Kefalonia, Greece, August 8, 2019

Photo: www.johnsanidopoulos.com

Every year, around the new calendar feast of the Transfiguration of the Lord on August 6, mysterious snakes appear in the villages of Markopoulo and Arginia on the western Greek island of Kefalonia, where there are chapels dedicated to the Dormition of the Theotokos, remaining until the feast on August 15.

Photo: www.johnsanidopoulos.com Hundreds and thousands of faithful pilgrims flock to the villages every year to behold the “Snakes of the Panagia” that seem to appear from out of nowhere and disappear again after the feast of the Dormition. The black and white snakes have the Sign of the Cross on their velvety heads, and their tongues are in the shape of a cross.

The snakes first appeared on the eve of the Transfiguration this year, reports Mystagogy, with reference to Kefalonia Press.

One snake first appeared in Markopoulo, followed not long after by two snakes in Arginia. Every year, the bells of the chapels ring out joyfully to announce the arrival of the snakes.

The local faithful testify that the snakes are warm-blooded, which is unknown anywhere else or any other time in the world. The snakes crawl throughout the churches and especially around the icons of the Theotokos.

Photo: www.johnsanidopoulos.com

As can be seen in the videos below from previous years, the snakes are peaceful and safe, and the faithful even venerate the snakes themselves, as a miraculous manifestation from God and the Most Holy Theotokos:

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The Church of the Dormition in Markopouo is built on the ruins of an old monastery. In the early 18th century, the nuns of the former convent were attacked by pirates. They prayed fervently to the Theotokos for protection, and when the pirates entered the convent they were terrified by the sight of snakes darting towards them and they fled.

The snakes have appeared every year since then, except for two years: 1940, the year Greece was brought into the Second World War, and 1953, the year of a devastating earthquake on Kefalonia. Thus, it is believed to be ominous if the snakes do not appear.

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