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Amfissa

Amfissa (Greek: Άμφισσα [ˈamfisa], also mentioned in classical sources as Amphissa) is a town in Phocis, Greece, part of the municipality of Delphi, of which it is the seat and a municipal unit. The municipal unit has an area of 315.174 km2.[2] It lies on the northern edge of the olive forest of the Crissaean plain, between two mountains, Giona to the west and Parnassus to the east, 200 km (120 mi) northwest of Athens and 20 km (12 mi) of Delphi, as well as 85 km (53 mi) northeast of Naupactus and 72 km (45 mi) south of Lamia.

Amfissa
Άμφισσα
View of Amfissa.
Amfissa
Location within the regional unit
Coordinates: 38°32′N 22°22′E / 38.533°N 22.367°E / 38.533; 22.367
CountryGreece
Administrative regionCentral Greece
Regional unitPhocis
MunicipalityDelphi
 • Municipal unit315.174 km2 (121.689 sq mi)
Lowest elevation
180 m (590 ft)
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Municipal unit
8,370
 • Municipal unit density27/km2 (69/sq mi)
Community
 • Population6,919 (2011)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
331 00
Area code(s)22650
Vehicle registrationAM
Southern part of Amfissa

Amfissa dates back to antiquity, with its history spanning around 3,000 years, and has been traditionally the largest and capital city of Phocis. It was the most important city of the ancient Greek tribe of the Ozolian Locrians and one of the most powerful cities in Central Greece. In the Middle Ages, Amfissa came to be known as Salona. It declined after several foreign conquests and destructions, but emerged as an important city in the region and played a major role during the Greek War of Independence.

Origin of the name edit

It is believed that the name Άμφισσα (Amfissa) derives from the ancient Greek verb αμφιέννυμι (amfiennymi), meaning 'surround', since the city is surrounded by mountains Giona and Parnassus. According to the Greek mythology, Amfissa, the daughter of Macar, son of Aeolus, and mistress of the god Apollo, gave her name to the city.

During the Frankish occupation of Greece in the 13th century, Amfissa was captured by the king of Thessalonica, Boniface of Montferrat, and was renamed to La Sole; since then the city came to be called Salona in Greek.[3] In 1833, after the establishment of the independent Greek State, the ancient name Amfissa was given back to the city.[citation needed]

History edit

Ancient times edit

Amfissa has been settled since the ancient times and was the chief town of Ozolian Locris, a region inhabited by the ancient Greek tribe of Locrians; the largest and most renowned town of Locris, beautifully constructed and located one hundred and twenty stades away from Delphi.

Pausanias, in his work Description of Greece, mentions the existence of the tombs of Amfissa and Andraemon, and the temple of Athena on the acropolis of the town, with a standing statue of bronze, which was said to have been brought from Troy by Thoas. The Amfissians celebrated mysteries in honor of the "anaktes boys", who might be the Dioskouroi, the Curetes or the Cabeiri (10.38). In Amfissa there were also the tomb of Gorge, wife of Andraemon, and a temple of Asclepius.

Recent excavations have revealed a Mycenaean tomb in Amfissa, preliminary findings indicate that the tomb was in use for more than two centuries, from the 13th to the 11th century B.C.[4]

Findings of several excavations revealed that the town had developed its commerce with Corinth and towns of the northwestern Peloponnese at the end of the 8th century BC. Amfissa was organised as polis in the 7th century BC and flourished in arts and trade, which lasted for three centuries. Parts of the walls of the ancient acropolis of the town date back between the 7th and the 6th century BC. In 653 BC, people from Amfissa migrated to Southern Italy and founded the town of Epizephyrian Locri. Amfissa's calendar differed from that of the other Ozolian towns,[5] while four of the months' names known are Argestyon, Panigyrion, Amon and Pokios. Its coins had the head of Apollo on the one side, and the inscription "ΑΜΦΙΣΣΕΩΝ" (Amfissians'), a spear-head and a jaw-bone of Calydonian boar, and either a star or grapes on the other.[6]

 
Women of Amfissa, by Lawrence Alma-Tadema and Laura Theresa Alma-Tadema (1887).

Following the Greek defeat by the Persians in the battle of Thermopylae, Persian troops invaded Phocis, Ozolian Locris, Doris and Boeotia. It is then that Amfissa, due to its strong acropolis, received Phocians seeking for safety. During the Peloponnesian War, Amfissa fought on Sparta's side, drifting the other towns of Ozolian Locris in this way. The town's form of government was oligarchic, similar to that of Sparta, but, during the Pericles' era in Athens, some unsuccessful attempts to establish democracy took place. Ten of the archontes of Amfissa have been known through inscriptions found at Delphi: Theagenes of Menandros, Voriadas, Charixenus, Aristodamus of Damon, Dorotheus, Euarchus, Archedamus, Aristodamus of Epinicus, Charixenus and Aristarchus.

In 426 BC, Spartan general Eurylochus, on his way to Naupactus, arrived to Delphi and sent a herald to Amfissa, in order to detach them from Athens and make the Amfissians leave him pass through their lands. The latter were the first to give him hostages and also persuaded the other Locrian cities to do the same, as they were alarmed at the hostility of the neighbouring Phocians. After the Peloponnesian War the Amfissians were allies to Thebes. In 395 BC, the Thebans encouraged the Amfissians to collect taxes from territories claimed by both Locris and Phocis; in response, the Phocians invaded Locris, and ransacked Locrian territory and its metropolis, Amfissa.

As a result, the Amfissians and the rest of Locrians, along with the Thebans, attacked Phocis, and the Phocians, in turn, appealed to their ally, Sparta. These conflicts led to the Corinthian War, with the Amfissians on the side of Athens, Argos, Corinth and Thebes.

During the Third Sacred War, 356 – 346 BC, the Amfissians, who were allies of the Thebans, cultivated part of the Crissaean plain, which belonged to Delphi, and founded potteries in Kirra. In 339 BC, the Athenians offered golden shields to the Temple of Apollo in Delphi with inscriptions insulting to the Thebans, who provoked the deputy of Amfissa to oppose to this offer. Then Aeschines, the Athenian deputy, contradicted the Amfissians, introducing their illegal actions in the sacred lands of the Oracle of Delphi before the Amphictyonic League, which called Philip II of Macedon to intercede.

In 338 BC, Philip attacked and destroyed Amfissa, expelling large parts of its population and giving the area to Delphi, which is known as the Fourth Sacred War. Later in the same year, under the motivation of Demosthenes, a confederation of the Athenians and the Thebans was organized against the Macedonians, which the Amfissians and the rest of the Ozolian Locrians joined.

The Amfissians managed to rebuild their town and give to it its former power, but in 322 BC it was sieged by Alexander of Aetolia. In 279 BC, four hundred Amfissian hoplites joined the Greek forces which defended Delphi against the Gauls. Later, the Amfissians and the Aetolians tightened their old affiliation, and in 250 BC, Amfissa joined the Aetolian League as friend and relative of the Aetolians. In 245 BC, Aratus, the strategos of the Achaean League, attacked and damaged Amfissa, but the two leagues allied with the Roman general Titus Quinctius Flamininus against Philip V of Macedon, and after their win over the Macedonian king, Titus proclaimed Amfissa, among other cities, as an independent and tax-exempt polis, capital of Ozolian Locris, with its own Boule, Ecclesia and coins. But when the Aetolians realised that Rome was to rule the Greek cities and asked Antiochus III the Great of Syria for help, the Roman general Manius Acilius Glabrio seized Lamia and advanced to Amfissa, where he conquered the Crissaean plain and besieged the town in 190 BC.

The Amfissians, being confident for the power of their acropolis and their walls, defended the city, but the fall of Amfissa to the superior forces of the Romans was likely to happen. Then, Manius Acilius was replaced by Lucius Cornelius Scipio Asiaticus, and the people of Amfissa ran into the acropolis. Athenian deputies intervened and prevented Amfissa from the siege, achieving a truce between the two sides.

 
View of the medieval castle ("Orias").

In the period between 174 and 160 BC, Amfissa had been damaged several times during the hostilities which took place between the pro-Roman Aetolians and the nationalists of the town. When Octavian founded the town of Nicopolis, in memory of his victory over Antony and Cleopatra in the battle of Actium, he drove Aetolians to populate it but the parts of them moved to Amfissa. That is why Pausanias says that the Amfissians were ashamed of calling themselves Ozolians, thus they claimed Aetolian descent, a fact that was a misconception of Pausanias, because some people of Amfissa in his times were indeed descendants of Aetolian refugees. In that period, Plutarch mentions, in the work Parallel Lives, a physician from Amfissa named Philotas (Marcus Antonius 28). During the 2nd century, Amfissa was a prosperous town which expanded outside its walls, having a population of 70,000 people in 180 AD.

Middle Ages edit

 
Castle of Amfissa

In the early Middle Ages, Amfissa was devastated by several foreign peoples who invaded Greece, like the Visigoths under Alaric I and the Huns. In 451, the town probably had an episcopical seat and in 530, Justinian I fortified the towns around the Crissaean plain and fixed the fortress of Amfissa. Hierocles in his Synecdemus mentions Amfissa as one of the towns of the eparchy of Hellas within the Byzantine Empire, which was under the rule of the vice-consul of Athens.[7]

Since the middle of the 9th century, new invaders, the Bulgars, raided the region of Phocis and sieged Amfissa several times, but the most damaging was in 996, when Samuel of Bulgaria destroyed the town and slaughtered its people. in 1059, Pechenegs besieged Amfissa one more time and forced the Amfissians to hide in caves of the region to avoid a massacre. In 1147 the Normans arrived to the Crissaean plain but left Amfissa unspoilt, maybe due to the town's decline.

In 1205, after the Fourth Crusade and the establishment of the Latin Empire, Boniface of Montferrat, the king of Thessalonica, conquered the region of Central Greece. Amfissa became the seat of a lordship under Thomas I d'Autremencourt. It is then that the new governors built the powerful Castle of Salona on the hill where the ancient acropolis of Amfissa existed, while the ancient name of the town was replaced by the new name Salona, or La Sole in French and La Sola in Italian. In 1311, the Catalans conquered and ruled Central Greece for more than eighty years.

Ottoman era and the Greek War of Independence edit

 
Nikos Mitropoulos hoists the flag at Salona. Painting of the capture of the city by the Greeks in 1821, by Louis Dupré.

The region of Salona was conquered by the Ottomans in 1394. In 1580, a huge earthquake destroyed several towns in Phocis, including Salona. After a period of Venetian rule from 1687 to 1697, Salona devolved to the Ottomans again; several foreign travellers visited the town, which had about 6,000 inhabitants at the time. Salona had lost the former splendor and nothing was left to remind the glorious past of ancient Amfissa, so as some of the visitors misbelieved that it was the town of ancient Delphi or Kirra. In the 18th century, Salona became the center of preparations for the war against the Ottoman Turks in Central Greece, due to its strategic location and its proximity to the klephts of Giona and Parnassus mountains.

In the Greek War of Independence, Salona was the first town of Central Greece to revolt under the leadership of Panourgias, Giannis Diovouniotis, Ioannis Gouras and its bishop Isaiah, who were in cooperation with Athanasios Diakos, Yannis Makriyannis and others originated from Phocis. On 27 March 1821, Panourgias invaded the town and on April 10 the Greeks captured the Castle of Salona, the first fortress which fell in Greek hands, and extinguished the six hundred people of the Ottoman garrison in it.

On 15–20 November 1821, a council was held in Salona, where the main local notables and military chiefs participated. Under the direction of Theodoros Negris, they set down a proto-constitution for the region, the "Legal Order of Eastern Continental Greece" (Νομική Διάταξις της Ανατολικής Χέρσου Ελλάδος), and established a governing council, the Areopagus of Eastern Continental Greece, composed of 71 notables from Eastern Greece, Thessaly and Macedonia. Salona became the capital of Eastern Continental Greece and the regime existed until the Ottoman recapture of East Greece in 1825.

Culture and sites of interest edit

 
View of Amfissa in a 1918 postcard.
 
Square of the town

Much of the town's culture is the result of private legacies left to it; some of the benefactors were Markidis, Giagtzis and Stallos. Landmarks include the Castle of Salona, also known as the Castle of Oria, where the ancient acropolis stood, the Archaeological Museum of Amfissa, the Annunciation Cathedral with its murals by Spyros Papaloukas, several smaller museums and the district of Charmaina where the traditional bells are produced. The Municipal Library of Amfissa, which was founded in 1957, hosts, apart from its large number of books, a collection of traditional paintings of Phocis.

Other older sites are the Byzantine Savior Church, built in the 11th century, the paleochristian baptistery of the 3rd century next to the Cathedral, Lykotrypa which is a Mycenaean tomb on the eastern edge of the town and the Folklore Museum of Amfissa. There are also a TEI (Technological Educational Institute) affiliated to the TEI of Lamia, an IEK and a lyceum.

There are ample opportunities for hiking and camping on the mountains. Amfissa contains several plateias, an odeon, a chorus, a public philharmonic, but is also known for its annual carnival.

Historical population edit

Year City population Municipality population
1981 7,156
1991 7,189 9,469
2001 6,946 9,248

Climate edit

Amfissa has a hot-summer Mediterranean climate.

Climate data for Amfissa (168m)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 12.3
(54.1)
14.8
(58.6)
18.1
(64.6)
19.9
(67.8)
26.5
(79.7)
31.7
(89.1)
34.1
(93.4)
34.6
(94.3)
30.6
(87.1)
25.3
(77.5)
19.5
(67.1)
15.7
(60.3)
23.6
(74.5)
Average low °C (°F) 2.2
(36.0)
3.1
(37.6)
5
(41)
7.4
(45.3)
10.9
(51.6)
16.7
(62.1)
21.1
(70.0)
22.1
(71.8)
18.6
(65.5)
12.4
(54.3)
10.1
(50.2)
6.5
(43.7)
11.3
(52.4)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 134
(5.3)
34.7
(1.37)
41.5
(1.63)
40.3
(1.59)
33.6
(1.32)
9.9
(0.39)
29.7
(1.17)
29.9
(1.18)
82.2
(3.24)
43.6
(1.72)
55
(2.2)
73.5
(2.89)
607.9
(24)
Source: http://penteli.meteo.gr/stations/amfissa/ (2019 – 2020 averages)

Notable people edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Απογραφή Πληθυσμού - Κατοικιών 2011. ΜΟΝΙΜΟΣ Πληθυσμός" (in Greek). Hellenic Statistical Authority.
  2. ^ (PDF) (in Greek). National Statistical Service of Greece. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-21.
  3. ^ Bon, Antoine (1937). "Forteresses médiévales de la Grèce centrale". Bulletin de correspondance hellénique (in French). 61: 165. doi:10.3406/bch.1937.2728.
  4. ^ "Untouched Mycenaean Tomb Found in Central Greece".
  5. ^ "The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites". Perseus Project. Retrieved 2008-05-08.
  6. ^ "Locris". Forum Ancient Coins. Retrieved 8 May 2008.
  7. ^ . soltdm.com. Archived from the original on 2007-09-21. Retrieved 2008-05-09.

External links edit

  • Archaeological Museum of Amfissa (in English)
  • (in Greek)
  • (in Greek and English)

Primary sources

  • Pausanias, Description of Greece, online at Perseus Project
  • Galaxidi Chronicle (in Greek)
  • A website for the history of Amfissa (in Greek)

Secondary sources

  • Petros Kalonaros, History of Amfissa, 1997

amfissa, greek, Άμφισσα, ˈamfisa, also, mentioned, classical, sources, amphissa, town, phocis, greece, part, municipality, delphi, which, seat, municipal, unit, municipal, unit, area, lies, northern, edge, olive, forest, crissaean, plain, between, mountains, g. Amfissa Greek Amfissa ˈamfisa also mentioned in classical sources as Amphissa is a town in Phocis Greece part of the municipality of Delphi of which it is the seat and a municipal unit The municipal unit has an area of 315 174 km2 2 It lies on the northern edge of the olive forest of the Crissaean plain between two mountains Giona to the west and Parnassus to the east 200 km 120 mi northwest of Athens and 20 km 12 mi of Delphi as well as 85 km 53 mi northeast of Naupactus and 72 km 45 mi south of Lamia Amfissa AmfissaView of Amfissa AmfissaLocation within the regional unitCoordinates 38 32 N 22 22 E 38 533 N 22 367 E 38 533 22 367CountryGreeceAdministrative regionCentral GreeceRegional unitPhocisMunicipalityDelphi Municipal unit315 174 km2 121 689 sq mi Lowest elevation180 m 590 ft Population 2011 1 Municipal unit8 370 Municipal unit density27 km2 69 sq mi Community 1 Population6 919 2011 Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Postal code331 00Area code s 22650Vehicle registrationAMSouthern part of AmfissaAmfissa dates back to antiquity with its history spanning around 3 000 years and has been traditionally the largest and capital city of Phocis It was the most important city of the ancient Greek tribe of the Ozolian Locrians and one of the most powerful cities in Central Greece In the Middle Ages Amfissa came to be known as Salona It declined after several foreign conquests and destructions but emerged as an important city in the region and played a major role during the Greek War of Independence Contents 1 Origin of the name 2 History 2 1 Ancient times 2 2 Middle Ages 2 3 Ottoman era and the Greek War of Independence 3 Culture and sites of interest 4 Historical population 5 Climate 6 Notable people 7 References 8 External linksOrigin of the name editIt is believed that the name Amfissa Amfissa derives from the ancient Greek verb amfiennymi amfiennymi meaning surround since the city is surrounded by mountains Giona and Parnassus According to the Greek mythology Amfissa the daughter of Macar son of Aeolus and mistress of the god Apollo gave her name to the city During the Frankish occupation of Greece in the 13th century Amfissa was captured by the king of Thessalonica Boniface of Montferrat and was renamed to La Sole since then the city came to be called Salona in Greek 3 In 1833 after the establishment of the independent Greek State the ancient name Amfissa was given back to the city citation needed History editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Amfissa news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ancient times edit Amfissa has been settled since the ancient times and was the chief town of Ozolian Locris a region inhabited by the ancient Greek tribe of Locrians the largest and most renowned town of Locris beautifully constructed and located one hundred and twenty stades away from Delphi Pausanias in his work Description of Greece mentions the existence of the tombs of Amfissa and Andraemon and the temple of Athena on the acropolis of the town with a standing statue of bronze which was said to have been brought from Troy by Thoas The Amfissians celebrated mysteries in honor of the anaktes boys who might be the Dioskouroi the Curetes or the Cabeiri 10 38 In Amfissa there were also the tomb of Gorge wife of Andraemon and a temple of Asclepius Recent excavations have revealed a Mycenaean tomb in Amfissa preliminary findings indicate that the tomb was in use for more than two centuries from the 13th to the 11th century B C 4 Findings of several excavations revealed that the town had developed its commerce with Corinth and towns of the northwestern Peloponnese at the end of the 8th century BC Amfissa was organised as polis in the 7th century BC and flourished in arts and trade which lasted for three centuries Parts of the walls of the ancient acropolis of the town date back between the 7th and the 6th century BC In 653 BC people from Amfissa migrated to Southern Italy and founded the town of Epizephyrian Locri Amfissa s calendar differed from that of the other Ozolian towns 5 while four of the months names known are Argestyon Panigyrion Amon and Pokios Its coins had the head of Apollo on the one side and the inscription AMFISSEWN Amfissians a spear head and a jaw bone of Calydonian boar and either a star or grapes on the other 6 nbsp Women of Amfissa by Lawrence Alma Tadema and Laura Theresa Alma Tadema 1887 Following the Greek defeat by the Persians in the battle of Thermopylae Persian troops invaded Phocis Ozolian Locris Doris and Boeotia It is then that Amfissa due to its strong acropolis received Phocians seeking for safety During the Peloponnesian War Amfissa fought on Sparta s side drifting the other towns of Ozolian Locris in this way The town s form of government was oligarchic similar to that of Sparta but during the Pericles era in Athens some unsuccessful attempts to establish democracy took place Ten of the archontes of Amfissa have been known through inscriptions found at Delphi Theagenes of Menandros Voriadas Charixenus Aristodamus of Damon Dorotheus Euarchus Archedamus Aristodamus of Epinicus Charixenus and Aristarchus In 426 BC Spartan general Eurylochus on his way to Naupactus arrived to Delphi and sent a herald to Amfissa in order to detach them from Athens and make the Amfissians leave him pass through their lands The latter were the first to give him hostages and also persuaded the other Locrian cities to do the same as they were alarmed at the hostility of the neighbouring Phocians After the Peloponnesian War the Amfissians were allies to Thebes In 395 BC the Thebans encouraged the Amfissians to collect taxes from territories claimed by both Locris and Phocis in response the Phocians invaded Locris and ransacked Locrian territory and its metropolis Amfissa As a result the Amfissians and the rest of Locrians along with the Thebans attacked Phocis and the Phocians in turn appealed to their ally Sparta These conflicts led to the Corinthian War with the Amfissians on the side of Athens Argos Corinth and Thebes During the Third Sacred War 356 346 BC the Amfissians who were allies of the Thebans cultivated part of the Crissaean plain which belonged to Delphi and founded potteries in Kirra In 339 BC the Athenians offered golden shields to the Temple of Apollo in Delphi with inscriptions insulting to the Thebans who provoked the deputy of Amfissa to oppose to this offer Then Aeschines the Athenian deputy contradicted the Amfissians introducing their illegal actions in the sacred lands of the Oracle of Delphi before the Amphictyonic League which called Philip II of Macedon to intercede In 338 BC Philip attacked and destroyed Amfissa expelling large parts of its population and giving the area to Delphi which is known as the Fourth Sacred War Later in the same year under the motivation of Demosthenes a confederation of the Athenians and the Thebans was organized against the Macedonians which the Amfissians and the rest of the Ozolian Locrians joined The Amfissians managed to rebuild their town and give to it its former power but in 322 BC it was sieged by Alexander of Aetolia In 279 BC four hundred Amfissian hoplites joined the Greek forces which defended Delphi against the Gauls Later the Amfissians and the Aetolians tightened their old affiliation and in 250 BC Amfissa joined the Aetolian League as friend and relative of the Aetolians In 245 BC Aratus the strategos of the Achaean League attacked and damaged Amfissa but the two leagues allied with the Roman general Titus Quinctius Flamininus against Philip V of Macedon and after their win over the Macedonian king Titus proclaimed Amfissa among other cities as an independent and tax exempt polis capital of Ozolian Locris with its own Boule Ecclesia and coins But when the Aetolians realised that Rome was to rule the Greek cities and asked Antiochus III the Great of Syria for help the Roman general Manius Acilius Glabrio seized Lamia and advanced to Amfissa where he conquered the Crissaean plain and besieged the town in 190 BC The Amfissians being confident for the power of their acropolis and their walls defended the city but the fall of Amfissa to the superior forces of the Romans was likely to happen Then Manius Acilius was replaced by Lucius Cornelius Scipio Asiaticus and the people of Amfissa ran into the acropolis Athenian deputies intervened and prevented Amfissa from the siege achieving a truce between the two sides nbsp View of the medieval castle Orias In the period between 174 and 160 BC Amfissa had been damaged several times during the hostilities which took place between the pro Roman Aetolians and the nationalists of the town When Octavian founded the town of Nicopolis in memory of his victory over Antony and Cleopatra in the battle of Actium he drove Aetolians to populate it but the parts of them moved to Amfissa That is why Pausanias says that the Amfissians were ashamed of calling themselves Ozolians thus they claimed Aetolian descent a fact that was a misconception of Pausanias because some people of Amfissa in his times were indeed descendants of Aetolian refugees In that period Plutarch mentions in the work Parallel Lives a physician from Amfissa named Philotas Marcus Antonius 28 During the 2nd century Amfissa was a prosperous town which expanded outside its walls having a population of 70 000 people in 180 AD Middle Ages edit nbsp Castle of AmfissaIn the early Middle Ages Amfissa was devastated by several foreign peoples who invaded Greece like the Visigoths under Alaric I and the Huns In 451 the town probably had an episcopical seat and in 530 Justinian I fortified the towns around the Crissaean plain and fixed the fortress of Amfissa Hierocles in his Synecdemus mentions Amfissa as one of the towns of the eparchy of Hellas within the Byzantine Empire which was under the rule of the vice consul of Athens 7 Since the middle of the 9th century new invaders the Bulgars raided the region of Phocis and sieged Amfissa several times but the most damaging was in 996 when Samuel of Bulgaria destroyed the town and slaughtered its people in 1059 Pechenegs besieged Amfissa one more time and forced the Amfissians to hide in caves of the region to avoid a massacre In 1147 the Normans arrived to the Crissaean plain but left Amfissa unspoilt maybe due to the town s decline In 1205 after the Fourth Crusade and the establishment of the Latin Empire Boniface of Montferrat the king of Thessalonica conquered the region of Central Greece Amfissa became the seat of a lordship under Thomas I d Autremencourt It is then that the new governors built the powerful Castle of Salona on the hill where the ancient acropolis of Amfissa existed while the ancient name of the town was replaced by the new name Salona or La Sole in French and La Sola in Italian In 1311 the Catalans conquered and ruled Central Greece for more than eighty years Ottoman era and the Greek War of Independence edit nbsp Nikos Mitropoulos hoists the flag at Salona Painting of the capture of the city by the Greeks in 1821 by Louis Dupre The region of Salona was conquered by the Ottomans in 1394 In 1580 a huge earthquake destroyed several towns in Phocis including Salona After a period of Venetian rule from 1687 to 1697 Salona devolved to the Ottomans again several foreign travellers visited the town which had about 6 000 inhabitants at the time Salona had lost the former splendor and nothing was left to remind the glorious past of ancient Amfissa so as some of the visitors misbelieved that it was the town of ancient Delphi or Kirra In the 18th century Salona became the center of preparations for the war against the Ottoman Turks in Central Greece due to its strategic location and its proximity to the klephts of Giona and Parnassus mountains In the Greek War of Independence Salona was the first town of Central Greece to revolt under the leadership of Panourgias Giannis Diovouniotis Ioannis Gouras and its bishop Isaiah who were in cooperation with Athanasios Diakos Yannis Makriyannis and others originated from Phocis On 27 March 1821 Panourgias invaded the town and on April 10 the Greeks captured the Castle of Salona the first fortress which fell in Greek hands and extinguished the six hundred people of the Ottoman garrison in it On 15 20 November 1821 a council was held in Salona where the main local notables and military chiefs participated Under the direction of Theodoros Negris they set down a proto constitution for the region the Legal Order of Eastern Continental Greece Nomikh Diata3is ths Anatolikhs Xersoy Ellados and established a governing council the Areopagus of Eastern Continental Greece composed of 71 notables from Eastern Greece Thessaly and Macedonia Salona became the capital of Eastern Continental Greece and the regime existed until the Ottoman recapture of East Greece in 1825 Culture and sites of interest editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Amfissa news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp View of Amfissa in a 1918 postcard nbsp Square of the townMuch of the town s culture is the result of private legacies left to it some of the benefactors were Markidis Giagtzis and Stallos Landmarks include the Castle of Salona also known as the Castle of Oria where the ancient acropolis stood the Archaeological Museum of Amfissa the Annunciation Cathedral with its murals by Spyros Papaloukas several smaller museums and the district of Charmaina where the traditional bells are produced The Municipal Library of Amfissa which was founded in 1957 hosts apart from its large number of books a collection of traditional paintings of Phocis Other older sites are the Byzantine Savior Church built in the 11th century the paleochristian baptistery of the 3rd century next to the Cathedral Lykotrypa which is a Mycenaean tomb on the eastern edge of the town and the Folklore Museum of Amfissa There are also a TEI Technological Educational Institute affiliated to the TEI of Lamia an IEK and a lyceum There are ample opportunities for hiking and camping on the mountains Amfissa contains several plateias an odeon a chorus a public philharmonic but is also known for its annual carnival Historical population editYear City population Municipality population1981 7 156 1991 7 189 9 4692001 6 946 9 248Climate editAmfissa has a hot summer Mediterranean climate Climate data for Amfissa 168m Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 12 3 54 1 14 8 58 6 18 1 64 6 19 9 67 8 26 5 79 7 31 7 89 1 34 1 93 4 34 6 94 3 30 6 87 1 25 3 77 5 19 5 67 1 15 7 60 3 23 6 74 5 Average low C F 2 2 36 0 3 1 37 6 5 41 7 4 45 3 10 9 51 6 16 7 62 1 21 1 70 0 22 1 71 8 18 6 65 5 12 4 54 3 10 1 50 2 6 5 43 7 11 3 52 4 Average precipitation mm inches 134 5 3 34 7 1 37 41 5 1 63 40 3 1 59 33 6 1 32 9 9 0 39 29 7 1 17 29 9 1 18 82 2 3 24 43 6 1 72 55 2 2 73 5 2 89 607 9 24 Source http penteli meteo gr stations amfissa 2019 2020 averages Notable people editChristos Karouzos archaeologistReferences edit a b Apografh Plh8ysmoy Katoikiwn 2011 MONIMOS Plh8ysmos in Greek Hellenic Statistical Authority Population amp housing census 2001 incl area and average elevation PDF in Greek National Statistical Service of Greece Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 21 Bon Antoine 1937 Forteresses medievales de la Grece centrale Bulletin de correspondance hellenique in French 61 165 doi 10 3406 bch 1937 2728 Untouched Mycenaean Tomb Found in Central Greece The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites Perseus Project Retrieved 2008 05 08 Locris Forum Ancient Coins Retrieved 8 May 2008 Hieroclis Synekdemos Guide soltdm com Archived from the original on 2007 09 21 Retrieved 2008 05 09 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amfissa Archaeological Museum of Amfissa in English Official website in Greek Official website of Phocis regional unit in Greek and English Primary sources Pausanias Description of Greece online at Perseus Project Galaxidi Chronicle in Greek A website for the history of Amfissa in Greek Secondary sources Petros Kalonaros History of Amfissa 1997 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amfissa amp oldid 1176500075, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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