fbpx
Wikipedia

Aegina

Aegina (/ɪˈnə/;[2] Greek: Αίγινα, Aígina [ˈeʝina]; Ancient Greek: Αἴγῑνα) is one of the Saronic Islands of Greece in the Saronic Gulf, 27 km (17 mi) from Athens. Tradition derives the name from Aegina, the mother of the hero Aeacus, who was born on the island and became its king.[3]

Aegina
Αίγινα
View of Aegina's seafront
Aegina
Location within the region
Coordinates: 37°43′48″N 23°29′24″E / 37.73000°N 23.49000°E / 37.73000; 23.49000Coordinates: 37°43′48″N 23°29′24″E / 37.73000°N 23.49000°E / 37.73000; 23.49000
CountryGreece
Administrative regionAttica
Regional unitIslands
Government
 • MayorGiannis Zorbas (Ind.)
Area
 • Municipality87.41 km2 (33.75 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Municipality
13,056
 • Municipality density150/km2 (390/sq mi)
Community
 • Population8 924 (2011)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
180 10
Area code(s)2297
Vehicle registrationΥ
WebsiteOfficial Visitors Guide to Aegina

Administration

Municipality

The municipality of Aegina consists of the island of Aegina and a few offshore islets. It is part of the Islands regional unit, Attica region. The municipality is subdivided into the following five communities (population in 2011 in parentheses ):[4]

  • Kypseli (2,124)
  • Mesagros (1,361)
  • Perdika (8,23)
  • Vathy (1,495)

The regional capital is the town of Aegina, situated at the northwestern end of the island. Due to its proximity to Athens, it is a popular vacation place during the summer months, with quite a few Athenians owning second houses on the island.

Province

The province of Aegina (Greek: Επαρχία Αίγινας) was one of the provinces of the Attica Prefecture and was created in 1833 as part of Attica and Boeotia Prefecture. Its territory corresponded with that of the current municipalities Aegina and Agkistri.[5] It was abolished in 2006.

Geography

Aegina is roughly triangular in shape, approximately 15 km (9.3 mi) from east to west and 10 km (6.2 mi) from north to south, with an area of 87.41 km2 (33.75 sq mi).[6]

An extinct volcano constitutes two-thirds of Aegina. The northern and western sides consist of stony but fertile plains, which are well cultivated and produce luxuriant crops of grain, with some cotton, vines, almonds, olives and figs,[3] but the most characteristic crop of Aegina today (2000s) is pistachio. Economically, the sponge fisheries are of notable importance. The southern volcanic part of the island is rugged and mountainous, and largely barren. Its highest rise is the conical Mount Oros (531 m) in the south, and the Panhellenian ridge stretches northward with narrow fertile valleys on either side.

The beaches are also a popular tourist attraction. Hydrofoil ferries from Piraeus take only forty minutes to reach Aegina; the regular ferry takes about an hour, with ticket prices for adults within the 4–15 euro range. There are regular bus services from Aegina town to destinations throughout the island such as Agia Marina. Portes is a fishing village on the east coast.

 
A panorama of the island of Aegina, from the Mediterranean sea.

Climate

Aegina has a hot semi-arid climate (Köppen climate classification: BSh). It is one of the driest places in Greece.

Climate data for Aegina
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 14
(57)
15.1
(59.2)
17.2
(63.0)
19.9
(67.8)
26
(79)
30.7
(87.3)
33.5
(92.3)
34
(93)
29.4
(84.9)
24.4
(75.9)
20
(68)
16
(61)
23.3
(74.0)
Average low °C (°F) 8.8
(47.8)
9.5
(49.1)
10.6
(51.1)
12.4
(54.3)
17
(63)
21.1
(70.0)
24.5
(76.1)
25.1
(77.2)
22.1
(71.8)
18.2
(64.8)
14.8
(58.6)
11.6
(52.9)
16.3
(61.4)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 44.1
(1.74)
26.7
(1.05)
19.2
(0.76)
35.5
(1.40)
7.7
(0.30)
17.3
(0.68)
1.9
(0.07)
7.8
(0.31)
7
(0.3)
43.7
(1.72)
67.3
(2.65)
60.6
(2.39)
338.8
(13.37)
Source: http://penteli.meteo.gr/stations/aegina/ (2019-2021 averages)

History

Earliest history (20th–7th centuries BC)

Aegina, according to Herodotus,[7] was a colony of Epidaurus, to which state it was originally subject. Its placement between Attica and the Peloponnesus made it a site of trade even earlier, and its earliest inhabitants allegedly came from Asia Minor.[8] Minoan ceramics have been found in contexts of c. 2000 BC. The famous Aegina Treasure, now in the British Museum is estimated to date between 1700 and 1500 BC.[9] The discovery on the island of a number of gold ornaments belonging to the last period of Mycenaean art suggests that Mycenaean culture existed in Aegina for some generations after the Dorian conquest of Argos and Lacedaemon.[10] It is probable that the island was not Doricised before the 9th century BC.

One of the earliest historical facts is its membership in the Amphictyony or League of Calauria, attested around the 8th century BC. This ostensibly religious league included—besides Aegina—Athens, the Minyan (Boeotian) Orchomenos, Troezen, Hermione, Nauplia, and Prasiae. It was probably an organisation of city-states that were still Mycenaean, for the purpose of suppressing piracy in the Aegean that began as a result of the decay of the naval supremacy of the Mycenaean princes.

Aegina seems to have belonged to the Eretrian league during the Lelantine War; this, perhaps, may explain the war with Samos, a major member of the rival Chalcidian league during the reign of King Amphicrates (Herod. iii. 59), i.e. not later than the earlier half of the 7th century BC.[3]

Coinage and sea power (7th–5th centuries BC)

Coins of Aegina
 
Silver stater of Aegina, 550–530 BC. Obv. Sea turtle with large pellets down centre. Rev. incuse square punch with eight sections.
 
Silver drachma of Aegina, 404–340 BC. Obverse: Land tortoise. Reverse: inscription ΑΙΓ(INA) "Aegina" and dolphin.

Its early history reveals that the maritime importance of the island dates back to pre-Dorian times. It is usually stated on the authority of Ephorus, that Pheidon of Argos established a mint in Aegina, the first city-state to issue coins in Europe, the Aeginetic stater. One stamped stater (having the mark of some authority in the form of a picture or words) can be seen in the Bibliothèque Nationale of Paris. It is an electrum stater of a turtle, an animal sacred to Aphrodite, struck at Aegina that dates from 700 BC.[11] Therefore, it is thought that the Aeginetes, within 30 or 40 years of the invention of coinage in Asia Minor by the Ionian Greeks or the Lydians (c. 630 BC), might have been the ones to introduce coinage to the Western world. The fact that the Aeginetic standard of weights and measures (developed during the mid-7th century) was one of the two standards in general use in the Greek world (the other being the Euboic-Attic) is sufficient evidence of the early commercial importance of the island.[3] The Aeginetic weight standard of about 12.2 grams was widely adopted in the Greek world during the 7th century BC. The Aeginetic stater was divided into two drachmae of 6.1 grams of silver.[12] Staters depicting a sea-turtle were struck up to the end of the 5th century BC. During the First Peloponnesian War, by 456 BC, it was replaced by the land tortoise.[13]

During the naval expansion of Aegina during the Archaic Period, Kydonia was an ideal maritime stop for Aegina's fleet on its way to other Mediterranean ports controlled by the emerging sea-power Aegina.[14] During the next century Aegina was one of the three principal states trading at the emporium of Naucratis in Egypt, and it was the only Greek state near Europe that had a share in this factory.[15] At the beginning of the 5th century BC it seems to have been an entrepôt of the Pontic grain trade, which, at a later date, became an Athenian monopoly.[16]

Unlike the other commercial states of the 7th and 6th centuries BC, such as Corinth, Chalcis, Eretria and Miletus, Aegina did not found any colonies. The settlements to which Strabo refers (viii. 376) cannot be regarded as any real exceptions to this statement.[3]

Rivalry with Athens (5th century BC)

The known history of Aegina is almost exclusively a history of its relations with the neighbouring state of Athens, which began to compete with the thalassocracy (sea power) of Aegina about the beginning of the 6th century BC. Solon passed laws limiting Aeginetan commerce in Attica. The legendary history of these relations, as recorded by Herodotus (v. 79–89; vi. 49–51, 73, 85–94), involves critical problems of some difficulty and interest. He traces the hostility of the two states back to a dispute about the images of the goddesses Damia and Auxesia, which the Aeginetes had carried off from Epidauros, their parent state.

The Epidaurians had been accustomed to make annual offerings to the Athenian deities Athena and Erechtheus in payment for the Athenian olive-wood of which the statues were made. Upon the refusal of the Aeginetes to continue these offerings, the Athenians endeavoured to carry away the images. Their design was frustrated miraculously – according to the Aeginetan version, the statues fell upon their knees – and only a single survivor returned to Athens. There he became victim to the fury of his comrades' widows who pierced him with their peplos brooch-pins. No date is assigned by Herodotus for this "old feud"; recent writers, such as J. B. Bury and R. W. Macan, suggest the period between Solon and Peisistratus, c. 570 BC. It is possible that the whole episode is mythical. A critical analysis of the narrative seems to reveal little else than a series of aetiological traditions (explanatory of cults and customs), such as of the kneeling posture of the images of Damia and Auxesia, of the use of native ware instead of Athenian in their worship, and of the change in women's dress at Athens from the Dorian peplos to the Ionian style chiton.

 
Colour depiction of the Temple of Aphaea, sacred to a mother goddess, particularly worshiped on Aegina.

The account which Herodotus gives of the hostilities between the two states during the early years of the 5th century BC is to the following effect. The Thebans, after the defeat by Athens about 507 BC, appealed to Aegina for assistance. The Aeginetans at first contented themselves with sending the images of the Aeacidae, the tutelary heroes of their island. Subsequently, however, they contracted an alliance, and ravaged the seaboard of Attica. The Athenians were preparing to make reprisals, in spite of the advice of the Delphic oracle that they should desist from attacking Aegina for thirty years, and content themselves meanwhile with dedicating a precinct to Aeacus, when their projects were interrupted by the Spartan intrigues for the restoration of Hippias.

In 491 BC Aegina was one of the states which gave the symbols of submission ("earth and water") to Achaemenid Persia. Athens at once appealed to Sparta to punish this act of medism, and Cleomenes I, one of the Spartan kings, crossed over to the island, to arrest those who were responsible for it. His attempt was at first unsuccessful; but, after the deposition of Demaratus, he visited the island a second time, accompanied by his new colleague Leotychides, seized ten of the leading citizens and deposited them at Athens as hostages.

After the death of Cleomenes and the refusal of the Athenians to restore the hostages to Leotychides, the Aeginetes retaliated by seizing a number of Athenians at a festival at Sunium. Thereupon the Athenians concerted a plot with Nicodromus, the leader of the democratic party in the island, for the betrayal of Aegina. He was to seize the old city, and they were to come to his aid on the same day with seventy vessels. The plot failed owing to the late arrival of the Athenian force, when Nicodromus had already fled the island. An engagement followed in which the Aeginetes were defeated. Subsequently, however, they succeeded in winning a victory over the Athenian fleet.

All the incidents subsequent to the appeal of Athens to Sparta are referred expressly by Herodotus to the interval between the sending of the heralds in 491 BC and the invasion of Datis and Artaphernes in 490 BC (cf. Herod. vi. 49 with 94).

There are difficulties with this story, of which the following are the principal elements:

  • Herodotus nowhere states or implies that peace was concluded between the two states before 481 BC, nor does he distinguish between different wars during this period. Hence it would follow that the war lasted from soon after 507 BC until the congress at the Isthmus of Corinth in 481 BC
  • It is only for two years (491 and 490 BC) out of the twenty-five that any details are given. It is the more remarkable that no incidents are recorded in the period between the battles of Marathon and Salamis, since at the time of the Isthmian Congress the war was described as the most important one then being waged in Greece,[17]
  • It is improbable that Athens would have sent twenty vessels to the aid of the Ionians in 499 BC if at the time it was at war with Aegina.
  • There is an incidental indication of time, which indicates the period after Marathon as the true date for the events which are referred by Herodotus to the year before Marathon, viz. the thirty years that were to elapse between the dedication of the precinct to Aeacus and the final victory of Athens.[18]
 
The ruins of the Temple of Apollo.

As the final victory of Athens over Aegina was in 458 BC, the thirty years of the oracle would carry us back to the year 488 BC as the date of the dedication of the precinct and the beginning of hostilities. This inference is supported by the date of the building of the 200 triremes "for the war against Aegina" on the advice of Themistocles, which is given in the Constitution of Athens as 483–482 BC.[19] It is probable, therefore, that Herodotus is in error both in tracing back the beginning of hostilities to an alliance between Thebes and Aegina (c. 507 BC) and in claiming the episode of Nicodromus occurred prior to the battle of Marathon.

Overtures were unquestionably made by Thebes for an alliance with Aegina c. 507 BC, but they came to nothing. The refusal of Aegina was in the diplomatic guise of "sending the Aeacidae." The real occasion of the beginning of the war was the refusal of Athens to restore the hostages some twenty years later. There was but one war, and it lasted from 488 to 481 BC. That Athens had the worst of it in this war is certain. Herodotus had no Athenian victories to record after the initial success, and the fact that Themistocles was able to carry his proposal to devote the surplus funds of the state to the building of so large a fleet seems to imply that the Athenians were themselves convinced that a supreme effort was necessary.

It may be noted, in confirmation of this opinion, that the naval supremacy of Aegina is assigned by the ancient writers on chronology to precisely this period, i.e. the years 490–480 BC.[3][20]

Decline

In the repulse of Xerxes I it is possible that the Aeginetes played a larger part than is conceded to them by Herodotus. The Athenian tradition, which he follows in the main, would naturally seek to obscure their services. It was to Aegina rather than Athens that the prize of valour at Salamis was awarded, and the destruction of the Persian fleet appears to have been as much the work of the Aeginetan contingent as of the Athenian (Herod. viii. 91). There are other indications, too, of the importance of the Aeginetan fleet in the Greek scheme of defence. In view of these considerations it becomes difficult to credit the number of the vessels that is assigned to them by Herodotus (30 as against 180 Athenian vessels, cf. Greek History, sect. Authorities). During the next twenty years the Philo-Laconian policy of Cimon secured Aegina, as a member of the Spartan league, from attack. The change in Athenian foreign policy, which was consequent upon the ostracism of Cimon in 461 BC, resulted in what is sometimes called the First Peloponnesian War, during which most of the fighting was experienced by Corinth and Aegina. The latter state was forced to surrender to Athens after a siege, and to accept the position of a subject-ally (c. 456 BC). The tribute was fixed at 30 talents.

By the terms of the Thirty Years' Peace (445 BC) Athens promised to restore to Aegina her autonomy, but the clause remained ineffective. During the first winter of the Peloponnesian War (431 BC) Athens expelled the Aeginetans and established a cleruchy in their island. The exiles were settled by Sparta in Thyreatis, on the frontiers of Laconia and Argolis. Even in their new home they were not safe from Athenian rancour. A force commanded by Nicias landed in 424 BC, and killed most of them. At the end of the Peloponnesian War Lysander restored the scattered remnants of the old inhabitants to the island,[21][22] which was used by the Spartans as a base for operations against Athens during the Corinthian War.

It is probable that the power of Aegina had steadily declined during the twenty years after Salamis, and that it had declined absolutely, as well as relatively to that of Athens. Commerce was the source of Aegina's greatness, and her trade, which seems to have been principally with the Levant, must have suffered seriously from the war with Persia. Aegina's medism in 491 is to be explained by its commercial relations with the Persian Empire. It was forced into patriotism in spite of itself, and the glory won by the Battle of Salamis was paid for by the loss of its trade and the decay of its marine. The loss of the state's power is explained by the conditions of the island, which was based on slave labour; Aristotle's estimated the population of slaves were as much as 470,000.

Hellenistic period and Roman rule

 
The remains of the 4th century synagogue at the Archaeological Museum of Aegina

Aegina with the rest of Greece became dominated successively by the Macedonians (322–229 BC), the Achaeans (229–211 BC), Aetolians (211–210  BC), Attalus of Pergamum (210–133 BC) and the Romans (after 133 BC).[3] A sign at the Archaeological Museum of Aegina is reported to say that a Jewish community was established in Aegina "at the end of the second and during the 3rd century AD" by Jews fleeing the barbarian invasions of the time in Greece.[23] However, the first phases of those invasions began in the 4th century. The Romaniote jewish community erected an elaborate synagogue in rectangle form with an apse on the eastern wall with a magnificent mosaic decorated with geometric motifs, still preserved in the courtyard of the Archaeological Museum of Aegina. The synagogue dates from the 4th century AD and was in use until the 7th century AD.[24] Local Christian tradition has it that a Christian community was established there in the 1st century, having as its bishop Crispus, the ruler of the Corinthian synagogue, who became a Christian,[25] and was baptised by Paul the Apostle.[26] There are written records of participation by later bishops of Aegina, Gabriel and Thomas, in the Councils of Constantinople in 869 and 879. The see was at first a suffragan of the metropolitan see of Corinth, but was later given the rank of archdiocese.[27][28] No longer a residential bishopric, Aegina is today listed by the Catholic Church as a titular see.[29]

Byzantine period

 
The byzantine church of Agioi Theodoroi

Aegina belonged to the East Roman (Byzantine) Empire after the division of the Roman Empire in 395. It remained Eastern Roman during the period of crisis of the 7th–8th centuries, when most of the Balkans and the Greek mainland were overrun by Slavic invasions. Indeed, according to the Chronicle of Monemvasia, the island served as a refuge for the Corinthians fleeing these incursions.[30] The island flourished during the early 9th century, as evidenced by church construction activity, but suffered greatly from Arab raids originating from Crete. Various hagiographies record a large-scale raid c. 830, that resulted in the flight of much of the population to the Greek mainland. During that time, some of the population sought refuge in the island's hinterland, establishing the settlement of Palaia Chora.[30][31]

According to the 12th-century bishop of Athens, Michael Choniates, by his time the island had become a base for pirates.[30] This is corroborated by Benedict of Peterborough's graphic account of Greece, as it was in 1191; he states that many of the islands were uninhabited for fear of pirates and that Aegina, along with Salamis and Makronisos, were their strongholds.

Frankish rule after 1204

 
The former catholic church known as Saint George of the Forum in Palaiochora, the medieval capital of Aegina.

After the dissolution and partition of the Byzantine Empire by the Fourth Crusade in 1204, Aegina was accorded to the Republic of Venice. In the event, it became controlled by the Duchy of Athens. The Catalan Company seized control of Athens, and with it Aegina, in 1317, and in 1425 the island became controlled by the Venetians,[32] when Alioto Caopena, at that time ruler of Aegina, placed himself by treaty under the Republic's protection to escape the danger of a Turkish raid. The island must then have been fruitful, for one of the conditions by which Venice accorded him protection was that he should supply grain to Venetian colonies. He agreed to surrender the island to Venice if his family became extinct. Antonio II Acciaioli opposed the treaty for one of his adopted daughters had married the future lord of Aegina, Antonello Caopena.

Venetians in Aegina (1451–1537)

 
The Venetian era Markellos tower

In 1451, Aegina became Venetian. The islanders welcomed Venetian rule; the claims of Antonello's uncle Arnà, who had lands in Argolis, were satisfied by a pension. A Venetian governor (rettore) was appointed, who was dependent on the authorities of Nauplia. After Arnà's death, his son Alioto renewed his claim to the island but was told that the republic was resolved to keep it. He and his family were pensioned and one of them aided in the defence of Aegina against the Turks in 1537, was captured with his family, and died in a Turkish dungeon.

In 1463 the Turco-Venetian war began, which was destined to cost the Venetians Negroponte (Euboea), the island of Lemnos, most of the Cyclades islands, Scudra and their colonies in the Morea. Peace was concluded in 1479. Venice still retained Aegina, Lepanto (Naupactus), Nauplia, Monemvasia, Modon, Navarino, Coron, and the islands Crete, Mykonos and Tinos. Aegina remained subject to Nauplia.

Administration

Aegina obtained money for its defences by reluctantly sacrificing its cherished relic, the head of St. George, which had been carried there from Livadia by the Catalans. In 1462, the Venetian Senate ordered the relic to be removed to St. Giorgio Maggiore in Venice and on 12 November, it was transported from Aegina by Vettore Cappello, the famous Venetian commander. In return, the Senate gave the Aeginetes 100 ducats apiece towards fortifying the island.

In 1519, the government was reformed. The system of having two rectors was found to result in frequent quarrels and the republic thenceforth sent out a single official styled Bailie and Captain, assisted by two councillors, who performed the duties of camerlengo by turns. The Bailie's authority extended over the rector of Aegina, whereas Kastri (opposite the island Hydra) was granted to two families, the Palaiologoi and the Alberti.

Society at Nauplia was divided into three classes: nobles, citizens and plebeians, and it was customary for nobles alone to possess the much-coveted local offices, such as the judge of the inferior court and inspector of weights and measures. The populace now demanded its share and the home government ordered that at least one of the three inspectors should be a non-noble.

Aegina had always been exposed to the raids of corsairs and had oppressive governors during these last 30 years of Venetian rule. Venetian nobles were not willing to go to this island. In 1533, three rectors of Aegina were punished for their acts of injustice and there is a graphic account of the reception given by the Aeginetans to the captain of Nauplia, who came to command an enquiry into the administration of these delinquents (vid. inscription over the entrance of St. George the Catholic in Paliachora). The rectors had spurned their ancient right to elect an islander to keep one key of the money-chest. They had also threatened to leave the island en masse with the commissioner, unless the captain avenged their wrongs. To spare the economy of the community, it was ordered that appeals from the governor's decision should be made on Crete, instead of in Venice. The republic was to pay a bakshish to the Turkish governor of the Morea and to the voivode who was stationed at the frontier of Thermisi (opposite Hydra). The fortifications too, were allowed to become decrepit and were inadequately guarded.

16th century

 
The ruins of Palaiochora. Walls, houses, and castle have been destroyed, only the chapels were restored.

After the end of the Duchy of Athens and the principality of Achaia, the only Latin possessions left on the mainland of Greece were the papal city of Monemvasia, the fortress of Vonitsa, the Messenian stations Coron and Modon, Lepanto, Pteleon, Navarino, and the castles of Argos and Nauplia, to which the island of Aegina was subordinate.

In 1502–03, the new peace treaty left Venice with nothing but Cephalonia, Monemvasia and Nauplia, with their appurtenances in the Morea. And against the sack of Megara, it had to endure the temporary capture of the castle of Aegina by Kemal Reis and the abduction of 2000 inhabitants. This treaty was renewed in 1513 and 1521. All supplies of grain from Nauplia and Monemvasia had to be imported from Turkish possessions, while corsairs rendered dangerous all traffic by sea.

In 1537, sultan Suleiman declared war upon Venice and his admiral Hayreddin Barbarossa devastated much of the Ionian Islands, and in October invaded the island of Aegina. On the fourth day Palaiochora was captured, but the Latin church of St George was spared. Hayreddin Barbarossa had the adult male population massacred and took away 6,000 surviving women and children as slaves. Then Barbarossa sailed to Naxos, whence he carried off an immense booty, compelling the Duke of Naxos to purchase his further independence by paying a tribute of 5000 ducats.

With the peace of 1540, Venice ceded Nauplia and Monemvasia. For nearly 150 years afterwards, Venice ruled no part of the mainland of Greece except Parga and Butrinto (subordinate politically to the Ionian Islands), but it still retained its insular dominions Cyprus, Crete, Tenos and six Ionian islands.

First Ottoman period (1540–1687)

The island was attacked and left desolate by Francesco Morosini during the Cretan War (1654).

Second Venetian period (1687–1715)

 
Aegina in 1845, by Carl Rottmann.

In 1684, the beginning of the Morean War between Venice and the Ottoman Empire resulted in the temporary reconquest of a large part of the country by the Republic. In 1687 the Venetian army arrived in Piraeus and captured Attica. The number of the Athenians at that time exceeded 6,000, the Albanians from the villages of Attica excluded, whilst in 1674 the population of Aegina did not seem to exceed 3,000 inhabitants, two thirds of which were women. The Aeginetans had been reduced to poverty to pay their taxes. The most significant plague epidemic began in Attica during 1688, an occasion that caused the massive migration of Athenians toward the south; most of them settled in Aegina. In 1693 Morosini resumed command, but his only acts were to refortify the castle of Aegina, which he had demolished during the Cretan war in 1655, the cost of upkeep being paid as long as the war lasted by the Athenians, and to place it and Salamis under Malipiero as Governor. This caused the Athenians to send him a request for the renewal of Venetian protection and an offer of an annual tribute. He died in 1694 and Zeno was appointed at his place.

In 1699, thanks to English mediation, the war ended with the peace of Karlowitz by which Venice retained possession of the 7 Ionian islands as well as Butrinto and Parga, the Morea, Spinalonga and Suda, Tenos, Santa Maura and Aegina and ceased to pay a tribute for Zante, but which restored Lepanto to the Ottoman sultan. Cerigo and Aegina were united administratively since the peace with Morea, which not only paid all the expenses of administration but furnished a substantial balance for the naval defence of Venice, in which it was directly interested.

Second Ottoman period (1715–1821)

During the early part of the Ottoman–Venetian War of 1714–1718 the Ottoman Fleet commanded by Canum Hoca captured Aegina. Ottomans rule in Aegina and the Morea was resumed and confirmed by the Treaty of Passarowitz, and they retained control of the island with the exception of a brief Russian occupation Orlov Revolt (early 1770s), until the beginning of the Greek War of Independence in 1821.

Greek Revolution

During the Greek War of Independence, Aegina became an administrative centre for the Greek revolutionary authorities. Ioannis Kapodistrias was briefly established here.

Landmarks

 
Panorama of Aegina's port.
 
View of the port.
 
Traditional street in the town
 
Aegina town centre.
 
A bust of Kapodistrias
  • Temple of Aphaea, dedicated to its namesake, a goddess who was later associated with Athena; the temple was part of a pre-Christian, equilateral holy triangle of temples including the Athenian Parthenon and the temple of Poseidon at Sounion.
  • Monastery of Agios Nectarios, dedicated to Nectarios of Aegina, a recent saint of the Greek Orthodox Church.
  • A statue in the principal square commemorates Ioannis Kapodistrias (1776–1831), the first administrator of free modern Greece.
  • The Orphanage of Kapodistrias is a large building, known locally as The Prison (Οι Φυλακές, Oi Filakes), constructed in 1828-29 by Ioannis Kapodistrias as a home for children orphaned as a result of the Greek War of Independence. The building also housed schools, vocational workshops, the National Public Library, the National Archaeological Museum, a military academy, the National Printing Office and the National Conservatory for Choir and Orchestra. From about 1880 it was used as a prison, and housed political prisoners during the Greek Junta (1967-1974) - hence its local name. There are currently plans to restore the building as a museum.[33]
  • The Tower of Markellos was probably built during the second Venetian occupation, 1687–1714, as a watch tower in anticipation of a Turkish siege. A castle, fortified walls and numerous watchtowers were built at this time. The tower was abandoned after the Turkish occupation of 1714, until revolutionary leader Spyros Markellos bought the tower as his residence in around 1802. In 1826-28 it was the headquarters of the temporary government of the embryonic Greek state. It subsequently was used as a police headquarters and housed various government agencies until it was abandoned again in the mid 19th century. It is currently owned by the Municipality of Aegina.[34]
  • Temple of Zeus Hellanios, near the village of Pachia Rachi, is a 13th-century Byzantine church, built on the ruins of the ancient temple to Zeus Hellanios, built in the 4th century BC. The staircase leading up to the church, some of the original walls, and loose stones from the earlier temple remain.

Economy

Pistachios

In 1896, the physician Nikolaos Peroglou introduced the systematic cultivation of pistachios, which soon became popular among the inhabitants of the island. By 1950, pistachio cultivation had significantly displaced the rest of the agricultural activity due to its high profitability but also due to the phylloxera that threatened the vineyards that time. As a result, in the early 60s, the first pistachio peeling factory was established in the Plakakia area by Grigorios Konidaris. The quality of "Fistiki Aeginis" (Aegina Pistachios), a name that was established as a product of Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) in 1996, is considered internationally excellent and superior to several foreign varieties, due to the special climatic conditions of the island (drought) as well as soil's volcanic characteristics. Pistachios have made Aegina famous all over the world. Today, half of the pistachio growers are members of the Agricultural Cooperative of Aegina's Pistachio Producers. It is estimated that pistachio cultivation covers 29,000 acres of the island while the total production reaches 2,700 tons per year. In recent years, in mid-September, the Pistachio Festival has been organized every year under the name "Fistiki Fest".[35]

Culture

Mythology

In Greek mythology, Aegina was a daughter of the river god Asopus and the nymph Metope. She bore at least two children: Menoetius by Actor, and Aeacus by the god Zeus. When Zeus abducted Aegina, he took her to Oenone, an island close to Attica. Here, Aegina gave birth to Aeacus, who would later become king of Oenone; thenceforth, the island's name was Aegina.

Aegina was the gathering place of Myrmidons; in Aegina they gathered and trained. Zeus needed an elite army and at first thought that Aegina, which at the time did not have any villagers, was a good place. So he changed some ants (Ancient Greek: Μυρμύγια, Myrmigia) into warriors who had six hands and wore black armour. Later, the Myrmidons, commanded by Achilles, were known as the most fearsome fighting unit in Greece.

Famous Aeginetans

Historical population

Year Town population Municipal/Island population
1981 6,730 11,127
1991 6,373 11,639
2001 7,410 13,552
2011 7,253 13,056

See also

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b "Απογραφή Πληθυσμού - Κατοικιών 2011. ΜΟΝΙΜΟΣ Πληθυσμός" (in Greek). Hellenic Statistical Authority.
  2. ^ Smith, Benjamin E. (1895). Century Cyclopedia of Names. Vol. i. New York: Century. p. 16.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Aegina". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 251–254. This cites:
    • Herodotus loc cit.
    • Thucydides i. 105, 108, ii. 27, iv. 56, 57.
    • For the criticism of Herodotus's account of the relations of Athens and Aegina, Wilamowitz, Aristoteles und Athen, ii. 280–288, is indispensable.
    • See also Macan, Herodotus iv.-vi., ii. 102–120.
  4. ^ [1][permanent dead link]
  5. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. (39 MB) (in Greek and French)
  6. ^ (PDF) (in Greek). National Statistical Service of Greece. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 September 2015.
  7. ^ Herodotus v. 83, viii.46; Pausanias 2.29.9
  8. ^ Richard Stillwell, ed. Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites, 1976
  9. ^ "Collection search: You searched for Made on Crete, or by immigrant Cretan craftsmen on Aegina". britishmuseum.org.
  10. ^ A. J. Evans, in Journal of Hellenic Studies, vol. xiii. p. 195[when?]
  11. ^ British Museum Catalogue 11 – Attica Megaris Aegina, 700 – 550 BC, plate XXIII.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 May 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  13. ^ "Numista: Coins of Aegina". Retrieved 20 December 2020.
  14. ^ "The Modern Antiquarian: Cydonia". www.themodernantiquarian.com.
  15. ^ Herodotus ii. 178
  16. ^ Herodotus vii. 147
  17. ^ Herod. vii. 145
  18. ^ Herod. v. 89
  19. ^ Herod. vii. 144; Ath. Pol. r2. 7
  20. ^ Eusebius, Houston Chronicle. Can. p. 337
  21. ^ Xenophon. Hellenica, 2.2.9: "Meantime Lysander, upon reaching Aegina, restored the state to the Aeginetans, gathering together as many of them as he could, and he did the same thing for the Melians also and for all the others who had been deprived of their native states."
  22. ^ Plutarch. Life of Lysander, 14.3: "But there were other measures of Lysander upon which all the Greeks looked with pleasure, when, for instance, the Aeginetans, after a long time, received back their own city, and when the Melians and Scionaeans were restored to their homes by him, after the Athenians had been driven out and had delivered back the cities."
  23. ^ Mosaic floor of a Jewish synagogue (Sign). Aegina, Greece: Archaeological Museum of Aegina.
  24. ^ Belle Mazur, Studies on Jewry in Greece. Τόμος Ι. Athens 1935.
  25. ^ Acts of the Apostles 18:8
  26. ^ 1 Corinthians 1:14
  27. ^ Michel Lequien, Oriens christianus in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus, Paris 1740, Vol. II, coll. 226–227
  28. ^ Pius Bonifacius Gams, Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae, Leipzig 1931, pp. 430–431
  29. ^ Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2013 ISBN 978-88-209-9070-1), p. 838
  30. ^ a b c Kazhdan (1991), p. 40
  31. ^ Christides (1981), pp. 87–89
  32. ^ Kazhdan (1991), pp. 40–41
  33. ^ . Municipality of Aegina (Δήμος Αίγινας). Archived from the original on 25 April 2016. Retrieved 10 August 2020.
  34. ^ "Tower of Markellos". Atlas Obscura.
  35. ^ source: Greek Wikipedia
  36. ^ Ross, Matthew Samuel (2010). "An Examination of the life and work of Gustav Hasford, Paper 236". UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones. doi:10.34917/1449240.
  37. ^ Lewis, Grover (June 4–10, 1993). "The Killing of Gus Hasford". LA Weekly. BronxBanter blog. Retrieved March 16, 2014

Sources

  • Welter Gabriel, Aigina, Archäol. Inst. d. Deutschen Reiches, Berlin 1938.
  • Christides, Vassilios (1981), "The Raids of the Moslems of Crete in the Aegean Sea: Piracy and Conquest", Byzantion, 51: 76–111
  • Kazhdan, Alexander, ed. (1991). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  • Miller William, Essays on the Latin orient, Rome 1921 (reprint: Amsterdam 1964).Essays on the Latin Orient
  • Miller William, "Η Παληαχώρα της Αιγίνης. Ηρημωμένη ελληνική πόλις", Νέος Ελληνομνήμων Κ΄ (1926), p. 363–365.
  • Rubio y Lluch A., "Συμβολαί εις την ιστορίαν των Καταλωνίων εν Ελλάδι", Δελτίον της Ιστορικής και Εθνολογικής Εταιρείας της Ελλάδος Β΄(1883), p. 458–466.
  • Lambros Spyridon ed., Έγγραφα αναφερόμενα εις την μεσαιωνικήν ιστορίαν των Αθηνών, Athens 1906.
  • D' Olwer Nic., Les seigneurs Catalans d' Egine, τόμος εις μνήμην του Σπυρίδωνος Λάμπρου, Athens 1935.
  • Koulikourdi Georgia, Αίγινα, 2 vols., Athens 1990.
  • Μεσσίνας, Ηλίας, Οι Συναγωγές της Θεσσαλονίκης και της Βέροιας, Aθήνα 1997. ISBN 960-336-010-4.
  • Messinas, Elias, The Synagogues of Greece: A Study of Synagogues in Macedonia and Thrace: With Architectural Drawings of all Synagogues of Greece. Seattle 2022. ISBN 979-8-8069-0288-8
  • Μεσσίνας, Ηλίας, H Συναγωγή, Αθήνα: Εκδόσεις Ινφογνώμων 2022. ISBN 978-618-5590-21-5
  • Moutsopoulos Nikolaos, Η Παλιαχώρα της Αιγίνης. Ιστορική και μορφολογική εξέτασις των μνημείων, Athens 1962.
  • Nikoloudis Nikolaos , "Η Αίγινα κατά τον Μεσαίωνα και την Τουρκοκρατία", Βυζαντινός Δόμος 7(1993–94), pp:13–21.
  • Pennas Charalambos .:BiblioNet : Πέννας, Χαράλαμπος, The Byzantine Aegina.:BiblioNet : Byzantine Aegina / Πέννας, Χαράλαμπος, Athens 2004.
  • John N. Koumanoudes .:BiblioNet : Κουμανούδης, Ιωάννης Ν., Ανεμομυλικά ΙΙ, Αγκίστρι, Αίγινα, Αστυπάλαια, Λήμνος, Σαλαμίνα, Σπέτσες, Σύμη, Χίος και Ψαρά.:BiblioNet : Ανεμομυλικά ΙΙ / Κουμανούδης, Ιωάννης Ν., Τεχνικό Επιμελητήριο Ελλάδας, 2010.

External links

  • The Municipality of Aegina – official website
  • Site for visitors and tourists run by the Municipality of Aegina 9 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Richard Stillwell, ed. Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites, 1976: 12 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine "Aigina, Greece"
  • Map of Ancient Greece (includes Aegina Island)
  • AeginaGreece.com Tourist guide
  • The Mosaic of Aegina Program

aegina, this, article, about, greek, island, other, uses, disambiguation, greek, Αίγινα, aígina, ˈeʝina, ancient, greek, Αἴγῑνα, saronic, islands, greece, saronic, gulf, from, athens, tradition, derives, name, from, mother, hero, aeacus, born, island, became, . This article is about the Greek island For other uses see Aegina disambiguation Aegina ɪ ˈ dʒ aɪ n e 2 Greek Aigina Aigina ˈeʝina Ancient Greek Aἴgῑna is one of the Saronic Islands of Greece in the Saronic Gulf 27 km 17 mi from Athens Tradition derives the name from Aegina the mother of the hero Aeacus who was born on the island and became its king 3 Aegina AiginaView of Aegina s seafrontFlagAeginaLocation within the regionCoordinates 37 43 48 N 23 29 24 E 37 73000 N 23 49000 E 37 73000 23 49000 Coordinates 37 43 48 N 23 29 24 E 37 73000 N 23 49000 E 37 73000 23 49000CountryGreeceAdministrative regionAtticaRegional unitIslandsGovernment MayorGiannis Zorbas Ind Area Municipality87 41 km2 33 75 sq mi Population 2011 1 Municipality13 056 Municipality density150 km2 390 sq mi Community 1 Population8 924 2011 Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Postal code180 10Area code s 2297Vehicle registrationYWebsiteOfficial Visitors Guide to Aegina Contents 1 Administration 1 1 Municipality 1 2 Province 2 Geography 3 Climate 4 History 4 1 Earliest history 20th 7th centuries BC 4 2 Coinage and sea power 7th 5th centuries BC 4 3 Rivalry with Athens 5th century BC 4 4 Decline 4 5 Hellenistic period and Roman rule 4 6 Byzantine period 4 7 Frankish rule after 1204 4 8 Venetians in Aegina 1451 1537 4 8 1 Administration 4 8 2 16th century 4 9 First Ottoman period 1540 1687 4 10 Second Venetian period 1687 1715 4 11 Second Ottoman period 1715 1821 4 12 Greek Revolution 5 Landmarks 6 Economy 6 1 Pistachios 7 Culture 7 1 Mythology 7 2 Famous Aeginetans 8 Historical population 9 See also 10 Gallery 11 References 12 Sources 13 External linksAdministration EditMunicipality Edit The municipality of Aegina consists of the island of Aegina and a few offshore islets It is part of the Islands regional unit Attica region The municipality is subdivided into the following five communities population in 2011 in parentheses 4 Kypseli 2 124 Mesagros 1 361 Perdika 8 23 Vathy 1 495 The regional capital is the town of Aegina situated at the northwestern end of the island Due to its proximity to Athens it is a popular vacation place during the summer months with quite a few Athenians owning second houses on the island Province Edit The province of Aegina Greek Eparxia Aiginas was one of the provinces of the Attica Prefecture and was created in 1833 as part of Attica and Boeotia Prefecture Its territory corresponded with that of the current municipalities Aegina and Agkistri 5 It was abolished in 2006 Geography Edit Aegina is roughly triangular in shape approximately 15 km 9 3 mi from east to west and 10 km 6 2 mi from north to south with an area of 87 41 km2 33 75 sq mi 6 An extinct volcano constitutes two thirds of Aegina The northern and western sides consist of stony but fertile plains which are well cultivated and produce luxuriant crops of grain with some cotton vines almonds olives and figs 3 but the most characteristic crop of Aegina today 2000s is pistachio Economically the sponge fisheries are of notable importance The southern volcanic part of the island is rugged and mountainous and largely barren Its highest rise is the conical Mount Oros 531 m in the south and the Panhellenian ridge stretches northward with narrow fertile valleys on either side The beaches are also a popular tourist attraction Hydrofoil ferries from Piraeus take only forty minutes to reach Aegina the regular ferry takes about an hour with ticket prices for adults within the 4 15 euro range There are regular bus services from Aegina town to destinations throughout the island such as Agia Marina Portes is a fishing village on the east coast A panorama of the island of Aegina from the Mediterranean sea Climate EditAegina has a hot semi arid climate Koppen climate classification BSh It is one of the driest places in Greece Climate data for AeginaMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 14 57 15 1 59 2 17 2 63 0 19 9 67 8 26 79 30 7 87 3 33 5 92 3 34 93 29 4 84 9 24 4 75 9 20 68 16 61 23 3 74 0 Average low C F 8 8 47 8 9 5 49 1 10 6 51 1 12 4 54 3 17 63 21 1 70 0 24 5 76 1 25 1 77 2 22 1 71 8 18 2 64 8 14 8 58 6 11 6 52 9 16 3 61 4 Average precipitation mm inches 44 1 1 74 26 7 1 05 19 2 0 76 35 5 1 40 7 7 0 30 17 3 0 68 1 9 0 07 7 8 0 31 7 0 3 43 7 1 72 67 3 2 65 60 6 2 39 338 8 13 37 Source http penteli meteo gr stations aegina 2019 2021 averages History EditEarliest history 20th 7th centuries BC Edit Aegina according to Herodotus 7 was a colony of Epidaurus to which state it was originally subject Its placement between Attica and the Peloponnesus made it a site of trade even earlier and its earliest inhabitants allegedly came from Asia Minor 8 Minoan ceramics have been found in contexts of c 2000 BC The famous Aegina Treasure now in the British Museum is estimated to date between 1700 and 1500 BC 9 The discovery on the island of a number of gold ornaments belonging to the last period of Mycenaean art suggests that Mycenaean culture existed in Aegina for some generations after the Dorian conquest of Argos and Lacedaemon 10 It is probable that the island was not Doricised before the 9th century BC One of the earliest historical facts is its membership in the Amphictyony or League of Calauria attested around the 8th century BC This ostensibly religious league included besides Aegina Athens the Minyan Boeotian Orchomenos Troezen Hermione Nauplia and Prasiae It was probably an organisation of city states that were still Mycenaean for the purpose of suppressing piracy in the Aegean that began as a result of the decay of the naval supremacy of the Mycenaean princes Aegina seems to have belonged to the Eretrian league during the Lelantine War this perhaps may explain the war with Samos a major member of the rival Chalcidian league during the reign of King Amphicrates Herod iii 59 i e not later than the earlier half of the 7th century BC 3 Coinage and sea power 7th 5th centuries BC Edit Coins of Aegina Silver stater of Aegina 550 530 BC Obv Sea turtle with large pellets down centre Rev incuse square punch with eight sections Silver drachma of Aegina 404 340 BC Obverse Land tortoise Reverse inscription AIG INA Aegina and dolphin Its early history reveals that the maritime importance of the island dates back to pre Dorian times It is usually stated on the authority of Ephorus that Pheidon of Argos established a mint in Aegina the first city state to issue coins in Europe the Aeginetic stater One stamped stater having the mark of some authority in the form of a picture or words can be seen in the Bibliotheque Nationale of Paris It is an electrum stater of a turtle an animal sacred to Aphrodite struck at Aegina that dates from 700 BC 11 Therefore it is thought that the Aeginetes within 30 or 40 years of the invention of coinage in Asia Minor by the Ionian Greeks or the Lydians c 630 BC might have been the ones to introduce coinage to the Western world The fact that the Aeginetic standard of weights and measures developed during the mid 7th century was one of the two standards in general use in the Greek world the other being the Euboic Attic is sufficient evidence of the early commercial importance of the island 3 The Aeginetic weight standard of about 12 2 grams was widely adopted in the Greek world during the 7th century BC The Aeginetic stater was divided into two drachmae of 6 1 grams of silver 12 Staters depicting a sea turtle were struck up to the end of the 5th century BC During the First Peloponnesian War by 456 BC it was replaced by the land tortoise 13 During the naval expansion of Aegina during the Archaic Period Kydonia was an ideal maritime stop for Aegina s fleet on its way to other Mediterranean ports controlled by the emerging sea power Aegina 14 During the next century Aegina was one of the three principal states trading at the emporium of Naucratis in Egypt and it was the only Greek state near Europe that had a share in this factory 15 At the beginning of the 5th century BC it seems to have been an entrepot of the Pontic grain trade which at a later date became an Athenian monopoly 16 Unlike the other commercial states of the 7th and 6th centuries BC such as Corinth Chalcis Eretria and Miletus Aegina did not found any colonies The settlements to which Strabo refers viii 376 cannot be regarded as any real exceptions to this statement 3 Rivalry with Athens 5th century BC Edit The known history of Aegina is almost exclusively a history of its relations with the neighbouring state of Athens which began to compete with the thalassocracy sea power of Aegina about the beginning of the 6th century BC Solon passed laws limiting Aeginetan commerce in Attica The legendary history of these relations as recorded by Herodotus v 79 89 vi 49 51 73 85 94 involves critical problems of some difficulty and interest He traces the hostility of the two states back to a dispute about the images of the goddesses Damia and Auxesia which the Aeginetes had carried off from Epidauros their parent state The Epidaurians had been accustomed to make annual offerings to the Athenian deities Athena and Erechtheus in payment for the Athenian olive wood of which the statues were made Upon the refusal of the Aeginetes to continue these offerings the Athenians endeavoured to carry away the images Their design was frustrated miraculously according to the Aeginetan version the statues fell upon their knees and only a single survivor returned to Athens There he became victim to the fury of his comrades widows who pierced him with their peplos brooch pins No date is assigned by Herodotus for this old feud recent writers such as J B Bury and R W Macan suggest the period between Solon and Peisistratus c 570 BC It is possible that the whole episode is mythical A critical analysis of the narrative seems to reveal little else than a series of aetiological traditions explanatory of cults and customs such as of the kneeling posture of the images of Damia and Auxesia of the use of native ware instead of Athenian in their worship and of the change in women s dress at Athens from the Dorian peplos to the Ionian style chiton Colour depiction of the Temple of Aphaea sacred to a mother goddess particularly worshiped on Aegina The Temple of Aphaea The account which Herodotus gives of the hostilities between the two states during the early years of the 5th century BC is to the following effect The Thebans after the defeat by Athens about 507 BC appealed to Aegina for assistance The Aeginetans at first contented themselves with sending the images of the Aeacidae the tutelary heroes of their island Subsequently however they contracted an alliance and ravaged the seaboard of Attica The Athenians were preparing to make reprisals in spite of the advice of the Delphic oracle that they should desist from attacking Aegina for thirty years and content themselves meanwhile with dedicating a precinct to Aeacus when their projects were interrupted by the Spartan intrigues for the restoration of Hippias In 491 BC Aegina was one of the states which gave the symbols of submission earth and water to Achaemenid Persia Athens at once appealed to Sparta to punish this act of medism and Cleomenes I one of the Spartan kings crossed over to the island to arrest those who were responsible for it His attempt was at first unsuccessful but after the deposition of Demaratus he visited the island a second time accompanied by his new colleague Leotychides seized ten of the leading citizens and deposited them at Athens as hostages After the death of Cleomenes and the refusal of the Athenians to restore the hostages to Leotychides the Aeginetes retaliated by seizing a number of Athenians at a festival at Sunium Thereupon the Athenians concerted a plot with Nicodromus the leader of the democratic party in the island for the betrayal of Aegina He was to seize the old city and they were to come to his aid on the same day with seventy vessels The plot failed owing to the late arrival of the Athenian force when Nicodromus had already fled the island An engagement followed in which the Aeginetes were defeated Subsequently however they succeeded in winning a victory over the Athenian fleet All the incidents subsequent to the appeal of Athens to Sparta are referred expressly by Herodotus to the interval between the sending of the heralds in 491 BC and the invasion of Datis and Artaphernes in 490 BC cf Herod vi 49 with 94 There are difficulties with this story of which the following are the principal elements Herodotus nowhere states or implies that peace was concluded between the two states before 481 BC nor does he distinguish between different wars during this period Hence it would follow that the war lasted from soon after 507 BC until the congress at the Isthmus of Corinth in 481 BC It is only for two years 491 and 490 BC out of the twenty five that any details are given It is the more remarkable that no incidents are recorded in the period between the battles of Marathon and Salamis since at the time of the Isthmian Congress the war was described as the most important one then being waged in Greece 17 It is improbable that Athens would have sent twenty vessels to the aid of the Ionians in 499 BC if at the time it was at war with Aegina There is an incidental indication of time which indicates the period after Marathon as the true date for the events which are referred by Herodotus to the year before Marathon viz the thirty years that were to elapse between the dedication of the precinct to Aeacus and the final victory of Athens 18 The ruins of the Temple of Apollo As the final victory of Athens over Aegina was in 458 BC the thirty years of the oracle would carry us back to the year 488 BC as the date of the dedication of the precinct and the beginning of hostilities This inference is supported by the date of the building of the 200 triremes for the war against Aegina on the advice of Themistocles which is given in the Constitution of Athens as 483 482 BC 19 It is probable therefore that Herodotus is in error both in tracing back the beginning of hostilities to an alliance between Thebes and Aegina c 507 BC and in claiming the episode of Nicodromus occurred prior to the battle of Marathon Overtures were unquestionably made by Thebes for an alliance with Aegina c 507 BC but they came to nothing The refusal of Aegina was in the diplomatic guise of sending the Aeacidae The real occasion of the beginning of the war was the refusal of Athens to restore the hostages some twenty years later There was but one war and it lasted from 488 to 481 BC That Athens had the worst of it in this war is certain Herodotus had no Athenian victories to record after the initial success and the fact that Themistocles was able to carry his proposal to devote the surplus funds of the state to the building of so large a fleet seems to imply that the Athenians were themselves convinced that a supreme effort was necessary It may be noted in confirmation of this opinion that the naval supremacy of Aegina is assigned by the ancient writers on chronology to precisely this period i e the years 490 480 BC 3 20 Decline Edit This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the repulse of Xerxes I it is possible that the Aeginetes played a larger part than is conceded to them by Herodotus The Athenian tradition which he follows in the main would naturally seek to obscure their services It was to Aegina rather than Athens that the prize of valour at Salamis was awarded and the destruction of the Persian fleet appears to have been as much the work of the Aeginetan contingent as of the Athenian Herod viii 91 There are other indications too of the importance of the Aeginetan fleet in the Greek scheme of defence In view of these considerations it becomes difficult to credit the number of the vessels that is assigned to them by Herodotus 30 as against 180 Athenian vessels cf Greek History sect Authorities During the next twenty years the Philo Laconian policy of Cimon secured Aegina as a member of the Spartan league from attack The change in Athenian foreign policy which was consequent upon the ostracism of Cimon in 461 BC resulted in what is sometimes called the First Peloponnesian War during which most of the fighting was experienced by Corinth and Aegina The latter state was forced to surrender to Athens after a siege and to accept the position of a subject ally c 456 BC The tribute was fixed at 30 talents By the terms of the Thirty Years Peace 445 BC Athens promised to restore to Aegina her autonomy but the clause remained ineffective During the first winter of the Peloponnesian War 431 BC Athens expelled the Aeginetans and established a cleruchy in their island The exiles were settled by Sparta in Thyreatis on the frontiers of Laconia and Argolis Even in their new home they were not safe from Athenian rancour A force commanded by Nicias landed in 424 BC and killed most of them At the end of the Peloponnesian War Lysander restored the scattered remnants of the old inhabitants to the island 21 22 which was used by the Spartans as a base for operations against Athens during the Corinthian War It is probable that the power of Aegina had steadily declined during the twenty years after Salamis and that it had declined absolutely as well as relatively to that of Athens Commerce was the source of Aegina s greatness and her trade which seems to have been principally with the Levant must have suffered seriously from the war with Persia Aegina s medism in 491 is to be explained by its commercial relations with the Persian Empire It was forced into patriotism in spite of itself and the glory won by the Battle of Salamis was paid for by the loss of its trade and the decay of its marine The loss of the state s power is explained by the conditions of the island which was based on slave labour Aristotle s estimated the population of slaves were as much as 470 000 Hellenistic period and Roman rule Edit The remains of the 4th century synagogue at the Archaeological Museum of Aegina Aegina with the rest of Greece became dominated successively by the Macedonians 322 229 BC the Achaeans 229 211 BC Aetolians 211 210 BC Attalus of Pergamum 210 133 BC and the Romans after 133 BC 3 A sign at the Archaeological Museum of Aegina is reported to say that a Jewish community was established in Aegina at the end of the second and during the 3rd century AD by Jews fleeing the barbarian invasions of the time in Greece 23 However the first phases of those invasions began in the 4th century The Romaniote jewish community erected an elaborate synagogue in rectangle form with an apse on the eastern wall with a magnificent mosaic decorated with geometric motifs still preserved in the courtyard of the Archaeological Museum of Aegina The synagogue dates from the 4th century AD and was in use until the 7th century AD 24 Local Christian tradition has it that a Christian community was established there in the 1st century having as its bishop Crispus the ruler of the Corinthian synagogue who became a Christian 25 and was baptised by Paul the Apostle 26 There are written records of participation by later bishops of Aegina Gabriel and Thomas in the Councils of Constantinople in 869 and 879 The see was at first a suffragan of the metropolitan see of Corinth but was later given the rank of archdiocese 27 28 No longer a residential bishopric Aegina is today listed by the Catholic Church as a titular see 29 Byzantine period Edit The byzantine church of Agioi Theodoroi Aegina belonged to the East Roman Byzantine Empire after the division of the Roman Empire in 395 It remained Eastern Roman during the period of crisis of the 7th 8th centuries when most of the Balkans and the Greek mainland were overrun by Slavic invasions Indeed according to the Chronicle of Monemvasia the island served as a refuge for the Corinthians fleeing these incursions 30 The island flourished during the early 9th century as evidenced by church construction activity but suffered greatly from Arab raids originating from Crete Various hagiographies record a large scale raid c 830 that resulted in the flight of much of the population to the Greek mainland During that time some of the population sought refuge in the island s hinterland establishing the settlement of Palaia Chora 30 31 According to the 12th century bishop of Athens Michael Choniates by his time the island had become a base for pirates 30 This is corroborated by Benedict of Peterborough s graphic account of Greece as it was in 1191 he states that many of the islands were uninhabited for fear of pirates and that Aegina along with Salamis and Makronisos were their strongholds Frankish rule after 1204 Edit Further information Frankokratia The former catholic church known as Saint George of the Forum in Palaiochora the medieval capital of Aegina After the dissolution and partition of the Byzantine Empire by the Fourth Crusade in 1204 Aegina was accorded to the Republic of Venice In the event it became controlled by the Duchy of Athens The Catalan Company seized control of Athens and with it Aegina in 1317 and in 1425 the island became controlled by the Venetians 32 when Alioto Caopena at that time ruler of Aegina placed himself by treaty under the Republic s protection to escape the danger of a Turkish raid The island must then have been fruitful for one of the conditions by which Venice accorded him protection was that he should supply grain to Venetian colonies He agreed to surrender the island to Venice if his family became extinct Antonio II Acciaioli opposed the treaty for one of his adopted daughters had married the future lord of Aegina Antonello Caopena Venetians in Aegina 1451 1537 Edit The Venetian era Markellos tower In 1451 Aegina became Venetian The islanders welcomed Venetian rule the claims of Antonello s uncle Arna who had lands in Argolis were satisfied by a pension A Venetian governor rettore was appointed who was dependent on the authorities of Nauplia After Arna s death his son Alioto renewed his claim to the island but was told that the republic was resolved to keep it He and his family were pensioned and one of them aided in the defence of Aegina against the Turks in 1537 was captured with his family and died in a Turkish dungeon In 1463 the Turco Venetian war began which was destined to cost the Venetians Negroponte Euboea the island of Lemnos most of the Cyclades islands Scudra and their colonies in the Morea Peace was concluded in 1479 Venice still retained Aegina Lepanto Naupactus Nauplia Monemvasia Modon Navarino Coron and the islands Crete Mykonos and Tinos Aegina remained subject to Nauplia Administration Edit Aegina obtained money for its defences by reluctantly sacrificing its cherished relic the head of St George which had been carried there from Livadia by the Catalans In 1462 the Venetian Senate ordered the relic to be removed to St Giorgio Maggiore in Venice and on 12 November it was transported from Aegina by Vettore Cappello the famous Venetian commander In return the Senate gave the Aeginetes 100 ducats apiece towards fortifying the island In 1519 the government was reformed The system of having two rectors was found to result in frequent quarrels and the republic thenceforth sent out a single official styled Bailie and Captain assisted by two councillors who performed the duties of camerlengo by turns The Bailie s authority extended over the rector of Aegina whereas Kastri opposite the island Hydra was granted to two families the Palaiologoi and the Alberti Society at Nauplia was divided into three classes nobles citizens and plebeians and it was customary for nobles alone to possess the much coveted local offices such as the judge of the inferior court and inspector of weights and measures The populace now demanded its share and the home government ordered that at least one of the three inspectors should be a non noble Aegina had always been exposed to the raids of corsairs and had oppressive governors during these last 30 years of Venetian rule Venetian nobles were not willing to go to this island In 1533 three rectors of Aegina were punished for their acts of injustice and there is a graphic account of the reception given by the Aeginetans to the captain of Nauplia who came to command an enquiry into the administration of these delinquents vid inscription over the entrance of St George the Catholic in Paliachora The rectors had spurned their ancient right to elect an islander to keep one key of the money chest They had also threatened to leave the island en masse with the commissioner unless the captain avenged their wrongs To spare the economy of the community it was ordered that appeals from the governor s decision should be made on Crete instead of in Venice The republic was to pay a bakshish to the Turkish governor of the Morea and to the voivode who was stationed at the frontier of Thermisi opposite Hydra The fortifications too were allowed to become decrepit and were inadequately guarded 16th century Edit The ruins of Palaiochora Walls houses and castle have been destroyed only the chapels were restored After the end of the Duchy of Athens and the principality of Achaia the only Latin possessions left on the mainland of Greece were the papal city of Monemvasia the fortress of Vonitsa the Messenian stations Coron and Modon Lepanto Pteleon Navarino and the castles of Argos and Nauplia to which the island of Aegina was subordinate In 1502 03 the new peace treaty left Venice with nothing but Cephalonia Monemvasia and Nauplia with their appurtenances in the Morea And against the sack of Megara it had to endure the temporary capture of the castle of Aegina by Kemal Reis and the abduction of 2000 inhabitants This treaty was renewed in 1513 and 1521 All supplies of grain from Nauplia and Monemvasia had to be imported from Turkish possessions while corsairs rendered dangerous all traffic by sea In 1537 sultan Suleiman declared war upon Venice and his admiral Hayreddin Barbarossa devastated much of the Ionian Islands and in October invaded the island of Aegina On the fourth day Palaiochora was captured but the Latin church of St George was spared Hayreddin Barbarossa had the adult male population massacred and took away 6 000 surviving women and children as slaves Then Barbarossa sailed to Naxos whence he carried off an immense booty compelling the Duke of Naxos to purchase his further independence by paying a tribute of 5000 ducats With the peace of 1540 Venice ceded Nauplia and Monemvasia For nearly 150 years afterwards Venice ruled no part of the mainland of Greece except Parga and Butrinto subordinate politically to the Ionian Islands but it still retained its insular dominions Cyprus Crete Tenos and six Ionian islands First Ottoman period 1540 1687 Edit The island was attacked and left desolate by Francesco Morosini during the Cretan War 1654 Second Venetian period 1687 1715 Edit Aegina in 1845 by Carl Rottmann In 1684 the beginning of the Morean War between Venice and the Ottoman Empire resulted in the temporary reconquest of a large part of the country by the Republic In 1687 the Venetian army arrived in Piraeus and captured Attica The number of the Athenians at that time exceeded 6 000 the Albanians from the villages of Attica excluded whilst in 1674 the population of Aegina did not seem to exceed 3 000 inhabitants two thirds of which were women The Aeginetans had been reduced to poverty to pay their taxes The most significant plague epidemic began in Attica during 1688 an occasion that caused the massive migration of Athenians toward the south most of them settled in Aegina In 1693 Morosini resumed command but his only acts were to refortify the castle of Aegina which he had demolished during the Cretan war in 1655 the cost of upkeep being paid as long as the war lasted by the Athenians and to place it and Salamis under Malipiero as Governor This caused the Athenians to send him a request for the renewal of Venetian protection and an offer of an annual tribute He died in 1694 and Zeno was appointed at his place In 1699 thanks to English mediation the war ended with the peace of Karlowitz by which Venice retained possession of the 7 Ionian islands as well as Butrinto and Parga the Morea Spinalonga and Suda Tenos Santa Maura and Aegina and ceased to pay a tribute for Zante but which restored Lepanto to the Ottoman sultan Cerigo and Aegina were united administratively since the peace with Morea which not only paid all the expenses of administration but furnished a substantial balance for the naval defence of Venice in which it was directly interested Second Ottoman period 1715 1821 Edit During the early part of the Ottoman Venetian War of 1714 1718 the Ottoman Fleet commanded by Canum Hoca captured Aegina Ottomans rule in Aegina and the Morea was resumed and confirmed by the Treaty of Passarowitz and they retained control of the island with the exception of a brief Russian occupation Orlov Revolt early 1770s until the beginning of the Greek War of Independence in 1821 Greek Revolution Edit During the Greek War of Independence Aegina became an administrative centre for the Greek revolutionary authorities Ioannis Kapodistrias was briefly established here Landmarks Edit Panorama of Aegina s port View of the port Traditional street in the town Aegina town centre A bust of Kapodistrias Temple of Aphaea dedicated to its namesake a goddess who was later associated with Athena the temple was part of a pre Christian equilateral holy triangle of temples including the Athenian Parthenon and the temple of Poseidon at Sounion Monastery of Agios Nectarios dedicated to Nectarios of Aegina a recent saint of the Greek Orthodox Church A statue in the principal square commemorates Ioannis Kapodistrias 1776 1831 the first administrator of free modern Greece The Orphanage of Kapodistrias is a large building known locally as The Prison Oi Fylakes Oi Filakes constructed in 1828 29 by Ioannis Kapodistrias as a home for children orphaned as a result of the Greek War of Independence The building also housed schools vocational workshops the National Public Library the National Archaeological Museum a military academy the National Printing Office and the National Conservatory for Choir and Orchestra From about 1880 it was used as a prison and housed political prisoners during the Greek Junta 1967 1974 hence its local name There are currently plans to restore the building as a museum 33 The Tower of Markellos was probably built during the second Venetian occupation 1687 1714 as a watch tower in anticipation of a Turkish siege A castle fortified walls and numerous watchtowers were built at this time The tower was abandoned after the Turkish occupation of 1714 until revolutionary leader Spyros Markellos bought the tower as his residence in around 1802 In 1826 28 it was the headquarters of the temporary government of the embryonic Greek state It subsequently was used as a police headquarters and housed various government agencies until it was abandoned again in the mid 19th century It is currently owned by the Municipality of Aegina 34 Temple of Zeus Hellanios near the village of Pachia Rachi is a 13th century Byzantine church built on the ruins of the ancient temple to Zeus Hellanios built in the 4th century BC The staircase leading up to the church some of the original walls and loose stones from the earlier temple remain Economy EditPistachios Edit In 1896 the physician Nikolaos Peroglou introduced the systematic cultivation of pistachios which soon became popular among the inhabitants of the island By 1950 pistachio cultivation had significantly displaced the rest of the agricultural activity due to its high profitability but also due to the phylloxera that threatened the vineyards that time As a result in the early 60s the first pistachio peeling factory was established in the Plakakia area by Grigorios Konidaris The quality of Fistiki Aeginis Aegina Pistachios a name that was established as a product of Protected Designation of Origin PDO in 1996 is considered internationally excellent and superior to several foreign varieties due to the special climatic conditions of the island drought as well as soil s volcanic characteristics Pistachios have made Aegina famous all over the world Today half of the pistachio growers are members of the Agricultural Cooperative of Aegina s Pistachio Producers It is estimated that pistachio cultivation covers 29 000 acres of the island while the total production reaches 2 700 tons per year In recent years in mid September the Pistachio Festival has been organized every year under the name Fistiki Fest 35 Culture EditMythology Edit In Greek mythology Aegina was a daughter of the river god Asopus and the nymph Metope She bore at least two children Menoetius by Actor and Aeacus by the god Zeus When Zeus abducted Aegina he took her to Oenone an island close to Attica Here Aegina gave birth to Aeacus who would later become king of Oenone thenceforth the island s name was Aegina Aegina was the gathering place of Myrmidons in Aegina they gathered and trained Zeus needed an elite army and at first thought that Aegina which at the time did not have any villagers was a good place So he changed some ants Ancient Greek Myrmygia Myrmigia into warriors who had six hands and wore black armour Later the Myrmidons commanded by Achilles were known as the most fearsome fighting unit in Greece Famous Aeginetans Edit Aeacus the first king of Aegina according to mythology in whose honour the Aeacea were celebrated Smilis 6th century BC sculptor Sostratus of Aegina 6th century BC merchant Onatas 5th century BC sculptor Ptolichus 5th century BC sculptor Philiscus of Aegina 4th century BC Cynic philosopher Paul of Aegina 7th century medical scholar and physician Saint Athanasia of Aegina 9th century abbess and saint Cosmas II Atticus 12th century Patriarch of Constantinople Nectarios of Aegina 1846 1920 bishop and saint Aristeidis Moraitinis aviator born 1891 died 1918 Gustav Hasford American military journalist and novelist moved to Aegina and died there of heart failure on 29 January 1993 aged 45 36 37 Historical population EditYear Town population Municipal Island population1981 6 730 11 1271991 6 373 11 6392001 7 410 13 5522011 7 253 13 056See also EditFlag of AeginaGallery Edit Airview of the town of Aegina Church Agios Nikolas o Thalassinos Aegina Agia Marina Aegina The first printshop of the independent Greek State 1830 Christopher Wordsworth Aegina 1882 The Temple of Aphaea Aegina Temple of Aphaea Reconstructed Byzantine church of the Taxiarchs built over the ruins of the Temple of Zeus Hellanios on Mount HellanionReferences Edit a b Apografh Plh8ysmoy Katoikiwn 2011 MONIMOS Plh8ysmos in Greek Hellenic Statistical Authority Smith Benjamin E 1895 Century Cyclopedia of Names Vol i New York Century p 16 a b c d e f g One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Aegina Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 251 254 This cites Herodotus loc cit Thucydides i 105 108 ii 27 iv 56 57 For the criticism of Herodotus s account of the relations of Athens and Aegina Wilamowitz Aristoteles und Athen ii 280 288 is indispensable See also Macan Herodotus iv vi ii 102 120 1 permanent dead link Detailed census results 1991 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2016 39 MB in Greek and French Population amp housing census 2001 incl area and average elevation PDF in Greek National Statistical Service of Greece Archived from the original PDF on 21 September 2015 Herodotus v 83 viii 46 Pausanias 2 29 9 Richard Stillwell ed Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites 1976 Collection search You searched for Made on Crete or by immigrant Cretan craftsmen on Aegina britishmuseum org A J Evans in Journal of Hellenic Studies vol xiii p 195 when British Museum Catalogue 11 Attica Megaris Aegina 700 550 BC plate XXIII History 310 Greek Coinage and Measures Archived from the original on 4 May 2015 Retrieved 29 July 2020 Numista Coins of Aegina Retrieved 20 December 2020 The Modern Antiquarian Cydonia www themodernantiquarian com Herodotus ii 178 Herodotus vii 147 Herod vii 145 Herod v 89 Herod vii 144 Ath Pol r2 7 Eusebius Houston Chronicle Can p 337 Xenophon Hellenica 2 2 9 Meantime Lysander upon reaching Aegina restored the state to the Aeginetans gathering together as many of them as he could and he did the same thing for the Melians also and for all the others who had been deprived of their native states Plutarch Life of Lysander 14 3 But there were other measures of Lysander upon which all the Greeks looked with pleasure when for instance the Aeginetans after a long time received back their own city and when the Melians and Scionaeans were restored to their homes by him after the Athenians had been driven out and had delivered back the cities Mosaic floor of a Jewish synagogue Sign Aegina Greece Archaeological Museum of Aegina Belle Mazur Studies on Jewry in Greece Tomos I Athens 1935 Acts of the Apostles 18 8 1 Corinthians 1 14 Michel Lequien Oriens christianus in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus Paris 1740 Vol II coll 226 227 Pius Bonifacius Gams Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae Leipzig 1931 pp 430 431 Annuario Pontificio 2013 Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2013 ISBN 978 88 209 9070 1 p 838 a b c Kazhdan 1991 p 40 Christides 1981 pp 87 89 Kazhdan 1991 pp 40 41 The Kapodistrian Orphanage Municipality of Aegina Dhmos Aiginas Archived from the original on 25 April 2016 Retrieved 10 August 2020 Tower of Markellos Atlas Obscura source Greek Wikipedia Ross Matthew Samuel 2010 An Examination of the life and work of Gustav Hasford Paper 236 UNLV Theses Dissertations Professional Papers and Capstones doi 10 34917 1449240 Lewis Grover June 4 10 1993 The Killing of Gus Hasford LA Weekly BronxBanter blog Retrieved March 16 2014Sources EditWelter Gabriel Aigina Archaol Inst d Deutschen Reiches Berlin 1938 Christides Vassilios 1981 The Raids of the Moslems of Crete in the Aegean Sea Piracy and Conquest Byzantion 51 76 111 Kazhdan Alexander ed 1991 The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Miller William Essays on the Latin orient Rome 1921 reprint Amsterdam 1964 Essays on the Latin Orient Miller William H Palhaxwra ths Aiginhs Hrhmwmenh ellhnikh polis Neos Ellhnomnhmwn K 1926 p 363 365 Wayback Machine Rubio y Lluch A Symbolai eis thn istorian twn Katalwniwn en Elladi Deltion ths Istorikhs kai E8nologikhs Etaireias ths Ellados B 1883 p 458 466 2 Lambros Spyridon ed Eggrafa anaferomena eis thn mesaiwnikhn istorian twn A8hnwn Athens 1906 D Olwer Nic Les seigneurs Catalans d Egine tomos eis mnhmhn toy Spyridwnos Lamproy Athens 1935 Koulikourdi Georgia Aigina 2 vols Athens 1990 Messinas Hlias Oi Synagwges ths 8essalonikhs kai ths Beroias A8hna 1997 ISBN 960 336 010 4 Messinas Elias The Synagogues of Greece A Study of Synagogues in Macedonia and Thrace With Architectural Drawings of all Synagogues of Greece Seattle 2022 ISBN 979 8 8069 0288 8 Messinas Hlias H Synagwgh A8hna Ekdoseis Infognwmwn 2022 ISBN 978 618 5590 21 5 Moutsopoulos Nikolaos H Paliaxwra ths Aiginhs Istorikh kai morfologikh e3etasis twn mnhmeiwn Athens 1962 Nikoloudis Nikolaos BiblioNet Nikoloydhs Nikolaos G H Aigina kata ton Mesaiwna kai thn Toyrkokratia Byzantinos Domos 7 1993 94 pp 13 21 Pennas Charalambos BiblioNet Pennas Xaralampos The Byzantine Aegina BiblioNet Byzantine Aegina Pennas Xaralampos Athens 2004 John N Koumanoudes BiblioNet Koymanoydhs Iwannhs N Anemomylika II Agkistri Aigina Astypalaia Lhmnos Salamina Spetses Symh Xios kai PSara BiblioNet Anemomylika II Koymanoydhs Iwannhs N Texniko Epimelhthrio Elladas 2010 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aegina Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Aegina The feud between Athens and Aegina The Municipality of Aegina official website Site for visitors and tourists run by the Municipality of Aegina Archived 9 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine Richard Stillwell ed Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites 1976 Archived 12 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine Aigina Greece Map of Ancient Greece includes Aegina Island AeginaGreece com Tourist guide The Mosaic of Aegina Program Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aegina amp oldid 1132781784, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.