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Archbishop Gregorios
of Thyateira and Great Britain
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His Eminence was born in the present-day Turkish-occupied village of Marathovounos
in the district of Famagusta, Cyprus,
on 28th October 1928. He was the ninth and last child of the family of the
builder Theocharis and his wife Maria Hadjitofi. At the age of three he was
orphaned through his father's death.
After completing his primary education at the village
school, the eleven-year-old Gregorios became an apprentice as a shoemaker in
his brother-in-law’s shop, where he worked for the next eight years.
At the age of twenty he
decided to attend a secondary school for which he enrolled in 1949 at the
Higher Commercial School of the town of Lefkoniko which, at that time, had only
five classes. He was accepted in the second-year class. |
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In 1951 he transferred to the famous Pan-Cyprian Gymnasium,
Nicosia, having become a rasophor, and he was
later ordained deacon on the Sunday of Pentecost, 1953 at the Church of St. Savvas
in Nicosia by
the late Archbishop Makarios III.
He graduated from the Gymnasium in 1954 and went to Athens to study at the Theological School
of the University there. Before receiving his university degree in February
1959, he was appointed to the Church
of All Saints in London,
arriving there and starting his duties at the Church
of All Saints in Camden Town
in April 1959. He was ordained presbyter by the late Archbishop of Thyateira,
Athenagoras Kawadas, on the 26th of the same month.
In 1964 he was appointed Chancellor of the Archdiocese of
Thyateira. On 12th December 1970 he was consecrated Bishop of Tropaeou by the
blessed former Archbishop of Thyateira Athenagoras Kokkinakis at the Cathedral
of Sta Sophia. From the first day of his ordination he undertook to organize
and administer the St. Mary's Cathedral and the Church
of St. Barnabas the Apostle in Wood
Green, North London.
On 16th April 1988 he was unanimously elected
by the Sacred Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate as Archbishop of Thyateira
and Great Britain and his
enthronement took place at the Cathedral of Sta. Sophia in West
London. |
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