Traditional Trades in Crete

The twentieth century brought many changes to the life of all. The pace became rapid, machines replaced human hands and many traditional trades disappeared forever. Countless handmade tools that were used by  craftsmen no longer exist. The personal touch each craftsman gave to his craft, thus creating a special identity, has vanished in our mechanized age.

Trades such as the saddler, the farrier, the currier, which for years were bound up with the life mainly of the rural population, perhaps still exist in remote villages. But the coppersmith’s forge with the picturesque bellows and the human toil beside the fire have been replaced by soulless machines. The terzίs who sewed the traditional male and female costume is rarely encountered today. Hand-crafted knives such as the tsakάkia will soon be gone forever, as cutlers are dying out. The silk-spinner (metaxάs) who went round the villages and with the reel (svίga) wound the silk filament unravelled from the cocoons and twisted it into thread, is no more. The musical instrument maker (organopoiόs), the cutlers who make certain Cretan knives and the coffee shop continue Cretan tradition.

With these tangible samples of the traditional handicraft of Crete, an attempt is made to present a picture of old Rethymnon, as described by the author Pantelis Prevelakis in his evocative work The Tale of a Town, excerpts from which accompany the exhibition.

View of the room with the old professions

IMAGE 1

View of the room with the old professions

Meeting of shoemakers in Rethymno, 1914

IMAGE 2

Meeting of shoemakers in Rethymno, 1914

Musical instrument maker

The lyra was the Cretans’ favourite musical instrument. They learnt to play it as children, while singing traditional songs. Men made their lýra themselves, very often adding various ornaments.

When you hear a Cretan lyrάris singing and playing his own personal lýra, then you feel the joys and sorrows of the Cretans’ life. Then you understand how deeply the Cretan people loves its homeland and freedom, and how it kept alive its mores and customs over the centuries.

Manolis Stagakis was an accomplished maker of the Cretan lýra. His workshop stood in Dimakopoulou Street and was later used by Georgios Papalexakis.

IMAGE 1

IMAGE 2

IMAGE 3

IMAGE 4

Geropiskopos, old lyra player

IMAGE 5

Geropiskopos, old lyra player