 1839, Charalambos Christopoulos, Nikolopoulos’s nephew and minister in various governments during the 1850s and 1860s, and Konstantinos Farmakis Zafeiropoulos, municipal councilor and later mayor of Andritsaina, went to Paris in order to receive the collection.
Letter written by Konstantinos Agathofron Nikolopoulos
About 5,000 books, packed in 47 boxes, were transported in 1840, first by ship to Nafplio and from there by animal-powered vehicles to Andritsaina, which was then the capital of mountainous Olympia, and they were then placed in the church of Agia Varvara, where they remained for four decades.
In 1875, the construction of the School Building (‘Didaktirio’) of Andritsaina began on a plot offered by Nikolis Babadimos, designed by Miltiadis Kanellopoulos, engineer and Professor of the Hellenic Military Academy. Α nationwide fundraiser and a donation from Angelos Giannikesis, Consul of Greece in Trieste, helped fund the construction. The building was inaugurated in 1879 and the Library was housed on the west side of the 1st floor.
In 1932, the Library was transferred to the northeast wing that was added to the building, which has been serving as an Educational Center for the region for 150 years.
In 1998, the library was transferred to a neoclassical building next to the Historical High School of Andritsaina.
Konstantinos Nikolopoulos Collection
In 1932, when the Library had been transferred to the new wing of the building, the librarian Agisilaos Tselalis recorded a total of 6,450 books, collected from the donations of Nikolopoulos, Babadimos, Maraslis, Koumbouris, Koutsandreas and others.
Regarding their content, Agisilaos Tselalis described the books in Nikolopoulos’ collection as “valuable” and “hard to find”. Many were published in the first years of typography (1500–1550), while there are also numerous books with handwritten notes, dedications and signatures of famous men whom Nikolopoulos met in Paris. The highly aesthetic bookbinding certainly deserves to be mentioned (paperback, leather binding, gold binding and parchment binding with micro-sculpture and micro-engraving on their cover), as well as the continuous, to a large extent, series of publications (e.g. early publications of Homer’s works, philosophical works, works of classical literature and the Bible), printed in printing centers of Italy and in important publishing centers of northern Europe.
Catalogue of K. Nikolopoulos Library. The importance and the variety of the books of the Nikolopoulos collection, combined with the lack of a recording and classifying system until then, made imperative the need for their cataloguing. Efforts to compile a detailed catalogue were made in the 1970s by Dimitris Priggouris (1928–2019), director of the Public Library of Andritsaina.
However, such a project could not have been carried out without the assistance of experts from the Institute of Neohellenic Research (INR) of the National Hellenic Research Foundation (NHRF), headed by Alexis Politis. The collaboration was an initiative of Loukia Droulia, director of INR, which was welcomed by D. Priggouris who assisted as much as possible to the historians’ work of recording and cataloguing the Nikolopoulos collection.
The Catalogue of the Library of Konstantinos-Agathofron Nikolopoulos was published in 1987 by the INR/NHRF and contained 3,691 book titles, 3 collections of prints and 2 manuscripts.
As can be seen from the Catalogue, Nikolopoulos’ main interests revolved around classical studies (philology, theology, archeology, philosophy) and their related sciences. At the same time, he had a special interest in European affairs, while very few printed modern Greek books were added in his collection after his settlement in Paris, as well as works of non-classical (in the broadest sense of the term) literary production. The collection also includes dictionaries, rare copies of the Bible, publications in various languages (such as Hebrew and Aramaic), and music scores.
Evangelos Kallianiotis Collection. Another event that happened during the first half of the 1980s and played an important role in the development of the Library in Andritsaina, was the acquisition of the collection of Evangelos Kallianiotis.
In 1983, after a number of actions by the director of the Library, Dimitris Priggouris, the heirs of Evangelos Kallianiotis decided to donate his personal library to the Library of Andritsaina, without the deceased (who had died in 1981) having any origins or other connection with the town.
More specifically, E. Kallianiotis was born in 1888 in Stemnitsa, Arcadia, where he first studied at the local primary school and later at the school of Dimitsana. At the age of 17 he went to America and settled in Boston, where he lived until 1967. There he pursued a career out of opening food and beverage stores, while at the same time, driven by his love for literature and philosophy, he created his own private library. In 1967 he returned to Greece and settled in Athens. Three years later, he moved to his hometown of Stemnitsa, where he lived until his death, contributing financially and in various ways to the local community. Although one would expect to bequeath his library to his birthplace, Kallianiotis – perhaps because of the lack of a suitable space – decided to leave it to his descendants. They were convinced by Priggouris and so the library’s 4,341 volumes (with a significant number of rare and remarkable books) are on display today in a separate room, named after their first owner, in the Public Library of Andritsaina.
The acquisition of the Evangelos Kallianiotis collection of enriched the Library, expanding it quantitatively and thematically, and contributed in its being thought of as ‘Library of Andritsaina’ and not solely ‘Library of the Nikolopoulos collection’ anymore.
Public Historical Library of Andritsaina
Benaki Museum| Working Residencies at the Leigh Fermor House| Academic Year 2025-2026
The Benaki Museum is pleased to ...More
City of Athens Municipal Gallery| Yannis Fokas: Works 1985-2024| 07 November 2024-05 January 2025
City of Athens, through OPANDA, organizes ...More
University Studio Press| Hans-Joachim Lang, The women of block 10
Title:The Women of Block 10: Medical Experiments at ...More
Piraeus Terminal Station: A walk through history| By Giannis Loukas
The interconnection of Athens with the ...More
Leave A Comment