fbpx
Wikipedia

Hydra (island)

Hydra, or Ydra or Idra (Greek: Ύδρα, romanizedÝdra, pronounced [ˈiðra] in Modern Greek, Arvanitika: Nύδρα/Nidhra[2]), and in antiquity Hydrea, is one of the Saronic Islands of Greece, located in the Aegean Sea between the Myrtoan Sea and the Argolic Gulf. It is separated from the Peloponnese by a narrow strip of water. In ancient times, the island was known as Hydrea (Ὑδρέα, derived from the Greek word for "water"), a reference to the natural springs on the island.[3]

Hydra
Ύδρα
View of Hydra's port
Hydra
Location within the region
Coordinates: 37°20′06″N 23°28′21″E / 37.33500°N 23.47250°E / 37.33500; 23.47250
CountryGreece
Administrative regionAttica
Regional unitIslands
Government
 • MayorGeorge Koukoudakis (Ind.)
Area
 • Municipality64.443 km2 (24.882 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Municipality
1,966
 • Municipality density31/km2 (79/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
180 40
Area code(s)22980
Vehicle registrationZ

The municipality of Hydra consists of the islands Hydra (pop. 1,948, area 49.6 km2 (19.2 sq mi)), Dokos (pop. 18, area 13.5 km2 (5.2 sq mi)), and a few uninhabited islets, total area 64.443 km2 (24.9 sq mi).[4] The province of Hydra (Greek: Επαρχία Ύδρας) was one of the provinces of the Argolis and Corinthia prefecture from 1833 to 1942, Attica prefecture from 1942 to 1964, Piraeus prefecture from 1964 to 1972 and then back to Attica as part of the newly establishment Piraeus prefecture of Attica prefecture. Its territory corresponded with that of the current municipality.[5] It was abolished in 2006. Today the municipality of Hydra is part of Islands regional unit of Attica region.

There is one main town, known simply as "Hydra port" (pop. 1,900 in 2011). It consists of a crescent-shaped harbor, around which is centered a strand of restaurants, shops, markets, and galleries that cater to tourists and locals (Hydriots). Steep stone streets lead up and outward from the harbor area. Most of the local residences, as well as the hostelries on the island, are located on these streets. Other small villages or hamlets on the island include Mandraki (pop. 11), Kamini, Vlychos (19), Palamidas, Episkopi, and Molos. All wheeled vehicles are not permitted in the island, including but not limited, cars, motorcycles, scooters, motorbikes, bicycles,and e-bikes.

Name Edit

The name Hydra comes from ancient Greek ὕδρα (hydra), derived from the Greek word for "water", a reference to the natural springs on the island.[6] The local Arvanite name is attested in two variants: the common variant Nύδρα/Nidhra and the rare form Nidhriza or Hydriza.[2] In Turkish it is known as Idra and in Ottoman Turkish: يدرا.

Transport, tourism and leisure Edit

 
Clocktower of Hydra island

Hydra depends on tourism, and Athenians account for a sizable segment of its visitors. High-speed hydrofoils and catamarans from Piraeus, some 37 nautical miles (69 km) away, serve Hydra, stopping first at Poros before going on to Spetses. There is a passenger ferry service providing an alternative to hydrofoils that operates between Hydra Harbour to Metochi on the Peloponnese coast. Many Athenians drive to Metochi, leave their car in the secure car park, and take the 20-minute passenger ferry across to Hydra.

Rubbish trucks are the only motor vehicles on the island, since by law, cars and motorcycles are not allowed. Horses, mules and donkeys, and water taxis provide public transportation.[7] The inhabited area, however, is so compact that most people walk everywhere.

Hydra benefits from numerous bays and natural harbours, and has a strong maritime culture. The island is a popular yachting destination and is the home of the Kamini Yacht Club, an international yacht club based in the port of Kamini.

In 2007, a National Geographic Traveler panel of 522 experts rated Hydra the highest of any Greek island (11th out of 111 islands worldwide), as a unique destination preserving its "integrity of place".[8]

Captains' mansions Edit

The Tsamadou mansion, on the left side as one enters the harbour, is now a Maritime Academy.[9] The Tsamados family donated the mansion for the purpose of hosting the Greek Maritime Academy on their island. Another house, originally built for the Tsamados family on the hill overlooking the port was donated to the church to be used as a weaving school and production facility of textiles and carpets. The house now belongs to the Colloredo-Mansfeld family and became known as the Old Carpet Factory.[10]

The Tombazis mansion is now part of the Athens School of Fine Arts,[11] owned by University of Athens.[12]

The mansions of Lazaros and George Kountouriotis, Boudouris, Kriezis, Voulgaris, Sachinis, and Miaoulis all contain collections of 18th-century island furniture. The descendants of Lazarus Kountouriotis donated his mansion to the Historic-Ethnologic Institute of Greece. Today, it operates as an extension branch of the National Museum of History.

Monasteries and the Cathedral Edit

There are numerous churches and six Orthodox monasteries on the island. Two particularly noteworthy monasteries are Profitis Ilias, founded in the 10th century, and Ayia Efpraxia. Both are on a hill overlooking the main harbour.

The island's cathedral is the old Monastery of the Dormition of the Virgin and sits on the quayside in the town. The monastery contains the tomb of Lazaros Kountouriotis, the richest sea captain on Hydra, who gave his entire fortune to support the Greek War of Independence.[13]

History Edit

Pre-history, antiquity, Byzantine and Venetian era Edit

There is evidence of farmers and herders from the second half of the third millennium BCE on the small, flat areas that are not visible from the sea. Obsidian from Milos has also been found. During the Helladic period, Hydra probably served as a maritime base for the kingdoms on the Greek peninsula. Fragments of vases, tools, and the head of an idol have been found on Mount Chorissa. There is also evidence of Mycenean-era aqueducts, supplying ships with water.

The large-scale Dorian invasion of Greece around the 12th century BCE appears to have depopulated the island. Hydra was repopulated by farmers and herders, perhaps sailing from the mainland port of Ermioni, in the 8th century BCE. Herodotus reports that toward the 6th century BCE, the island belonged to Ermioni, which sold it to Samos. Samos, in turn, ceded it to Troizina.

For much of its existence, Hydra stayed on the margins of history. The population was very small in ancient times and, except for the brief mentions in Herodotus and Pausanias, left little or no record in the history of those times.

It is clear that Hydra was populated during the Byzantine era, as vases and coins have been discovered in the area of Episkopi. However, it appears that the island again lost its population during the Latin Empire of Constantinople as its inhabitants fled the pirate depredations. On other islands, inhabitants moved inland, something that was essentially impossible on Hydra.

Albanian settlement and Arvanite community Edit

Among local Arvanites, the first account about their settlement was written by Antonis Miaoulis, son of admiral Andreas Miaoulis, after the end of the Greek war of independence (1830). According to this local narrative, the Hydriots descend from the Albanians who directly left Albania as refugees in the 1460s due to persecution by the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II. Historiographical research shows that the Albanians didn't settle in Hydra directly from Albania in the 15th century, but from the Peloponnese (Ermionida) due to conflicts in the region with the Venetians and the Ottomans.[14] This first Albanian settlement occurred in the early 16th century and likely involved members of the same 1-2 clans.[15] That made the island primarily Albanian in ethnic character.[16] They created the modern town port and their presence was evident until the mid-20th century, when, according to T. Jochalas, the majority of the island's population was composed of immigrants from outside of Peloponnesus.[14][page needed] In the 16th century, the island began to be settled also by refugees from the warfare between the Ottomans and Venetians.[17] In the early 18th century, a last Arvanite movement from nearby areas settled in the island. Arvanitika Albanian was the language spoken by all Hydriotes. By the 19th century men had learned to speak Greek too, while women and children often didn't speak Greek. One of the reasons why Arvanitika was so enduring in Hydra as opposed to other islands which were part of the Albanian Aegean settlements was that the language was spoken and favored by the newly emerging Hydriot urban-merchant class.[18] Even in the 20th century families of the local magnates like the Koundouriotis spoke Arvanitika in Hydra.[19] Hydra was also an island where church liturgy was often held in local Arvanitika, which is a rare case as in most Orthodox Albanian communities Greek was the language of liturgy even up to the early 20th century.[19] The Arvanite community is still found on the island.[20] Nowadays they are fully assimilated.

Ottoman era: period of commercial and naval strength Edit

 
Traditional houses

Hydra was relatively unimportant during much of the period of Ottoman rule. At the end of the sixteenth century there was a wave of migration consisting of big families from the Hellenic and Asia Minor regions to the island. Due to the infertile ground, the inhabitants turned to the sea.[21] Its naval and commercial development began in the 17th century, and its first school for mariners was established in 1645.[22] Apparently, the first truly Hydriot vessel was launched in 1657. However, the conflict between the Republic of Venice and the Ottoman Empire limited the island's maritime development until after 1718 and the Treaty of Passarowitz. From the 17th century on, Hydra began to take on a greater importance because of its trading strength.

During the first half of the 18th century, Hydra built the same kind of vessels as were built in the other Aegean Islands: the sachtouri of 15 to 20 tons, and the latinadiko of 40 to 50 tons. The Hydriots contented themselves with trading in the Aegean, going as far as Constantinople. A great change occurred in 1757 after they launched a vessel of 250 tons. The larger boats enabled Hydra to become an important commercial port. By 1771, there were up to 50 vessels from throughout Greece in the roads. Ten years later, the island had fitted out 100 vessels.[23]

However, the Ottoman Empire and its policies constrained Hydra's economic success. Heavy tariffs and taxes limited the speed of development. The Ottoman administration limited free trade, permitting only Ottoman vessels to navigate the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus, and hence to have access to the Black Sea, its ports, and the trade in grain from their hinterlands. The Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca changed all this. Russia gained from the Ottoman Empire the right to protect the Empire's Orthodox Christians. The religious protection had a commercial corollary: the Hydriots began to sail under the Russian flag. The treaty also provided for free passage between the Aegean and the Black Sea. Hydra entered its commercial era. Hydriot vessels carried goods between Southern Russia in the east and the Italian ports of Ancona and Livorno in the west. From 1785 on, the Hydriot shippers began to engage in commerce, not just transport. Each vessel became its own small commercial enterprise, and trade with the Levant quickly began to depend on Hydra's vessels, though not without competition from those of Spetses and Psara.

The plague of 1792 killed a large part of the population, and many people moved away. As a result, the town was almost completely abandoned for a while. By the end of the 18th century, Hydra had again become quite prosperous, with its vessels trading as far as France, Spain, and even the Americas. Napoleon presented the island with the huge silver chandelier in the cathedral as a gesture of gratitude for the Hydriots' role in running the British blockade and so bringing food to France.

Greek War of Independence Edit

 
Statue of Andreas Miaoulis, admiral during the Greek War of Independence.
 
Antonis Oikonomou starts the revolution in Hydra by Peter von Hess.
 
Flag of Hydra during the Greek War of Independence, displaying the Spartan maxim "Η ΤΑΝ Η ΕΠΙ ΤΑΣ".

In the 19th century, Hydra was home to some 125 boats and 10,000 sailors. The mansions of the sea captains that ring the harbor are a testament to the prosperity that shipping brought to the island, which, at the time of the Greek Revolution, had 16,000 inhabitants.

To begin with, Hydriots were far from unanimous in joining the Greek War of Independence. In April 1821, when Antonis Oikonomou expelled the governor, the Ottoman Nikolao Kokovila and proclaimed Hydra's adherence to the independence struggle, he met strong opposition from island leaders who were reluctant to lose the relatively privileged position they had under Ottoman rule. Oikonomou was imprisoned, hounded off the island and eventually his opponents sent assassins to chase and kill him in December 1821.

Still, Hydra eventually did join the cause of independence, and Hydra's contribution of some 150 ships, plus supplies, to fight against the Turks played a critical role. The Greek admiral Andreas Miaoulis, himself a settler on Hydra, used Hydriot fire ships to inflict heavy losses on the Ottoman fleet. Eventually the fleet of Hydra - along with those of the other two naval islands of Psara and Spetses - were able to wrest control of the eastern Aegean Sea from the Ottoman Empire.

The Albanian-speaking seamen of Hydra and Spetses provided the core of the Greek fleet and leading members of the Greek government, among them a one wartime president. They in some cases used Albanian with each other to prevent others on their side from reading their correspondence.[24] 

Modern History Edit

With the end of the revolution and the creation of the Greek state, the island gradually lost its maritime position in the Eastern Mediterranean, igniting an economic crisis that led to a period of hardship and unemployment. The main reason was that with the creation of the Greek state, Hydra's fleet lost the privileges that the Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca and the use of the Russian flag had given it. Another reason was that the traditional families who owned the majority of the fleet failed to foresee the benefits of participating in the steam ship revolution, which significantly cut shipping operational costs through reduced crew and independence of the winds, putting them at a disadvantage vis-á-vis the new shipping companies of Piraeus, Patras, and Syros. A third reason was that the new conditions made illegal activities such as piracy impossible. Once again, many inhabitants abandoned Hydra, leaving behind their large mansions and beautiful residences, which fell into ruin. The mainstay of the island's economy became fishing for sponge. This brought prosperity again until 1932, when Egypt forbade fishing along its coast.

Between 1941 and 1943, during the Axis occupation of Greece during World War II, there was famine on Hydra. It is estimated that some eight per cent of the population died of starvation. By the end of the World War II, the Hydriots were again leaving the island; many of them went abroad.

Historical population Edit

Year Town population Municipality/Island population
1981 2,732 -
1991 2,279 2,387
2001 2,526 2,719
2011 1,900 1,982

Topography and ecology Edit

 
Aerial view
 
View from the promenade.

The dominant geographic features of Hydra are its rocky hillsides, which are bare, pine forested valleys with the occasional farmhouse. The island was subject to a modern geologic study by Renz in 1955. Some of the later Permian limestone strata are rich in well-preserved fossils.

There are many types of wildflowers, including rare 'spentzes' or cyclamen and poppies. As well as pine trees, there are cypress and olive trees. Birds species include partridges, quails, and many migratory birds, which are subject to local hunting. Mammals include rabbits, feral cats, and goats.

Although the island's name is derived from ancient springs known to the Ancient Greeks, it is now almost dry. Hydra previously had wells, and three new wells have been found. Today, the island imports its water by boat from the Greek mainland. A new desalinization plant has been finished but is not in operation. Many local people store winter rainfall in cisterns beneath their houses to use later as drinking water.

A fire during the 2007 European heat wave destroyed much of the pine forest to the east of Hydra Port. However, the fire left untouched some forest above Kamini and at the west end of Hydra. The forest around Molos, Bisti, and Agios Nikolaos was also unaffected.

Climate Edit

Hydra island has a hot semi-arid climate (Köppen climate classification: BSh) with an average annual temperature of around 20°C and an average annual precipitation of less than 400 mm. Winters are mild and summers are hot with very high night temperatures. [25] [26]

Municipality of Hydra Edit

The municipality of Hydra includes the following islands:

Name Area Population
Dokos Island 13.5 18
Agios Georgios Island 4.3 0
Hydra Island 52 1960
Trikeri Island and more Islands 2.2 4

The total area of the municipality is 72 km2 (28 sq mi), and its population is 1980 (2011), most in Hydra (city).

Cultural life Edit

The Miaoulia Festival provides a series of cultural events in the last week in June and commemorates the victory of naval battles led by Admiral Miaouli during the Greek War of Independence. The festival culminates with a fictionalised re-enactment at sea of the burning of an Ottoman armada followed by a spectacular firework display.[27]

Hydrama Theatre and Arts Centre showcases free theatre and dance productions during the Hydra Performing Arts Festival every summer. [28][29] Hydrama has hosted drama and dance activities for the local community and international visitors since 2001.[30]

In June 2009, the art collector Dakis Joannou opened the Hydra branch of a private art museum, the Deste Foundation, to show the work of established young artists.[31]

In the 1950s and 1960s Hydra was the adopted home of a community of expatriate artists that included celebrated Norwegian novelist Axel Jensen, Australian writers Charmian Clift and George Johnston, and Canadian singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen.[32] Cohen wrote several of his better-known songs on Hydra, including "Bird on the Wire" and "So Long, Marianne", while living with Jensen's ex-wife, Marianne Ihlen. This period was depicted in the 2019 documentary film Marianne & Leonard: Words of Love, and Polly Samson's 2020 novel A Theatre for Dreamers.

Near Leonard Cohen's house is the Panagiotis Tetsis house which now operates as a museum.[33]


The island used to host an annual conference on Rebetiko, a type of Greek urban folk music, in mid-October.[citation needed]

International relations Edit

Twin towns — sister cities Edit

The municipality of Hydra is twinned with:

Notable people Edit

 
Georgios Kountouriotis
 
Anastasios Tsamados
 
Bust of Lazaros Kountouriotis
 
Georgios Sachtouris

Books about or set on Hydra Edit

  • The Colossus of Maroussi, Henry Miller (1941)
  • Peel Me a Lotus, Charmian Clift (1959)
  • The Sea Change, Elizabeth Jane Howard (1959)
  • Doctors Wear Scarlet, Simon Raven (1960)
  • A Rope of Vines: Journal from a Greek Island, Brenda Chamberlain (1965) (ISBN 9781905762866)
  • The Sleepwalker, Margarita Karapanou (1985)
  • Clouds over Hydra, Charles Young (1996)
  • Fugitive Pieces, Anne Michaels (1996)
  • The Riders, Tim Winton (1996)
  • Hydra and the Bananas of Leonard Cohen, Roger Green (2003)
  • Rhubarbs from a Rock, David Fagan (2003)
  • Hydra, Catherine Vanderpool (1980)
  • Le Premier jour, Marc Levy (2009)
  • Travels with Epicurus, Daniel Klein (2012)
  • Hydra vues privées / Private views, Catherine Panchout, Éditions Gourcuff Gradenigo (2015)
  • Island of Cats – Hydra, Gabriela Staebler, Edition Reuss (2015)
  • Beautiful Animals, Lawrence Osborne (2017)
  • So Long, Marianne: a Love Story, Kari Hesthamar (2017)
  • Hydra. An Island and Its Architecture, Michael Loudon (2018)
  • Forth Into Light, Gordon Merrick (1974)
  • A Theatre for Dreamers, Polly Samson (2020)
  • Half the Perfect World (writers, dreamers and drifters),Paul Genoni and Tanya Dalziell (2018)
  • When We Were Almost Young: Hydra through War and Bohemians, Helle Goldman (editor, compiler) (2018)
  • Δε λες κουβέντα" (“Athens Undocumented”),[36] Makis Malafekas (2018)

Films shot on Hydra Edit

In popular culture Edit

Gallery Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Απογραφή Πληθυσμού - Κατοικιών 2011. ΜΟΝΙΜΟΣ Πληθυσμός" (in Greek). Hellenic Statistical Authority.
  2. ^ a b Jochalas, Titos (2006). Ύδρα: λησμονημένη γλώσσα. Ekdoseis Patakē. p. 81. ISBN 9601621148.
  3. ^ "Water supply for Hydra Island Greece". www.hydradirect.com. Retrieved 2017-03-15.
  4. ^ (PDF) (in Greek). National Statistical Service of Greece. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-21.
  5. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. (39 MB) (in Greek and French)
  6. ^ "Water supply for Hydra Island Greece". www.hydradirect.com. Retrieved 2017-03-15.
  7. ^ Zikakou, Ioanna (9 September 2014). "Hydra: The Cosmopolitan Greek Island Where No Cars Are Allowed | GreekReporter.com". Retrieved 2017-03-15.
  8. ^ . traveler.nationalgeographic.com. Archived from the original on 2015-01-08. Retrieved 2014-01-08.
  9. ^ "Hydra National Merchant Marine Academy". www.hydra.com.gr. Retrieved 2017-03-15.
  10. ^ Loudon, Michael (2018). Hydra. An Island and Its Architecture. Vienna. ISBN 978-3-85161-194-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  11. ^ . GRECT. Archived from the original on 2017-03-15. Retrieved 2017-03-15.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2019-10-22. Retrieved 2018-09-25.
  13. ^ . Inside Hydra Island Greece | Hydra News & Info from Hydra Locals. 2010-11-06. Archived from the original on 2017-03-15. Retrieved 2017-03-15.
  14. ^ a b 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.
  15. ^ Jochalas 2006, p. 40.
  16. ^ Jelavich, Barbara (1983). History of the Balkans: Volume 1. Cambridge University Press. p. 26.
  17. ^ Vanderpool, Catherine (1980) Hydra, Athens Lycabettus Press, pp. 3-4.
  18. ^ Jochalas 2006, p. 76.
  19. ^ a b Jochalas 2006, p. 140.
  20. ^ Modern Greece. Elaine Cotsirilos Thomopoulos. Santa Barbara, California. 2022. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-4408-5492-7. OCLC 1252736820.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  21. ^ Vicky Katsoni; Ciná van Zyl, eds. (21 June 2021). Culture and Tourism in a Smart, Globalized, and Sustainable World: 7th International Conference of IACuDiT, Hydra, Greece, 2020. Springer Nature. ISBN 978-3-03-072469-6. OCLC 1258664982.
  22. ^ Iles grecques, Guide Bleu, Hachette, 1998. p. 185.
  23. ^ Georgios Voyatis, Le Golfe Saronique, p. 164.
  24. ^ Mark Mazower (2021). The Greek Revolution and the Making of Modern Europe. Penguin Press. p. 44. ISBN 9780698163980. On the Greek side, there were the Christian Albanian Souliot bands, hardened mountain fighters based around clan leaders who gradually became integrated into the national war effort. There were also the Albanian-speaking seamen of Hydra and Spetses who provided not only the core of the Greek fleet but also leading members of the Greek government – including one wartime president – who occasionally used Albanian among themselves to prevent others on their own side from reading their correspondence.
  25. ^ "Meteo.gr - Προγνώσεις καιρού για όλη την Ελλάδα".
  26. ^ "Latest Conditions in Hydra".
  27. ^ "Miaoulia Festival in Hydra - Hydra Events | Greeka".
  28. ^ "Το πρόγραμμα των παραστάσεων του Φεστιβάλ Θεάτρου Hydrama Theatre στον Βλυχό - Η Φωνή της Ύδρας".
  29. ^ "Hydrama Theatre & Arts in Vlychos on Hydra Island Greece".
  30. ^ Velina Hasu Houston "Green Tea Girl in Orange Pekoe Country " p.7 OCLC 940511969
  31. ^ "In Pictures: See Jeff Koons's Luxurious Art Offerings to Apollo, God of the Sun, on the Greek Island of Hydra". 5 August 2022.
  32. ^ Alex Beam (2014-11-20). "From Greece, with love". Boston Globe. from the original on 2015-07-07. Retrieved 2016-08-06. Cohen and Ihlen embarked on a 10-year long love affair/shuttle romance that found them in Oslo, Montreal and/or New York, depending on circumstance. Cohen jokingly called Ihlen his "Greek muse," as he launched into a decade of creative fervor, culminating in the ultimate breakup song, "So Long, Marianne." ("We met when we were almost young. . . ")
  33. ^ office. "Tetsis Home & Studio on Hydra Island". www.nhmuseum.gr. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
  34. ^ (PDF). Central Union of Municipalities & Communities of Greece. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-01-15. Retrieved 2013-08-25.
  35. ^ "National Commission for Decentralised cooperation". Délégation pour l’Action Extérieure des Collectivités Territoriales (Ministère des Affaires étrangères) (in French). Archived from the original on 2013-10-08. Retrieved 2013-12-26.
  36. ^ Caucaso, Osservatorio Balcani e. "Malafekas: pulp is the genuine product of a country in crisis". OBC Transeuropa (in Italian). Retrieved 2020-10-06.

Further reading Edit

  • Genoni, Paul; Dalziell, Tanya (2018). Half the Perfect World: Writers, Dreamers and Drifters on Hydra, 1955-1964 (Paperback). Clayton, Australia: Monash University Publishing. ISBN 9781925523096.

External links Edit

  •   Hydra travel guide from Wikivoyage

hydra, island, this, article, about, island, greece, other, uses, hydra, disambiguation, hydra, ydra, idra, greek, Ύδρα, romanized, Ýdra, pronounced, ˈiðra, modern, greek, arvanitika, nύδρα, nidhra, antiquity, hydrea, saronic, islands, greece, located, aegean,. This article is about an island in Greece For other uses see Hydra disambiguation Hydra or Ydra or Idra Greek Ydra romanized Ydra pronounced ˈidra in Modern Greek Arvanitika Nydra Nidhra 2 and in antiquity Hydrea is one of the Saronic Islands of Greece located in the Aegean Sea between the Myrtoan Sea and the Argolic Gulf It is separated from the Peloponnese by a narrow strip of water In ancient times the island was known as Hydrea Ὑdrea derived from the Greek word for water a reference to the natural springs on the island 3 Hydra YdraView of Hydra s portFlagHydraLocation within the regionCoordinates 37 20 06 N 23 28 21 E 37 33500 N 23 47250 E 37 33500 23 47250CountryGreeceAdministrative regionAtticaRegional unitIslandsGovernment MayorGeorge Koukoudakis Ind Area Municipality64 443 km2 24 882 sq mi Population 2011 1 Municipality1 966 Municipality density31 km2 79 sq mi Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Postal code180 40Area code s 22980Vehicle registrationZThe municipality of Hydra consists of the islands Hydra pop 1 948 area 49 6 km2 19 2 sq mi Dokos pop 18 area 13 5 km2 5 2 sq mi and a few uninhabited islets total area 64 443 km2 24 9 sq mi 4 The province of Hydra Greek Eparxia Ydras was one of the provinces of the Argolis and Corinthia prefecture from 1833 to 1942 Attica prefecture from 1942 to 1964 Piraeus prefecture from 1964 to 1972 and then back to Attica as part of the newly establishment Piraeus prefecture of Attica prefecture Its territory corresponded with that of the current municipality 5 It was abolished in 2006 Today the municipality of Hydra is part of Islands regional unit of Attica region There is one main town known simply as Hydra port pop 1 900 in 2011 It consists of a crescent shaped harbor around which is centered a strand of restaurants shops markets and galleries that cater to tourists and locals Hydriots Steep stone streets lead up and outward from the harbor area Most of the local residences as well as the hostelries on the island are located on these streets Other small villages or hamlets on the island include Mandraki pop 11 Kamini Vlychos 19 Palamidas Episkopi and Molos All wheeled vehicles are not permitted in the island including but not limited cars motorcycles scooters motorbikes bicycles and e bikes Contents 1 Name 2 Transport tourism and leisure 2 1 Captains mansions 2 2 Monasteries and the Cathedral 3 History 3 1 Pre history antiquity Byzantine and Venetian era 3 1 1 Albanian settlement and Arvanite community 3 2 Ottoman era period of commercial and naval strength 3 3 Greek War of Independence 3 4 Modern History 4 Historical population 5 Topography and ecology 6 Climate 7 Municipality of Hydra 8 Cultural life 9 International relations 9 1 Twin towns sister cities 10 Notable people 11 Books about or set on Hydra 12 Films shot on Hydra 13 In popular culture 14 Gallery 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksName EditThe name Hydra comes from ancient Greek ὕdra hydra derived from the Greek word for water a reference to the natural springs on the island 6 The local Arvanite name is attested in two variants the common variant Nydra Nidhra and the rare form Nidhriza or Hydriza 2 In Turkish it is known as Idra and in Ottoman Turkish يدرا Transport tourism and leisure Edit nbsp Clocktower of Hydra islandHydra depends on tourism and Athenians account for a sizable segment of its visitors High speed hydrofoils and catamarans from Piraeus some 37 nautical miles 69 km away serve Hydra stopping first at Poros before going on to Spetses There is a passenger ferry service providing an alternative to hydrofoils that operates between Hydra Harbour to Metochi on the Peloponnese coast Many Athenians drive to Metochi leave their car in the secure car park and take the 20 minute passenger ferry across to Hydra Rubbish trucks are the only motor vehicles on the island since by law cars and motorcycles are not allowed Horses mules and donkeys and water taxis provide public transportation 7 The inhabited area however is so compact that most people walk everywhere Hydra benefits from numerous bays and natural harbours and has a strong maritime culture The island is a popular yachting destination and is the home of the Kamini Yacht Club an international yacht club based in the port of Kamini In 2007 a National Geographic Traveler panel of 522 experts rated Hydra the highest of any Greek island 11th out of 111 islands worldwide as a unique destination preserving its integrity of place 8 Captains mansions Edit The Tsamadou mansion on the left side as one enters the harbour is now a Maritime Academy 9 The Tsamados family donated the mansion for the purpose of hosting the Greek Maritime Academy on their island Another house originally built for the Tsamados family on the hill overlooking the port was donated to the church to be used as a weaving school and production facility of textiles and carpets The house now belongs to the Colloredo Mansfeld family and became known as the Old Carpet Factory 10 The Tombazis mansion is now part of the Athens School of Fine Arts 11 owned by University of Athens 12 The mansions of Lazaros and George Kountouriotis Boudouris Kriezis Voulgaris Sachinis and Miaoulis all contain collections of 18th century island furniture The descendants of Lazarus Kountouriotis donated his mansion to the Historic Ethnologic Institute of Greece Today it operates as an extension branch of the National Museum of History Monasteries and the Cathedral Edit There are numerous churches and six Orthodox monasteries on the island Two particularly noteworthy monasteries are Profitis Ilias founded in the 10th century and Ayia Efpraxia Both are on a hill overlooking the main harbour The island s cathedral is the old Monastery of the Dormition of the Virgin and sits on the quayside in the town The monastery contains the tomb of Lazaros Kountouriotis the richest sea captain on Hydra who gave his entire fortune to support the Greek War of Independence 13 History EditPre history antiquity Byzantine and Venetian era Edit There is evidence of farmers and herders from the second half of the third millennium BCE on the small flat areas that are not visible from the sea Obsidian from Milos has also been found During the Helladic period Hydra probably served as a maritime base for the kingdoms on the Greek peninsula Fragments of vases tools and the head of an idol have been found on Mount Chorissa There is also evidence of Mycenean era aqueducts supplying ships with water The large scale Dorian invasion of Greece around the 12th century BCE appears to have depopulated the island Hydra was repopulated by farmers and herders perhaps sailing from the mainland port of Ermioni in the 8th century BCE Herodotus reports that toward the 6th century BCE the island belonged to Ermioni which sold it to Samos Samos in turn ceded it to Troizina For much of its existence Hydra stayed on the margins of history The population was very small in ancient times and except for the brief mentions in Herodotus and Pausanias left little or no record in the history of those times It is clear that Hydra was populated during the Byzantine era as vases and coins have been discovered in the area of Episkopi However it appears that the island again lost its population during the Latin Empire of Constantinople as its inhabitants fled the pirate depredations On other islands inhabitants moved inland something that was essentially impossible on Hydra Albanian settlement and Arvanite community Edit Among local Arvanites the first account about their settlement was written by Antonis Miaoulis son of admiral Andreas Miaoulis after the end of the Greek war of independence 1830 According to this local narrative the Hydriots descend from the Albanians who directly left Albania as refugees in the 1460s due to persecution by the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II Historiographical research shows that the Albanians didn t settle in Hydra directly from Albania in the 15th century but from the Peloponnese Ermionida due to conflicts in the region with the Venetians and the Ottomans 14 This first Albanian settlement occurred in the early 16th century and likely involved members of the same 1 2 clans 15 That made the island primarily Albanian in ethnic character 16 They created the modern town port and their presence was evident until the mid 20th century when according to T Jochalas the majority of the island s population was composed of immigrants from outside of Peloponnesus 14 page needed In the 16th century the island began to be settled also by refugees from the warfare between the Ottomans and Venetians 17 In the early 18th century a last Arvanite movement from nearby areas settled in the island Arvanitika Albanian was the language spoken by all Hydriotes By the 19th century men had learned to speak Greek too while women and children often didn t speak Greek One of the reasons why Arvanitika was so enduring in Hydra as opposed to other islands which were part of the Albanian Aegean settlements was that the language was spoken and favored by the newly emerging Hydriot urban merchant class 18 Even in the 20th century families of the local magnates like the Koundouriotis spoke Arvanitika in Hydra 19 Hydra was also an island where church liturgy was often held in local Arvanitika which is a rare case as in most Orthodox Albanian communities Greek was the language of liturgy even up to the early 20th century 19 The Arvanite community is still found on the island 20 Nowadays they are fully assimilated Ottoman era period of commercial and naval strength Edit Further information Ottoman Greece nbsp Traditional housesHydra was relatively unimportant during much of the period of Ottoman rule At the end of the sixteenth century there was a wave of migration consisting of big families from the Hellenic and Asia Minor regions to the island Due to the infertile ground the inhabitants turned to the sea 21 Its naval and commercial development began in the 17th century and its first school for mariners was established in 1645 22 Apparently the first truly Hydriot vessel was launched in 1657 However the conflict between the Republic of Venice and the Ottoman Empire limited the island s maritime development until after 1718 and the Treaty of Passarowitz From the 17th century on Hydra began to take on a greater importance because of its trading strength During the first half of the 18th century Hydra built the same kind of vessels as were built in the other Aegean Islands the sachtouri of 15 to 20 tons and the latinadiko of 40 to 50 tons The Hydriots contented themselves with trading in the Aegean going as far as Constantinople A great change occurred in 1757 after they launched a vessel of 250 tons The larger boats enabled Hydra to become an important commercial port By 1771 there were up to 50 vessels from throughout Greece in the roads Ten years later the island had fitted out 100 vessels 23 However the Ottoman Empire and its policies constrained Hydra s economic success Heavy tariffs and taxes limited the speed of development The Ottoman administration limited free trade permitting only Ottoman vessels to navigate the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus and hence to have access to the Black Sea its ports and the trade in grain from their hinterlands The Treaty of Kucuk Kaynarca changed all this Russia gained from the Ottoman Empire the right to protect the Empire s Orthodox Christians The religious protection had a commercial corollary the Hydriots began to sail under the Russian flag The treaty also provided for free passage between the Aegean and the Black Sea Hydra entered its commercial era Hydriot vessels carried goods between Southern Russia in the east and the Italian ports of Ancona and Livorno in the west From 1785 on the Hydriot shippers began to engage in commerce not just transport Each vessel became its own small commercial enterprise and trade with the Levant quickly began to depend on Hydra s vessels though not without competition from those of Spetses and Psara The plague of 1792 killed a large part of the population and many people moved away As a result the town was almost completely abandoned for a while By the end of the 18th century Hydra had again become quite prosperous with its vessels trading as far as France Spain and even the Americas Napoleon presented the island with the huge silver chandelier in the cathedral as a gesture of gratitude for the Hydriots role in running the British blockade and so bringing food to France Greek War of Independence Edit Further information Greek War of Independence Antonis Oikonomou and Andreas Miaoulis nbsp Statue of Andreas Miaoulis admiral during the Greek War of Independence nbsp Antonis Oikonomou starts the revolution in Hydra by Peter von Hess nbsp Flag of Hydra during the Greek War of Independence displaying the Spartan maxim H TAN H EPI TAS In the 19th century Hydra was home to some 125 boats and 10 000 sailors The mansions of the sea captains that ring the harbor are a testament to the prosperity that shipping brought to the island which at the time of the Greek Revolution had 16 000 inhabitants To begin with Hydriots were far from unanimous in joining the Greek War of Independence In April 1821 when Antonis Oikonomou expelled the governor the Ottoman Nikolao Kokovila and proclaimed Hydra s adherence to the independence struggle he met strong opposition from island leaders who were reluctant to lose the relatively privileged position they had under Ottoman rule Oikonomou was imprisoned hounded off the island and eventually his opponents sent assassins to chase and kill him in December 1821 Still Hydra eventually did join the cause of independence and Hydra s contribution of some 150 ships plus supplies to fight against the Turks played a critical role The Greek admiral Andreas Miaoulis himself a settler on Hydra used Hydriot fire ships to inflict heavy losses on the Ottoman fleet Eventually the fleet of Hydra along with those of the other two naval islands of Psara and Spetses were able to wrest control of the eastern Aegean Sea from the Ottoman Empire The Albanian speaking seamen of Hydra and Spetses provided the core of the Greek fleet and leading members of the Greek government among them a one wartime president They in some cases used Albanian with each other to prevent others on their side from reading their correspondence 24 Modern History Edit With the end of the revolution and the creation of the Greek state the island gradually lost its maritime position in the Eastern Mediterranean igniting an economic crisis that led to a period of hardship and unemployment The main reason was that with the creation of the Greek state Hydra s fleet lost the privileges that the Treaty of Kucuk Kaynarca and the use of the Russian flag had given it Another reason was that the traditional families who owned the majority of the fleet failed to foresee the benefits of participating in the steam ship revolution which significantly cut shipping operational costs through reduced crew and independence of the winds putting them at a disadvantage vis a vis the new shipping companies of Piraeus Patras and Syros A third reason was that the new conditions made illegal activities such as piracy impossible Once again many inhabitants abandoned Hydra leaving behind their large mansions and beautiful residences which fell into ruin The mainstay of the island s economy became fishing for sponge This brought prosperity again until 1932 when Egypt forbade fishing along its coast Between 1941 and 1943 during the Axis occupation of Greece during World War II there was famine on Hydra It is estimated that some eight per cent of the population died of starvation By the end of the World War II the Hydriots were again leaving the island many of them went abroad Historical population EditYear Town population Municipality Island population1981 2 732 1991 2 279 2 3872001 2 526 2 7192011 1 900 1 982Topography and ecology Edit nbsp Aerial view nbsp View from the promenade The dominant geographic features of Hydra are its rocky hillsides which are bare pine forested valleys with the occasional farmhouse The island was subject to a modern geologic study by Renz in 1955 Some of the later Permian limestone strata are rich in well preserved fossils There are many types of wildflowers including rare spentzes or cyclamen and poppies As well as pine trees there are cypress and olive trees Birds species include partridges quails and many migratory birds which are subject to local hunting Mammals include rabbits feral cats and goats Although the island s name is derived from ancient springs known to the Ancient Greeks it is now almost dry Hydra previously had wells and three new wells have been found Today the island imports its water by boat from the Greek mainland A new desalinization plant has been finished but is not in operation Many local people store winter rainfall in cisterns beneath their houses to use later as drinking water A fire during the 2007 European heat wave destroyed much of the pine forest to the east of Hydra Port However the fire left untouched some forest above Kamini and at the west end of Hydra The forest around Molos Bisti and Agios Nikolaos was also unaffected Climate EditHydra island has a hot semi arid climate Koppen climate classification BSh with an average annual temperature of around 20 C and an average annual precipitation of less than 400 mm Winters are mild and summers are hot with very high night temperatures 25 26 Municipality of Hydra EditThe municipality of Hydra includes the following islands Name Area PopulationDokos Island 13 5 18Agios Georgios Island 4 3 0Hydra Island 52 1960Trikeri Island and more Islands 2 2 4The total area of the municipality is 72 km2 28 sq mi and its population is 1980 2011 most in Hydra city Cultural life EditThe Miaoulia Festival provides a series of cultural events in the last week in June and commemorates the victory of naval battles led by Admiral Miaouli during the Greek War of Independence The festival culminates with a fictionalised re enactment at sea of the burning of an Ottoman armada followed by a spectacular firework display 27 Hydrama Theatre and Arts Centre showcases free theatre and dance productions during the Hydra Performing Arts Festival every summer 28 29 Hydrama has hosted drama and dance activities for the local community and international visitors since 2001 30 In June 2009 the art collector Dakis Joannou opened the Hydra branch of a private art museum the Deste Foundation to show the work of established young artists 31 In the 1950s and 1960s Hydra was the adopted home of a community of expatriate artists that included celebrated Norwegian novelist Axel Jensen Australian writers Charmian Clift and George Johnston and Canadian singer songwriter Leonard Cohen 32 Cohen wrote several of his better known songs on Hydra including Bird on the Wire and So Long Marianne while living with Jensen s ex wife Marianne Ihlen This period was depicted in the 2019 documentary film Marianne amp Leonard Words of Love and Polly Samson s 2020 novel A Theatre for Dreamers Near Leonard Cohen s house is the Panagiotis Tetsis house which now operates as a museum 33 nbsp Leonard Cohen s house nbsp OverviewThe island used to host an annual conference on Rebetiko a type of Greek urban folk music in mid October citation needed International relations EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Greece and List of islands of Greece Twin towns sister cities Edit The municipality of Hydra is twinned with nbsp Eregli Turkey since 1996 34 nbsp Bayonne France since 2008 35 Notable people Edit nbsp Georgios KountouriotisLaskarina Bouboulina 1771 1825 merchant shipowner naval heroine admiral Brenda Chamberlain artist 1912 1971 Welsh artist and writer Charmian Clift 1923 1969 Australian novelist and writer Leonard Cohen 1934 2016 Canadian singer songwriter poet and novelist who spent his early song writing career on Hydra with his girlfriend Marianne Ihlen Andrea Dimitry 1775 1852 Greek American war hero fought in the War of 1812 Dorotheus 1888 1957 Archbishop of Athens and All Greece Photius Fisk 1809 1890 Greek American abolitionist and U S Navy Chaplain Axel Jensen 1932 2003 Norwegian author George Johnston 1912 1970 Australian journalist novelist and writer Gikas N Koulouras shipowner member of Parliament founded and donated the Historical Museum and Archives of Hydra founder and first President of the Greek Shipowners Association Georgios Kountouriotis 1789 1858 merchant shipowner politician Prime Minister of Greece Lazaros Kountouriotis merchant shipowner The biggest funder of the Greek War of Independence Pavlos Kountouriotis 1855 1935 naval hero admiral and President of Greece Panayotis Koupitoris 1821 1881 writer nbsp Anastasios Tsamados nbsp Bust of Lazaros KountouriotisAntonios Kriezis 1796 1865 merchant shipowner naval hero admiral Prime Minister of Greece Marios Loizides 1928 1988 was a Greek visual artist Michalis Maniatis 1952 film and TV actor producer screen and book writer Andreas Miaoulis 1768 1835 merchant shipowner naval hero admiral Athanasios Miaoulis 1815 1867 Prime Minister of Greece Nikos Nikolaou 1909 1986 artist Georgios Sachtouris shipowner admiral during the Greek war of Independence Georgios Sachinis 1789 1864 merchant shipowner naval hero admiral Stavros Sachinis died in the Battle of Sphacteria 1825 holding off the Egyptian Turkish landing force Panayiotis Tetsis 1925 2016 painter Emmanouil Tombazis merchant shipowner naval hero admiral Iakovos Tombazis 1782 1829 merchant shipowner naval hero admiral nbsp Georgios SachtourisRallou Manou choreographer Anastasios Tsamados 1774 1825 shipowner admiral Greek national hero captain of the brig Aris died heroically in the Battle of Sphacteria 1825 holding off the Egyptian Turkish landing force Goran Tunstrom 1937 2000 Swedish author Lily Venizelos b 1933 conservationist Nikolaos Vokos 1854 1902 painter Elena Votsi b 1964 jewellery designer Nikolaos Votsis 1877 1931 naval hero and admiral Dimitrios Voulgaris 1802 1878 merchant shipowner Prime Minister of Greece Gordon Merrick 1916 1988 author Kristina Colloredo Mansfeld b 1940 artist Ingeborg Beugel b 1960 journalist Irene Kiskakes Veliotes mother of Greek American R amp B singer Johnny Otis and his brother Ambassador Nicholas VeliotesBooks about or set on Hydra EditThe Colossus of Maroussi Henry Miller 1941 Peel Me a Lotus Charmian Clift 1959 The Sea Change Elizabeth Jane Howard 1959 Doctors Wear Scarlet Simon Raven 1960 A Rope of Vines Journal from a Greek Island Brenda Chamberlain 1965 ISBN 9781905762866 The Sleepwalker Margarita Karapanou 1985 Clouds over Hydra Charles Young 1996 Fugitive Pieces Anne Michaels 1996 The Riders Tim Winton 1996 Hydra and the Bananas of Leonard Cohen Roger Green 2003 Rhubarbs from a Rock David Fagan 2003 Hydra Catherine Vanderpool 1980 Le Premier jour Marc Levy 2009 Travels with Epicurus Daniel Klein 2012 Hydra vues privees Private views Catherine Panchout Editions Gourcuff Gradenigo 2015 Island of Cats Hydra Gabriela Staebler Edition Reuss 2015 Beautiful Animals Lawrence Osborne 2017 So Long Marianne a Love Story Kari Hesthamar 2017 Hydra An Island and Its Architecture Michael Loudon 2018 Forth Into Light Gordon Merrick 1974 A Theatre for Dreamers Polly Samson 2020 Half the Perfect World writers dreamers and drifters Paul Genoni and Tanya Dalziell 2018 When We Were Almost Young Hydra through War and Bohemians Helle Goldman editor compiler 2018 De les koybenta Athens Undocumented 36 Makis Malafekas 2018 Films shot on Hydra EditA Girl in Black Greece 1956 Boy on a Dolphin 1957 Hydra was the setting for this Sophia Loren hit movie Phaedra 1962 Island of Love 1963 Incense for the Damned 1970 The Blue Villa Un Bruit Qui Rend Fou 1995 Boat Trip 2002 Fugitive Pieces 2007 The Capsule 2012 Marianne amp Leonard Words of Love 2019 The Trip to Greece 2020 In popular culture EditKing Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard shot their video for Ice V on the island Gallery Edit nbsp View of Hydra nbsp Hydra town and harbour nbsp Hydra view from the west nbsp Panoramic view nbsp The town of Hydra on Hydra island Greece nbsp Andreas Vokos Miaoulis by Peter von Hess nbsp The Epitaphios being carried Good Friday nbsp Snapshot from the seafront nbsp On the left the Museum of Hydra On the right the Tsamados mansion nbsp The Museum of Hydra nbsp Cannons nbsp Bisti Beach Hydra island Greece nbsp Hydra town nbsp StreetReferences Edit a b Apografh Plh8ysmoy Katoikiwn 2011 MONIMOS Plh8ysmos in Greek Hellenic Statistical Authority a b Jochalas Titos 2006 Ydra lhsmonhmenh glwssa Ekdoseis Patake p 81 ISBN 9601621148 Water supply for Hydra Island Greece www hydradirect com Retrieved 2017 03 15 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 Detailed census results 1991 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 03 39 MB in Greek and French Water supply for Hydra Island Greece www hydradirect com Retrieved 2017 03 15 Zikakou Ioanna 9 September 2014 Hydra The Cosmopolitan Greek Island Where No Cars Are Allowed GreekReporter com Retrieved 2017 03 15 Travel traveler nationalgeographic com Archived from the original on 2015 01 08 Retrieved 2014 01 08 Hydra National Merchant Marine Academy www hydra com gr Retrieved 2017 03 15 Loudon Michael 2018 Hydra An Island and Its Architecture Vienna ISBN 978 3 85161 194 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Athens School of Fine Arts GRECT Archived from the original on 2017 03 15 Retrieved 2017 03 15 Tombazis Mansion Hydra s Historic Mansions Hydra Greece Archived from the original on 2019 10 22 Retrieved 2018 09 25 Cathedral of Hydra Inside Hydra Island Greece Hydra News amp Info from Hydra Locals 2010 11 06 Archived from the original on 2017 03 15 Retrieved 2017 03 15 a b 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 Jochalas 2006 p 40 Jelavich Barbara 1983 History of the Balkans Volume 1 Cambridge University Press p 26 Vanderpool Catherine 1980 Hydra Athens Lycabettus Press pp 3 4 Jochalas 2006 p 76 a b Jochalas 2006 p 140 Modern Greece Elaine Cotsirilos Thomopoulos Santa Barbara California 2022 p 4 ISBN 978 1 4408 5492 7 OCLC 1252736820 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Vicky Katsoni Cina van Zyl eds 21 June 2021 Culture and Tourism in a Smart Globalized and Sustainable World 7th International Conference of IACuDiT Hydra Greece 2020 Springer Nature ISBN 978 3 03 072469 6 OCLC 1258664982 Iles grecques Guide Bleu Hachette 1998 p 185 Georgios Voyatis Le Golfe Saronique p 164 Mark Mazower 2021 The Greek Revolution and the Making of Modern Europe Penguin Press p 44 ISBN 9780698163980 On the Greek side there were the Christian Albanian Souliot bands hardened mountain fighters based around clan leaders who gradually became integrated into the national war effort There were also the Albanian speaking seamen of Hydra and Spetses who provided not only the core of the Greek fleet but also leading members of the Greek government including one wartime president who occasionally used Albanian among themselves to prevent others on their own side from reading their correspondence Meteo gr Prognwseis kairoy gia olh thn Ellada Latest Conditions in Hydra Miaoulia Festival in Hydra Hydra Events Greeka To programma twn parastasewn toy Festibal 8eatroy Hydrama Theatre ston Blyxo H Fwnh ths Ydras Hydrama Theatre amp Arts in Vlychos on Hydra Island Greece Velina Hasu Houston Green Tea Girl in Orange Pekoe Country p 7 OCLC 940511969 In Pictures See Jeff Koons s Luxurious Art Offerings to Apollo God of the Sun on the Greek Island of Hydra 5 August 2022 Alex Beam 2014 11 20 From Greece with love Boston Globe Archived from the original on 2015 07 07 Retrieved 2016 08 06 Cohen and Ihlen embarked on a 10 year long love affair shuttle romance that found them in Oslo Montreal and or New York depending on circumstance Cohen jokingly called Ihlen his Greek muse as he launched into a decade of creative fervor culminating in the ultimate breakup song So Long Marianne We met when we were almost young office Tetsis Home amp Studio on Hydra Island www nhmuseum gr Retrieved 2022 07 13 Twinnings PDF Central Union of Municipalities amp Communities of Greece Archived from the original PDF on 2016 01 15 Retrieved 2013 08 25 National Commission for Decentralised cooperation Delegation pour l Action Exterieure des Collectivites Territoriales Ministere des Affaires etrangeres in French Archived from the original on 2013 10 08 Retrieved 2013 12 26 Caucaso Osservatorio Balcani e Malafekas pulp is the genuine product of a country in crisis OBC Transeuropa in Italian Retrieved 2020 10 06 Further reading EditGenoni Paul Dalziell Tanya 2018 Half the Perfect World Writers Dreamers and Drifters on Hydra 1955 1964 Paperback Clayton Australia Monash University Publishing ISBN 9781925523096 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hydra island category nbsp Hydra travel guide from Wikivoyage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hydra island amp oldid 1175454034, 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.