(House of Gabriel and Eleni Papachristoforou)
La casa è un esemplare tipico dell'architettura locale del XIX secolo. E 'fatto di pietra con cinque camere al piano terra e una camera di livello superiore, una al coperto, cortile recintato con forno, e un passaggio coperto con un arco che conduce al grande portale, che si apre verso la strada. Anche se semplice, è stato piuttosto una casa per la sua lussureggiante tempo, appartenente ad una facoltosa famiglia che terreni di proprietà e ha ricevuto un reddito dignitoso tramite i suoi raccolti. Quando è stato trasformato in museo, il Dipartimento di Antichità fatto in modo che gli elementi e la configurazione dava al visitatore l'immagine di una casa rurale tradizionale.
(House of Gabriel and Eleni Papachristoforou)
дом является типичным образцом местной архитектуры с 19-го века. Это камень-сделано с пятью первом этаже номера и верхнего уровня комната, крытый, закрытый двор с печи, и крытый проход с аркой, что приводит к большой шлюз, который открывается в сторону дороги. Несмотря на простоту, она была довольно пышной дом для своего времени, принадлежащие к богатой семье, которая владела землей и получил приличный доход через свою культур. Когда он был преобразован в музей, Департамент древностей убедились, что предметы и конфигурации дал посетитель образ традиционных сельских домохозяйств.
Behind
the "dichoro" there is the "sospito" ("inner
house") or "tzellari" (cellar), a room without any
windows that was used as a storage area for foods and tools. The
large earthenware jars were used for the storage of wine and olive-oil.
http://www.gabrielhouse-cy.com/ The "dichoro" (meaning "two areas" and referring to a large room divided in two by an arch) remained the house's main room, functioning as a living room, a dinning room, a reception hall, and also as a working area. The stone-made arch supports the roof and lends to the room a tone of nobility, making it look like a palace.
The furnishing is simple and frugal; the table, the chairs, the woodcut couch, the chest where they kept their trousseau, a simple brazier for heating, and the loom.
The house is a typical specimen of local architecture from the 19th century. It is stone-made with five ground-floor rooms and an upper-level room, an indoor, enclosed yard with an oven, and a roofed passage with an arch that leads to the large gateway, which opens toward the road. Although simple, it was quite a luxuriant house for its time, belonging to a wealthy family that owned land and received a decent income through its crops. When it was converted into a museum, the Antiquities Department made sure that the items and the configuration gave to the visitor an image of a traditional rural household.