fbpx
Wikipedia

Kythnos

Kythnos (Greek: Κύθνος), commonly called Thermia (Greek: Θερμιά), is a Greek island and municipality in the Western Cyclades between Kea and Serifos. It is 56 nautical miles (104 km) from the Athenian harbor of Piraeus. The municipality Kythnos is 100.187 km2 (38.68 sq mi)[2] in area and has a coastline of about 100 km (62 mi). Mount Kakovolo is island's highest peak (365m).[3]

Kythnos
Κύθνος
Chora, Kythnos
Kythnos
Location within the region
Coordinates: 37°23′9″N 24°25′41″E / 37.38583°N 24.42806°E / 37.38583; 24.42806
CountryGreece
Administrative regionSouth Aegean
Regional unitKea-Kythnos
Area
 • Municipality100.2 km2 (38.7 sq mi)
Highest elevation
297 m (974 ft)
Lowest elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Municipality
1,456
 • Municipality density15/km2 (38/sq mi)
Community
 • Population669 (2011)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
840 06
Area code(s)22810
Vehicle registrationΕΜ
Websitewww.kythnos.gr

Settlements edit

 

The island has two significant settlements, the village of Messaria or Chora of Kythnos (pop. 561 in 2011 census), known locally as Chora, and the village of Dryopis or Dryopida (pop. 325), also known as Chorio. Both villages are notable for their winding and often stepped streets, too narrow for vehicular traffic. The villages are very picturesque but in different architectural styles. Chora has the more-typical flat roofs of the Cyclades, while Dryopida's rooftops are slanted and tiled. Chora is also notable for its large Greek Orthodox Church.

There is also a growing coastal settlement called Kanala on the east side of the island with the homonymous Christian Orthodox shrine, and many of the larger beaches are settled by a handful of residents. Aghios Dimitrios, at the southern tip of the island, is a mostly modern settlement, with small vacation houses dotting the hillside above a wide beach that is dotted with sea daffodils. On the northeast end of the island lies Loutra (pop. 81), a village famous for its thermal springs, which are said to have curative properties. Although the large tourist hotel there has been closed for several years, the bathhouse is still functioning and visitors may soak in its marble tubs for a modest fee.

The port town is called Merichas (pop. 369), its population significantly fluctuating during the year. Before the 1970s, there were no year-round residents in recent history; a Greek fisherman named Manolas Psaras and his wife Foto were the first to live in the port year-round. Today, there is a growing year-round population, and, especially during the peak of the summer tourist season, the town becomes quite busy. Many residents of the port speak at least some English, the most popular second language. Merihas is connected to Piraeus and to Lavrion by ferry boat, and the ride takes one to four hours, depending on the speed of the ship and the weather.[4] Construction of a new mole began in 2005 to accommodate larger ferryboats and was completed in 2008. Kythnos was until recently considered to be one of the last Cycladic islands unaffected by the impact of tourism, but this is inexorably changing. Still, the island has not yet been overdeveloped, and in the more remote areas of the villages, traditional ways live on relatively unchanged.

Name edit

The first inhabitants of Kythnos were the Dryopes  whose mythical king was Kythnos (son of the God Apollo), hence the name of the island. It was also known as Dryopis or Ofiousa. In  the Middle Ages it was called Thiramna, while Nilos Doxapatris mentions it with the name Thermia as early as 1143, from the hot springs that exist. Later, the Turks called it "Hamam Antassi" ("island of warm waters").

History edit

Pre-history edit

Kythnos can lay claim to one of the oldest known habitations in the Cycladic islands, a Mesolithic settlement (10000 BCE – 8000 BCE) at Maroulas on the northeast coast. The site, close to the village of Loutra, is situated on the shore, and large portions have eroded into the sea.[5] Excavations in 1996 found intact human skeletons, along with stone artifacts and part of a floor pavement, which indicates a long-term settlement, probably of hunter-gatherers.

Pre-classical antiquity edit

Third millennium BCE (First Cycladic Period) findings at Skouries near the highest peak of the island, Mt. Profitis Elias, suggest that Kythnos was a supplier of raw materials for metallurgy to other islands during the Bronze Age. Remains of copper smelting sites and open-air copper mines were investigated in 1984–1985. (A recent by Myrto Georgakopoulo points to the seminal work here by Gale and others.)

The earliest inhabitants of the island known to historians were the Kares (Carians), an Anatolian people probably allied to or under the dominion of the Minoans, who eventually were forced by pressure of invading tribes to move on and settle in Asia Minor. Herodotus (Bk. viii, 73) records that in the 13th century BCE, another pre-Hellenic tribe, the Dryopes, originally from the Greek mainland near Mount Parnassus, migrated to the islands, first to Euboea and later spreading to Kea, Kythnos, and beyond. This tribe most probably gave rise to the name of one of the two main villages, Dryopis or Dryopida. Some sources say the island took its name from King Kythnos of the Dryopes; others suggest this is a mythical rather than a historical figure. (Speculations on the origin of the name are contained in Vallinda, 1896.) The Dryopes eventually moved on as well under pressure from Ionians, who migrated out of mainland Greece as Dorian tribes moved in from the north.

 
Ancient walls at Vryokastro

A Hellenistic site at Vryokastro, above the bay of Episkopi on the northwest part of the island, was partially excavated in the mid-20th century, yielding floor plans of houses and a sanctuary, as well as a few artifacts. In Greek newspaper articles of December 19, 2002, archaeologist Alexandros Mazarakis-Ainian announced a spectacular discovery on this site: an inner sanctum (adyton) of the temple was found intact and unplundered. Over 1,400 objects, including precious jewels and gold, silver and bronze artifacts, terracotta figurines, and painted vases, were excavated from what the archaeologists have determined is a 2,700-year-old temple dedicated to either Hera, queen of the gods, or Aphrodite, goddess of love. The artifacts date mostly from the 7th to the 5th centuries BCE. The site at Vryokastro was inhabited until Roman times. In this era, the islands of the Cyclades suffered frequent predation by pirates, and perhaps for this reason, the main settlements moved inland and to more defensible locations.

Remains of another old settlement, with extensive stone walls, can be seen in the extreme northern headland. This site, called Kastro (Greek for Castle), was likely the capital of the island from about the 1st century through the Byzantine era and into Frankish times. This site seems nearly impregnable: on three sides is a sheer 500-foot (150 m) drop to the sea. The fourth side is approached via a narrow track, which was barricaded with a thick, high wall, parts of which are still extant (along with walls delineating hundreds of houses). Nevertheless, there is evidence that the town was destroyed and rebuilt several times. The population fluctuated dramatically during this period and at times the island was decimated due to marauders and plague (Smith, 1854 and Bent, 1885, reprinted 2002).

 
View of the village of Dryopida

Classical antiquity edit

Only rarely is the island mentioned by ancient authors. In the Battle of Salamis (480 BCE), Herodotus records that Kythnos contributed a trireme and a penteconter, and this contribution is commemorated on the base of a golden tripod at Delphi (Herodotus, Bk viii, 46).

Innumerable sources repeat, without providing a citation, that Aristotle praised the government of Kythnos in his "Constitution of Kythnos." Exactly what he wrote is difficult to ascertain, since all of his essays on the constitutions of 158 city-states are lost except for the one on Athens. (Possibly, the origin of the quote is from the 2nd century lexicographer Harpocration.)[6]

In the Roman period Kythnos was a place of exile for important persons. In addition, in antiquity there were several temples on the island, which resulted in the island being visited by travelers from various regions (e.g. Egypt, Asia Minor, Italy, etc.).[7] The painters Timanthis and Cydias were born in Kythnos in antiquity. Later Kythnos became part of the Byzantine Empire.

Crusader and Venetian Era edit

In 1207, Kythnos was annexed to the Frankish overlord Marco Sanudo's Aegean Duchy of the Archipelago (or of Naxos). During this period, it was known as Thermia, a name derived from the hot mineral springs occurring on the northeastern coast at the village of Loutra (which means "baths" in Greek). These medicinal baths were renowned at least since Roman times and were a fashionable spa and resort area.

The island was ruled as an appanage of the Duchy of the Archipelago from the 16th century until the fall of the Duchy, where it became de facto independent.[8]

In 1600, Thermia also became the new name of a Latin bishopric on the Cyclades, formerly known as Roman Catholic Diocese of Ceo (now a Latin Catholic titular see).

The island capital remained at Kastro of Oria or Katakefalo, which was rebuilt as a Frankish fortress and was known as the Tower of Thermia (Bent, 1885, reprinted 2002).

After a period of depopulation in the early 15th century some Albanian communities moved from nearby Euboea. They were assimilated into the local Greek population.[9][10]

Ottoman Era edit

 
Oria or Katakefalo Castle

Following a siege, the Turks were victorious over the last Venetian overlord, Angelo III Gozzadini, in 1617.[11] According to a myth recounted by Theodore Bent in his 1885 travelogue on the Cyclades, Kastro fell only because of a treacherous ploy by the Turks: a young woman, heavy with child and apparently in pain, approached the entrance and begged to be admitted; the watchman's daughter opened the gate for her—and for the Turks hiding nearby.[12] Bent writes that this version is preserved in a popular island ballad.

After its fall to the Turks, Kastro was abandoned and the new capital was located inland, as the name Messaria suggests. Later, this town became known as Hora (the generic Greek name for a capital town, also spelled Chora). During this period Kythnos was a poor, under-populated place, still beset by pirates and suffering frequent epidemics.

In 1791 a Greek school was opened in Chora (Messaria), which was housed in the monastery of Panagia of Nikous. The monk Parthenios Koulouris from Sifnos initially taught there. He was succeeded in 1809 by the monk Makarios Filippaios from Kythnos, who continued teaching during the years of Ioannis Kapodistrias.[13]

In 1806 a pirate raid, although repelled, resulted in groups of locals emigrating to the coast of Asia Minor, from where some later repatriated, bringing back customs to the island  from the places where they had lived.[14]

Kythnos took part in the 1821 Revolution and during its duration was a safe haven for Greek refugees from areas such as Chios, Psara and Aivali. In 1823 a plague broke out. Kythnos was represented in the 3rd National Assembly of Epidaurus, in the 3rd National Assembly of Troizina by Moschos Filippaios (Chora) and N. Economidis Levantis (Dryopida). In the following years until 1832 Kythnos was represented in the National Assemblies by N. Vallindas. [15]

Modern Kythnos edit

In 1828 five schools were operating on the island, including private schools, and by 1833 there were only two schools operating.[16] They were financially supported by contributions from the residents and income from monasteries on the island.[16] During the reign of King Othon, Kythnos was a place of exile for political prisoners and was the scene of an unsuccessful revolt in 1862 by rebels from Syros who attempted to free the prisoners.

 
View of Merichas

In the 19th century, Kythnians mainly earned their living as they had for centuries before: as shepherds or by fishing. The island had few natural resources and, lacking a deep-water mooring for boats, was relatively inaccessible. On the other hand ceramics and pottery flourished in Kythnos, with Kythnian craftsmen leaving for Athens in the summers and returning in the winter.

At the beginning of the 20th century the production of high quality barley and semolina increased greatly and exports increased accordingly.[17] As the new century dawned, iron ore was discovered on the island and Kythnians were able to supplement their meager incomes by working in the mines.[18] These mines, however, were mostly played out by World War II, and once again, the population of the island went into decline, as young people left to find employment and a better life in Athens or even further afield. During the Axis Occupation of Greece, many Kythnians living in Athens returned to the island for better living conditions.

The Greek tourist boom beginning in the mid-20th century largely bypassed Kythnos because its harbor lacked a deep-water dock for ferryboats. The construction of a new mole in 1974 precipitated great changes. Today, the island is a modern, prosperous place, with a burgeoning tourist trade. It is in the forefront of alternative energy experiments, with the establishment in 1982 of Greece's first wind park.[19][20] With the addition of a photovoltaic system and storage batteries, the amount of diesel fuel required to supply the island's electricity has been reduced by 11%.[21] Numerous individual houses on remote coves are equipped with photovoltaic systems, and nearly all houses employ solar water heaters.

Due to its proximity to Athens, Kythnos has become a fashionable setting for vacation homes, in addition to being an accessible destination for foreign visitors. Besides its numerous beaches and picturesque villages, it also is the site of one of the largest caves in Greece, Katafyki Cave in Dryopida. This cave, first visited in the 1830s and described by the geologist Fiedler, has unique "schratten" or rock curtains, as well as speleotherms. It was the site of an iron mine until 1939 and has now been developed as a tourist attraction.

Folklore edit

Swings edit

Swings or Kounies (Greek: Κούνιες) is an Easter custom that has been preserved to this day. A wooden swing is tied to a tree or  to stakes in the centre of the village and young men and women swing on it, exchanging praise and poetry. [22]

May Day edit

On the eve of the first of May they would prepare the  "May" wreath with flowers and  sing to music. This is a custom that is still preserved today.[23][24]

Lazanis edit

At noon on the Tyrian Sunday, the "Lazanis", a straw puppet who supposedly  came to "take the lasagna (spaghetti)", would be baptized. The custom is still maintained to this day, with 'Lazanis' occupying the role of King Carnival.[23][25]

Music and dance tradition edit

 
Dancers performing Balos.

The violin and the lute are the main musical instruments of the island, which form the "Zyas", as they are called on the island. The tsampouna (or kaida) is the characteristic instrument heard on Carnival.[26]

Traditions edit

In the legends and beliefs of Kythnos there are multiple references to fairies, vampires, dragons etc. living in various places on the island such as: ancient ruins, mills, threshing floors, isolated beaches etc.[27]

Gastronomy edit

Representative dishes of the local cuisine are sfougata (fried cheese balls), kolopi (pita with greens) and poulos (a bread roll filled with salted pork). The island also has other traditional products such as honey and various types of cheese.[28]

Beaches edit

Kythnos has more than 90 beaches, many of which are still inaccessible by road. Of particular note is the crescent-shaped isthmus of fine sand at Kolona. Other beaches are: Episkopi, Apokrousi, Megali Ammos, Schinari, Simousi, Martinakia, Zogaki, Naoussa, Kouri, Agios Stefanos, Vasilika, Lefkes & Liotrivi.[29][30]

Notable people edit

In popular culture edit

Gallery 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. ^ "Great Online Encyclopaedia of Asia Minor". www.ehw.gr. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
  4. ^ "Port of Kythnos - Merichas". Municipal Port Fund of Syros. Retrieved 2022-07-03.
  5. ^ "- Αρχαιότητες της Κύθνου". extras.ha.uth.gr. Retrieved 2022-07-03.
  6. ^ "Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), CYTHNUS". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
  7. ^ "Αρχαία Κύθνος: Οι ανασκαφές αποκαλύπτουν τα μυστικά της". www.news247.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 2022-07-03.
  8. ^ Bent, J. Theodore (1885). The Cyclades :or, life among the insular Greeks. London. hdl:2027/mdp.39015028327800.
  9. ^ Taylor, Roderick (1998). Embroidery of the Greek Islands and Epirus. Interlink Books. p. 15. ISBN 978-1-899296-05-7. Both Andros and Kythnos had Albanian populations that were moved there from Euboea in the early fifteenth century , after a period of depopulation .
  10. ^ Jochalas, Titos P. (1971): Über die Einwanderung der Albaner in Griechenland: Eine zusammenfassene Betrachtung ["On the immigration of Albanians to Greece: A summary"]. München: Trofenik. pg. 89-106
  11. ^ . 2006-02-17. Archived from the original on 2006-02-17. Retrieved 2021-02-27.
  12. ^ Bent, J. Theodore (1885). The Cyclades :or, life among the insular Greeks. London. hdl:2027/mdp.39015028327800.
  13. ^ Κορδατζή-Πρασσά p. 28
  14. ^ Χρυσού-Καρατζά p. 64
  15. ^ Βάλληνδας 1896 p. 121.
  16. ^ a b Κορδατζή-Πρασσά p. 69
  17. ^ Χρυσού-Καρατζά p. 82.
  18. ^ Χρυσού-Καρατζά p. 54
  19. ^ "Kythnos Island - 20 years' of experience of system technology for renewable energies" (PDF). SMA. 2002. Retrieved 2017-08-02.
  20. ^ "eletaen". Eletaen.gr. Retrieved 2012-02-09.
  21. ^ "Large Scale Integration Of Renewable Electricity Production Into The Grids" (PDF). Journal of Electrical Engineering. 58. 2007. Retrieved 2012-02-09.
  22. ^ Βάλληνδα, Αντωνίου (1882). Κυθνιακά ήτοι της νήσου Κύθνου χωρογραφία και ιστορία μετά του βίου των συγχρόνων Κυθνίων εν ω ήθη και έθη και γλώσσα και γένη κλπ. Εν Ερμουπόλει: Τυπ. της "Προόδου". p. 119.
  23. ^ a b admin. "Customs". Κύθνος. Retrieved 2022-07-03.
  24. ^ "Ήρχεν ο Μάης". Δόμνα Σαμίου. Retrieved 2022-07-03.
  25. ^ Βάλληνδας 1882 p. 118
  26. ^ admin. "Tradititional Dances & Music". Κύθνος. Retrieved 2022-07-03.
  27. ^ Freely p. 34
  28. ^ Karamanes, Evangelos (2016-01-01). "Τοπικά παραδοσιακά προϊόντα και ανάπτυξη: οικολογία, τοπικά συστήματα, τοπικότητες". Επετηρίς του Κέντρου Ερεύνης της Ελληνικής Λαογραφίας της Ακαδημίας Αθηνών, τόμ. 33-34 (2009-2013), Αθήνα 2016, σ. 59-81.
  29. ^ "Κύθνος: Ο μικρός παράδεισος επί γης με τις 99 καταγάλανες παραλίες". www.ertnews.gr (in Greek). 2022-06-14. Retrieved 2022-07-03.
  30. ^ admin. "Beaches". Κύθνος. Retrieved 2022-07-03.
  31. ^ Clive Barker (19 November 2017). "Books of Blood, Vol. 5". Sphere.

Sources edit

  • Bent, James Theodore, "The Cyclades: Life Among the Insular Greeks," 1885, reprinted in 2002 by Archaeopress, Oxford. Chapter 17 recounts his impressions of Kythnos
  • Freely, John (2006). The Cyclades : discovering the Greek islands of the Aegean. London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 1-4294-1495-2. OCLC 76938088.
  • Herodotus, "The History," translated by David Greene, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, paperback edition, 1988
  • Smith, William, ed., "Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography," 1854. Can be accessed at the Perseus Project.
  • Vallinda, Antoniou, "History of the Island of Kythnos," monograph (in Greek), 1896, reprinted by the Syndesmos Kythnion, Athens, 1990.
  • Βάλληνδα, Αντωνίου (1882). Κυθνιακά ήτοι της νήσου Κύθνου χωρογραφία και ιστορία μετά του βίου των συγχρόνων Κυθνίων εν ω ήθη και έθη και γλώσσα και γένη κλπ. Εν Ερμουπόλει: Τυπ. της "Προόδου".
  • Βάλληνδα, Αντωνίου (1896). Ιστορία της νήσου Κύθνου . Αθήνα.
  • Κορδατζή-Πρασσά, Αναστασία (1996-01-01). Η ΕΚΠΑΙΔΕΥΣΗ ΣΤΙΣ ΚΥΚΛΑΔΕΣ ΚΑΤΑ ΤΗΝ ΚΑΠΟΔΙΣΤΡΙΑΚΗ ΠΕΡΙΟΔΟ (1828-1832). Εθνικό και Καποδιστριακό Πανεπιστήμιο Αθηνών (ΕΚΠΑ), Σχολή Φιλοσοφική, Τμήμα Ιστορίας και Αρχαιολογίας. doi:10.12681/eadd/7433.
  • Χρυσού-Καρατζά, Κυριακή (2006). Τροφή και διατροφή στις Κυκλάδες (19ος-20ος αι.). Εθνικό και Καποδιστριακό Πανεπιστήμιο Αθηνών (ΕΚΠΑ). Σχολή Φιλοσοφική. Τμήμα Φιλολογίας. Τομέας Βυζαντινής Φιλολογίας και Λαογραφίας. doi:10.12681/eadd/21852.

External links edit

  • Official website (in English and Greek)
  • GigaCatholic - former bishopric of Thermia

kythnos, greek, Κύθνος, commonly, called, thermia, greek, Θερμιά, greek, island, municipality, western, cyclades, between, serifos, nautical, miles, from, athenian, harbor, piraeus, municipality, area, coastline, about, mount, kakovolo, island, highest, peak, . Kythnos Greek Ky8nos commonly called Thermia Greek 8ermia is a Greek island and municipality in the Western Cyclades between Kea and Serifos It is 56 nautical miles 104 km from the Athenian harbor of Piraeus The municipality Kythnos is 100 187 km2 38 68 sq mi 2 in area and has a coastline of about 100 km 62 mi Mount Kakovolo is island s highest peak 365m 3 Kythnos Ky8nosChora KythnosKythnosLocation within the regionCoordinates 37 23 9 N 24 25 41 E 37 38583 N 24 42806 E 37 38583 24 42806CountryGreeceAdministrative regionSouth AegeanRegional unitKea KythnosArea Municipality100 2 km2 38 7 sq mi Highest elevation297 m 974 ft Lowest elevation0 m 0 ft Population 2011 1 Municipality1 456 Municipality density15 km2 38 sq mi Community 1 Population669 2011 Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Postal code840 06Area code s 22810Vehicle registrationEMWebsitewww kythnos gr Contents 1 Settlements 2 Name 3 History 3 1 Pre history 3 2 Pre classical antiquity 3 3 Classical antiquity 3 4 Crusader and Venetian Era 3 5 Ottoman Era 3 6 Modern Kythnos 4 Folklore 4 1 Swings 4 2 May Day 4 3 Lazanis 4 4 Music and dance tradition 4 5 Traditions 4 6 Gastronomy 5 Beaches 6 Notable people 7 In popular culture 8 Gallery 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksSettlements edit nbsp The island has two significant settlements the village of Messaria or Chora of Kythnos pop 561 in 2011 census known locally as Chora and the village of Dryopis or Dryopida pop 325 also known as Chorio Both villages are notable for their winding and often stepped streets too narrow for vehicular traffic The villages are very picturesque but in different architectural styles Chora has the more typical flat roofs of the Cyclades while Dryopida s rooftops are slanted and tiled Chora is also notable for its large Greek Orthodox Church There is also a growing coastal settlement called Kanala on the east side of the island with the homonymous Christian Orthodox shrine and many of the larger beaches are settled by a handful of residents Aghios Dimitrios at the southern tip of the island is a mostly modern settlement with small vacation houses dotting the hillside above a wide beach that is dotted with sea daffodils On the northeast end of the island lies Loutra pop 81 a village famous for its thermal springs which are said to have curative properties Although the large tourist hotel there has been closed for several years the bathhouse is still functioning and visitors may soak in its marble tubs for a modest fee The port town is called Merichas pop 369 its population significantly fluctuating during the year Before the 1970s there were no year round residents in recent history a Greek fisherman named Manolas Psaras and his wife Foto were the first to live in the port year round Today there is a growing year round population and especially during the peak of the summer tourist season the town becomes quite busy Many residents of the port speak at least some English the most popular second language Merihas is connected to Piraeus and to Lavrion by ferry boat and the ride takes one to four hours depending on the speed of the ship and the weather 4 Construction of a new mole began in 2005 to accommodate larger ferryboats and was completed in 2008 Kythnos was until recently considered to be one of the last Cycladic islands unaffected by the impact of tourism but this is inexorably changing Still the island has not yet been overdeveloped and in the more remote areas of the villages traditional ways live on relatively unchanged Name editThe first inhabitants of Kythnos were the Dryopes whose mythical king was Kythnos son of the God Apollo hence the name of the island It was also known as Dryopis or Ofiousa In the Middle Ages it was called Thiramna while Nilos Doxapatris mentions it with the name Thermia as early as 1143 from the hot springs that exist Later the Turks called it Hamam Antassi island of warm waters History editPre history edit Kythnos can lay claim to one of the oldest known habitations in the Cycladic islands a Mesolithic settlement 10000 BCE 8000 BCE at Maroulas on the northeast coast The site close to the village of Loutra is situated on the shore and large portions have eroded into the sea 5 Excavations in 1996 found intact human skeletons along with stone artifacts and part of a floor pavement which indicates a long term settlement probably of hunter gatherers Pre classical antiquity edit Third millennium BCE First Cycladic Period findings at Skouries near the highest peak of the island Mt Profitis Elias suggest that Kythnos was a supplier of raw materials for metallurgy to other islands during the Bronze Age Remains of copper smelting sites and open air copper mines were investigated in 1984 1985 A recent paper by Myrto Georgakopoulo points to the seminal work here by Gale and others The earliest inhabitants of the island known to historians were the Kares Carians an Anatolian people probably allied to or under the dominion of the Minoans who eventually were forced by pressure of invading tribes to move on and settle in Asia Minor Herodotus Bk viii 73 records that in the 13th century BCE another pre Hellenic tribe the Dryopes originally from the Greek mainland near Mount Parnassus migrated to the islands first to Euboea and later spreading to Kea Kythnos and beyond This tribe most probably gave rise to the name of one of the two main villages Dryopis or Dryopida Some sources say the island took its name from King Kythnos of the Dryopes others suggest this is a mythical rather than a historical figure Speculations on the origin of the name are contained in Vallinda 1896 The Dryopes eventually moved on as well under pressure from Ionians who migrated out of mainland Greece as Dorian tribes moved in from the north nbsp Ancient walls at VryokastroA Hellenistic site at Vryokastro above the bay of Episkopi on the northwest part of the island was partially excavated in the mid 20th century yielding floor plans of houses and a sanctuary as well as a few artifacts In Greek newspaper articles of December 19 2002 archaeologist Alexandros Mazarakis Ainian announced a spectacular discovery on this site an inner sanctum adyton of the temple was found intact and unplundered Over 1 400 objects including precious jewels and gold silver and bronze artifacts terracotta figurines and painted vases were excavated from what the archaeologists have determined is a 2 700 year old temple dedicated to either Hera queen of the gods or Aphrodite goddess of love The artifacts date mostly from the 7th to the 5th centuries BCE The site at Vryokastro was inhabited until Roman times In this era the islands of the Cyclades suffered frequent predation by pirates and perhaps for this reason the main settlements moved inland and to more defensible locations Remains of another old settlement with extensive stone walls can be seen in the extreme northern headland This site called Kastro Greek for Castle was likely the capital of the island from about the 1st century through the Byzantine era and into Frankish times This site seems nearly impregnable on three sides is a sheer 500 foot 150 m drop to the sea The fourth side is approached via a narrow track which was barricaded with a thick high wall parts of which are still extant along with walls delineating hundreds of houses Nevertheless there is evidence that the town was destroyed and rebuilt several times The population fluctuated dramatically during this period and at times the island was decimated due to marauders and plague Smith 1854 and Bent 1885 reprinted 2002 nbsp View of the village of DryopidaClassical antiquity edit Only rarely is the island mentioned by ancient authors In the Battle of Salamis 480 BCE Herodotus records that Kythnos contributed a trireme and a penteconter and this contribution is commemorated on the base of a golden tripod at Delphi Herodotus Bk viii 46 Innumerable sources repeat without providing a citation that Aristotle praised the government of Kythnos in his Constitution of Kythnos Exactly what he wrote is difficult to ascertain since all of his essays on the constitutions of 158 city states are lost except for the one on Athens Possibly the origin of the quote is from the 2nd century lexicographer Harpocration 6 In the Roman period Kythnos was a place of exile for important persons In addition in antiquity there were several temples on the island which resulted in the island being visited by travelers from various regions e g Egypt Asia Minor Italy etc 7 The painters Timanthis and Cydias were born in Kythnos in antiquity Later Kythnos became part of the Byzantine Empire Crusader and Venetian Era edit In 1207 Kythnos was annexed to the Frankish overlord Marco Sanudo s Aegean Duchy of the Archipelago or of Naxos During this period it was known as Thermia a name derived from the hot mineral springs occurring on the northeastern coast at the village of Loutra which means baths in Greek These medicinal baths were renowned at least since Roman times and were a fashionable spa and resort area The island was ruled as an appanage of the Duchy of the Archipelago from the 16th century until the fall of the Duchy where it became de facto independent 8 In 1600 Thermia also became the new name of a Latin bishopric on the Cyclades formerly known as Roman Catholic Diocese of Ceo now a Latin Catholic titular see The island capital remained at Kastro of Oria or Katakefalo which was rebuilt as a Frankish fortress and was known as the Tower of Thermia Bent 1885 reprinted 2002 After a period of depopulation in the early 15th century some Albanian communities moved from nearby Euboea They were assimilated into the local Greek population 9 10 Ottoman Era edit nbsp Oria or Katakefalo CastleFollowing a siege the Turks were victorious over the last Venetian overlord Angelo III Gozzadini in 1617 11 According to a myth recounted by Theodore Bent in his 1885 travelogue on the Cyclades Kastro fell only because of a treacherous ploy by the Turks a young woman heavy with child and apparently in pain approached the entrance and begged to be admitted the watchman s daughter opened the gate for her and for the Turks hiding nearby 12 Bent writes that this version is preserved in a popular island ballad After its fall to the Turks Kastro was abandoned and the new capital was located inland as the name Messaria suggests Later this town became known as Hora the generic Greek name for a capital town also spelled Chora During this period Kythnos was a poor under populated place still beset by pirates and suffering frequent epidemics In 1791 a Greek school was opened in Chora Messaria which was housed in the monastery of Panagia of Nikous The monk Parthenios Koulouris from Sifnos initially taught there He was succeeded in 1809 by the monk Makarios Filippaios from Kythnos who continued teaching during the years of Ioannis Kapodistrias 13 In 1806 a pirate raid although repelled resulted in groups of locals emigrating to the coast of Asia Minor from where some later repatriated bringing back customs to the island from the places where they had lived 14 Kythnos took part in the 1821 Revolution and during its duration was a safe haven for Greek refugees from areas such as Chios Psara and Aivali In 1823 a plague broke out Kythnos was represented in the 3rd National Assembly of Epidaurus in the 3rd National Assembly of Troizina by Moschos Filippaios Chora and N Economidis Levantis Dryopida In the following years until 1832 Kythnos was represented in the National Assemblies by N Vallindas 15 Modern Kythnos editIn 1828 five schools were operating on the island including private schools and by 1833 there were only two schools operating 16 They were financially supported by contributions from the residents and income from monasteries on the island 16 During the reign of King Othon Kythnos was a place of exile for political prisoners and was the scene of an unsuccessful revolt in 1862 by rebels from Syros who attempted to free the prisoners nbsp View of MerichasIn the 19th century Kythnians mainly earned their living as they had for centuries before as shepherds or by fishing The island had few natural resources and lacking a deep water mooring for boats was relatively inaccessible On the other hand ceramics and pottery flourished in Kythnos with Kythnian craftsmen leaving for Athens in the summers and returning in the winter At the beginning of the 20th century the production of high quality barley and semolina increased greatly and exports increased accordingly 17 As the new century dawned iron ore was discovered on the island and Kythnians were able to supplement their meager incomes by working in the mines 18 These mines however were mostly played out by World War II and once again the population of the island went into decline as young people left to find employment and a better life in Athens or even further afield During the Axis Occupation of Greece many Kythnians living in Athens returned to the island for better living conditions The Greek tourist boom beginning in the mid 20th century largely bypassed Kythnos because its harbor lacked a deep water dock for ferryboats The construction of a new mole in 1974 precipitated great changes Today the island is a modern prosperous place with a burgeoning tourist trade It is in the forefront of alternative energy experiments with the establishment in 1982 of Greece s first wind park 19 20 With the addition of a photovoltaic system and storage batteries the amount of diesel fuel required to supply the island s electricity has been reduced by 11 21 Numerous individual houses on remote coves are equipped with photovoltaic systems and nearly all houses employ solar water heaters Due to its proximity to Athens Kythnos has become a fashionable setting for vacation homes in addition to being an accessible destination for foreign visitors Besides its numerous beaches and picturesque villages it also is the site of one of the largest caves in Greece Katafyki Cave in Dryopida This cave first visited in the 1830s and described by the geologist Fiedler has unique schratten or rock curtains as well as speleotherms It was the site of an iron mine until 1939 and has now been developed as a tourist attraction Folklore editSwings edit Swings or Kounies Greek Koynies is an Easter custom that has been preserved to this day A wooden swing is tied to a tree or to stakes in the centre of the village and young men and women swing on it exchanging praise and poetry 22 May Day edit On the eve of the first of May they would prepare the May wreath with flowers and sing to music This is a custom that is still preserved today 23 24 Lazanis edit At noon on the Tyrian Sunday the Lazanis a straw puppet who supposedly came to take the lasagna spaghetti would be baptized The custom is still maintained to this day with Lazanis occupying the role of King Carnival 23 25 Music and dance tradition edit nbsp Dancers performing Balos The violin and the lute are the main musical instruments of the island which form the Zyas as they are called on the island The tsampouna or kaida is the characteristic instrument heard on Carnival 26 Traditions edit In the legends and beliefs of Kythnos there are multiple references to fairies vampires dragons etc living in various places on the island such as ancient ruins mills threshing floors isolated beaches etc 27 Gastronomy edit Representative dishes of the local cuisine are sfougata fried cheese balls kolopi pita with greens and poulos a bread roll filled with salted pork The island also has other traditional products such as honey and various types of cheese 28 Beaches editKythnos has more than 90 beaches many of which are still inaccessible by road Of particular note is the crescent shaped isthmus of fine sand at Kolona Other beaches are Episkopi Apokrousi Megali Ammos Schinari Simousi Martinakia Zogaki Naoussa Kouri Agios Stefanos Vasilika Lefkes amp Liotrivi 29 30 Notable people editTimanthes 4th century BC painter Ignatius of Mariupol 1716 1786 bishop founder of Mariupol Giorgos Zambetas 1925 1992 composer Leonidas Paraskevopoulos military officerIn popular culture editClive Barker s story Babel s Children 31 is set in Kythnos Gallery edit nbsp Throughout Kythnos drylaid stone walls delineate individual parcels of land nbsp Kolona Beach nbsp Dryopida village Kythnos nbsp Typical alley in Dryopida nbsp Dryopida nbsp Katafiki Dryopida nbsp View of Chora Kythnos nbsp Agios Panteleimon Chora nbsp Church of Agios Savvas in Chora nbsp Alley in Chora nbsp Landscape nbsp Loutra nbsp Kanala nbsp Agios Dimitrios nbsp A ruined mill amp Agios Nektarios churchReferences 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 Great Online Encyclopaedia of Asia Minor www ehw gr Retrieved 2022 07 13 Port of Kythnos Merichas Municipal Port Fund of Syros Retrieved 2022 07 03 Arxaiothtes ths Ky8noy extras ha uth gr Retrieved 2022 07 03 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography 1854 CYTHNUS www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 2021 03 15 Arxaia Ky8nos Oi anaskafes apokalyptoyn ta mystika ths www news247 gr in Greek Retrieved 2022 07 03 Bent J Theodore 1885 The Cyclades or life among the insular Greeks London hdl 2027 mdp 39015028327800 Taylor Roderick 1998 Embroidery of the Greek Islands and Epirus Interlink Books p 15 ISBN 978 1 899296 05 7 Both Andros and Kythnos had Albanian populations that were moved there from Euboea in the early fifteenth century after a period of depopulation Jochalas Titos P 1971 Uber die Einwanderung der Albaner in Griechenland Eine zusammenfassene Betrachtung On the immigration of Albanians to Greece A summary Munchen Trofenik pg 89 106 Aegean Islands 2006 02 17 Archived from the original on 2006 02 17 Retrieved 2021 02 27 Bent J Theodore 1885 The Cyclades or life among the insular Greeks London hdl 2027 mdp 39015028327800 Kordatzh Prassa p 28 Xrysoy Karatza p 64 Ballhndas 1896 p 121 a b Kordatzh Prassa p 69 Xrysoy Karatza p 82 Xrysoy Karatza p 54 Kythnos Island 20 years of experience of system technology for renewable energies PDF SMA 2002 Retrieved 2017 08 02 eletaen Eletaen gr Retrieved 2012 02 09 Large Scale Integration Of Renewable Electricity Production Into The Grids PDF Journal of Electrical Engineering 58 2007 Retrieved 2012 02 09 Ballhnda Antwnioy 1882 Ky8niaka htoi ths nhsoy Ky8noy xwrografia kai istoria meta toy bioy twn sygxronwn Ky8niwn en w h8h kai e8h kai glwssa kai genh klp En Ermoypolei Typ ths Proodoy p 119 a b admin Customs Ky8nos Retrieved 2022 07 03 Hrxen o Mahs Domna Samioy Retrieved 2022 07 03 Ballhndas 1882 p 118 admin Tradititional Dances amp Music Ky8nos Retrieved 2022 07 03 Freely p 34 Karamanes Evangelos 2016 01 01 Topika paradosiaka proionta kai anapty3h oikologia topika systhmata topikothtes Epethris toy Kentroy Ereynhs ths Ellhnikhs Laografias ths Akadhmias A8hnwn tom 33 34 2009 2013 A8hna 2016 s 59 81 Ky8nos O mikros paradeisos epi ghs me tis 99 katagalanes paralies www ertnews gr in Greek 2022 06 14 Retrieved 2022 07 03 admin Beaches Ky8nos Retrieved 2022 07 03 Clive Barker 19 November 2017 Books of Blood Vol 5 Sphere Sources editBent James Theodore The Cyclades Life Among the Insular Greeks 1885 reprinted in 2002 by Archaeopress Oxford Chapter 17 recounts his impressions of Kythnos Freely John 2006 The Cyclades discovering the Greek islands of the Aegean London I B Tauris ISBN 1 4294 1495 2 OCLC 76938088 Herodotus The History translated by David Greene Chicago University of Chicago Press paperback edition 1988 Smith William ed Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography 1854 Can be accessed at the Perseus Project Vallinda Antoniou History of the Island of Kythnos monograph in Greek 1896 reprinted by the Syndesmos Kythnion Athens 1990 Ballhnda Antwnioy 1882 Ky8niaka htoi ths nhsoy Ky8noy xwrografia kai istoria meta toy bioy twn sygxronwn Ky8niwn en w h8h kai e8h kai glwssa kai genh klp En Ermoypolei Typ ths Proodoy Ballhnda Antwnioy 1896 Istoria ths nhsoy Ky8noy A8hna Kordatzh Prassa Anastasia 1996 01 01 H EKPAIDEYSH STIS KYKLADES KATA THN KAPODISTRIAKH PERIODO 1828 1832 E8niko kai Kapodistriako Panepisthmio A8hnwn EKPA Sxolh Filosofikh Tmhma Istorias kai Arxaiologias doi 10 12681 eadd 7433 Xrysoy Karatza Kyriakh 2006 Trofh kai diatrofh stis Kyklades 19os 20os ai E8niko kai Kapodistriako Panepisthmio A8hnwn EKPA Sxolh Filosofikh Tmhma Filologias Tomeas Byzantinhs Filologias kai Laografias doi 10 12681 eadd 21852 External links editOfficial website in English and Greek GigaCatholic former bishopric of Thermia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kythnos amp oldid 1161213018, 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.