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Vjosa

The Vjosa (Albanian: [ˈvjɔsa]; indefinite form: Vjosë) or Aoös (Greek: Αώος) is a river in northwestern Greece and southwestern Albania. Its total length is about 272 kilometres (169 mi),[1] of which the first 80 kilometres (50 mi) are in Greece, and the remaining 192 kilometres (119 mi) in Albania.[2] Its drainage basin is 6,706 km2 (2,589 sq mi) and its average discharge is 195 m3/s (6,900 cu ft/s).[1] The main tributaries are Voidomatis, Sarantaporos, Drino and Shushicë.

Vjosa
Αώος (Aoös)
Vjosa near Tepelenë
Location
CountriesAlbania and Greece
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationPindus, Greece
Mouth 
 • location
Adriatic Sea, Albania
 • coordinates
40°38′34″N 19°19′2″E / 40.64278°N 19.31722°E / 40.64278; 19.31722Coordinates: 40°38′34″N 19°19′2″E / 40.64278°N 19.31722°E / 40.64278; 19.31722
 • elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Length272 kilometres (169 mi)
Basin size6,706 km2 (2,589 sq mi)
Discharge 
 • average195 m3/s (6,900 cu ft/s)

The river arises in the Pindus mountains of Epirus, Greece, and generally flows northwest. It enters Albania near Çarshovë, and empties into the Adriatic Sea just north of Vlorë. Generally wild and unpolluted, the river is surrounded by the Vikos–Aoös National Park in Greece and the Vjosa-Narta Protected Landscape near its mouth. In December 2020, the Albanian portion of the river was designated a "Managed Nature Reserve" by the government. There is a campaign by the environmentalist groups to designate the whole Albanian part of the course a national park, to guard against the prospective hydroelectric projects.

Name

The Vjosa is known by a number of different names. In antiquity it was called Aoös (Ἄωος, Ἀῶος, Ἀῷος) in Greek (e.g. in Eratosthenes' Geography[3]), and Aous in Latin. In Albanian it is called Vjosë or Vjosa, while in Greece it is known by its ancient name (Αώος in modern orthography), in medieval Latin maps was called Viossa as well as Vovousa (Βοβούσα) or Aias (Αίας, Αἴας).[4] In Greek is also known as Βοϊούσα (Voioussa, pronounced vo-i-Usa), especially in pre-20th century texts.[5][6] According to historian Ap. Vakalopoulos (1977) the name Voioussa is the common Greek name of Aoos.[7]

Vjosa is also a common female Albanian given name.[8][9][10]

Geography

 
The area in yellow represents the drainage basin of the Vjosë and its main affluent, the Drino; the red line delineates the border between Albania and Greece.

The river arises in the Pindus mountains of Epirus, Greece, near the village of Vovousa.[11][12] An artificial lake has been constructed at an elevation of 1,350 metres (4,430 ft),[13] where a hydroelectric dam has been in place since 1987. It flows through the canyons of Vikos–Aoös National Park, and then through the town of Konitsa, where it is joined by the Voidomatis. It enters Albania near Çarshovë, where it is joined by the Sarantaporos, and then continues northwest through Përmet, Këlcyrë, and Tepelenë (where it is joined by the Drino), Memaliaj, Selenicë and Novoselë. It then flows into the Adriatic Sea northwest of Vlorë. The river's mouth is located within the boundaries of the Vjosa-Narta Protected Landscape. In December 2020, the Albanian portion of the Vjosa was designated a "Managed Nature Reserve" by the government.[14]

The main tributaries of Vjosa are the Sarantaporos and Voidomatis in Greece, and the Drino and Shushicë in Albania,

The main cities and towns along the river are, in downstream order, Vovousa and Konitsa in Greece; and Përmet, Këlcyrë, Çarshovë, Tepelenë, Memaliaj, Selenicë and Novoselë in Albania.

Antiquity

 
The old Konitsa Bridge over the Aoos River, just before the Vikos–Aoös National Park

In Greek mythology,[15] Aous is an epithet or name of Adonis.[16] Aous was also the name of the first king of Cyprus.[citation needed] A river and a mountain[17] in Cyprus were also named Aous.[15]

Hecataeus (550–476 BC) refers to the river as Aias (Greek: Αἴας), the name Anios (Greek: Ἄνιος) is used by Plutarch in Caesar,[18] while Polybius, Livy and Strabo use the term Aoös. The Thesprotian tribe of Parauaioi received their name from the river, as those living beside it.[citation needed] Pausanias writes of "sharks"[19] (Greek: θηρία) in the river, as it flows through Thesprotia. It is mentioned as Avos (Greek: Αύος) by Stephanus of Byzantium[20] in the sixth century AD.

In 274 BC Pyrrhus of Epirus defeated Antigonus II Gonatas near the river's banks. In 198 BC, Philip V of Macedon and the Roman Titus Quinctius Flamininus, clashed in the Battle of the Aous. In 170 BC[21] a plot to kidnap Aulus Hostilius Mancinus was foiled by Molossians by mistake. In antiquity the river passed more to the north[citation needed], towards where Fier lies today. Owing to an earthquake[citation needed] in the fourth century, it changed to its present course. The earthquake and changed river course led to the decline of the ancient Greek city of Apollonia.[citation needed]

Conservation

Greece

The Vikos–Aoös National Park (Greek: Εθνικός Δρυμός Βίκου–Αώου Ethnikós Drymós Víkou–Aóou), created in 1973, is a national park in Epirus in northwestern Greece. The national park encompasses 126 square kilometres (31,135 acres) of mountainous terrain, with numerous rivers, lakes, caves, canyons, and coniferous and deciduous forest. The core of the 3,400 hectare park[22] is the Vikos Gorge, carved by the Voidomatis River, while the Aoos Gorge, Mount Tymfi, with its highest peak, Gamila, at 2,497 metres (8,192 ft), and a number of settlements forming the park's peripheral zone.

Albania

 
The Vjosë upstream from Tepelenë
 
View of Vjosë and the Nemerçkë Mountain near Çarshova
 
Vjosë Valley

In February 2005, the Albanian government made the Vjose-Narte wetlands a protected area. This legislation followed Albania's ratification of the Kyoto Protocol in December 2004. The river contributes water to the Vjosë-Levan-Fier irrigation canal, a canal that was built in the 1950s to irrigate the Myzeqe. In December 2020, the Albanian portion of the river was designated a "Managed Nature Reserve" by the Albanian government.[14]

The Vjosa's potential for hydropower has attracted developers to submit proposal to planning authorities for dam projects along the river and its tributaries. By 2017, over 2000 dam projects had gained governmental approval on stretches of river throughout the Balkans, including the Vjosa's channel.[23] Developers have met with opposition from European nature organisations including RiverWatch, EuroNatur,[24] and EcoAlbania.[25]

A 2012 study assessed the hydromorphology of the Balkan's rivers, taking into account the structural status of 35,000 river kilometres. The study showed that the region's rivers are largely intact, with 30% deemed pristine and 50% slightly modified.[26]

In February 2020, a campaign to elevate the status of the Vjosa watershed to Vjosa National Park gained approval from 20 environmental groups under the leadership of EcoAlbania. The effort to create Europe's first wild river park and save 300 km of rivers and streams targeted several projects identified in a February 2021 proposal.[27]

In September 2020, Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama announced that a protected area will be created around the Vjosa. In December 2020, the Albanian government designated the Vjosa River as a "Managed Nature Reserve" or nature park.[14] Environmental groups are skeptical of the level of protection afforded by "protected" status. A national park designation would prohibit hydroelectric projects, airports, and other development; a protected area designation would not.[2]

In April 2021 a petition signed by Vjosa River scientists was delivered to Albanian President Ilir Meta.[28] The scientists immediate concern is a plan by a Turkish-Albanian venture, Ayen ALB, to build a 50-metre high hydroelectric dam. It would be the first development to change the course of Albania's 200 kilometre portion of the river. The dam would flood areas populated with the 1,175 animal and plant species—some endangered. It would inundate farmland, destroy the river's fishery, and force thousands from their homes. Activists maintain that the government should focus on other less damaging renewable energy sources.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Cullaj, A., Hasko, A., Miho, A., Schanz, F., Brandl, H. & Bachofen, R. (2005). "The quality of Albanian natural waters and the human impact". Environment International. 31 (1): 138. doi:10.1016/j.envint.2004.06.008. PMID 15607787.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  2. ^ a b c Mema, Bresiloa; Boyle, Joseph (14 May 2021). "Undammed, undimmed: The battle over a unique European river". Bangkok Post. Agence France-Presse. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
  3. ^ Duane Roller, "Eratosthenes' Geography", Princeton Univ. Press, 2010, p. 226
  4. ^ Λαμπρίδης Ιωάννης "Ζαγοριακά", Τυπογραφείον Αυγής, Αθήνα, 1870
  5. ^ "Ἠπειρωτικα. Ἠτοι ἱστορια και γεωγραφια της Ἠπειρου ..." (Epirotika. That is history and geography of Epirus ...), Βιέννη (Wien) 1819, p. 455. In Greek.
  6. ^ "Neoellēnika analekta ...", Athens, 1871, p. 33 In Greek.
  7. ^ Βακαλόπουλος Απόστολος, "Πηγές της ιστορίας του νέου ελληνισμού" (Vakalopoulos Apostolos, Sources of the history of new hellenism), Εταιρεία Μακεδονικών Σπουδών (Society of Macedonian Studies), 1977, p. 548
  8. ^ From 20000 names babynames website
  9. ^ From Aboutnames babynames website
  10. ^ Albanian names website
  11. ^ Acta Hydrochimica Et Hydrobiologica. VCH Verlagsgesellschaft. 2001.
  12. ^ William Bowden (2003). Epirus Vetus: the archaeology of a late antique province. Duckworth. ISBN 978-0-7156-3116-4.
  13. ^ Egnatia Municipality August 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ a b c "Për miratimin e kufijve të zonave te mbrojtura". Council of Ministers. 28 December 2020. from the original on 28 March 2022.
  15. ^ a b Parthenius (of Nicaea) (1999). Parthenius of Nicaea: The Poetical Fragments and the Erōtika Pathēmata. Clarendon Press. p. 182. ISBN 978-0-19-815253-8.
  16. ^ Yves Bonnefoy (1992). Greek and Egyptian Mythologies. University of Chicago Press. p. 135. ISBN 978-0-226-06454-3.
  17. ^ Joseph Eddy Fontenrose (1981). Orion: The Myth of the Hunter and the Huntress. University of California Press. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-520-09632-5.
  18. ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854)
  19. ^ Paus. 4.34,"But the rivers of Greece contain no terrors from wild beasts, for the sharks of the Aous, which flows through Thesprotia, are not river beasts but migrants from the sea."
  20. ^ Ethnica Epitome,"Παρά τον Αύον ποταμόν"
  21. ^ A History of Macedonia: 336-167 B.C, Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière Hammond, Frank William Walbank, 1988, ISBN 0198148151, p. 520
  22. ^ Trakolis: p. 3
  23. ^ Ross, Will (22 March 2017). "Rising On Edges: Anti-Damming on the Wild Rivers of the Balkans". Zafiri. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
  24. ^ "Vjosa National Park NOW". EuroNatur. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
  25. ^ "Profile". EcoAlbania. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
  26. ^ Schwarz, Ulrich (March 2012). "Balkan Rivers - The Blue Heart of Europe; Hydromorphological Status and Dam Projects Report" (PDF). Balkan Rivers. FLUVIUS. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
  27. ^ "Proposal for establishing the Vjosa Wild River National Park" (PDF). EcoAlbania. February 2021. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
  28. ^ "Petition of Scientists of the Vojsa River handed to Albanian President". Tour du Valat. 2020-04-01. Retrieved 2021-04-18.

External links

  • Vjosa/Aoos River Ecomuseum Official Website

vjosa, aous, redirects, here, other, uses, aous, disambiguation, albanian, ˈvjɔsa, indefinite, form, vjosë, aoös, greek, Αώος, river, northwestern, greece, southwestern, albania, total, length, about, kilometres, which, first, kilometres, greece, remaining, ki. Aous redirects here For other uses see Aous disambiguation The Vjosa Albanian ˈvjɔsa indefinite form Vjose or Aoos Greek Awos is a river in northwestern Greece and southwestern Albania Its total length is about 272 kilometres 169 mi 1 of which the first 80 kilometres 50 mi are in Greece and the remaining 192 kilometres 119 mi in Albania 2 Its drainage basin is 6 706 km2 2 589 sq mi and its average discharge is 195 m3 s 6 900 cu ft s 1 The main tributaries are Voidomatis Sarantaporos Drino and Shushice VjosaAwos Aoos Vjosa near TepeleneLocationCountriesAlbania and GreecePhysical characteristicsSource locationPindus GreeceMouth locationAdriatic Sea Albania coordinates40 38 34 N 19 19 2 E 40 64278 N 19 31722 E 40 64278 19 31722 Coordinates 40 38 34 N 19 19 2 E 40 64278 N 19 31722 E 40 64278 19 31722 elevation0 m 0 ft Length272 kilometres 169 mi Basin size6 706 km2 2 589 sq mi Discharge average195 m3 s 6 900 cu ft s The river arises in the Pindus mountains of Epirus Greece and generally flows northwest It enters Albania near Carshove and empties into the Adriatic Sea just north of Vlore Generally wild and unpolluted the river is surrounded by the Vikos Aoos National Park in Greece and the Vjosa Narta Protected Landscape near its mouth In December 2020 the Albanian portion of the river was designated a Managed Nature Reserve by the government There is a campaign by the environmentalist groups to designate the whole Albanian part of the course a national park to guard against the prospective hydroelectric projects Contents 1 Name 2 Geography 3 Antiquity 4 Conservation 4 1 Greece 4 2 Albania 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksName EditThe Vjosa is known by a number of different names In antiquity it was called Aoos Ἄwos Ἀῶos Ἀῷos in Greek e g in Eratosthenes Geography 3 and Aous in Latin In Albanian it is called Vjose or Vjosa while in Greece it is known by its ancient name Awos in modern orthography in medieval Latin maps was called Viossa as well as Vovousa Boboysa or Aias Aias Aἴas 4 In Greek is also known as Boioysa Voioussa pronounced vo i Usa especially in pre 20th century texts 5 6 According to historian Ap Vakalopoulos 1977 the name Voioussa is the common Greek name of Aoos 7 Vjosa is also a common female Albanian given name 8 9 10 Geography Edit The area in yellow represents the drainage basin of the Vjose and its main affluent the Drino the red line delineates the border between Albania and Greece The river arises in the Pindus mountains of Epirus Greece near the village of Vovousa 11 12 An artificial lake has been constructed at an elevation of 1 350 metres 4 430 ft 13 where a hydroelectric dam has been in place since 1987 It flows through the canyons of Vikos Aoos National Park and then through the town of Konitsa where it is joined by the Voidomatis It enters Albania near Carshove where it is joined by the Sarantaporos and then continues northwest through Permet Kelcyre and Tepelene where it is joined by the Drino Memaliaj Selenice and Novosele It then flows into the Adriatic Sea northwest of Vlore The river s mouth is located within the boundaries of the Vjosa Narta Protected Landscape In December 2020 the Albanian portion of the Vjosa was designated a Managed Nature Reserve by the government 14 The main tributaries of Vjosa are the Sarantaporos and Voidomatis in Greece and the Drino and Shushice in Albania The main cities and towns along the river are in downstream order Vovousa and Konitsa in Greece and Permet Kelcyre Carshove Tepelene Memaliaj Selenice and Novosele in Albania Antiquity Edit The old Konitsa Bridge over the Aoos River just before the Vikos Aoos National Park In Greek mythology 15 Aous is an epithet or name of Adonis 16 Aous was also the name of the first king of Cyprus citation needed A river and a mountain 17 in Cyprus were also named Aous 15 Hecataeus 550 476 BC refers to the river as Aias Greek Aἴas the name Anios Greek Ἄnios is used by Plutarch in Caesar 18 while Polybius Livy and Strabo use the term Aoos The Thesprotian tribe of Parauaioi received their name from the river as those living beside it citation needed Pausanias writes of sharks 19 Greek 8hria in the river as it flows through Thesprotia It is mentioned as Avos Greek Ayos by Stephanus of Byzantium 20 in the sixth century AD In 274 BC Pyrrhus of Epirus defeated Antigonus II Gonatas near the river s banks In 198 BC Philip V of Macedon and the Roman Titus Quinctius Flamininus clashed in the Battle of the Aous In 170 BC 21 a plot to kidnap Aulus Hostilius Mancinus was foiled by Molossians by mistake In antiquity the river passed more to the north citation needed towards where Fier lies today Owing to an earthquake citation needed in the fourth century it changed to its present course The earthquake and changed river course led to the decline of the ancient Greek city of Apollonia citation needed Conservation EditGreece Edit The Vikos Aoos National Park Greek E8nikos Drymos Bikoy Awoy Ethnikos Drymos Vikou Aoou created in 1973 is a national park in Epirus in northwestern Greece The national park encompasses 126 square kilometres 31 135 acres of mountainous terrain with numerous rivers lakes caves canyons and coniferous and deciduous forest The core of the 3 400 hectare park 22 is the Vikos Gorge carved by the Voidomatis River while the Aoos Gorge Mount Tymfi with its highest peak Gamila at 2 497 metres 8 192 ft and a number of settlements forming the park s peripheral zone Albania Edit The Vjose upstream from Tepelene View of Vjose and the Nemercke Mountain near Carshova Vjose Valley In February 2005 the Albanian government made the Vjose Narte wetlands a protected area This legislation followed Albania s ratification of the Kyoto Protocol in December 2004 The river contributes water to the Vjose Levan Fier irrigation canal a canal that was built in the 1950s to irrigate the Myzeqe In December 2020 the Albanian portion of the river was designated a Managed Nature Reserve by the Albanian government 14 The Vjosa s potential for hydropower has attracted developers to submit proposal to planning authorities for dam projects along the river and its tributaries By 2017 over 2000 dam projects had gained governmental approval on stretches of river throughout the Balkans including the Vjosa s channel 23 Developers have met with opposition from European nature organisations including RiverWatch EuroNatur 24 and EcoAlbania 25 A 2012 study assessed the hydromorphology of the Balkan s rivers taking into account the structural status of 35 000 river kilometres The study showed that the region s rivers are largely intact with 30 deemed pristine and 50 slightly modified 26 In February 2020 a campaign to elevate the status of the Vjosa watershed to Vjosa National Park gained approval from 20 environmental groups under the leadership of EcoAlbania The effort to create Europe s first wild river park and save 300 km of rivers and streams targeted several projects identified in a February 2021 proposal 27 In September 2020 Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama announced that a protected area will be created around the Vjosa In December 2020 the Albanian government designated the Vjosa River as a Managed Nature Reserve or nature park 14 Environmental groups are skeptical of the level of protection afforded by protected status A national park designation would prohibit hydroelectric projects airports and other development a protected area designation would not 2 In April 2021 a petition signed by Vjosa River scientists was delivered to Albanian President Ilir Meta 28 The scientists immediate concern is a plan by a Turkish Albanian venture Ayen ALB to build a 50 metre high hydroelectric dam It would be the first development to change the course of Albania s 200 kilometre portion of the river The dam would flood areas populated with the 1 175 animal and plant species some endangered It would inundate farmland destroy the river s fishery and force thousands from their homes Activists maintain that the government should focus on other less damaging renewable energy sources 2 See also EditList of rivers of Albania List of rivers of Europe List of rivers of GreeceReferences Edit a b Cullaj A Hasko A Miho A Schanz F Brandl H amp Bachofen R 2005 The quality of Albanian natural waters and the human impact Environment International 31 1 138 doi 10 1016 j envint 2004 06 008 PMID 15607787 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link a b c Mema Bresiloa Boyle Joseph 14 May 2021 Undammed undimmed The battle over a unique European river Bangkok Post Agence France Presse Retrieved 14 May 2021 Duane Roller Eratosthenes Geography Princeton Univ Press 2010 p 226 Lampridhs Iwannhs Zagoriaka Typografeion Ayghs A8hna 1870 Ἠpeirwtika Ἠtoi ἱstoria kai gewgrafia ths Ἠpeiroy Epirotika That is history and geography of Epirus Biennh Wien 1819 p 455 In Greek Neoellenika analekta Athens 1871 p 33 In Greek Bakalopoylos Apostolos Phges ths istorias toy neoy ellhnismoy Vakalopoulos Apostolos Sources of the history of new hellenism Etaireia Makedonikwn Spoydwn Society of Macedonian Studies 1977 p 548 From 20000 names babynames website From Aboutnames babynames website Albanian names website Acta Hydrochimica Et Hydrobiologica VCH Verlagsgesellschaft 2001 William Bowden 2003 Epirus Vetus the archaeology of a late antique province Duckworth ISBN 978 0 7156 3116 4 Egnatia Municipality Archived August 2 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b c Per miratimin e kufijve te zonave te mbrojtura Council of Ministers 28 December 2020 Archived from the original on 28 March 2022 a b Parthenius of Nicaea 1999 Parthenius of Nicaea The Poetical Fragments and the Erōtika Pathemata Clarendon Press p 182 ISBN 978 0 19 815253 8 Yves Bonnefoy 1992 Greek and Egyptian Mythologies University of Chicago Press p 135 ISBN 978 0 226 06454 3 Joseph Eddy Fontenrose 1981 Orion The Myth of the Hunter and the Huntress University of California Press p 103 ISBN 978 0 520 09632 5 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography 1854 Paus 4 34 But the rivers of Greece contain no terrors from wild beasts for the sharks of the Aous which flows through Thesprotia are not river beasts but migrants from the sea Ethnica Epitome Para ton Ayon potamon A History of Macedonia 336 167 B C Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere Hammond Frank William Walbank 1988 ISBN 0198148151 p 520 Trakolis p 3 Ross Will 22 March 2017 Rising On Edges Anti Damming on the Wild Rivers of the Balkans Zafiri Retrieved 14 May 2021 Vjosa National Park NOW EuroNatur Retrieved 14 May 2021 Profile EcoAlbania Retrieved 14 May 2021 Schwarz Ulrich March 2012 Balkan Rivers The Blue Heart of Europe Hydromorphological Status and Dam Projects Report PDF Balkan Rivers FLUVIUS Retrieved 14 May 2021 Proposal for establishing the Vjosa Wild River National Park PDF EcoAlbania February 2021 Retrieved 14 May 2021 Petition of Scientists of the Vojsa River handed to Albanian President Tour du Valat 2020 04 01 Retrieved 2021 04 18 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to River Aoos Vjosa Vjosa Aoos River Ecomuseum Official Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vjosa amp oldid 1128784869, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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