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Ypati

Ypati (Greek: Υπάτη) is a village and a former municipality in Phthiotis, central peninsular Greece. Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality of Lamia, of which it is a municipal unit.[2] The municipal unit has an area of 257.504 km2.[3] In 2021 its population was 3,537 for the municipal unit, and 440 for the settlement of Ypati itself.[1] The town has a long history, being founded at the turn of the 5th/4th century BC as the capital of the Aenianes. During the Roman period the town prospered and was regarded as the chief city of Thessaly, as well as a bishopric. It was probably abandoned in the 7th century as a result of the Slavic invasions, but was re-established by the 9th century as Neopatras. The town became prominent as a metropolitan see and was the capital of the Greek principality of Thessaly in 1268–1318 and of the Catalan Duchy of Neopatras from 1319 to 1391. It was conquered by the Ottomans in the early 15th century and remained under Ottoman rule until the Greek War of Independence.

Ypati
Υπάτη
Ypati
Location within the regional unit
Coordinates: 38°52′N 22°14′E / 38.867°N 22.233°E / 38.867; 22.233
CountryGreece
Administrative regionCentral Greece
Regional unitPhthiotis
MunicipalityLamia
Area
 • Municipal unit257.5 km2 (99.4 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)[1]
 • Municipal unit
3,537
 • Municipal unit density14/km2 (36/sq mi)
 • Community
440
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Vehicle registrationΜΙ

Geography edit

 
View of Ypati from west

Ypati is around 30 km west of Thermopylae and north of the Oiti mountains and Xerisa river, it is also 25 km west of Lamia south of the GR-38 (Lamia - Karpenissi - Agrinio), around 230 km NNW of Athens and about 50 km east of Karpenissi, it overlooks the Spercheios to the north. The geography includes forests and grasslands to the south in higher elevations. Phocis lies to the south. Around 3 km northwest are the famous springs that date to ancient times. It is around a few kilometres from the mountains.

History edit

Antiquity edit

In Antiquity, the city was known as Hypate (Ὑπάτη) or Hypata (Ὑπάτα), probably a corruption of hypo Oita (ὑπὸ Οἴτα, meaning "near the Mount Oeta").

The city was founded in the late 5th/early 4th century BC, as the capital of the Aenianes tribe and their koinon("league, commonwealth").[4][5] In later times it belonged to the Amphictyony of Amphela. Herodotus records the nearby hot springs (now Loutra Ypatis), which were visited in Antiquity. It was also a polis (city-state).[6]

In around 344 BC, the city came under Macedonian rule, which continued, except for a brief interruption during the Lamian War, until the city became a member of the Aetolian League c. 273 BC.[4] As a member of the League, it was ravaged by the Roman general Manius Acilius Glabrio in 191 BC during his advance through Thessaly during the Roman-Seleucid War, and hosted the Aetolian peace negotiations with Roman general Lucius Valerius Flaccus two years later.[7][8] After the conclusion of peace between Roman and the Aetolian League, Hypata remained as the only Aetolian possession north of Oeta.[4] In 168 BC, Rome re-established the koinon of the Aenianes as an autonomous polity, with its own eponymous magistrates and coins; Hypata became again its capital, and entered a period of renewed prosperity.[4][5]

After the Battle of Pydna, from the year 167 BC, the city was independent for a period of about twenty years, until creation of the Aenianian League, a confederation of territories of the Aenianes that was directed by five officials, although in Hypata, the capital, two archons also governed.[9] Aenis, including Hypata, was united with the Thessalian League in the first century BC. Possibly this was done by Augustus following his victory in the Battle of Actium, foundation of Nicopolis, and reorganisation of the Amphictyonic League in 31 BC,[4] but numismatic evidence suggests that it had already occurred before 44 BC.[10] The city remained part of Thessaly thereafter. Under Augustus, the city received the right to refer to itself as "Hypata Augusta," which it continued to do throughout the Roman Imperial period.[10] By the 2nd century AD, it was counted as the most important Thessalian city.[4] The archaeological remains indicate a substantial city.[11]

A local family, who mostly used the names Cyllus and Eubiotus became the league's most prominent family, with members serving as the League's leading magistrate, the general (strategos), until the office was abolished in the mid-second century AD.[10] They also began to participate in wider provincial politics under Domitian, when a Cyllus was manager of the Amphictyonic League at Delphi and received Roman citizenship.[10] In the early second century AD, his son Titus Flavius Eubiotus held the same post, funded the Pythian Games, was high priest of the Imperial cult in Thessaly, and held the post of Helladarch.[10] Another Hypatan of this time, Lucius Cassius Petraeus funded the Pythian Games twice. Both Eubiotus and Petraeus appear as interlocutors in the philosophical dialogues of Plutarch.[10] Hypata joined the Panhellenion, which was established in Athens by Hadrian in 131/2 AD, and Titus Flavius Cyllus, a member of the leading family, funded the Great Penhellenic games organised by the Panhellenion and was the archon of the Panhellenion for AD 153-157.[10][12] In The Golden Ass, Apuleius presents the area of Hypata as being infested with bandits at this time and a poem written at this time by Ammianus, which mocks Cyllus as a "spear-moron", might indicate that he had undertaken unsuccessful expeditions to suppress this problem.[10] A daughter of the family, Flavia Habroea, who may have a cameo at the beginning of Lucian's Lucius or the Ass, married Marcus Ulpius Leurus, a fellow Thessalian and a Roman consul.[10] Their son Marcus Ulpius Eubiotus Leurus was a consul in the 220s and a major benefactor at Athens around 230. He seems to have been related to Emperor Pupienus in some way.[10]

Byzantine, Latin and Ottoman rule edit

 
Coat of arms of the Duchy of Neopatras

The city is still mentioned in the 6th century under its ancient name by Procopius, who recorded repairs to its walls by Emperor Justinian I, and in the Synecdemus.[13][14]

The city was probably abandoned after the Slavic invasions of the 7th century, but reappears in the 9th century under the name Neai Patrai (Νέαι Πάτραι, "New Patras") or Patrai Helladikai (Πάτραι Ἑλλαδικαὶ, "Patras in Hellas").[13][14] Nicephorus Gregoras, writing in the 14th century, mentions it as being a strongly fortified place in the 12th century.[15] Otherwise, until the 13th century, the city is mentioned only as an ecclesiastical centre (see below).

Coming briefly under Latin rule after the Fourth Crusade, the city was recovered by the ruler of Epirus, Theodore Komnenos Doukas, in 1218. It remained in Epirote hands thereafter, except for a brief period when it was occupied by Nicaean troops after the Battle of Pelagonia in 1259.[13] After c. 1268 it became the capital of the independent principality of Thessaly under John I Doukas and his successors, until the death of John II Doukas in 1318.[13] The Catalan Company seized the city in 1319 and made it the centre of the new Duchy of Neopatras, which was joined with the recently conquered Duchy of Athens to the south. Neopatras was one of the last remaining Catalan possessions in Greece, being captured by Nerio Acciaioli in 1391. Three years later it fell to the Ottoman Turks under Bayezid I.[13][14] The Turks were evicted for a time, in 1402, by Theodore Palaiologos, Despot of the Morea. The Turks recovered it in 1414, the Byzantines again in 1416, until it was definitively conquered by the Ottomans in 1423. Under Ottoman rule, the city became known as Patracık ("Little Patras"), rendered in Greek as Patratziki (Πατρατζίκι).[16]

Early 19th-century sources report that the town was the centre of a kaza (district) in the Sanjak of Inebahti of the Morea Eyalet.[17]

Revolutionary period edit

In the Greek War of Independence, Ypati (Patratziki) was the scene of three battles :

  • On 18 April 1821, when the Turkish-held town was attacked by the Greek rebels under Mitsos Kondogiannis, Dyovouniotis, Athanasios Diakos and Bakogiannis. The garrison was defeated and negotiations for its surrender began, but the arrival of a large Turkish relief army forced the rebels to withdraw.[16]
  • In May 1821, the Greek commanders Yannis Gouras, Skaltsodimos and Safakas intended to attack the town in order to halt the Ottoman advance towards Livadeia. Their forces however were attacked first, and although they beat back the Turkish assault, the plans to take the town were dropped.[16]
  • On 2 April 1822, when the town itself was finally taken by the forces of the captains Kondogiannis, Panourgias, Skaltsas and Safakas. The castle, however, with its 1,500-strong garrison, held out. A final attack against it was successful, evicting the garrison, but again the revolutionaries had to withdraw due to the arrival of Ottoman reinforcements from Lamia.[16]

Ypati finally joined Greece in 1830 and revived its ancient name. The municipality of Ypati was founded on January 10, 1834.[citation needed]

Modern era edit

The town suffered during the Axis occupation: 15 inhabitants were shot as reprisals for the Gorgopotamos sabotage in 1942.[citation needed]

The worst blow came on 17 June 1944, when the Germans surrounded the town as part of reprisals for attacks by EAM-ELAS partisans based in the region. They executed 28 people, wounded another 30, and burned down 375 out of the town's 400 buildings. A memorial in the town centre commemorates the event and Ypati has been declared a "martyr city" by the Greek state.[18]

Ecclesiastical history edit

The Greek menologium commemorates, on 28 March, Saint Herodion, traditionally held to be one of 70 disciples mentioned in the Gospel (whom the Apostle Paul of Tarsus calls a relative in Epistle to the Romans, ch.16, v.11) as first bishop of Neopatras.[citation needed]

The city is historically attested as an episcopal see from the 3rd century on.[4][13] Initially it was a suffragan of the Metropolis of Larissa, in the sway of the Patriarchate of Constantinople. Its first historically documented bishop was Leo, participant at the Council of Costantinople of 879-880 which rehabilitated Patriarch Photios I of Constantinople.[19]

It was raised to a metropolitan bishopric ca. 900, listed in the Notitia Episcopatuum attributed to the Byzantine emperor Leo VI (r. 886–912), as the penultimate metropolitan see under the Patriarchate of Constantinople with one suffragan see, the Diocese of Marmaritzana.[19][20] A 10th-century seal holds the name of archbishop Cosmas,[21] while the Metropolitan Nicholas signed a synodal decree from Patriarch Sisinius II of Constantinople around 997.[19]

Until the 13th century, the city is most notable as an ecclesiastical centre. In the 12th century it had three suffragans: Marmaritzana (again) plus Diocese of Hagia and Diocese of Bela, but in the 13th century, it was reduced again to Marmaritzana alone, before ceding this too to the Archdiocese of Lamia (Zetounion), probably after 1318.[13] At the turn of the 13th century, its bishop, Euthymios Malakes, was a correspondent of the metropolitan of Athens, Michael Choniates.[13][19]

After the Fourth Crusade, the city was made a Latin rite archdiocese, the Latin Archbishopric of Neopatras. The see was suppressed after the Greek reconquest, but restored when the Catalans established the Duchy of Neopatras in 1319, and remained active until the Ottoman conquest at the turn of the 15th century. In 1933, it was restored as a Catholic titular see.[citation needed]

Administrative subdivisions edit

The municipal unit of Ypati is subdivided into the following communities (constituent villages in brackets) :[2]

  • Argyrochori
  • Dafni
  • Kastanea (Kastanea, Kapnochori)
  • Kompotades
  • Ladikou
  • Loutra Ypatis (Loutra Ypatis, Varka, Magoula, Nea Ypati)
  • Lychno (Lychno, Alonia)
  • Mexiates
  • Mesochori Ypatis
  • Neochori Ypatis
  • Peristeri
  • Pyrgos
  • Rodonia (Rodonia, Karya)
  • Syka Ypatis
  • Vasiliki
  • Ypati (Ypati, Amalota)

Population edit

Year Village Community Municipality
(after 2011 Mun. Unit)
1991 929 6,795
2001 724 849 6,855
2011 496 552 4,541
2021 - 440 3,537

Archaeology edit

When visited by William Martin Leake in the 19th century, there are still considerable remains of the ancient town. He observed many large quadrangular blocks of stones and foundations of ancient walls on the heights, as well as in the buildings of the town. In the metropolitan church he noticed a handsome shaft of white marble, and on the outside of the wall an inscription in small characters of the best times. He also discovered an inscription on a broken block of white marble, lying under a plane-tree near a fountain in the Jewish cemetery.[22][23]

Monuments and sights edit

 
The Byzantine Museum of Phthiotis

The town is still dominated by its medieval castle, probably built in its present form in the 13th century, although the large round tower likely dates to the Catalan period. The castle's last military use was during the Greek Civil War.[24][25] The castle was restored in 2011–15 with EU funds under the supervision of the 24th Ephorate of Byzantine Antiquities and is open to the public from 19 December 2015.[25][26]

The Byzantine Museum of Phthiotis, housed in an old barracks building erected in 1836 and open to the public since 2007,[27] features Byzantine artifacts discovered in archaeological digs across the Phthiotis Prefecture, including mosaics and items of daily use, as well as a significant coin collection.[28] The town features also the Byzantine-era Church of Hagia Sophia, built on the site of an older, early Christian church. The church masonry incorporates many pieces of spolia from the early and middle Byzantine periods, as well as the post-Byzantine era. At the southern side, archaeologists have discovered remnants of a 5th-century baptistery.[24] The town's old cathedral church, dedicated to Saint Nicholas, dates to the 18th century, but portions of a mosaic floor and reused architectural elements point to the existence, on the same location, of an early Christian basilica.[29]

Notable sights are also the "Kakogianneio" Astronomical School and planetarium,[30] the traditional water mill at the waterfall near the entrance of the town,[31] and the martyrs' monument at the central town square, dedicated to the people executed by the Germans on 17 June 1944.[18] Due to the proximity of Oeta, Ypati has also become a centre for excursions to the mountain, and is the starting point of several trekking paths.[32]

The 15th-century Agathonos Monastery is located some 3 km west of the town.[33][34] The monastery also houses the Oiti Natural History Museum, dedicated to the geology, climate, flora and fauna of Mount Oeta and its national park.[35]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Αποτελέσματα Απογραφής Πληθυσμού - Κατοικιών 2021, Μόνιμος Πληθυσμός κατά οικισμό" [Results of the 2021 Population - Housing Census, Permanent population by settlement] (in Greek). Hellenic Statistical Authority. 29 March 2024.
  2. ^ a b "ΦΕΚ B 1292/2010, Kallikratis reform municipalities" (in Greek). Government Gazette.
  3. ^ "Population & housing census 2001 (incl. area and average elevation)" (PDF) (in Greek). National Statistical Service of Greece.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Kramolisch, Herwig (October 2006). "Hypata". Brill's New Pauly. Brill Online, 2015. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  5. ^ a b Kramolisch, Herwig (October 2006). "Aenianes". Brill's New Pauly. Brill Online, 2015. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  6. ^ Mogens Herman Hansen & Thomas Heine Nielsen (2004). "Thessaly and Adjacent Regions". An inventory of archaic and classical poleis. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 708. ISBN 0-19-814099-1.
  7. ^ Livy. Ab urbe condita Libri [History of Rome]. Vol. 36.27-29.
  8. ^ Polybius. The Histories. Vol. 20.9-11.
  9. ^ Jorge Martínez de Tejada Garaizábal, Instituciones, sociedad, religión y léxico de Tesalia de la antigüedad desde la época de la independencia hasta el fin de la edad antigua (siglos VIII AC-V DC), pp.237,432.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sekunda, Nicholas V. (1997). "The Kylloi and Eubiotoi of Hypata during the Imperial Period". Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik. 118: 207–226. ISSN 0084-5388.
  11. ^ Rozaki, Stavroula (1983). AAA: Arbeiten aus Anglistik und Amerikanistik. 16: 132–142. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  12. ^ Benjamin, Anna S. (1968). "Two Dedications in Athens to Archons of the Panhellenion". Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. 37 (3): 341–344. doi:10.2307/147601. ISSN 0018-098X. JSTOR 147601.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Koder, Johannes; Hild, Friedrich (1976). Tabula Imperii Byzantini, Band 1: Hellas und Thessalia (in German). Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. pp. 223–224. ISBN 978-3-7001-0182-6.
  14. ^ a b c Gregory, Timothy E. (1991). "Neopatras". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. p. 1454. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  15. ^ Nicephorus Gregoras, 4.9. p. 112, ed. Bonn.
  16. ^ a b c d Τουρκοκρατία - Επανάσταση (in Greek), Municipality of Ypati, retrieved 21 May 2010
  17. ^ "Reisen ins Osmanische Reich". Jahrbücher der Literatur (in German). 49–50. Vienna: C. Gerold: 22. 1830.
  18. ^ a b "Μνημείο μαρτυρικής πόλης Υπάτης" (in Greek). Municipality of Lamia. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  19. ^ a b c d Le Quien, Michel (1740). "Ecclesia Hypatorum; Ecclesia Novarum Patrarum". Oriens Christianus, in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus: quo exhibentur ecclesiæ, patriarchæ, cæterique præsules totius Orientis. Tomus secundus, in quo Illyricum Orientale ad Patriarchatum Constantinopolitanum pertinens, Patriarchatus Alexandrinus & Antiochenus, magnæque Chaldæorum & Jacobitarum Diœceses exponuntur (in Latin). Paris: Ex Typographia Regia. cols. 119–120, 123–126. OCLC 955922747.
  20. ^ Heinrich Gelzer, Ungedruckte und ungenügend veröffentlichte Texte der Notitiae episcopatuum, in: Abhandlungen der philosophisch-historische classe der bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1901, p. 559, nnº 665-666. Le Quien erroneously considered it a suffragan of Euchaita (in Pontus).
  21. ^ Gustave Léon Schlumberger, Sigillographie de l'empire byzantin, 1884, p. 176
  22. ^ William Martin Leake, Northern Greece, vol. ii, p. 14 et seq.
  23. ^   Smith, William, ed. (1854–1857). "Hypata". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: John Murray.
  24. ^ a b "Παλαιό Κάστρο και Βυζαντινός Ναός Αγίας Σοφίας" (in Greek). Municipality of Lamia. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  25. ^ a b "Αποκατάσταση και ανάδειξη Μεσαιωνικού Κάστρου Υπάτης" (in Greek). Municipality of Lamia. 16 December 2015. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  26. ^ "Επισκέψιμο και πάλι το Μεσαιωνικό Κάστρο Υπάτης" (in Greek). in.gr. 17 December 2015. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  27. ^ Georgios Pallis. "Βυζαντινό Μουσείο Φθιώτιδας: Ιστορικό" (in Greek). Greek Ministry of Culture. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  28. ^ Georgios Pallis. "Βυζαντινό Μουσείο Φθιώτιδας: Περιγραφή" (in Greek). Greek Ministry of Culture. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  29. ^ "Ναός Αγίου Νικολάου και ψηφιδωτό" (in Greek). Municipality of Lamia. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  30. ^ ""Κακογιάννειο" Αστεροσχολείο Υπάτης" (in Greek). Municipality of Lamia. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  31. ^ "Καταρράκτης και Νερόμυλος Υπάτης" (in Greek). Municipality of Lamia. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  32. ^ "Ορειβατικά Μονοπάτια Υπάτης" (in Greek). Municipality of Lamia. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  33. ^ Koder, Johannes; Hild, Friedrich (1976). Tabula Imperii Byzantini, Band 1: Hellas und Thessalia (in German). Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. pp. 117–118. ISBN 3-7001-0182-1.
  34. ^ Vasiliki Sythiakaki. "Μονή Αγάθωνος: Περιγραφή" (in Greek). Greek Ministry of Culture. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  35. ^ "Μουσείο Φυσικής Ιστορίας Οίτης" (in Greek). Municipality of Lamia. Retrieved 17 December 2015.

Sources and external links edit

  • Official Website
  • GCatholic - (former and) titular Catholic see
Bibliography - ecclesiastical history
  • Pius Bonifacius Gams, Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae, Leipzig 1931, p. 429
  • Michel Lequien, Oriens christianus in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus, Paris 1740, Vol. II, coll. 123-126
  • Gaetano Moroni, lemma 'Patrasso o Neopatra o Nova Patrasso', in Dizionario di erudizione storico-ecclesiastica, vol. LI, Venice 1851, p. 291
  • Konrad Eubel, Hierarchia Catholica Medii Aevi, vol. 1, p. 362; vol. 2, p. XXXII

ypati, muse, hypate, neai, patrai, redirects, here, ancient, city, thessaly, metropolis, thessaly, hypata, redirects, here, moth, hypata, moderatella, greek, Υπάτη, village, former, municipality, phthiotis, central, peninsular, greece, since, 2011, local, gove. For the muse see Hypate Neai Patrai redirects here For the ancient city of Thessaly see Metropolis Thessaly Hypata redirects here For the moth see Hypata moderatella Ypati Greek Ypath is a village and a former municipality in Phthiotis central peninsular Greece Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality of Lamia of which it is a municipal unit 2 The municipal unit has an area of 257 504 km2 3 In 2021 its population was 3 537 for the municipal unit and 440 for the settlement of Ypati itself 1 The town has a long history being founded at the turn of the 5th 4th century BC as the capital of the Aenianes During the Roman period the town prospered and was regarded as the chief city of Thessaly as well as a bishopric It was probably abandoned in the 7th century as a result of the Slavic invasions but was re established by the 9th century as Neopatras The town became prominent as a metropolitan see and was the capital of the Greek principality of Thessaly in 1268 1318 and of the Catalan Duchy of Neopatras from 1319 to 1391 It was conquered by the Ottomans in the early 15th century and remained under Ottoman rule until the Greek War of Independence Ypati YpathMunicipal unitYpatiLocation within the regional unitCoordinates 38 52 N 22 14 E 38 867 N 22 233 E 38 867 22 233CountryGreeceAdministrative regionCentral GreeceRegional unitPhthiotisMunicipalityLamiaArea Municipal unit257 5 km2 99 4 sq mi Population 2021 1 Municipal unit3 537 Municipal unit density14 km2 36 sq mi Community440Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Vehicle registrationMI Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2 1 Antiquity 2 2 Byzantine Latin and Ottoman rule 2 3 Revolutionary period 2 4 Modern era 3 Ecclesiastical history 4 Administrative subdivisions 5 Population 6 Archaeology 7 Monuments and sights 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources and external linksGeography edit nbsp View of Ypati from westYpati is around 30 km west of Thermopylae and north of the Oiti mountains and Xerisa river it is also 25 km west of Lamia south of the GR 38 Lamia Karpenissi Agrinio around 230 km NNW of Athens and about 50 km east of Karpenissi it overlooks the Spercheios to the north The geography includes forests and grasslands to the south in higher elevations Phocis lies to the south Around 3 km northwest are the famous springs that date to ancient times It is around a few kilometres from the mountains History editAntiquity edit In Antiquity the city was known as Hypate Ὑpath or Hypata Ὑpata probably a corruption of hypo Oita ὑpὸ Oἴta meaning near the Mount Oeta The city was founded in the late 5th early 4th century BC as the capital of the Aenianes tribe and their koinon league commonwealth 4 5 In later times it belonged to the Amphictyony of Amphela Herodotus records the nearby hot springs now Loutra Ypatis which were visited in Antiquity It was also a polis city state 6 In around 344 BC the city came under Macedonian rule which continued except for a brief interruption during the Lamian War until the city became a member of the Aetolian League c 273 BC 4 As a member of the League it was ravaged by the Roman general Manius Acilius Glabrio in 191 BC during his advance through Thessaly during the Roman Seleucid War and hosted the Aetolian peace negotiations with Roman general Lucius Valerius Flaccus two years later 7 8 After the conclusion of peace between Roman and the Aetolian League Hypata remained as the only Aetolian possession north of Oeta 4 In 168 BC Rome re established the koinon of the Aenianes as an autonomous polity with its own eponymous magistrates and coins Hypata became again its capital and entered a period of renewed prosperity 4 5 After the Battle of Pydna from the year 167 BC the city was independent for a period of about twenty years until creation of the Aenianian League a confederation of territories of the Aenianes that was directed by five officials although in Hypata the capital two archons also governed 9 Aenis including Hypata was united with the Thessalian League in the first century BC Possibly this was done by Augustus following his victory in the Battle of Actium foundation of Nicopolis and reorganisation of the Amphictyonic League in 31 BC 4 but numismatic evidence suggests that it had already occurred before 44 BC 10 The city remained part of Thessaly thereafter Under Augustus the city received the right to refer to itself as Hypata Augusta which it continued to do throughout the Roman Imperial period 10 By the 2nd century AD it was counted as the most important Thessalian city 4 The archaeological remains indicate a substantial city 11 A local family who mostly used the names Cyllus and Eubiotus became the league s most prominent family with members serving as the League s leading magistrate the general strategos until the office was abolished in the mid second century AD 10 They also began to participate in wider provincial politics under Domitian when a Cyllus was manager of the Amphictyonic League at Delphi and received Roman citizenship 10 In the early second century AD his son Titus Flavius Eubiotus held the same post funded the Pythian Games was high priest of the Imperial cult in Thessaly and held the post of Helladarch 10 Another Hypatan of this time Lucius Cassius Petraeus funded the Pythian Games twice Both Eubiotus and Petraeus appear as interlocutors in the philosophical dialogues of Plutarch 10 Hypata joined the Panhellenion which was established in Athens by Hadrian in 131 2 AD and Titus Flavius Cyllus a member of the leading family funded the Great Penhellenic games organised by the Panhellenion and was the archon of the Panhellenion for AD 153 157 10 12 In The Golden Ass Apuleius presents the area of Hypata as being infested with bandits at this time and a poem written at this time by Ammianus which mocks Cyllus as a spear moron might indicate that he had undertaken unsuccessful expeditions to suppress this problem 10 A daughter of the family Flavia Habroea who may have a cameo at the beginning of Lucian s Lucius or the Ass married Marcus Ulpius Leurus a fellow Thessalian and a Roman consul 10 Their son Marcus Ulpius Eubiotus Leurus was a consul in the 220s and a major benefactor at Athens around 230 He seems to have been related to Emperor Pupienus in some way 10 Byzantine Latin and Ottoman rule edit nbsp Coat of arms of the Duchy of Neopatras The city is still mentioned in the 6th century under its ancient name by Procopius who recorded repairs to its walls by Emperor Justinian I and in the Synecdemus 13 14 The city was probably abandoned after the Slavic invasions of the 7th century but reappears in the 9th century under the name Neai Patrai Neai Patrai New Patras or Patrai Helladikai Patrai Ἑlladikaὶ Patras in Hellas 13 14 Nicephorus Gregoras writing in the 14th century mentions it as being a strongly fortified place in the 12th century 15 Otherwise until the 13th century the city is mentioned only as an ecclesiastical centre see below Coming briefly under Latin rule after the Fourth Crusade the city was recovered by the ruler of Epirus Theodore Komnenos Doukas in 1218 It remained in Epirote hands thereafter except for a brief period when it was occupied by Nicaean troops after the Battle of Pelagonia in 1259 13 After c 1268 it became the capital of the independent principality of Thessaly under John I Doukas and his successors until the death of John II Doukas in 1318 13 The Catalan Company seized the city in 1319 and made it the centre of the new Duchy of Neopatras which was joined with the recently conquered Duchy of Athens to the south Neopatras was one of the last remaining Catalan possessions in Greece being captured by Nerio Acciaioli in 1391 Three years later it fell to the Ottoman Turks under Bayezid I 13 14 The Turks were evicted for a time in 1402 by Theodore Palaiologos Despot of the Morea The Turks recovered it in 1414 the Byzantines again in 1416 until it was definitively conquered by the Ottomans in 1423 Under Ottoman rule the city became known as Patracik Little Patras rendered in Greek as Patratziki Patratziki 16 Early 19th century sources report that the town was the centre of a kaza district in the Sanjak of Inebahti of the Morea Eyalet 17 Revolutionary period edit In the Greek War of Independence Ypati Patratziki was the scene of three battles On 18 April 1821 when the Turkish held town was attacked by the Greek rebels under Mitsos Kondogiannis Dyovouniotis Athanasios Diakos and Bakogiannis The garrison was defeated and negotiations for its surrender began but the arrival of a large Turkish relief army forced the rebels to withdraw 16 In May 1821 the Greek commanders Yannis Gouras Skaltsodimos and Safakas intended to attack the town in order to halt the Ottoman advance towards Livadeia Their forces however were attacked first and although they beat back the Turkish assault the plans to take the town were dropped 16 On 2 April 1822 when the town itself was finally taken by the forces of the captains Kondogiannis Panourgias Skaltsas and Safakas The castle however with its 1 500 strong garrison held out A final attack against it was successful evicting the garrison but again the revolutionaries had to withdraw due to the arrival of Ottoman reinforcements from Lamia 16 Ypati finally joined Greece in 1830 and revived its ancient name The municipality of Ypati was founded on January 10 1834 citation needed Modern era edit The town suffered during the Axis occupation 15 inhabitants were shot as reprisals for the Gorgopotamos sabotage in 1942 citation needed The worst blow came on 17 June 1944 when the Germans surrounded the town as part of reprisals for attacks by EAM ELAS partisans based in the region They executed 28 people wounded another 30 and burned down 375 out of the town s 400 buildings A memorial in the town centre commemorates the event and Ypati has been declared a martyr city by the Greek state 18 Ecclesiastical history editThe Greek menologium commemorates on 28 March Saint Herodion traditionally held to be one of 70 disciples mentioned in the Gospel whom the Apostle Paul of Tarsus calls a relative in Epistle to the Romans ch 16 v 11 as first bishop of Neopatras citation needed The city is historically attested as an episcopal see from the 3rd century on 4 13 Initially it was a suffragan of the Metropolis of Larissa in the sway of the Patriarchate of Constantinople Its first historically documented bishop was Leo participant at the Council of Costantinople of 879 880 which rehabilitated Patriarch Photios I of Constantinople 19 It was raised to a metropolitan bishopric ca 900 listed in the Notitia Episcopatuum attributed to the Byzantine emperor Leo VI r 886 912 as the penultimate metropolitan see under the Patriarchate of Constantinople with one suffragan see the Diocese of Marmaritzana 19 20 A 10th century seal holds the name of archbishop Cosmas 21 while the Metropolitan Nicholas signed a synodal decree from Patriarch Sisinius II of Constantinople around 997 19 Until the 13th century the city is most notable as an ecclesiastical centre In the 12th century it had three suffragans Marmaritzana again plus Diocese of Hagia and Diocese of Bela but in the 13th century it was reduced again to Marmaritzana alone before ceding this too to the Archdiocese of Lamia Zetounion probably after 1318 13 At the turn of the 13th century its bishop Euthymios Malakes was a correspondent of the metropolitan of Athens Michael Choniates 13 19 After the Fourth Crusade the city was made a Latin rite archdiocese the Latin Archbishopric of Neopatras The see was suppressed after the Greek reconquest but restored when the Catalans established the Duchy of Neopatras in 1319 and remained active until the Ottoman conquest at the turn of the 15th century In 1933 it was restored as a Catholic titular see citation needed Administrative subdivisions editThe municipal unit of Ypati is subdivided into the following communities constituent villages in brackets 2 Argyrochori Dafni Kastanea Kastanea Kapnochori Kompotades Ladikou Loutra Ypatis Loutra Ypatis Varka Magoula Nea Ypati Lychno Lychno Alonia Mexiates Mesochori Ypatis Neochori Ypatis Peristeri Pyrgos Rodonia Rodonia Karya Syka Ypatis Vasiliki Ypati Ypati Amalota Population editYear Village Community Municipality after 2011 Mun Unit 1991 929 6 795 2001 724 849 6 855 2011 496 552 4 541 2021 440 3 537Archaeology editWhen visited by William Martin Leake in the 19th century there are still considerable remains of the ancient town He observed many large quadrangular blocks of stones and foundations of ancient walls on the heights as well as in the buildings of the town In the metropolitan church he noticed a handsome shaft of white marble and on the outside of the wall an inscription in small characters of the best times He also discovered an inscription on a broken block of white marble lying under a plane tree near a fountain in the Jewish cemetery 22 23 Monuments and sights edit nbsp The Byzantine Museum of Phthiotis The town is still dominated by its medieval castle probably built in its present form in the 13th century although the large round tower likely dates to the Catalan period The castle s last military use was during the Greek Civil War 24 25 The castle was restored in 2011 15 with EU funds under the supervision of the 24th Ephorate of Byzantine Antiquities and is open to the public from 19 December 2015 25 26 The Byzantine Museum of Phthiotis housed in an old barracks building erected in 1836 and open to the public since 2007 27 features Byzantine artifacts discovered in archaeological digs across the Phthiotis Prefecture including mosaics and items of daily use as well as a significant coin collection 28 The town features also the Byzantine era Church of Hagia Sophia built on the site of an older early Christian church The church masonry incorporates many pieces of spolia from the early and middle Byzantine periods as well as the post Byzantine era At the southern side archaeologists have discovered remnants of a 5th century baptistery 24 The town s old cathedral church dedicated to Saint Nicholas dates to the 18th century but portions of a mosaic floor and reused architectural elements point to the existence on the same location of an early Christian basilica 29 Notable sights are also the Kakogianneio Astronomical School and planetarium 30 the traditional water mill at the waterfall near the entrance of the town 31 and the martyrs monument at the central town square dedicated to the people executed by the Germans on 17 June 1944 18 Due to the proximity of Oeta Ypati has also become a centre for excursions to the mountain and is the starting point of several trekking paths 32 The 15th century Agathonos Monastery is located some 3 km west of the town 33 34 The monastery also houses the Oiti Natural History Museum dedicated to the geology climate flora and fauna of Mount Oeta and its national park 35 See also editList of Catholic dioceses in GreeceReferences edit a b Apotelesmata Apografhs Plh8ysmoy Katoikiwn 2021 Monimos Plh8ysmos kata oikismo Results of the 2021 Population Housing Census Permanent population by settlement in Greek Hellenic Statistical Authority 29 March 2024 a b FEK B 1292 2010 Kallikratis reform municipalities in Greek Government Gazette Population amp housing census 2001 incl area and average elevation PDF in Greek National Statistical Service of Greece a b c d e f g Kramolisch Herwig October 2006 Hypata Brill s New Pauly Brill Online 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 a b Kramolisch Herwig October 2006 Aenianes Brill s New Pauly Brill Online 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Mogens Herman Hansen amp Thomas Heine Nielsen 2004 Thessaly and Adjacent Regions An inventory of archaic and classical poleis New York Oxford University Press p 708 ISBN 0 19 814099 1 Livy Ab urbe condita Libri History of Rome Vol 36 27 29 Polybius The Histories Vol 20 9 11 Jorge Martinez de Tejada Garaizabal Instituciones sociedad religion y lexico de Tesalia de la antiguedad desde la epoca de la independencia hasta el fin de la edad antigua siglos VIII AC V DC pp 237 432 a b c d e f g h i j Sekunda Nicholas V 1997 The Kylloi and Eubiotoi of Hypata during the Imperial Period Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik 118 207 226 ISSN 0084 5388 Rozaki Stavroula 1983 AAA Arbeiten aus Anglistik und Amerikanistik 16 132 142 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help Benjamin Anna S 1968 Two Dedications in Athens to Archons of the Panhellenion Hesperia The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens 37 3 341 344 doi 10 2307 147601 ISSN 0018 098X JSTOR 147601 a b c d e f g h Koder Johannes Hild Friedrich 1976 Tabula Imperii Byzantini Band 1 Hellas und Thessalia in German Vienna Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften pp 223 224 ISBN 978 3 7001 0182 6 a b c Gregory Timothy E 1991 Neopatras In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press p 1454 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Nicephorus Gregoras 4 9 p 112 ed Bonn a b c d Toyrkokratia Epanastash in Greek Municipality of Ypati retrieved 21 May 2010 Reisen ins Osmanische Reich Jahrbucher der Literatur in German 49 50 Vienna C Gerold 22 1830 a b Mnhmeio martyrikhs polhs Ypaths in Greek Municipality of Lamia Retrieved 17 December 2015 a b c d Le Quien Michel 1740 Ecclesia Hypatorum Ecclesia Novarum Patrarum Oriens Christianus in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus quo exhibentur ecclesiae patriarchae caeterique praesules totius Orientis Tomus secundus in quo Illyricum Orientale ad Patriarchatum Constantinopolitanum pertinens Patriarchatus Alexandrinus amp Antiochenus magnaeque Chaldaeorum amp Jacobitarum Diœceses exponuntur in Latin Paris Ex Typographia Regia cols 119 120 123 126 OCLC 955922747 Heinrich Gelzer Ungedruckte und ungenugend veroffentlichte Texte der Notitiae episcopatuum in Abhandlungen der philosophisch historische classe der bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften 1901 p 559 nnº 665 666 Le Quien erroneously considered it a suffragan of Euchaita in Pontus Gustave Leon Schlumberger Sigillographie de l empire byzantin 1884 p 176 William Martin Leake Northern Greece vol ii p 14 et seq nbsp Smith William ed 1854 1857 Hypata Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography London John Murray a b Palaio Kastro kai Byzantinos Naos Agias Sofias in Greek Municipality of Lamia Retrieved 17 December 2015 a b Apokatastash kai anadei3h Mesaiwnikoy Kastroy Ypaths in Greek Municipality of Lamia 16 December 2015 Retrieved 17 December 2015 Episkepsimo kai pali to Mesaiwniko Kastro Ypaths in Greek in gr 17 December 2015 Retrieved 17 December 2015 Georgios Pallis Byzantino Moyseio F8iwtidas Istoriko in Greek Greek Ministry of Culture Retrieved 17 December 2015 Georgios Pallis Byzantino Moyseio F8iwtidas Perigrafh in Greek Greek Ministry of Culture Retrieved 17 December 2015 Naos Agioy Nikolaoy kai pshfidwto in Greek Municipality of Lamia Retrieved 17 December 2015 Kakogianneio Asterosxoleio Ypaths in Greek Municipality of Lamia Retrieved 17 December 2015 Katarrakths kai Neromylos Ypaths in Greek Municipality of Lamia Retrieved 17 December 2015 Oreibatika Monopatia Ypaths in Greek Municipality of Lamia Retrieved 17 December 2015 Koder Johannes Hild Friedrich 1976 Tabula Imperii Byzantini Band 1 Hellas und Thessalia in German Vienna Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften pp 117 118 ISBN 3 7001 0182 1 Vasiliki Sythiakaki Monh Aga8wnos Perigrafh in Greek Greek Ministry of Culture Retrieved 19 September 2015 Moyseio Fysikhs Istorias Oiths in Greek Municipality of Lamia Retrieved 17 December 2015 Sources and external links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ypati Official Website GCatholic former and titular Catholic see Bibliography ecclesiastical history Pius Bonifacius Gams Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae Leipzig 1931 p 429 Michel Lequien Oriens christianus in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus Paris 1740 Vol II coll 123 126 Gaetano Moroni lemma Patrasso o Neopatra o Nova Patrasso in Dizionario di erudizione storico ecclesiastica vol LI Venice 1851 p 291 Konrad Eubel Hierarchia Catholica Medii Aevi vol 1 p 362 vol 2 p XXXII Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ypati amp oldid 1222615309, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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