Chapel of the Archangels
Feast day: November 8
A stone-built, single-aisled chapel with a prominent, three-sided apse and a steep-pitched wooden roof. Its main entrance is on the west side, while there is also an entrance on the north side. It is lit by the two windows on the north wall and the one on the superstructure. The fragments of the old iconostasis, dated to the 19th century, are hanging on the walls of the chapel, since it was unfortunately dismantled and cut into pieces for its removal and replacement. The Crucifixion and the “Lipira” (depiction of Virgin Mary and John the Theologian that surround the Cross that crowns the iconostasis) and the Royal doors (the central doors of the iconostasis) where are depicted eight hierarchs and the scene of the Annunciation, have also survived and are exhibited in the chapel. It celebrates on November 8.