Omolio Folk-Agricultural Showroom Marinos Antipas

Address: Omolio local community, Agia, Larissa
Tel.: +30 24943 50100

WORKING HOURS
TICKETS

Free

Share it!

Omolio Folk-Agricultural Showroom Marinos Antipas

Omolio is a historical settlement of the Municipality of Agia surrounded by great natural beauty. Located in a central location, 40 km from the capital of the Larissa regional administration, just three kilometers from the Athens-Thessaloniki national road and at a minimum distance from the sea. According to Homer, the city participated in the Amphictyony of Delphi, while the mint of Ancient Omoli was one of the greatest in central Greece. The ruins of this ancient city and citadel still remain close to current Omolio.

Conditions brought the village back  close to major historical events. This is the soil in which Marinos Antipas is buried, one of the most important figures of Greece in the fight to defend civil liberties. When Antipas came to Thessaly, where he took over as caretaker of the property of his uncle, he changed social conditions in the region. Although he was in a position of strength, he deleted agricultural debts, applied Sunday as a day off and set the remuneration of tenant farmers based on 75% of production (instead of 25% as was up to then in force). His murder was the natural consequence in a place dominated by lthe andowners of the time.

Μαρίνος Αντύπας / Marinos Antypas

Nowadays, the local community commemorates him, recognizing his contribution to changing social conditions, both in the region and across the country. It built a modest monument erected in Omolio where events are held every year in memory of the great fighter. At the same time, it gave his name to the small museum built in the village: Omolio Folk-Agricultural Showroom Marino Antipas, housed in the former Community chambers, located in the village square.
Today, the exhibition presents the tools used by the people for whom Antipas fought. Inaugurated on 18 March 2007 to mark the 100th anniversary of his death (murdered in 1907 in Pirgetos). Premechanical agricultural and foraging tools are hosted in the exhibition venue. Visitors can also admire tools of traditional occupations (fishermen, shoemakers, weavers, etc.) and objects from daily life of local people: handicrafts, embroidery and textiles, utilitarian household items (sofras (low tables), pots, pinakoti (bread levening boards)), local costumes, traditional clothing, woodwork items, postcards and engravings, coins, antique furniture, and a local bisiki (cot).

The collection includes artifacts that may be considered historical documents: a local’s military diary, which describes in detail the experience of the war in Asia Minor, but also photographs of social events and the occupations of the inhabitants. The showroom has a conference hall that holds 50-60 people.

Λαογραφικό-Γεωργικό Εκθετήριο Ομολίου Μαρίνος Αντύπας

Places like the Omolio Folk-Agricultural Showroom Marinos Antipas, although exhibiting objects from earlier times, alsoshow that traditional culture is not a static body of evidence that survives only in a museum. Because on the one hand, tools and materials actually bear witness to the immutable characteristics of an era (available resources, raw materials), however, they also reveal the basic principles of human creativity that lead to evolution. The name of the exhibition reminds us, at the same time, that this creativity should always be developed with concepts such as respecting the principles of human law and social justice.

Aegilia: The Pirate’s Island! By Giannis Loukas

Piracy has been an economic activity since ancient times. The Mediterranean had a developed commercial economy and shipping. However, the shipping routes followed by merchant ships were close to the coast due to the dangers of sailing on the open sea. The morphology of the Mediterranean coastline provided an ideal environment for the development of piracy. The fast, light pirate ships could remain hidden on the coast and charge at merchant ships. The inhabitants of coastal settlements, who had small boats for local trade, fishing, and travel, could easily turn to piracy for additional, easy income. ...More

By |August 9, 2024|Categories: History|0 Comments

Greek Community of Melbourne| 29th Greek Film Festival| 15-27 October 2024

The Greek Community of Melbourne informs that the pre-sale of tickets for the Premiere of the 29th Greek Film Festival has begun! The festival, which will run from 15-27 October, opens this year with the Niarchos Thodoris’ feature Hear Who’s Talking. The quirky comedy explores the story of Fotis, a life-coach whose own life has reached an impasse. Fotis (Elias Meletis) is in a dead end both personally and professionally. A life coach, in his profession, who has lost his bearings. The sessions, which once fulfilled him professionally, no longer offer him the same inner satisfaction ...More

By |August 9, 2024|Categories: Beyond the country|0 Comments

Foundation for Research and Technology- Hellas (FORTH)| Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology (IMBB)| International scientific collaboration reveals how intermittent fasting regulates ageing through autophagy

Recent research at the Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology (IMBB) of the Foundation for Research and Technology-Hellas (FORTH), at the Paris Cité University, and at the University of Graz, published today in the premier international science periodical Nature Cell Biology, sheds light on the mechanism through which spermidine regulates autophagy, a process that ensures the recycling of components within the cell, to promote the anti-ageing effects of intermittent fasting. Dr. Nektarios Tavernarakis IMBB Researchers, Dr. Ioanna Daskalaki and Dr. Ilias Gkikas, led by Dr. Nektarios Tavernarakis (Professor at the Medical School of the ...More

By |August 9, 2024|Categories: Technology / Science|0 Comments

Fougaro Artcenter| Woman in popular and rebetiko songs| 17 August 2024

FOUGARO ARTCENTER welcomes on Saturday 17 August at 9pm, with free admission, Kostas Doumouliakas and 5 other musicians in a concert dedicated to woman, as we find her as a theme in popular and rebetiko songs. In days when the position of women is still under threat, with frequent incidents of abuse, it is worth revisiting the rich history of popular and rebetiko music through songs where women dominate as a theme and are celebrated as they deserve. the musicians Kostas Doumouliakas| voice, bouzouki Katerina Tziviloglou | voice Christos Manifavas | song, guitar Noah Zafiridis | ...More

By |August 8, 2024|Categories: Beyond the city|0 Comments

Supervisors go to the theater. Artistic movement in Smyrna in 1922: Snapshots from the archive of the Directorate of Finance of the High Commission of Smyrna. By General State Archives

Myrto Karageorgi-Gyftodimou Department of Archive Processing  General State Archives, Central Service Supervisors go to the theater. Artistic movement in Smyrna in 1922: Snapshots from the archive of the Directorate of Finance of the High Commission of Smyrna Document 1. Column of public spectacles of the newspaper "Kosmos", 13/26 April 1922. Archives of the Financial Directorate of the High Commission in Smyrna, General State Archives-Central Service Where would you go if you wanted to attend a theatrical performance in Smyrna on April 26, 1922? The answer is given by the morning newspaper Kosmos: Nezerakia presented ...More

By |August 8, 2024|Categories: History|0 Comments

Selini. The primal symbol of the myths| The August events

Already in antiquity, Selene took her place in myths as the goddess of the moon, daughter, wife and mother of gods and divine creatures such as Leo of Nemea and Hores (who represented the seasons of time). However, her most famous love affair was with the mortal shepherd Endymion, whom she put into eternal sleep so that he would never die. Victor Florence Pollet, Endymion and Selene, mid 19th century (painted) Similarly, as Luna she was worshipped by the Romans who had given her a triple status according to the phases of the moon: ...More

By |August 7, 2024|Categories: Beyond the city, Uncategorized|0 Comments
2022-08-31T09:16:02+00:00August 31, 2022|Categories: ART PLACES, Museums|0 Comments

Leave A Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Go to Top