Kouka Village and its History
Our small village is located 25km from Limassol, the beautiful capital of our district and only a few minutes from Platres
and the Troodos mountains. Platres is a resort known all over the world. Kouka is in the middle of the villages of Koilani,
Pera Pedi, Sylikou, Moniatis, Saittas and Trimiklini.
It is included among the wine producing villages of Limassol District and it is surrounded by vines, pine trees and oak trees, some of which
are over 100 years old. There are those that say that Kouka has the best air in the whole of Cyprus and that anyone fortunate enough to live
here will live a very long time.
The tradition of the village goes back through the centuries, as it is famous for the Timios Stavros Monastery, founded during the years of
Saint Helena, the mother of Constantine the Great, who visited the island in the year 327 AD. The most important Chronicles of Cyprus,
Leontios Macheras, Georgios Voustronios and Archimandrite Kyprianos, document the Monastery and the Holy Cross of the church, on which
were kept pieces from the Holy Wood that Saint Helena gave as a present to the village.
Kouka derives it's name from the word "Koka", the type of hair of a noble man who had most of the village as his property, probably during
the Venetian period in Cyprus.
There are a number of historical references to Kouka in the standard texts.
Vasyl Bars’kyj, who travelled extensively in the region in the early eighteenth-century, maintained a travel journal that was published
after his death in 1747. Extracts from this journal were published in 1996 by the Greece and Cyprus Research Centre (Volume III) as
A Pilgrim’s Account of Cyprus: Bars’kyj’s Travels in Cyprus. In this he writes about walking from Koilani via present day Agia Mavri to Kouka:
“Once again I crossed the stream at the ford and walked through the neighbouring mountains for an hour and arrived at the monastery of the
True Cross, called Kouka, named after the village in which it is found. When I visited the village it was deserted, with only one or two
houses. This small monastery, like the previous one of Saint Maura of which I have spoken, is under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of
Kition. Originally there was no monastery, only a village church. When the village was abandoned and the church stood empty, a hieromonk
with novices settled there to look after the place, and on his death another one and then another, and so the replaced one another
until the present day, feeding themselves from their own labours in agriculture.”
(A hieromonk is a monk who is also a priest – monks in the Orthodox Church are not automatically priests)
Rev J Hackett in The Church of Cyprus published in 1900 wrote:
“In the village church of Kouka near Kilani was deposited the dust from the suppedaneum of the Cross, when it was sawn in pieces by Helena’s orders”
(The suppedaneum is a support for feet on a cross for crucifixion)
George Jeffrey in A Description of the Historic Monuments of Cyprus published in 1918, noted the following:
“Kouka is a Moslem hamlet but at its centre stands an interesting little church of some antiquity associated with the legend of the Holy Cross. The building is cruciform in plan with a dome over the transepts, but of no architectural character. On the north side of the sanctuary is a small square chamber, intended probably as the relic treasury. Within a recess of the wall of the south transept there is also a large cross of wood reclining against the wall exactly like the one on Stavrovouni.”
Rupert Gunnis in Historic Cyprus, published in 1936 made the following entry for Kouka:
“The Church of the Holy Cross is a cruciform Byzantine building with a dome over the transept. On the north side is a small square chamber probably built to contain the famous relic of the church, the dust from the suppedaneum of the Cross, when it was sawn in pieces by the order of St Helena. There are considerable remains of painting on the roof and walls of the north transept. There is an unusual seventeenth-century icon of the B.V.M., with a bronze medallion of the Virgin and Child in the centre. The ruins of the monastic buildings still surround the church.”
Jack C. Goodwin in A Historical Toponymy of Cyprus (3rd Edition) published in limited edition in 1978, has the following entry for Kouka:
“KOUKA* (LIM XLVII). VILLAGE of the S Troodos Range & 3m SE of Pano Platres. Pop 63(G). Rated 4 in 1977. Elev 740. HZ B6 & C2. PO.
In Greek the literal meaning of Koukas is "one who braids his hair", but the village was supposedly named after a certain Kokas
who footed the bill for construction of Stavros Ch. The village
dates from the 4-8th Cent AD. Less than 50 lived here a century
ago; it was a mixed village at that time, there being 2 separate
building compounds & a mosque next to one of them. The old
Troodos Military Road (separate entry) passed immediately E of
the village; it was abandoned long ago in this sector.”