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Chios

Chios (/ˈk.ɒs, ˈk.s, ˈk-/; Greek: Χίος, romanizedChíos [ˈçi.os] , traditionally known as Scio in English) is the fifth largest Greek island, situated in the northern Aegean Sea, and the tenth largest island in the Mediterranean Sea. The island is separated from Turkey by the Chios Strait. Chios is notable for its exports of mastic gum and its nickname is "the Mastic Island". Tourist attractions include its medieval villages and the 11th-century monastery of Nea Moni, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Chios
Χίος
Chios
Location within the region
Coordinates: 38°22′39″N 26°03′54″E / 38.37750°N 26.06500°E / 38.37750; 26.06500
CountryGreece
Administrative regionNorth Aegean
Regional unitChios
Government
 • MayorIoannis Malafis[1] (since 2023)
Area
 • Municipality842.3 km2 (325.2 sq mi)
Highest elevation
1,297 m (4,255 ft)
Lowest elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2021)[2]
 • Municipality50,361
 • Density60/km2 (150/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
82x xx
Area code(s)227x0
Vehicle registrationΧΙ
Websitewww.chios.gr

Administratively, the island forms a separate municipality within the Chios regional unit, which is part of the North Aegean region. The principal town of the island and seat of the municipality is Chios.[3] Locals refer to Chios town as Chora (Χώρα literally means land or country, but usually refers to the capital or a settlement at the highest point of a Greek island).

The island was also the site of the Chios massacre, in which tens of thousands of Greeks on the island were massacred, expelled, and enslaved by Ottoman troops during the Greek War of Independence in 1822. Chios remained a part of the Ottoman Empire until 1912.

Geography edit

 
Topographic map of Chios and Psara islands, situated in the Aegean Sea in Greece.
 
Detailed map of Chios
 
Buildings in Pyrgi covered with sgraffito (local name: Xistà)
 
View of the village of Mesta

Chios island is crescent or kidney-shaped, 50 km (31 mi) long from north to south, and 29 km (18 mi) at its widest, covering an area of 842.289 km2 (325.210 sq mi).[4] The terrain is mountainous and arid, with a ridge of mountains running the length of the island. The two largest of these mountains, Pelineon (1,297 m (4,255 ft)) and Epos (1,188 m (3,898 ft)), are situated in the north of the island. The center of the island is divided between east and west by a range of smaller peaks, known as Provatas.

Regions edit

Chios can be divided into five regions.

East coast edit

 
Chios Municipal Park, with a statue of Konstantinos Kanaris

Midway up the east coast lie the main population centers, the main town of Chios, and the regions of Vrontados and Kambos. Chios Town, with a population of 32,400, is built around the island's main harbour and medieval castle. The current castle, with a perimeter of 1,400 m (4,600 ft), was principally constructed during the time of Genoese and Ottoman rule, although remains have been found dating settlements there back to 2000 B.C. The town was substantially damaged by an earthquake in 1881, and only partially retains its original character.

North of Chios Town lies the large suburb of Vrontados (population 4,500), which claims to be the birthplace of Homer.[5] The suburb lies in the Omiroupoli municipality, and its connection to the poet is supported by an archaeological site known traditionally as "Teacher's Rock".[6]

Southern region (Mastichochória) edit

In the southern region of the island are the Mastichochoria[7] (literally 'mastic villages'), the seven villages of Mesta (Μεστά), Pyrgi (Πυργί), Olympi (Ολύμποι), Kalamoti (Καλαμωτή), Vessa (Βέσσα), Lithi (Λιθί), and Elata (Ελάτα), which together have controlled the production of mastic gum in the area since the Roman period. The villages, built between the 14th and 16th centuries, have a carefully designed layout with fortified gates and narrow streets to protect against the frequent raids by marauding pirates.[citation needed] Between Chios Town and the Mastichochoria lie a large number of historic villages including Armolia (Αρμόλια), Myrmighi (Μυρμήγκι), and Kalimassia (Καλλιμασιά).[citation needed] Along the east coast are the fishing villages of Kataraktis (Καταρράκτης) and to the south, Nenita (Νένητα).

Interior edit

Directly in the centre of the island, between the villages of Avgonyma to the west and Karyes to the east, is the 11th century monastery of Nea Moni, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The monastery was built with funds given by the Byzantine Emperor Constantine IX, after three monks, living in caves nearby, had petitioned him while he was in exile on the island of Lesbos. The monastery had substantial estates attached, with a thriving community until the massacre of 1822. It was further damaged during the 1881 earthquake.[8] In 1952, due to the shortage of monks, Nea Moni was converted to a convent.

Climate edit

The island's climate is warm and moderate, categorised as temperate, Mediterranean (Köppen: Csa), with modest variation due to the stabilising effect of the surrounding sea. Average temperatures normally range from a summer high of 30 °C (86 °F) to a winter low of 7 °C (45 °F) in January, although temperatures of over 40 °C (104 °F) or below freezing can sometimes be encountered.

The island normally experiences steady breezes (average 3–5 m/s (6.7–11.2 mph)) throughout the year, with wind direction predominantly northerly ("Etesian" Wind—locally called the "Meltemi") or southwesterly (Sirocco).

Climate data for Chios town (23m)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 12.8
(55.0)
13
(55)
17.3
(63.1)
19.4
(66.9)
24.5
(76.1)
29.4
(84.9)
32
(90)
32.4
(90.3)
28.6
(83.5)
24.4
(75.9)
19.6
(67.3)
16.1
(61.0)
22.5
(72.4)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 7.2
(45.0)
8
(46)
10
(50)
11.8
(53.2)
15.5
(59.9)
20.9
(69.6)
23.3
(73.9)
24
(75)
20.5
(68.9)
16.6
(61.9)
13.4
(56.1)
10.7
(51.3)
15.2
(59.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 139.6
(5.50)
94.4
(3.72)
41.8
(1.65)
61.2
(2.41)
27.6
(1.09)
10.9
(0.43)
0.1
(0.00)
0
(0)
3.6
(0.14)
23.2
(0.91)
88.2
(3.47)
178
(7.0)
668.6
(26.32)
Source: http://penteli.meteo.gr/stations/chios/ (2019 – 2020 averages)

Geology edit

 
Mount Pelinaio
 
Rock of Saint Markella, patron saint of Chios

The Chios Basin is a hydrographic sub-unit of the Aegean Sea adjacent to the island of Chios.[9] A kind of white dirt found near Pyrgi on the southern part of the island[10] was famed as an astringent and cosmetic since antiquity as Chian earth (Latin: Chia terra;[11] Greek: πηλομαιοτικο, pēlomaiotiko).[10] Extracted around May each year,[10] it was considered less valuable than the similar medicinal earth produced by Lemnos given that the Limnian earth was considered protective against venoms and poisons[10] but nonetheless reputed to be "the greatest of all cosmetics... giv[ing] a whiteness and smoothness to the skin and prevent[ing] wrinkles beyond any of the other substances... for the same purposes."[12]

History edit

 
16th-century detailed map of Chios by Piri Reis

Etymology edit

The ancient writer Pausanias tells us that the poet Ion of Chios believed the island received its name from Chios, the son of Poseidon by a nymph of the island, who was born amidst snowfall (Ancient Greek: χιών chiōn 'snow').[13] Known as Ophioussa (Ὀφιοῦσσα, 'snake island') and Pityoussa (Πιτυοῦσσα, 'pine-tree island') in antiquity, during the later Middle Ages the island was ruled by a number of non-Greek powers and was known as Scio (Genoese), Chio (Italian) and Sakız (صاقيز in Ottoman Turkish). The capital during that time was Kastron (Κάστρον, 'castle').

Prehistoric period edit

Archaeological research on Chios has found evidence of habitation dating back at least to the Neolithic era. The primary sites of research for this period have been cave dwellings at Hagio(n) Galas in the north and a settlement and accompanying necropolis in modern-day Emporeio (also known as Emporio) at the far south of the island. Scholars lack information on this period. The size and duration of these settlements have therefore not been well-established.

The British School at Athens under the direction of Sinclair Hood excavated the Emporeio site in 1952–1955, and most current information comes from these digs.[14] The Greek Archaeological Service has also been excavating periodically on Chios since 1970, though much of its work on the island remains unpublished.

The noticeable uniformity in the size of houses at Emporeio leads some scholars to believe that there may have been little social distinction during the Neolithic era on the island. The inhabitants apparently all benefited from agricultural and livestock farming.[15]

It is also widely held by scholars that the island was not occupied by humans during the Middle Bronze Age (2300–1600), though researchers have recently suggested that the lack of evidence from this period may only demonstrate the lack of excavations on Chios and the northern Aegean.[16]

By at least the 11th century BC the island was ruled by a monarchy, and the subsequent transition to aristocratic (or possibly tyrannic) rule occurred sometime over the next four centuries. Future excavations may reveal more information about this period.[17] 9th-century Euboean and Cypriote presence on the island is attested by ceramics, while a Phoenician presence is noted at Erythrae, the traditional competitor of Chios on the mainland.[18]

Archaic and Classical periods edit

 
ISLANDS off IONIA, Chios. Circa 380-350 BC. AR Tetradrachm (15.32 g, 11h)

Pherecydes, native to the Aegean, wrote that the island was occupied by the Leleges,[19] Pre-Greeks who were reported to be subjected to the Minoans on Crete.[20] They were eventually driven out by invading Ionians.

Chios was one of the original twelve member states of the Ionian League. As a result, Chios, at the end of the 7th century BC,[21] was one of the first cities to strike or mint coins, establishing the sphinx as its symbol. It maintained this tradition for almost 900 years.

In the 6th century BC, Chios' government adopted a constitution similar to that developed by Solon in Athens[22] and later developed democratic elements with a voting assembly and people's magistrates called damarchoi.[23]

In 546 BC, Chios was subjected to the Persian Empire.[23] Chios joined the Ionian Revolt against the Persians in 499 BC. The naval power of Chios during this period is demonstrated by the fact that the Chians had the largest fleet (100 ships) of all of the Ionians at the Battle of Lade in 494 BC. At Lade, the Chian fleet doggedly continued to fight the Persian fleet even after the defection of the Samians and others, but the Chians were ultimately forced to retreat and were again subjected to Persian domination.[24]

The defeat of Persia at the Battle of Mycale in 479 BC meant the liberation of Chios from Persian rule. When the Athenians formed the Delian League, Chios joined as one of the few members who did not have to pay tribute but who supplied ships to the alliance.[25]

By the fifth to fourth centuries BC, the island had grown to an estimated population of over 120,000 (two to three times the estimated population in 2005), based on the huge necropolis at the main city of Chios. It is thought that the majority of the population lived in that area.[26]

In 412 BC, during the Peloponnesian War, Chios revolted against Athens, and the Athenians besieged it. Relief only came the following year when the Spartans were able to raise the siege. In the 4th century BC, Chios was a member of the Second Athenian League but revolted against Athens during the Social War (357–355 BC), and Chios became independent again until the rise of Macedonia.

Hellenistic period edit

 
Reproduction of Sphinx (emblem of Chios).

Theopompus returned to Chios with the other exiles in 333 BC after Alexander had invaded Asia Minor and decreed their return,[27] as well as the exile or trial of Persian supporters on the island. Theopompus was exiled again sometime after Alexander's death and took refuge in Egypt.[28]

During this period, the island also had become the largest exporter of Greek wine, which was noted for being of relatively high quality (see "Chian wine"). Chian amphoras, with a characteristic sphinx emblem and bunches of grapes, have been found in nearly every country with whom the ancient Greeks traded. These countries included Gaul, Upper Egypt, and Southern Russia.[29]

Roman period edit

During the Third Macedonian War, thirty-five vessels allied to Rome, carrying about 1,000 Galatian troops, as well as a number of horses, were sent by Eumenes II to his brother Attalus. Leaving from Elaea, they were headed to the harbour of Phanae, planning to disembark from there to Macedonia. However, Perseus's naval commander Antenor intercepted the fleet between Erythrae (on the Western coast of Turkey) and Chios. According to Livy,[30] they were caught completely off-guard by Antenor. Eumenes' officers at first thought the intercepting fleet were friendly Romans, but scattered upon realizing they were facing an attack by their Macedonian enemy, some choosing to abandon ship and swim to Erythrae. Others, crashing their ships into land on Chios, fled toward the city. The Chians however closed their gates, startled at the calamity. And the Macedonians, who had docked closer to the city anyway, cut the rest of the fleet off outside the city gates, and on the road leading to the city. Of the 1,000 men, 800 were killed, 200 taken prisoner.'

After the Roman conquest Chios became part of the province of Asia.

Pliny remarks upon the islanders' use of variegated marble in their buildings, their appreciation for such stone above murals or other forms of artificial decoration,[31] and the cosmetic properties of the local earth.[32] The marble from Chios, called marmor chium or "portasanta" today, became one of the most desireable and expensive in the Roman world and later.[33] It has a pinkish coloured background containing yellow-orange, brown and grey spots of variable shape and size, separated by whitish or red veins. The name "portasanta" derives from the door jambs of St. Peter's Basilica, Rome, being made of this marble.

According to the Acts of the Apostles, Luke the Evangelist, Paul the Apostle and their companions passed Chios during Paul's third missionary journey, on a passage from Lesbos to Samos.[34]

Byzantine period edit

 
Nea Moni of Chios (11th century)
 
Byzantine Panagia Kokorovilia Church (13th century) in Kampos

After the permanent division of the Roman Empire in 395 AD, Chios was for seven centuries part of the Byzantine Empire. This came to an end when the island was briefly held (1090–97) by Tzachas, a Turkish bey in the region of Smyrna during the first expansion of the Turks to the Aegean coast.[35] However, the Turks were driven back from the Aegean coast by the Byzantines aided by the First Crusade, and the island was restored to Byzantine rule by admiral Constantine Dalassenos.

This relative stability was ended by the sacking of Constantinople by the Fourth Crusade (1204) and during the turmoil of the 13th century the island's ownership was constantly affected by the regional power struggles. After the Fourth Crusade, the Byzantine empire was divided up by the Latin emperors of Constantinople, with Chios nominally becoming a possession of the Republic of Venice. However, defeats for the Latin empire resulted in the island reverting to Byzantine rule in 1225.

Genoese period (1304–1566) edit

 
Castle of Chios
 
Chios map by Benedetto Bordone, 1547
 
Building in Kampos
 
The Massacre of the Giustiniani at Chios by Francesco Solimena

The Byzantine rulers had little influence and through the Treaty of Nymphaeum, authority was ceded to the Republic of Genoa (1261).[36] At this time the island was frequently attacked by pirates, and by 1302–1303 was a target for the renewed Turkish fleets. To prevent Turkish expansion, the island was reconquered and kept as a renewable concession, at the behest of the Byzantine emperor Andronicus II Palaeologus, by the Genovese Benedetto I Zaccaria (1304), then admiral to Philip of France. Zaccaria installed himself as ruler of the island, founding the short-lived Lordship of Chios. His rule was benign and effective control remained in the hands of the local Greek landowners. Benedetto Zacharia was followed by his son Paleologo and then his grandsons or nephews Benedetto II and Martino. They attempted to turn the island towards the Latin and Papal powers, and away from the predominant Byzantine influence. The locals, still loyal to the Byzantine Empire, responded to a letter from the emperor and, despite a standing army of a thousand infantrymen, a hundred cavalrymen and two galleys, expelled the Zacharia family from the island (1329) and dissolved the fiefdom.[37]

Local rule was brief. In 1346, a chartered company or Maona (the "Maona di Chio e di Focea") was set up in Genoa to reconquer and exploit Chios and the neighbouring town of Phocaea in Asia Minor. Although the islanders firmly rejected an initial offer of protection, the island was invaded by a Genoese fleet, led by Simone Vignoso, and the castle besieged. Again rule was transferred peacefully, as on 12 September the castle was surrendered and a treaty signed with no loss of privileges to the local landowners as long as the new authority was accepted. The Maona was controlled by the Giustiniani family.

The Genoese, being interested in profit rather than conquest, controlled the trade-posts and warehouses, in particular the trade of mastic, alum, salt and pitch. Other trades such as grain, wine oil and cloth and most professions were run jointly with the locals. After a failed uprising in 1347, and being heavily outnumbered (less than 10% of the population in 1395), the Latins maintained light control over the local population, remaining largely in the town and allowing full religious freedom. In this way the island remained under Genoese control for two centuries. A notable Genoese inhabitant from this period was Christopher Columbus who lived in Chios in the 1470s before his voyages to the Americas. In 1566, when Genoa lost Chios to the Ottoman Empire, there were 12.000 Greeks and 2.500 Genoese (or 17% of the total population) in the island.[38]

Ottoman period: economic prosperity and the Great Destruction edit

 
The Massacre at Chios by Eugène Delacroix. This, and the works of Lord Byron, did much to draw the attention of mainland Europe to the catastrophe that had taken place in Chios (1824, oil on canvas, 419 cm × 354 cm (165 in × 139 in), Musée du Louvre, Paris).
 
"The blowing up of the Nasuh Ali Pasha's flagship by Konstantinos Kanaris", painted by Nikiphoros Lytras (143 cm × 109 cm (56 in × 43 in). Averoff Gallery). Kanaris blew up the flagship as a revenge for the massacre.
 
Anavatos abandoned village

In the April of 1566, the island of Chios was captured by the Ottoman Empire after the surrender to Piyale Pasha. Subsequently, the Genoans were sent to the capital and after some time upon the request of the French ambassador they were allowed to return with a firman.[39]

During Ottoman rule, the government and tax gathering again remained in the hands of Greeks and the Turkish garrison was small and inconspicuous.[40]

As well as the Latin and Turkish influx, documents record a small Jewish population from at least 1049 AD.[41] The original Greek (Romaniote) Jews, thought to have been brought over by the Romans, were later joined by Sephardic Jews welcomed by the Ottomans during the Iberian expulsions of the late 15th century.

The mainstay of the island's famous wealth was the mastic crop. Chios was able to make a substantial contribution to the imperial treasury while at the same time maintaining only a light level of taxation. The Ottoman government regarded it as one of the most valuable provinces of the Empire.[42]

When the Greek War of Independence broke out, the island's leaders were reluctant to join the revolutionaries, fearing the loss of their security and prosperity. However, in March 1822, several hundred armed Greeks from the neighbouring island of Samos landed in Chios. They proclaimed the revolution and launched attacks against the Turks, at which point islanders decided to join the struggle.

Ottomans landed a large force on the island consequently and put down the rebellion. The Ottoman massacre of Chios expelled, killed or enslaved thousands of the inhabitants of the island.[43] It wiped out whole villages and affected the Mastichochoria area, the mastic growing villages in the south of the island. It triggered also negative public reaction in Western Europe, as portrayed by Eugène Delacroix, and in the writing of Lord Byron and Victor Hugo. In 1825, Thomas Barker of Bath painted a fresco depicting the Chios Massacre on the walls of Doric House, Bath, Somerset.[44] Finally, Chios was not included in the modern Greek state and remained under Ottoman rule.

The 1881 Chios earthquake, estimated as 6.5 on the moment magnitude scale, damaged a large portion of the island's buildings and resulted in great loss of life. Reports of the time spoke of 5,500–10,000 fatalities.[45]

Remarkably, despite the terrible devastation, in the later 19th century Chios emerged as the motherland of the modern Greek shipping industry. Indicatively, while in 1764, Chios had 6 vessels with 90 sailors on record, in 1875 there were 104 ships with over 60,000 registered tonnes, and in 1889 were recorded 440 sailing ships of various types with 3,050 sailors. The dynamic development of Chian shipping in the 19th century is further attested by the various shipping related services that were present in the island during this time, such as the creation of the shipping insurance companies Chiaki Thalassoploia (Χιακή Θαλασσοπλοΐα), Dyo Adelfai (Δυο Αδελφαί), Omonoia (Ομόνοια) and the shipping bank Archangelos (Αρχάγγελος) (1863). The boom of Chian shipping took place with the successful transition from sailing vessels to steam. To this end, Chian ship owners were supported by the strong diaspora presence of Chian merchants and bankers, and the connections they had developed with the financing centers of the time (Istanbul, London), the establishment in London of shipping businessmen, the creation of shipping academies in Chios and the expertise of Chian personnel on board.[46]

In independent Greece edit

 
The port of Lagada

Chios joined the rest of independent Greece after the First Balkan War (1912). The Greek Navy landed at Chios in November 1912 and took control of the island after a series of clashes that lasted for over a month. The Ottoman Empire recognized Greece's annexation of Chios and the other Aegean islands by signing the Treaty of London (1913).

Although Greece was officially neutral, the island was occupied by the British during World War I, on 17 February 1916. This may have been due to the island's proximity to the Ottoman Empire and the city of İzmir in particular.[47]

It was affected also by the population exchange after the Greco–Turkish War of 1919–1922, with the incoming Greek refugees settling in Kastro (previously a Turkish neighborhood) and in new settlements hurriedly built south of Chios town.

The island saw some local violence during the Greek Civil War setting neighbour against neighbour. This ended when the final band of communist fighters was trapped and killed in the orchards of Kampos and their bodies driven through the main town on the back of a truck. In March 1948, the island was used as an internment camp for female political detainees (communists or relatives of guerillas) and their children, who were housed in military barracks near the town of Chios. Up to 1300 women and 50 children were housed in cramped and degrading conditions, until March 1949 when the camp was closed and the inhabitants moved to Trikeri.[48]

The production of mastic was threatened by the Chios forest fire that swept the southern half of the island in August 2012 and destroyed some mastic groves.

By 2015, Chios had become a transit point for refugees and asylum seekers entering the EU from Turkey. A reception and identification centre was formed at VIAL near the village of Chalkeio, however, in 2021 the Greek government announced a new closed reception centre will be built in a more isolated location at Akra Pachy near the village of Pantoukios.[49]

Demographics edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
2001[4]51,773—    
2011[50]51,390−0.7%
2021[2]50,361−2.0%

Government edit

 
View of Oinousses

The present municipality Chios was formed at the 2011 local government reform by the merger of the following 8 former municipalities, that became municipal units:[3]

Economy edit

 
Traditional collecting of mastic (plant resin)
 
Bottles of Chios mastiha alcoholic beverages: Masticha Ouzo (left) and Masticha Liqueur (right).

Commerce edit

The local merchant shipping community transports several locally grown products including mastic, olives, figs, wine, mandarins, and cherries.

Cuisine edit

Local specialities of the island include:

  • Kordelia, pasta
  • Malathropita
  • Neratzopita
  • Mastello (cheese)
  • Valanes, type of pasta
  • Sfougato, type of omelette
  • Mamoulia (dessert)
  • Masourakia (dessert)
  • Mastiha (drink)
  • Souma (drink)

Antimony mines edit

Sporadically for some time during the early 19th century to 1950s there was mining activity on the island at Keramos Antimony Mines.

Culture edit

 
Adamantios Korais public library of Chios town.
 
Rouketopolemos (Rocket war), Vrontados
  • Nea Moni is a monastery with fine mosaics from Constantine IX's reign and a World Heritage Site.[51]
  • An ancient inscription (at Chios Archaeological Museum) from a fifth-century funerary monument for Heropythos the son of Philaios, traced his family back over fourteen generations to Kyprios at the tenth century BC, before there were any written records in Greece.[52][53]
Forts
  • Castle of Chios, a Byzantine fort built in the 10th century
    • St. George's church
Museums
Traditions
  • The town of Vrontados is home to a unique Easter celebration, where competing teams of locals gather at the town's two (rival) churches to fire tens of thousands of homemade rockets at the other church's bell tower while the Easter service is going on inside the churches, in what has become known as rouketopolemos.[54]
Sports
Media
  • Alithia TV
  • Chiakos Laos, newspaper
  • Politis, newspaper
  • Dimokratiki, newspaper

Twin town, sister cities edit

Chios is twinned with:

Notable natives and inhabitants edit

A native of Chios is known in English as a Chian.[56]

Ancient edit

 
Bupalus and Athenis, sons of Archermus
  • Homer (8th century BC), poet. See History of the Pelopennesian War by Thucydides, section 3.104.5, wherein Thucydides quotes Homer's self-reference: "A blind old man of Scio's rocky isle."
  • Oenopides (c. 490 – c. 420 BC), mathematician and geometer
  • Ion of Chios (484-421 BC), tragedy writer
  • Hippocrates of Chios (c. 470 – c. 410 BC), notable mathematician, geometer and astronomer
  • Theopompus of Chios (378 – c. 320 BC), rhetorical historian[57]
  • Erasistratus of Chios (304–250 BC), pioneering anatomist, royal physician and founder of the ancient medical school of Alexandria, who discovered the linking between organs through the systems of veins, arteries and nerves[58]
  • Aristo of Chios (c. 260 BC), Stoic philosopher
  • Claudia Metrodora (c. 54–68 AD), public benefactor

Medieval edit

 
Leo Allatius
  • Saint Markella (14th century), martyr and saint of the Greek Orthodox church
  • Leo Kalothetos (1315–1363), provincial governor of the Byzantine empire
  • Leonard of Chios, Greek Dominican scholar
  • Giovanni Giustiniani (1418-1453), died during the Fall of Constantinople and buried in Chios
  • Matrona of Chios (* 15th century, † before 1455), saint of the Greek Orthodox church
  • Andreas Argenti (saint) († 1465 n. Chr.), neomartyr of the Orthodox Church
  • Andrea Bianco (15th century), Genoese cartographer resided on Chios
  • In 1982, Ruth Durlacher hypothesised that Chios was Christopher Columbus's birthplace.[59] Columbus himself said he was from the Republic of Genoa, which included the island of Chios at the time. Columbus was friendly with a number of Chian Genoese families, referenced Chios in his writings and used the Greek language for some of his notes.[60] 'Columbus' remains a common surname on Chios. Other common Greek spellings are: Kouloumbis and Couloumbis.
  • Vincenzo Giustiniani, Italian banker
  • Francisco Albo (16th century), pilot of Magellan expedition, the first circumnavigation of the Earth
  • Leo Allatius (Leone Allacci) (c. 1586–1669), Greek Catholic scholar and theologian
  • Constantine Rodocanachi (1635–1687), Ottoman Greek academic, chemist, lexicographer, and physician to Charles II of England

Modern edit

 
Ioannis Psycharis, major promoter of Demotic Greek
 
Andreas Syggros

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Municipality of Chios, Municipal elections – October 2023". Ministry of Interior.
  2. ^ 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.
  3. ^ a b "ΦΕΚ B 1292/2010, Kallikratis reform municipalities" (in Greek). Government Gazette.
  4. ^ a b "Population & housing census 2001 (incl. area and average elevation)" (PDF) (in Greek). National Statistical Service of Greece. (PDF) from the original on 21 September 2015.
  5. ^ John Boardman; C. E. Vaphopoulou-Richardson (1986). . Clarendon Press. p. v. ISBN 9780198148647. Archived from the original on 22 July 2017.
  6. ^ Δασκαλóπετρα
  7. ^ Μαστιχοχώρια
  8. ^ 1881 and 1949 earthquakes at the Chios-Cesme Strait (Aegean Sea) and their relation to tsunamis
  9. ^ C.Michael Hogan. 2011. Aegean Sea. Eds. P.Saundry & C.J.Cleveland. Encyclopedia of Earth. National Council for Science and the Environment. Washington DC
  10. ^ a b c d Hasluck, F.W. (1910), "Terra Lemnia", The Annual, vol. 16, Athens: The British School, pp. 220–231, JSTOR 30096442.
  11. ^ "Chian, adj. (and n.)", Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021.
  12. ^ "Chian Earth", Encyclopaedia Britannica, vol. II (1st ed.), Edinburgh: Colin Macfarquhar, 1771.
  13. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece: 7.4.8
  14. ^ Boardman, John Excavations in Chios, 1952–1955: Greek Emporio (London : British School of Archaeology at Athens; Thames and Hudson, 1967), cf. also Hood, Sinclair Excavations in Chios, 1938–1955: prehistoric Emporio and Ayio Gala (London : British School of Archaeology at Athens: Thames and Hudson, 1981–) ISBN 0-500-96017-8
  15. ^ Merouses, Nikos Chios. Physiko periballon & katoikese apo te neolithike epoche mechri to telos tes archaiothtas. (Chios. Natural Environment & Habitation from the Neolithic Age to the end of Antiquity) pg. 80. Papyros, 2002
  16. ^ Merouses 2002 ch. 4
  17. ^ Merouses 2002 ch. 5, sect. 1
  18. ^ I.S. Lemos, The Protogeometric Aegean 2002:240, and Euboean ceramics in the Archeological Museum, noted by Robin Lane Fox, Travelling Heroes in the Epic Age of Homer, 2008:60 note 59.
  19. ^ Strabo 14.1.3
  20. ^ Herodotus 1.171
  21. ^ Agelarakis A., "Analyses of Cremated Human Skeletal Remains Dating to the Seventh Century BC, Chios, Greece". Horos: Ena Archaeognostiko Periodiko 4 (1986): 145–153.
  22. ^ Murray, Oswyn (1993). Early Greece (2nd ed.). London: Fontana. p. 188. ISBN 0006862497.
  23. ^ a b Grant, Michael (1989). The Classical Greeks. Guild Publishing London. p.149
  24. ^ Herodotus, The Histories IV.15
  25. ^ Thucydides, Peloponnesian War 3.10.
  26. ^ Merouses 2002 ch. 5, sect. 3
  27. ^ A translation of the decree can be viewed online
  28. ^ Anthon, Charles A Manual of Greek Literature, p.251, 1853
  29. ^ Hugh Johnson, Vintage: The Story of Wine pg 41. Simon and Schuster 1989
  30. ^ Livy, 44.28
  31. ^ "Pliny the Elder, The Natural History, BOOK XXXVI. THE NATURAL HISTORY OF STONES., CHAP. 5. (6.)—AT WHAT PERIOD MARBLE WAS FIRST USED IN BUILDINGS". Perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  32. ^ Pliny, Nat. Hist., Book XXXV, Sect. 56.
  33. ^ Pensabene P., I marmi nella Roma antica, Rome 2013, pp. 59-62.
  34. ^ Acts 20:15
  35. ^ Brownworth, Lars (2009) Lost to the West: The Forgotten Byzantine Empire That Rescued Western Civilization, Crown Publishers, ISBN 978-0-307-40795-5: "...the Muslims captured Ephesus in 1090 and spread out to the Greek islands. Chios, Rhodes, and Lesbos fell in quick succession." p. 233.
  36. ^ William Miller, "The Zaccaria of Phocaea and Chios. (1275–1329.)" The Journal of Hellenic Studies, Vol. 31, 1911 (1911), pp. 42–55; doi:10.2307/624735.
  37. ^ Arbel, Benjamin, Bernard Hamilton, and David Jacob. Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204. ISBN 0-7146-3372-0.
  38. ^ Chios History 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ Örenç, Ali Fuat (2009). "Sakız Adası". TDV Encyclopedia of Islam, Vol. 36 (Sakal – Sevm) (in Turkish). Istanbul: Turkiye Diyanet Foundation, Centre for Islamic Studies. pp. 6–10. ISBN 978-975-389-566-8.
  40. ^ William St. Clair, That Greece Might Still Be Free, The Philhellenes in the War of Independence, Oxford University Press, London, 1972, p.79. ISBN 0-19-215194-0.
  41. ^ "The Sephardic Community of Chios". Sephardicstudies.org. Retrieved 22 March 2009.
  42. ^ William St. Clair, p. 79
  43. ^ Hellenic Genocide Events 4 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 19 May 2008
  44. ^ YJC Cartledge, 'The Chios Massacre (1822) and early British Christian-humanitarianism', Historical Research, vol. 93, no. 259 (February 2020), pp. 52-72, at pp. 60-61.
  45. ^ Y. Altinok; B. Alpar B; N. Özer; C. Gazioglu (2005). "1881 and 1949 earthquakes at the Chios-Cesme Strait (Aegean Sea) and their relation to tsunamis" (PDF). Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences. 5 (5): 717–725. Bibcode:2005NHESS...5..717A. doi:10.5194/nhess-5-717-2005. Retrieved 31 July 2010.
  46. ^ Μιχαηλίδης, Σταύρος Γ. (2014). Σταύρος Γ. Λιβανός. Η Χιώτικη Ναυτιλιακή παραδοση στην κορυφή της παγκόσμιας ναυτιλίας. Χίος.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  47. ^ "First World War.com – On This Day – 17 February 1916". www.firstworldwar.com. Retrieved 17 February 2016.
  48. ^ Becoming a Subject: Political Prisoners During the Greek Civil War: Polymeris Voglis, Published 2002Berghahn Books ISBN 157181308X
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  52. ^ A Corpus of the Inscriptions of Chios (IG XII 6.3)
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  58. ^ Arthur Bard; Mitchell G. Bard (2002). The Complete Idiot's Guide to Understanding the Brain. Alpha Books. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-02-864310-6.
  59. ^ A New Theory Clarifying the Identity OF Christopher Columbus: A Byzantine Prince from Chios, Greece. by Ruth G Durlacher-Wolper 1982(Published by The New World Museum, San Salvador, Bahamas)
  60. ^ . Chianfed.org. Archived from the original on 27 March 2013. Retrieved 26 March 2013.

Further reading edit

  • Fanny Aneroussi, Leonidas Mylonadis: The Kampos of Chios in its Heyday: Houses and Surroundings. Translated from the Greek by Antonis Scotiniotis. (Aipos Series, no 12). Akritas Publications, Nea Smyrni 1992, ISBN 960-7006-87-9.
  • Charalambos Th. Bouras: Chios. (Guides to Greece, no 4). National Bank of Greece, Athens 1974.
  • Charalambos Th. Bouras: Greek Traditional Architecture: Chios. Melissa, Athens 1984.
  • Athena Zacharou-Loutrari, Vaso Penna, Tasoula Mandala: Chios: History and Art. Translated from the Greek by Athena Dallas-Damis ... (The Monuments of Chios). The Chios Prefecture, Chios 1989. OCLC 31423355.
  • Hubert Pernot: En Pays Turc: L’île de Chios. (Dijon, Imprimerie Darantière, Rue Chabot-Charny, 65). Avec 17 mélodies populaires et 118 simili-gravures. J. Maisonneuve, Libraire-Éditeur, Paris 1903. (online)
  • Arnold C. Smith: The Architecture of Chios: Subsidiary Buildings, Implements and Crafts. Edited by Philip Pandely Argenti. Tison, London 1962.
  • Michales G. Tsankares, Alkes X. Xanthakes: Chios: hekato chronia photographies, 1850–1950. (Chios: One Hundred Years of Photographs, 1850–1950). Synolo, Athens 1996, ISBN 960-85416-4-6.
  • Eleftherios Yalouris: The Archeology and Early History of Chios. (From the Neolithic Period to the End of the Sixth Century B.C.). University of Oxford, Merton College, dissertation, 1976.

External links edit

  • Official Chios website—operated by Chios Prefecture (including tourist guide)
  • Sarantakou Efi; Misailidou Anna; Beneki Eleni; Varlas Michael (20 April 2005). . Cultural Portal of the Aegean Archipelago. Foundation of the Hellenic World. Archived from the original on 7 August 2016. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
  • (in Greek and English)
  • Chios in ancient sources @ attalus.org
  • "Chios" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 236–237.

chios, greek, Χίος, romanized, chíos, ˈçi, traditionally, known, scio, english, fifth, largest, greek, island, situated, northern, aegean, tenth, largest, island, mediterranean, island, separated, from, turkey, strait, notable, exports, mastic, nickname, masti. Chios ˈ k aɪ ɒ s ˈ k aɪ oʊ s ˈ k iː Greek Xios romanized Chios ˈci os traditionally known as Scio in English is the fifth largest Greek island situated in the northern Aegean Sea and the tenth largest island in the Mediterranean Sea The island is separated from Turkey by the Chios Strait Chios is notable for its exports of mastic gum and its nickname is the Mastic Island Tourist attractions include its medieval villages and the 11th century monastery of Nea Moni a UNESCO World Heritage Site Chios XiosMunicipalityChiosLocation within the regionCoordinates 38 22 39 N 26 03 54 E 38 37750 N 26 06500 E 38 37750 26 06500CountryGreeceAdministrative regionNorth AegeanRegional unitChiosGovernment MayorIoannis Malafis 1 since 2023 Area Municipality842 3 km2 325 2 sq mi Highest elevation1 297 m 4 255 ft Lowest elevation0 m 0 ft Population 2021 2 Municipality50 361 Density60 km2 150 sq mi Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Postal code82x xxArea code s 227x0Vehicle registrationXIWebsitewww chios gr Administratively the island forms a separate municipality within the Chios regional unit which is part of the North Aegean region The principal town of the island and seat of the municipality is Chios 3 Locals refer to Chios town as Chora Xwra literally means land or country but usually refers to the capital or a settlement at the highest point of a Greek island The island was also the site of the Chios massacre in which tens of thousands of Greeks on the island were massacred expelled and enslaved by Ottoman troops during the Greek War of Independence in 1822 Chios remained a part of the Ottoman Empire until 1912 Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Regions 1 1 1 East coast 1 1 2 Southern region Mastichochoria 1 1 3 Interior 1 2 Climate 1 3 Geology 2 History 2 1 Etymology 2 2 Prehistoric period 2 3 Archaic and Classical periods 2 4 Hellenistic period 2 5 Roman period 2 6 Byzantine period 2 7 Genoese period 1304 1566 2 8 Ottoman period economic prosperity and the Great Destruction 2 9 In independent Greece 3 Demographics 4 Government 5 Economy 5 1 Commerce 5 2 Cuisine 5 3 Antimony mines 6 Culture 6 1 Twin town sister cities 7 Notable natives and inhabitants 7 1 Ancient 7 2 Medieval 7 3 Modern 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksGeography edit nbsp Topographic map of Chios and Psara islands situated in the Aegean Sea in Greece nbsp Detailed map of Chios nbsp Buildings in Pyrgi covered with sgraffito local name Xista nbsp View of the village of Mesta Chios island is crescent or kidney shaped 50 km 31 mi long from north to south and 29 km 18 mi at its widest covering an area of 842 289 km2 325 210 sq mi 4 The terrain is mountainous and arid with a ridge of mountains running the length of the island The two largest of these mountains Pelineon 1 297 m 4 255 ft and Epos 1 188 m 3 898 ft are situated in the north of the island The center of the island is divided between east and west by a range of smaller peaks known as Provatas Regions edit Chios can be divided into five regions East coast edit nbsp Chios Municipal Park with a statue of Konstantinos Kanaris Midway up the east coast lie the main population centers the main town of Chios and the regions of Vrontados and Kambos Chios Town with a population of 32 400 is built around the island s main harbour and medieval castle The current castle with a perimeter of 1 400 m 4 600 ft was principally constructed during the time of Genoese and Ottoman rule although remains have been found dating settlements there back to 2000 B C The town was substantially damaged by an earthquake in 1881 and only partially retains its original character North of Chios Town lies the large suburb of Vrontados population 4 500 which claims to be the birthplace of Homer 5 The suburb lies in the Omiroupoli municipality and its connection to the poet is supported by an archaeological site known traditionally as Teacher s Rock 6 Southern region Mastichochoria edit In the southern region of the island are the Mastichochoria 7 literally mastic villages the seven villages of Mesta Mesta Pyrgi Pyrgi Olympi Olympoi Kalamoti Kalamwth Vessa Bessa Lithi Li8i and Elata Elata which together have controlled the production of mastic gum in the area since the Roman period The villages built between the 14th and 16th centuries have a carefully designed layout with fortified gates and narrow streets to protect against the frequent raids by marauding pirates citation needed Between Chios Town and the Mastichochoria lie a large number of historic villages including Armolia Armolia Myrmighi Myrmhgki and Kalimassia Kallimasia citation needed Along the east coast are the fishing villages of Kataraktis Katarrakths and to the south Nenita Nenhta Interior edit Directly in the centre of the island between the villages of Avgonyma to the west and Karyes to the east is the 11th century monastery of Nea Moni a UNESCO World Heritage Site The monastery was built with funds given by the Byzantine Emperor Constantine IX after three monks living in caves nearby had petitioned him while he was in exile on the island of Lesbos The monastery had substantial estates attached with a thriving community until the massacre of 1822 It was further damaged during the 1881 earthquake 8 In 1952 due to the shortage of monks Nea Moni was converted to a convent Climate edit The island s climate is warm and moderate categorised as temperate Mediterranean Koppen Csa with modest variation due to the stabilising effect of the surrounding sea Average temperatures normally range from a summer high of 30 C 86 F to a winter low of 7 C 45 F in January although temperatures of over 40 C 104 F or below freezing can sometimes be encountered The island normally experiences steady breezes average 3 5 m s 6 7 11 2 mph throughout the year with wind direction predominantly northerly Etesian Wind locally called the Meltemi or southwesterly Sirocco Climate data for Chios town 23m Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Mean daily maximum C F 12 8 55 0 13 55 17 3 63 1 19 4 66 9 24 5 76 1 29 4 84 9 32 90 32 4 90 3 28 6 83 5 24 4 75 9 19 6 67 3 16 1 61 0 22 5 72 4 Mean daily minimum C F 7 2 45 0 8 46 10 50 11 8 53 2 15 5 59 9 20 9 69 6 23 3 73 9 24 75 20 5 68 9 16 6 61 9 13 4 56 1 10 7 51 3 15 2 59 2 Average precipitation mm inches 139 6 5 50 94 4 3 72 41 8 1 65 61 2 2 41 27 6 1 09 10 9 0 43 0 1 0 00 0 0 3 6 0 14 23 2 0 91 88 2 3 47 178 7 0 668 6 26 32 Source http penteli meteo gr stations chios 2019 2020 averages Geology edit nbsp Mount Pelinaio nbsp Rock of Saint Markella patron saint of Chios The Chios Basin is a hydrographic sub unit of the Aegean Sea adjacent to the island of Chios 9 A kind of white dirt found near Pyrgi on the southern part of the island 10 was famed as an astringent and cosmetic since antiquity as Chian earth Latin Chia terra 11 Greek phlomaiotiko pelomaiotiko 10 Extracted around May each year 10 it was considered less valuable than the similar medicinal earth produced by Lemnos given that the Limnian earth was considered protective against venoms and poisons 10 but nonetheless reputed to be the greatest of all cosmetics giv ing a whiteness and smoothness to the skin and prevent ing wrinkles beyond any of the other substances for the same purposes 12 History edit nbsp 16th century detailed map of Chios by Piri Reis Etymology edit The ancient writer Pausanias tells us that the poet Ion of Chios believed the island received its name from Chios the son of Poseidon by a nymph of the island who was born amidst snowfall Ancient Greek xiwn chiōn snow 13 Known as Ophioussa Ὀfioῦssa snake island and Pityoussa Pityoῦssa pine tree island in antiquity during the later Middle Ages the island was ruled by a number of non Greek powers and was known as Scio Genoese Chio Italian and Sakiz صاقيز in Ottoman Turkish The capital during that time was Kastron Kastron castle Prehistoric period edit Main article Emporio Chios Archaeological research on Chios has found evidence of habitation dating back at least to the Neolithic era The primary sites of research for this period have been cave dwellings at Hagio n Galas in the north and a settlement and accompanying necropolis in modern day Emporeio also known as Emporio at the far south of the island Scholars lack information on this period The size and duration of these settlements have therefore not been well established The British School at Athens under the direction of Sinclair Hood excavated the Emporeio site in 1952 1955 and most current information comes from these digs 14 The Greek Archaeological Service has also been excavating periodically on Chios since 1970 though much of its work on the island remains unpublished The noticeable uniformity in the size of houses at Emporeio leads some scholars to believe that there may have been little social distinction during the Neolithic era on the island The inhabitants apparently all benefited from agricultural and livestock farming 15 It is also widely held by scholars that the island was not occupied by humans during the Middle Bronze Age 2300 1600 though researchers have recently suggested that the lack of evidence from this period may only demonstrate the lack of excavations on Chios and the northern Aegean 16 By at least the 11th century BC the island was ruled by a monarchy and the subsequent transition to aristocratic or possibly tyrannic rule occurred sometime over the next four centuries Future excavations may reveal more information about this period 17 9th century Euboean and Cypriote presence on the island is attested by ceramics while a Phoenician presence is noted at Erythrae the traditional competitor of Chios on the mainland 18 Archaic and Classical periods edit nbsp ISLANDS off IONIA Chios Circa 380 350 BC AR Tetradrachm 15 32 g 11h Pherecydes native to the Aegean wrote that the island was occupied by the Leleges 19 Pre Greeks who were reported to be subjected to the Minoans on Crete 20 They were eventually driven out by invading Ionians Chios was one of the original twelve member states of the Ionian League As a result Chios at the end of the 7th century BC 21 was one of the first cities to strike or mint coins establishing the sphinx as its symbol It maintained this tradition for almost 900 years In the 6th century BC Chios government adopted a constitution similar to that developed by Solon in Athens 22 and later developed democratic elements with a voting assembly and people s magistrates called damarchoi 23 In 546 BC Chios was subjected to the Persian Empire 23 Chios joined the Ionian Revolt against the Persians in 499 BC The naval power of Chios during this period is demonstrated by the fact that the Chians had the largest fleet 100 ships of all of the Ionians at the Battle of Lade in 494 BC At Lade the Chian fleet doggedly continued to fight the Persian fleet even after the defection of the Samians and others but the Chians were ultimately forced to retreat and were again subjected to Persian domination 24 The defeat of Persia at the Battle of Mycale in 479 BC meant the liberation of Chios from Persian rule When the Athenians formed the Delian League Chios joined as one of the few members who did not have to pay tribute but who supplied ships to the alliance 25 By the fifth to fourth centuries BC the island had grown to an estimated population of over 120 000 two to three times the estimated population in 2005 based on the huge necropolis at the main city of Chios It is thought that the majority of the population lived in that area 26 In 412 BC during the Peloponnesian War Chios revolted against Athens and the Athenians besieged it Relief only came the following year when the Spartans were able to raise the siege In the 4th century BC Chios was a member of the Second Athenian League but revolted against Athens during the Social War 357 355 BC and Chios became independent again until the rise of Macedonia Hellenistic period edit nbsp Reproduction of Sphinx emblem of Chios Theopompus returned to Chios with the other exiles in 333 BC after Alexander had invaded Asia Minor and decreed their return 27 as well as the exile or trial of Persian supporters on the island Theopompus was exiled again sometime after Alexander s death and took refuge in Egypt 28 During this period the island also had become the largest exporter of Greek wine which was noted for being of relatively high quality see Chian wine Chian amphoras with a characteristic sphinx emblem and bunches of grapes have been found in nearly every country with whom the ancient Greeks traded These countries included Gaul Upper Egypt and Southern Russia 29 Roman period edit During the Third Macedonian War thirty five vessels allied to Rome carrying about 1 000 Galatian troops as well as a number of horses were sent by Eumenes II to his brother Attalus Leaving from Elaea they were headed to the harbour of Phanae planning to disembark from there to Macedonia However Perseus s naval commander Antenor intercepted the fleet between Erythrae on the Western coast of Turkey and Chios According to Livy 30 they were caught completely off guard by Antenor Eumenes officers at first thought the intercepting fleet were friendly Romans but scattered upon realizing they were facing an attack by their Macedonian enemy some choosing to abandon ship and swim to Erythrae Others crashing their ships into land on Chios fled toward the city The Chians however closed their gates startled at the calamity And the Macedonians who had docked closer to the city anyway cut the rest of the fleet off outside the city gates and on the road leading to the city Of the 1 000 men 800 were killed 200 taken prisoner After the Roman conquest Chios became part of the province of Asia Pliny remarks upon the islanders use of variegated marble in their buildings their appreciation for such stone above murals or other forms of artificial decoration 31 and the cosmetic properties of the local earth 32 The marble from Chios called marmor chium or portasanta today became one of the most desireable and expensive in the Roman world and later 33 It has a pinkish coloured background containing yellow orange brown and grey spots of variable shape and size separated by whitish or red veins The name portasanta derives from the door jambs of St Peter s Basilica Rome being made of this marble According to the Acts of the Apostles Luke the Evangelist Paul the Apostle and their companions passed Chios during Paul s third missionary journey on a passage from Lesbos to Samos 34 Byzantine period edit Further information Aegean Sea theme and Samos theme nbsp Nea Moni of Chios 11th century nbsp Byzantine Panagia Kokorovilia Church 13th century in Kampos After the permanent division of the Roman Empire in 395 AD Chios was for seven centuries part of the Byzantine Empire This came to an end when the island was briefly held 1090 97 by Tzachas a Turkish bey in the region of Smyrna during the first expansion of the Turks to the Aegean coast 35 However the Turks were driven back from the Aegean coast by the Byzantines aided by the First Crusade and the island was restored to Byzantine rule by admiral Constantine Dalassenos This relative stability was ended by the sacking of Constantinople by the Fourth Crusade 1204 and during the turmoil of the 13th century the island s ownership was constantly affected by the regional power struggles After the Fourth Crusade the Byzantine empire was divided up by the Latin emperors of Constantinople with Chios nominally becoming a possession of the Republic of Venice However defeats for the Latin empire resulted in the island reverting to Byzantine rule in 1225 Genoese period 1304 1566 edit See also Lordship of Chios and Maona of Chios and Phocaea nbsp Castle of Chios nbsp Chios map by Benedetto Bordone 1547 nbsp Building in Kampos nbsp The Massacre of the Giustiniani at Chios by Francesco Solimena The Byzantine rulers had little influence and through the Treaty of Nymphaeum authority was ceded to the Republic of Genoa 1261 36 At this time the island was frequently attacked by pirates and by 1302 1303 was a target for the renewed Turkish fleets To prevent Turkish expansion the island was reconquered and kept as a renewable concession at the behest of the Byzantine emperor Andronicus II Palaeologus by the Genovese Benedetto I Zaccaria 1304 then admiral to Philip of France Zaccaria installed himself as ruler of the island founding the short lived Lordship of Chios His rule was benign and effective control remained in the hands of the local Greek landowners Benedetto Zacharia was followed by his son Paleologo and then his grandsons or nephews Benedetto II and Martino They attempted to turn the island towards the Latin and Papal powers and away from the predominant Byzantine influence The locals still loyal to the Byzantine Empire responded to a letter from the emperor and despite a standing army of a thousand infantrymen a hundred cavalrymen and two galleys expelled the Zacharia family from the island 1329 and dissolved the fiefdom 37 Local rule was brief In 1346 a chartered company or Maona the Maona di Chio e di Focea was set up in Genoa to reconquer and exploit Chios and the neighbouring town of Phocaea in Asia Minor Although the islanders firmly rejected an initial offer of protection the island was invaded by a Genoese fleet led by Simone Vignoso and the castle besieged Again rule was transferred peacefully as on 12 September the castle was surrendered and a treaty signed with no loss of privileges to the local landowners as long as the new authority was accepted The Maona was controlled by the Giustiniani family The Genoese being interested in profit rather than conquest controlled the trade posts and warehouses in particular the trade of mastic alum salt and pitch Other trades such as grain wine oil and cloth and most professions were run jointly with the locals After a failed uprising in 1347 and being heavily outnumbered less than 10 of the population in 1395 the Latins maintained light control over the local population remaining largely in the town and allowing full religious freedom In this way the island remained under Genoese control for two centuries A notable Genoese inhabitant from this period was Christopher Columbus who lived in Chios in the 1470s before his voyages to the Americas In 1566 when Genoa lost Chios to the Ottoman Empire there were 12 000 Greeks and 2 500 Genoese or 17 of the total population in the island 38 Ottoman period economic prosperity and the Great Destruction edit Main article Sanjak of Sakiz Further information Greek War of Independence Chian Committee Chios Massacre Chian diaspora and Chios expedition nbsp The Massacre at Chios by Eugene Delacroix This and the works of Lord Byron did much to draw the attention of mainland Europe to the catastrophe that had taken place in Chios 1824 oil on canvas 419 cm 354 cm 165 in 139 in Musee du Louvre Paris nbsp The blowing up of the Nasuh Ali Pasha s flagship by Konstantinos Kanaris painted by Nikiphoros Lytras 143 cm 109 cm 56 in 43 in Averoff Gallery Kanaris blew up the flagship as a revenge for the massacre nbsp Anavatos abandoned village In the April of 1566 the island of Chios was captured by the Ottoman Empire after the surrender to Piyale Pasha Subsequently the Genoans were sent to the capital and after some time upon the request of the French ambassador they were allowed to return with a firman 39 During Ottoman rule the government and tax gathering again remained in the hands of Greeks and the Turkish garrison was small and inconspicuous 40 As well as the Latin and Turkish influx documents record a small Jewish population from at least 1049 AD 41 The original Greek Romaniote Jews thought to have been brought over by the Romans were later joined by Sephardic Jews welcomed by the Ottomans during the Iberian expulsions of the late 15th century The mainstay of the island s famous wealth was the mastic crop Chios was able to make a substantial contribution to the imperial treasury while at the same time maintaining only a light level of taxation The Ottoman government regarded it as one of the most valuable provinces of the Empire 42 When the Greek War of Independence broke out the island s leaders were reluctant to join the revolutionaries fearing the loss of their security and prosperity However in March 1822 several hundred armed Greeks from the neighbouring island of Samos landed in Chios They proclaimed the revolution and launched attacks against the Turks at which point islanders decided to join the struggle Ottomans landed a large force on the island consequently and put down the rebellion The Ottoman massacre of Chios expelled killed or enslaved thousands of the inhabitants of the island 43 It wiped out whole villages and affected the Mastichochoria area the mastic growing villages in the south of the island It triggered also negative public reaction in Western Europe as portrayed by Eugene Delacroix and in the writing of Lord Byron and Victor Hugo In 1825 Thomas Barker of Bath painted a fresco depicting the Chios Massacre on the walls of Doric House Bath Somerset 44 Finally Chios was not included in the modern Greek state and remained under Ottoman rule The 1881 Chios earthquake estimated as 6 5 on the moment magnitude scale damaged a large portion of the island s buildings and resulted in great loss of life Reports of the time spoke of 5 500 10 000 fatalities 45 Remarkably despite the terrible devastation in the later 19th century Chios emerged as the motherland of the modern Greek shipping industry Indicatively while in 1764 Chios had 6 vessels with 90 sailors on record in 1875 there were 104 ships with over 60 000 registered tonnes and in 1889 were recorded 440 sailing ships of various types with 3 050 sailors The dynamic development of Chian shipping in the 19th century is further attested by the various shipping related services that were present in the island during this time such as the creation of the shipping insurance companies Chiaki Thalassoploia Xiakh 8alassoploia Dyo Adelfai Dyo Adelfai Omonoia Omonoia and the shipping bank Archangelos Arxaggelos 1863 The boom of Chian shipping took place with the successful transition from sailing vessels to steam To this end Chian ship owners were supported by the strong diaspora presence of Chian merchants and bankers and the connections they had developed with the financing centers of the time Istanbul London the establishment in London of shipping businessmen the creation of shipping academies in Chios and the expertise of Chian personnel on board 46 In independent Greece edit nbsp The port of Lagada Chios joined the rest of independent Greece after the First Balkan War 1912 The Greek Navy landed at Chios in November 1912 and took control of the island after a series of clashes that lasted for over a month The Ottoman Empire recognized Greece s annexation of Chios and the other Aegean islands by signing the Treaty of London 1913 Although Greece was officially neutral the island was occupied by the British during World War I on 17 February 1916 This may have been due to the island s proximity to the Ottoman Empire and the city of Izmir in particular 47 It was affected also by the population exchange after the Greco Turkish War of 1919 1922 with the incoming Greek refugees settling in Kastro previously a Turkish neighborhood and in new settlements hurriedly built south of Chios town The island saw some local violence during the Greek Civil War setting neighbour against neighbour This ended when the final band of communist fighters was trapped and killed in the orchards of Kampos and their bodies driven through the main town on the back of a truck In March 1948 the island was used as an internment camp for female political detainees communists or relatives of guerillas and their children who were housed in military barracks near the town of Chios Up to 1300 women and 50 children were housed in cramped and degrading conditions until March 1949 when the camp was closed and the inhabitants moved to Trikeri 48 The production of mastic was threatened by the Chios forest fire that swept the southern half of the island in August 2012 and destroyed some mastic groves By 2015 Chios had become a transit point for refugees and asylum seekers entering the EU from Turkey A reception and identification centre was formed at VIAL near the village of Chalkeio however in 2021 the Greek government announced a new closed reception centre will be built in a more isolated location at Akra Pachy near the village of Pantoukios 49 Demographics editHistorical populationYearPop 2001 4 51 773 2011 50 51 390 0 7 2021 2 50 361 2 0 Government edit nbsp View of Oinousses The present municipality Chios was formed at the 2011 local government reform by the merger of the following 8 former municipalities that became municipal units 3 Agios Minas Amani Chios town Ionia Kampochora Kardamyla Mastichochoria OmiroupoliEconomy edit nbsp Traditional collecting of mastic plant resin nbsp Bottles of Chios mastiha alcoholic beverages Masticha Ouzo left and Masticha Liqueur right Commerce edit The local merchant shipping community transports several locally grown products including mastic olives figs wine mandarins and cherries Cuisine edit Local specialities of the island include Kordelia pasta Malathropita Neratzopita Mastello cheese Valanes type of pasta Sfougato type of omelette Mamoulia dessert Masourakia dessert Mastiha drink Souma drink Antimony mines edit Sporadically for some time during the early 19th century to 1950s there was mining activity on the island at Keramos Antimony Mines Culture edit nbsp Adamantios Korais public library of Chios town nbsp Rouketopolemos Rocket war Vrontados Nea Moni is a monastery with fine mosaics from Constantine IX s reign and a World Heritage Site 51 An ancient inscription at Chios Archaeological Museum from a fifth century funerary monument for Heropythos the son of Philaios traced his family back over fourteen generations to Kyprios at the tenth century BC before there were any written records in Greece 52 53 Forts Castle of Chios a Byzantine fort built in the 10th century St George s church Museums Chios Byzantine Museum The Chios Mastic Museum Archaeological Museum of Chios Chios Maritime Museum Traditions The town of Vrontados is home to a unique Easter celebration where competing teams of locals gather at the town s two rival churches to fire tens of thousands of homemade rockets at the other church s bell tower while the Easter service is going on inside the churches in what has become known as rouketopolemos 54 Sports F C Lailapas Chios town NC Chios water polo Panchiakos GS Media Alithia TV Chiakos Laos newspaper Politis newspaper Dimokratiki newspaper Twin town sister cities edit Chios is twinned with nbsp Brezno Slovakia nbsp Ermoupoli Greece nbsp Genoa Italy since 1985 55 nbsp Guiyang China nbsp Ortona Italy nbsp Polykastro GreeceNotable natives and inhabitants editA native of Chios is known in English as a Chian 56 Ancient edit nbsp Bupalus and Athenis sons of Archermus Homer 8th century BC poet See History of the Pelopennesian War by Thucydides section 3 104 5 wherein Thucydides quotes Homer s self reference A blind old man of Scio s rocky isle Oenopides c 490 c 420 BC mathematician and geometer Ion of Chios 484 421 BC tragedy writer Hippocrates of Chios c 470 c 410 BC notable mathematician geometer and astronomer Theopompus of Chios 378 c 320 BC rhetorical historian 57 Erasistratus of Chios 304 250 BC pioneering anatomist royal physician and founder of the ancient medical school of Alexandria who discovered the linking between organs through the systems of veins arteries and nerves 58 Aristo of Chios c 260 BC Stoic philosopher Claudia Metrodora c 54 68 AD public benefactor Medieval edit nbsp Leo Allatius Saint Markella 14th century martyr and saint of the Greek Orthodox church Leo Kalothetos 1315 1363 provincial governor of the Byzantine empire Leonard of Chios Greek Dominican scholar Giovanni Giustiniani 1418 1453 died during the Fall of Constantinople and buried in Chios Matrona of Chios 15th century before 1455 saint of the Greek Orthodox church Andreas Argenti saint 1465 n Chr neomartyr of the Orthodox Church Andrea Bianco 15th century Genoese cartographer resided on Chios In 1982 Ruth Durlacher hypothesised that Chios was Christopher Columbus s birthplace 59 Columbus himself said he was from the Republic of Genoa which included the island of Chios at the time Columbus was friendly with a number of Chian Genoese families referenced Chios in his writings and used the Greek language for some of his notes 60 Columbus remains a common surname on Chios Other common Greek spellings are Kouloumbis and Couloumbis Vincenzo Giustiniani Italian banker Francisco Albo 16th century pilot of Magellan expedition the first circumnavigation of the Earth Leo Allatius Leone Allacci c 1586 1669 Greek Catholic scholar and theologian Constantine Rodocanachi 1635 1687 Ottoman Greek academic chemist lexicographer and physician to Charles II of England Modern edit nbsp Ioannis Psycharis major promoter of Demotic Greek nbsp Andreas Syggros Scylitzes family of Byzantine descent Mavrokordatos family Damalas family Athanasios Parios 1722 1813 Greek hieromonk and notable theologian philosopher educator and hymnographer of his time Macarius of Corinth 1731 1805 metropolitan bishop of Corinth mystic and spiritual theological writer Nikephoros of Chios ca 1750 1821 abbot of Nea Moni monastery theological writer and orthodox saint Eustratios Argentis theologian Eustratios Argenti national hero 1767 1798 executed with Rigas Velestinlis Alexandros Kontostavlos 1789 1865 politician Christophorus Plato Castanis 1814 1866 Ottoman Greek academic author and classicist as well as former slave orphan and refugee to the United States Alexandros Georgios Paspatis 1814 1891 linguist historian and physician researcher of the Romani language and of the history and culture of the Roma people George Colvocoresses 1816 1872 military officer Mustapha Khaznadar 1817 1878 was Prime Minister of the Beylik of Tunis Michel Emmanuel Rodocanachi 1821 1901 trader and banker of London Andreas Syggros 1830 banker descended from Chios George Glarakis 1789 1855 politician Minister of Education 1838 Patriarch Constantine V of Constantinople 1833 Ralli Brothers 18th 19th century founders of major 19th century trading enterprise Ibrahim Edhem Pasha 1819 1893 Ottoman Grand Vizier Namik Kemal 1840 1888 one of the principal founders of modern Turkish literature served as a sub prefect exiled in practical terms of Chios from 1886 to his death on the island in 1888 Osman Hamdi Bey 1842 1910 Ottoman painter archaeologist Ioannis Psycharis 1854 1929 philologist descended from Chios Ambrosios Skaramagas merchant Konstantinos Amantos 1874 1960 Byzantine scholar professor at the University of Athens member of the Athens Academy Stylianos Miliadis painter Kostia Vlastos 1883 1967 banker of the old Vlastos family John D Chandris 1890 1942 Greek shipowner Stavros Livanos 1891 1963 shipping magnate Ioannis Despotopoulos 1903 1992 architect Kostas Perrikos 1905 1943 Greek Resistance figure leader of PEAN Yiannis Carras shipowner Adamantios Lemos 1916 2006 actor Andreas Papandreou 1919 1996 politician Prime Minister of Greece Mikis Theodorakis 1925 2021 composer born on the island Jani Christou 1926 1970 composer George P Livanos 1926 1997 Greek shipowner Petros Molyviatis politician Stamatios Krimigis 1938 NASA space scientist Takis Fotopoulos 1940 political philosopher Adamantios Vassilakis 1942 diplomat Dimitris Varos 1949 author poet journalist Theodoros Veniamis 1950 shipowner Mark Palios 1952 of Chian descent former professional footballer and former chief executive of the English Football Association Matthew Mirones 1956 New York politician Nikos Pateras 1963 shipowner Angeliki Frangou 1965 shipowner John Sitaras 1972 fitness professional Ioannis Fountoulis 1988 water polo playerSee also editChian wine Chian diasporaReferences edit Municipality of Chios Municipal elections October 2023 Ministry of Interior 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 a b Population amp housing census 2001 incl area and average elevation PDF in Greek National Statistical Service of Greece Archived PDF from the original on 21 September 2015 John Boardman C E Vaphopoulou Richardson 1986 Chios a conference at the Homereion in Chios 1984 Clarendon Press p v ISBN 9780198148647 Archived from the original on 22 July 2017 Daskalopetra Mastixoxwria 1881 and 1949 earthquakes at the Chios Cesme Strait Aegean Sea and their relation to tsunamis C Michael Hogan 2011 Aegean Sea Eds P Saundry amp C J Cleveland Encyclopedia of Earth National Council for Science and the Environment Washington DC a b c d Hasluck F W 1910 Terra Lemnia The Annual vol 16 Athens The British School pp 220 231 JSTOR 30096442 Chian adj and n Oxford English Dictionary Oxford Oxford University Press 2021 Chian Earth Encyclopaedia Britannica vol II 1st ed Edinburgh Colin Macfarquhar 1771 Pausanias Description of Greece 7 4 8 Boardman John Excavations in Chios 1952 1955 Greek Emporio London British School of Archaeology at Athens Thames and Hudson 1967 cf also Hood Sinclair Excavations in Chios 1938 1955 prehistoric Emporio and Ayio Gala London British School of Archaeology at Athens Thames and Hudson 1981 ISBN 0 500 96017 8 Merouses Nikos Chios Physiko periballon amp katoikese apo te neolithike epoche mechri to telos tes archaiothtas Chios Natural Environment amp Habitation from the Neolithic Age to the end of Antiquity pg 80 Papyros 2002 Merouses 2002 ch 4 Merouses 2002 ch 5 sect 1 I S Lemos The Protogeometric Aegean 2002 240 and Euboean ceramics in the Archeological Museum noted by Robin Lane Fox Travelling Heroes in the Epic Age of Homer 2008 60 note 59 Strabo 14 1 3 Herodotus 1 171 Agelarakis A Analyses of Cremated Human Skeletal Remains Dating to the Seventh Century BC Chios Greece Horos Ena Archaeognostiko Periodiko 4 1986 145 153 Murray Oswyn 1993 Early Greece 2nd ed London Fontana p 188 ISBN 0006862497 a b Grant Michael 1989 The Classical Greeks Guild Publishing London p 149 Herodotus The Histories IV 15 Thucydides Peloponnesian War 3 10 Merouses 2002 ch 5 sect 3 A translation of the decree can be viewed online Anthon Charles A Manual of Greek Literature p 251 1853 Hugh Johnson Vintage The Story of Wine pg 41 Simon and Schuster 1989 Livy 44 28 Pliny the Elder The Natural History BOOK XXXVI THE NATURAL HISTORY OF STONES CHAP 5 6 AT WHAT PERIOD MARBLE WAS FIRST USED IN BUILDINGS Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 26 March 2013 Pliny Nat Hist Book XXXV Sect 56 Pensabene P I marmi nella Roma antica Rome 2013 pp 59 62 Acts 20 15 Brownworth Lars 2009 Lost to the West The Forgotten Byzantine Empire That Rescued Western Civilization Crown Publishers ISBN 978 0 307 40795 5 the Muslims captured Ephesus in 1090 and spread out to the Greek islands Chios Rhodes and Lesbos fell in quick succession p 233 William Miller The Zaccaria of Phocaea and Chios 1275 1329 The Journal of Hellenic Studies Vol 31 1911 1911 pp 42 55 doi 10 2307 624735 Arbel Benjamin Bernard Hamilton and David Jacob Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204 ISBN 0 7146 3372 0 Chios History Archived 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Orenc Ali Fuat 2009 Sakiz Adasi TDV Encyclopedia of Islam Vol 36 Sakal Sevm in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Diyanet Foundation Centre for Islamic Studies pp 6 10 ISBN 978 975 389 566 8 William St Clair That Greece Might Still Be Free The Philhellenes in the War of Independence Oxford University Press London 1972 p 79 ISBN 0 19 215194 0 The Sephardic Community of Chios Sephardicstudies org Retrieved 22 March 2009 William St Clair p 79 Hellenic Genocide Events Archived 4 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 19 May 2008 YJC Cartledge The Chios Massacre 1822 and early British Christian humanitarianism Historical Research vol 93 no 259 February 2020 pp 52 72 at pp 60 61 Y Altinok B Alpar B N Ozer C Gazioglu 2005 1881 and 1949 earthquakes at the Chios Cesme Strait Aegean Sea and their relation to tsunamis PDF Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 5 5 717 725 Bibcode 2005NHESS 5 717A doi 10 5194 nhess 5 717 2005 Retrieved 31 July 2010 Mixahlidhs Stayros G 2014 Stayros G Libanos H Xiwtikh Naytiliakh paradosh sthn koryfh ths pagkosmias naytilias Xios a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link First World War com On This Day 17 February 1916 www firstworldwar com Retrieved 17 February 2016 Becoming a Subject Political Prisoners During the Greek Civil War Polymeris Voglis Published 2002Berghahn Books ISBN 157181308X Xios Nea prosfygikh domh sto nhsi anakoinwse to yp Metanasteyshs 28 January 2021 Archived from the original on 28 January 2021 Apografh Plh8ysmoy Katoikiwn 2011 MONIMOS Plh8ysmos in Greek Hellenic Statistical Authority Nea Moni Hellenic Ministry of Culture Archived 3 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine A Corpus of the Inscriptions of Chios IG XII 6 3 Wood Michael 1998 In Search of the Trojan War Berkeley and Los Angeles CA Univ of CA Press ISBN 0 520 21599 0 Matthew Somerville 3 July 2017 This Insane Greek Fireworks Battle Puts Your July 4th to Shame Narrative ly Archived from the original on 25 September 2018 Retrieved 3 July 2017 Municipality of Genoa Homepage Dictionary com Jona Lendering Theopompus of Chios Livius org Archived from the original on 17 February 2014 Retrieved 22 March 2009 Arthur Bard Mitchell G Bard 2002 The Complete Idiot s Guide to Understanding the Brain Alpha Books p 17 ISBN 978 0 02 864310 6 A New Theory Clarifying the Identity OF Christopher Columbus A Byzantine Prince from Chios Greece by Ruth G Durlacher Wolper 1982 Published by The New World Museum San Salvador Bahamas The Chian Federation Chianfed org Archived from the original on 27 March 2013 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Further reading editFanny Aneroussi Leonidas Mylonadis The Kampos of Chios in its Heyday Houses and Surroundings Translated from the Greek by Antonis Scotiniotis Aipos Series no 12 Akritas Publications Nea Smyrni 1992 ISBN 960 7006 87 9 Charalambos Th Bouras Chios Guides to Greece no 4 National Bank of Greece Athens 1974 Charalambos Th Bouras Greek Traditional Architecture Chios Melissa Athens 1984 Athena Zacharou Loutrari Vaso Penna Tasoula Mandala Chios History and Art Translated from the Greek by Athena Dallas Damis The Monuments of Chios The Chios Prefecture Chios 1989 OCLC 31423355 Hubert Pernot En Pays Turc L ile de Chios Dijon Imprimerie Darantiere Rue Chabot Charny 65 Avec 17 melodies populaires et 118 simili gravures J Maisonneuve Libraire Editeur Paris 1903 online Arnold C Smith The Architecture of Chios Subsidiary Buildings Implements and Crafts Edited by Philip Pandely Argenti Tison London 1962 Michales G Tsankares Alkes X Xanthakes Chios hekato chronia photographies 1850 1950 Chios One Hundred Years of Photographs 1850 1950 Synolo Athens 1996 ISBN 960 85416 4 6 Eleftherios Yalouris The Archeology and Early History of Chios From the Neolithic Period to the End of the Sixth Century B C University of Oxford Merton College dissertation 1976 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chios nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Chios nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Chios Official Chios website operated by Chios Prefecture including tourist guide Sarantakou Efi Misailidou Anna Beneki Eleni Varlas Michael 20 April 2005 Chios Cultural Portal of the Aegean Archipelago Foundation of the Hellenic World Archived from the original on 7 August 2016 Retrieved 2 April 2013 History of Chios in Greek and English Chios in ancient sources attalus org Chios Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed 1911 pp 236 237 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chios amp oldid 1223352556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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