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PHOTO ESSAY: On Greece’s Tinos island, families own and lovingly care for 1,000 chapels

TINOS, Greece (AP) — A glance in any direction on the Greek island of Tinos reveals at least a dozen chapels, recognizable as tiny houses of worship by their miniature belltowers and simple crosses.

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PHOTO ESSAY: On Greece's Tinos island, families own and lovingly care for 1,000 chapels

Naim Domi, 50, an Albanian worker who has lived in Greece for 17 years, paints the rooftop of the Panagia Faneromeni family-owned chapel overlooking the Aegean Sea near the village of Pyrgos, on the island of Tinos, Greece, Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris)


TINOS, Greece (AP) — A glance in any direction on the Greek island of Tinos reveals at least a dozen chapels, recognizable as tiny houses of worship by their miniature belltowers and simple crosses.

There are some 1,000 — more than one per 10 residents — and they’re owned and cared for by ordinary families, mostly Orthodox Christians but also Catholics, in a rare tradition rooted in centuries of history that they’re adamant about passing down the generations.

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