Rimondi fountain- Loggia and church of Saint Barbara in the Old town Rethymno -Crete
The Rimondi fountain is a Venetian fountain, which is located on Rimondi Square in Rethymno, Crete in Greece. It was built around 1626. It was named after Albice Rimondi, then governor of the city. The coat of arms of the Rimondi family is still visible on the monument.
Loggia was built in the 16th century with designs by the famous Venetian architect Michel Sanmicheli. The Loggia was a splendid building in the city center and was a gathering place and meeting place for the nobility to discuss political and economic issues. The building is maintained in very good condition, is square in plan and has arches on all three sides (except the west). It is built according to the isodomic system and the cornices are impressive. Immediately after the Turkish conquest, it was converted into a mosque and a minaret was built, which was demolished in 1930.
The church of Saint Barbara is located near the tempe Megali Panagia in Rethymnon and celebrates on December 4th. The church was founded in 1885 on the site of an older temple, probably dedicated to the same saint, which appears on maps of 1613. The present church belongs to the architectural type of the free-domed cross with Gothic elements. Inside there is an imposing chandelier, a tribute of the Russian army that used the temple during the Russian administration of Rethymnon from 1898 to 1907.
Due to the connection of the church with various miracles for the city of Rethymnon and its inhabitants during the Turkish occupation, Saint Barbara is the patron saint of the city of Rethymnon. Even the founding of the temple is linked to a miracle: In 1883 the Christians persuaded the Turkish Agha Ali Efendis Tsitsekakis, who had turned the ruined temple into baths, not to proceed with the planned demolition of the remaining temple, and to give it for the erection of a new temple. Initially the Turkish Agha did not give his consen and then a smallpox epidemic overwhelmed the Muslim families of Rethymnon, while the Christians remained healthy. At that time, Muslims, believing that the epidemic was caused by Saint Barbara, persuaded Ali Efendis to hand over the church complex to the Christian community in 1885.
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