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Rhodes

Rhodes (/rdz/ (listen); Greek: Ρόδος, romanizedRódos [ˈroðos]) is the largest and the historical capital of the Dodecanese islands of Greece. Administratively, the island forms a separate municipality within the Rhodes regional unit, which is part of the South Aegean administrative region. The principal town of the island and seat of the municipality is Rhodes.[2] The city of Rhodes had 50,636 inhabitants in 2011. In 2022 the island has population of 124,851 people.[3] It is located northeast of Crete, southeast of Athens. Rhodes has several nicknames, such as "Island of the Sun" due to its patron sun god Helios, "The Pearl Island", and "The Island of the Knights", named after the Knights of Saint John of Jerusalem, who ruled the island from 1310 to 1522.[4]

Rhodes
Ρόδος
Nickname: 
Island of the Sun
Location in the South Aegean administrative region of Greece
Coordinates: 36°10′N 27°55′E / 36.17°N 27.92°E / 36.17; 27.92Coordinates: 36°10′N 27°55′E / 36.17°N 27.92°E / 36.17; 27.92
Country Greece
Administrative regionSouth Aegean
PrefectureDodecanese
Regional unitRhodes
SeatRhodes
Government
 • MayorAntonios Kambourakis [1] (New Democracy)
Area
 • Total1,400.68 km2 (540.81 sq mi)
Highest elevation1,216 m (3,990 ft)
Lowest elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2011)
 • Total115,490
 • Density82/km2 (210/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Rhodian, Rhodiot or Rhodiote (rare)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
851 00, 851 31, 851 32, 851 33 (for Rhodes town)
Telephone2241, 2244, 2246
Websitewww.rhodes.gr
General view of the village of Lindos, with the acropolis and beaches, island of Rhodes, Greece

Historically, Rhodes was famous for the Colossus of Rhodes, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. The Medieval Old Town of the City of Rhodes has been declared a World Heritage Site. Today, it is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Europe.[5][6][7][8]

Name

The island has been known as Ρόδος (Ródos) in Greek throughout its history. It was also called Lindos (Ancient Greek: Λίνδος).[9][10] In addition, the island has been called Rodi in Italian, Rodos in Turkish, and רודי (Rodi) or רודיס (Rodes) in Ladino. Other ancient names were Ρόδη (Rodē), Τελχινίς (Telchinis) and Ηλιάς (Helias).

The Travels of Sir John Mandeville incorrectly reports that Rhodes was formerly called "Collosus", through a conflation of the Colossus of Rhodes and Paul's Epistle to the Colossians, which refers to Colossae.[11]

The island's name might be derived from erod, Phoenician for snake, since the island was home to many snakes in antiquity.[12]

Geography

 
Topographic map of Rhodes
 
Akramitis mountain
 
Detailed map of Rhodes, Kos and nearby lands

The island of Rhodes is shaped like a spearhead, 79.7 km (49.5 mi) long and 38 km (24 mi) wide, with a total area of approximately 1,400 km2 (541 sq mi) and a coastline of approximately 220 km (137 mi). Limestone is the main bedrock.[13] The city of Rhodes is located at the northern tip of the island, as well as the site of the ancient and modern commercial harbours. The main airport is the Diagoras International Airport (IATA code: RHO), located 14 km (9 mi) to the southwest of the city in Paradisi. The road network radiates from the city along the east and west coasts.

Outside the city of Rhodes, the island is dotted with small villages of whitewashed homes and spa resorts, among them Faliraki, Lindos, Kremasti, Haraki, Pefkos, Archangelos, Afantou, Koskinou, Embona (Attavyros), Paradisi, and Trianta (Ialysos).

Rhodes is situated 363 km (226 mi) east-southeast from the Greek mainland, and 18 km (11 mi) from the southern shore of Turkey. Mount Attavyros, at 1,216 m (3,990 ft), is the island's highest point of elevation.

Flora

The interior of the island is mountainous, sparsely inhabited and covered with forests of pine (Pinus brutia) and cypress (Cupressus sempervirens). While the shores are rocky, the island has arable strips of land where citrus fruit, wine grapes, vegetables, olives and other crops are grown. Many flowering plants for which the island is named are abundant.

Fauna

The Rhodian population of fallow deer was found to be genetically distinct in 2005, and to be of urgent conservation concern.[14] In Petaloudes Valley (Greek for "Valley of the Butterflies"), large numbers of tiger moths gather during the summer months.

Earthquakes

Earthquakes include the 226 BC earthquake that destroyed the Colossus of Rhodes; one on 3 May 1481 which destroyed much of the city of Rhodes;[15] and one on 26 June 1926.[16]

On 15 July 2008, Rhodes was struck by a 6.3 magnitude earthquake causing minor damage to a few old buildings and one death.[17]

Climate

Rhodes has a hot-summer Mediterranean climate (Csa in the Köppen climate classification) with mild winters and hot summers. The South East of the island experiences a significantly warmer climate with Lindos registering for the period 2010-2019 a mean annual temperature of 21.9 °C (71.4 °F),[18] making it the warmest area in Greece.[19][20] Moreover, according to the Hellenic National Meteorological Service, South East Rhodes records the highest mean annual sunshine in Greece with over 3,100 hours.[21]

Climate data for Rhodes Airport
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 22.0
(71.6)
22.0
(71.6)
27.4
(81.3)
30.6
(87.1)
34.8
(94.6)
36.2
(97.2)
39.0
(102.2)
41.2
(106.2)
35.4
(95.7)
33.2
(91.8)
28.4
(83.1)
22.8
(73.0)
41.2
(106.2)
Average high °C (°F) 15.1
(59.2)
15.2
(59.4)
17
(63)
20.0
(68.0)
24.1
(75.4)
28.3
(82.9)
30.4
(86.7)
30.7
(87.3)
28.1
(82.6)
24.5
(76.1)
20.2
(68.4)
16.7
(62.1)
22.5
(72.6)
Daily mean °C (°F) 12.0
(53.6)
12.0
(53.6)
13.5
(56.3)
16.3
(61.3)
20.0
(68.0)
24.2
(75.6)
26.4
(79.5)
26.7
(80.1)
24.4
(75.9)
20.7
(69.3)
16.7
(62.1)
13.5
(56.3)
18.9
(66.0)
Average low °C (°F) 9.2
(48.6)
9.1
(48.4)
10.5
(50.9)
13
(55)
16.3
(61.3)
20.4
(68.7)
22.7
(72.9)
23.2
(73.8)
21
(70)
17.4
(63.3)
13.7
(56.7)
10.8
(51.4)
15.6
(60.1)
Record low °C (°F) −4.0
(24.8)
−1.6
(29.1)
0.2
(32.4)
5.2
(41.4)
8.6
(47.5)
12.6
(54.7)
16.8
(62.2)
17.0
(62.6)
10.6
(51.1)
7.2
(45.0)
2.4
(36.3)
1.2
(34.2)
−4.0
(24.8)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 151.8
(5.98)
101.7
(4.00)
68.9
(2.71)
29.4
(1.16)
16.4
(0.65)
1.8
(0.07)
0.3
(0.01)
0.2
(0.01)
6.3
(0.25)
56.9
(2.24)
89.6
(3.53)
152.8
(6.02)
676.1
(26.63)
Average rainy days 15.5 12.7 10.5 7.6 4.6 1.2 0.2 0.1 1.5 6.7 9.5 15.4 85.5
Average relative humidity (%) 70.1 69.1 68.7 66.5 64.4 58.5 57.6 59.9 61.4 67.5 71.4 72.4 65.6
Mean daily sunshine hours 5.0 6.0 7.0 9.0 11.0 13.0 14.0 13.0 11.0 8.0 6.0 5.0 9.0
Percent possible sunshine 50 55 58 69 79 87 100 100 92 73 60 50 73
Source 1: Hellenic National Meteorological Service (1955-2010 averages) [22]
Source 2: NOAA (1961-1977 record temperatures taken from Maritsa Airport and 1977-1990 from Rhodes International Airport[23]),[24] Weather Atlas (sunshine data)[25]
Climate data for Rhodes
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average sea temperature °C (°F) 17.9
(64.2)
17.0
(62.6)
17.1
(62.8)
17.6
(63.7)
20.1
(68.2)
23.4
(74.1)
25.9
(78.6)
27.2
(81.0)
26.7
(80.1)
23.8
(74.8)
20.9
(69.6)
18.8
(65.8)
21.4
(70.5)
Mean daily daylight hours 10.0 11.0 12.0 13.0 14.0 15.0 14.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 10.0 10.0 12.1
Average Ultraviolet index 2 3 5 7 8 10 10 9 7 5 3 2 5.9
Source: Weather Atlas [25]

History

Prehistory

The island was inhabited in the Neolithic period although little remains of this culture.

Minoan Era

In the 16th century BC, the Minoans came to Rhodes. Later Greek mythology recalled a Rhodian race called the Telchines and associated the island of Rhodes with Danaus; it was sometimes nicknamed Telchinis.

Mycenaean Era

 
Mycenean necklace of carnelian found in Kattavia

In the 15th century BCE, Mycenaean Greeks invaded. After the Bronze Age collapse, the first renewed outside contacts were with Cyprus.[26]

In the Digesta seu Pandectae (533), the second volume of the codification of laws ordered by Justinian I (527–565) of the Eastern Roman Empire, a legal opinion written by the Roman jurist Paulus at the beginning of the Crisis of the Third Century in 235 AD was included about the Lex Rhodia ("Rhodian law") that articulates the general average principle of marine insurance established on the island of Rhodes in approximately 1000 to 800 BC as a member of the Doric Hexapolis, plausibly by the Phoenicians during the proposed Dorian invasion and emergence of the purported Sea Peoples during the Greek Dark Ages (c. 1100–c. 750) that led to the proliferation of the Doric Greek dialect.[27][28][29] The law of general average constitutes the fundamental principle that underlies all insurance.[28]

Homer mentions that Rhodes participated in the Trojan War under the leadership of Tlepolemus.[30]

Archaic Era

 
Warrior-headed vase, Camirus, Rhodes, 590-575 BC

In the 8th century BC, the island's settlements started to form, with the coming of the Dorians, who built the three important cities of Lindos, Ialyssos and Kameiros, which together with Kos, Cnidus and Halicarnassus (on the mainland) made up the so-called Dorian Hexapolis (Greek for six cities).

In Pindar's ode, the island was said to be born of the union of Helios the sun god and the nymph Rhodos, and the cities were named for their three sons. The rhoda is a pink hibiscus, native to the island. Diodorus Siculus added that Actis, one of the sons of Helios and Rhode, travelled to Egypt. He built the city of Heliopolis and taught the Egyptians astrology.[31]

In the second half of the 8th century BC, the sanctuary of Athena received votive gifts that are markers for cultural contacts: small ivories from the Near East and bronze objects from Syria. At Kameiros on the northwest coast, a former Bronze Age site, where the temple was founded in the 8th century BC, there is another notable contemporaneous sequence of carved ivory figurines. The cemeteries of Kameiros and Ialyssos yielded several exquisite exemplars of the Orientalizing Rhodian jewelry, dated in the 7th and early 6th centuries BC.[32]

Classical Era

 
Temple of Apollo at the Acropolis of Rhodes

The Persians invaded and overran the island, but they were in turn defeated by forces from Athens in 478 BC. The Rhodian cities joined the Athenian League. When the Peloponnesian War broke out in 431 BC, Rhodes remained largely neutral, although it remained a member of the League. The war lasted until 404 BC, but by this time Rhodes had withdrawn entirely from the conflict and decided to go her own way.

In 408 BC, the cities united to form one territory. They built the city of Rhodes, a new capital on the northern end of the island. Its regular plan was, according to Strabo, superintended by the Athenian architect Hippodamus.

In 357 BC, the island was conquered by the king Mausolus of Caria; then it fell again to the Persians in 340 BC. Their rule was also short.

Hellenistic and Roman periods

Rhodes then became a part of the growing empire of Alexander the Great in 332 BC, after he defeated the Persians.

 
The Colossus of Rhodes, as depicted in an artist's impression of 1880

Following the death of Alexander, his generals (Diadochi) vied for control of the kingdom. Three — Ptolemy, Seleucus, and Antigonus — succeeded in dividing the kingdom among themselves. Rhodes formed strong commercial and cultural ties with the Ptolemies in Alexandria, and together formed the Rhodo-Egyptian alliance that controlled trade throughout the Aegean in the 3rd century BC.[33]

The city developed into a maritime, commercial and cultural center; its coins circulated nearly everywhere in the Mediterranean. Its famous schools of philosophy, science, literature and rhetoric shared masters with Alexandria: the Athenian rhetorician Aeschines, who formed a school at Rhodes; Apollonius of Rhodes, who wrote about Jason and Medea in the Argonautica; the observations and works of the astronomers Hipparchus and Geminus; and the rhetorician Dionysius Thrax. Its school of sculptors developed, under Pergamese influence, a rich, dramatic style that can be characterized as "Hellenistic Baroque". Agesander of Rhodes, with two other Rhodian sculptors, carved the famous Laocoön group, now in the Vatican Museums, and the large sculptures rediscovered at Sperlonga in the villa of Tiberius, probably in the early Imperial period.[34]

In 305 BC, Antigonus directed his son, Demetrius, to besiege Rhodes in an attempt to break its alliance with Egypt. Demetrius created huge siege engines, including a 180 ft (55 m) battering ram and a siege tower called Helepolis that weighed 360,000 lb (163,293 kg). Despite this engagement, in 304 BC after only one year, he relented and signed a peace agreement, leaving behind a huge store of military equipment. The Rhodians sold the equipment and used the money to erect a statue of their sun god, Helios, the statue since called the Colossus of Rhodes. The Rhodians celebrated in honour of Helios a grand festival, the Halieia.[35]

Throughout the 3rd century BC, Rhodes attempted to secure her independence and her commerce, most especially her virtual control over the grain trade in the eastern Mediterranean. Both of these goals were dependent upon no one of the three great Hellenistic states achieving dominance, and consequently the Rhodians pursued a policy of maintaining a balance of power among the Antigonids, Seleucids and Ptolemies, even if that meant going to war with her traditional ally, Egypt. To this end they employed as leverage their economy and their excellent navy, which was manned by proverbially the finest sailors in the Mediterranean world: "If we have ten Rhodians, we have ten ships."[36]

The Rhodians also established their dominance on the shores of Caria across from their island, which became known as the "Rhodian Peraia". It extended roughly from the modern city of Muğla (ancient Mobolla) in the north and Kaunos bordering Lycia in the south, near the present-day Dalyan, Turkey.

Rhodes successfully carried on this policy through the course of the third century BC, an impressive achievement for what was essentially a democratic state. By the end of that period, however, the balance of power was crumbling, as declining Ptolemaic power made Egypt an attractive target for Seleucid ambitions. In 203/2 BC the young and dynamic kings of Antigonid Macedon and Seleucid Asia, Philip V and Antiochus III, agreed to accept—at least temporarily—their respective military ambitions: Philip's campaign in the Aegean and western Anatolia and Antiochus' plan for Egypt. Heading a coalition of small states, the Rhodians checked Philip's navy, but not his superior army. Without a third power to which to turn, the Rhodians (along with ambassadors from Pergamum, Egypt, and Athens) appealed in 201 BC to the Roman Republic.[37][38]

 
Medieval gate at the Acropolis of Lindos
 
Silver drachma of Rhodes, 88/42 BC. Obverse: radiate head of Helios. Reverse: rose, "rhodon" (ῥόδον), the symbol of Rhodes.

Despite being exhausted by the Second Punic War against Hannibal (218–201 BC) the Romans agreed to intervene, still angry over the Macedonian alliance with Carthage that had led to the First Macedonian War from 214–205 BC. The Senate saw the appeal from Rhodes and her allies as the opportunity to pressure Philip. The result was the Second Macedonian War (200–196 BC), which Rome won and greatly reduced Macedon's power, prestige, and territory. Rhodian independence was preserved. Rhodian influence in the Aegean was cemented through the organization of the Cyclades into the Second Nesiotic League under Rhodian leadership.

The Romans withdrew from Greece after the end of the conflict, but the resulting power vacuum quickly drew in Antiochus III and subsequently the Romans. The Roman–Seleucid War lasted from 192–188 BC with Rome, Rhodes, Pergamon, and other Roman-allied Greek states defeated the Seleucids and their allies, the last Mediterranean power that might even vaguely threaten Roman dominance. Having provided Rome with valuable naval help in her first foray into Asia, the Rhodians were rewarded with territory and enhanced status by the Treaty of Apamea (188 BC).[39] The Romans once again evacuated the east – the Senate preferred clients to provinces – but it was clear that Rome now ruled the Mediterranean and Rhodian autonomy was ultimately dependent upon good relations with them.

Those good graces soon evaporated in the wake of the Third Macedonian War (171–168 BC). In 169 BC, during the war against Perseus, Rhodes sent Agepolis as ambassador to the consul Quintus Marcius Philippus, and then to Rome in the following year, hoping to turn the Senate against the war.[40]

Rhodes remained scrupulously neutral during the war, but in the view of hostile elements in the Senate she had been a bit too friendly with the defeated King Perseus. Some actually proposed declaring war on the island republic, but this was averted. In 164 BC, Rhodes became a "permanent ally" of Rome, which was essentially a reduction to client state of nominal but meaningless independence. It was said that the Romans ultimately turned against the Rhodians because the islanders were the only people they had encountered who were more arrogant than themselves.

After surrendering its independence, Rhodes became a cultural and educational center for Roman noble families. It was especially noted for its teachers of rhetoric, such as Hermagoras and the unknown author of Rhetorica ad Herennium. At first, the state was an important ally of Rome and enjoyed numerous privileges, but these were later lost in various machinations of Roman politics. Cassius eventually invaded the island and sacked the city. In the early Imperial period Rhodes became a favorite place for political exiles.[41]

In the 1st century AD, the Emperor Tiberius spent a brief term of exile on Rhodes. By tradition, Paul the Apostle evangelized and helped establish an early Christian church on the island during the first century.[42]

In ancient times there was a Roman saying: "Hic Rhodus, hic salta!"—"Here is Rhodes, jump here!" (as translated from Ancient Greek "Αὐτοῦ γὰρ καὶ Ῥόδος καὶ πήδημα"), an admonition to prove one's idle boasts by deed, rather than boastful talk. It comes from an Aesop's fable called "The Boastful Athlete" and was cited by Hegel, Marx, and Kierkegaard.

Byzantine period

In 395 with the division of the Roman Empire, the long Byzantine period began for Rhodes. In Late Antiquity, the island was the capital of the Roman province of the Islands, headed by a praeses (hegemon in Greek), and encompassing most of the Aegean islands, with twenty cities. Correspondingly, the island was also the metropolis of the ecclesiastical province of Cyclades, with eleven suffragan sees.[43]

Beginning from ca. 600 AD, its influence in maritime issues was manifested in the collection of maritime laws known as "Rhodian Sea Law" (Nomos Rhodion Nautikos), accepted throughout the Mediterranean and in use throughout Byzantine times (and influencing the development of admiralty law up to the present).[citation needed] In 622/3, during the climactic Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628, Rhodes was captured by the Sasanian navy.[44][45][46]

Rhodes was occupied by the Islamic Umayyad forces of Caliph Muawiyah I in 654, who carried off the remains of the Colossus of Rhodes.[43][47] The island was again captured by the Arabs in 673 as part of their first attack on Constantinople. When their fleet was destroyed by Greek fire before Constantinople and by storms on its return trip, however, the Umayyads evacuated their troops in 679/80 as part of the Byzantine–Umayyad peace treaty.[48] In 715 the Byzantine fleet dispatched against the Arabs launched a rebellion at Rhodes, which led to the installation of Theodosios III on the Byzantine throne.[43][49]

From the early 8th to the 12th centuries, Rhodes belonged to the Cibyrrhaeot Theme of the Byzantine Empire, and was a centre for shipbuilding and commerce.[43] In c. 1090, it was occupied by the forces of the Seljuk Turks, after the long period of chaos resulting from the Battle of Manzikert.[50] Rhodes was recaptured by the Emperor Alexios I Komnenos during the First Crusade.

 
Part of the late medieval fortifications of Rhodes

As Byzantine central power weakened under the Angeloi emperors (1185–1204), in the first half of the 13th century, Rhodes became the centre of an independent domain under Leo Gabalas and his brother John,[43] until it was occupied by the Genoese in 1248–1250. The Genoese were evicted by the Empire of Nicaea, after which the island became a regular province of the Nicaean state (and after 1261 of the restored Byzantine Empire). In 1305, the island was given as a fief to Andrea Morisco, a Genoese adventurer who had entered Byzantine service.

Crusader and Ottoman rule

 
Ottoman Janissaries and defending Knights of Saint John at the Siege of Rhodes in 1522, from an Ottoman manuscript
 
Rhodes in the 19th century

In 1306–1310, the Byzantine era of the island's history came to an end when the island was occupied by the Knights Hospitaller.[43] Under the rule of the newly named "Knights of Rhodes", the city was rebuilt into a model of the European medieval ideal. Many of the city's famous monuments, including the Palace of the Grand Master, were built during this period.

 
Palace of the Grand Master in the city of Rhodes

The strong walls which the knights had built withstood the attacks of the Sultan of Egypt in 1444, and a siege by the Ottomans under Mehmed II in 1480. Eventually, however, Rhodes fell to the large army of Suleiman the Magnificent in December 1522. The Sultan deployed 400 ships delivering 100,000 men to the island (200,000 in other sources). Against this force the Knights, under Grand Master Philippe Villiers de L'Isle-Adam, had about 7,000 men-at-arms and their fortifications. The siege lasted six months, at the end of which the surviving defeated Hospitallers were allowed to withdraw to the Kingdom of Sicily. Despite the defeat, both Christians and Muslims seem to have regarded the conduct of Villiers de L'Isle-Adam as extremely valiant, and the Grand Master was proclaimed a Defender of the Faith by Pope Adrian VI (see Knights of Cyprus and Rhodes). The knights would later move their base of operations to Malta.

Rhodes was thereafter a possession of the Ottoman Empire (see Sanjak of Rhodes) for nearly four centuries.

Modern history

 
5 soldi Austrian Levant stamp cancelled in brown RHODUS.[51]
 
Palazzo Governale (today the offices of the Prefecture of the Dodecanese), built during the Italian period

In the 19th century the island was populated by ethnic groups from the surrounding nations, including Jews, whose presence goes back 2,300 years.[52] Under Ottoman rule, they generally did fairly well, but discrimination and bigotry occasionally arose. In February 1840, the Jews of Rhodes were falsely accused by the Greek Orthodox community of ritually murdering a Christian boy. This became known as the Rhodes blood libel.

Austria opened a post-office at RHODUS (Venetian name) before 1864,[53] as witnessed by stamps with Franz Joseph's head.

Italian occupation

In 1912, Italy seized Rhodes from the Ottomans during the Italo-Turkish War. The island's population was spared the "exchange of the minorities" between Greece and Turkey. Rhodes and the rest of the Dodecanese Islands were assigned to Italy in the Treaty of Ouchy. Turkey ceded them officially to Italy with the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne. It then became the core of their possession of the Isole Italiane dell'Egeo. The island was greatly improved (mainly the capital, called "Rodi" in Italian) under the more than thirty years of the Kingdom of Italy's rule.[Citation needed]

Thousands of Italian colonists settled in the island, mainly in the capital "Rodi", while some of them founded farm villages (like "Peveragno Rodio" (1929), "Campochiaro" (1935), "San Marco" (1936) and "Savona" (1938): in the Dodecanese islands was officially proposed the creation in 1940 of the "Provincia italiana di Rodi". In the late 1930s, Mussolini embarked on a program of Italianization, attempting to make the island of Rhodes a transportation hub that would facilitate the spread of Italian culture in Greece and the Levant. The Fascist program coincided with improvements to infrastructure.

Following the Italian Armistice of 8 September 1943, the British attempted to get the Italian garrison on Rhodes to change sides. This was anticipated by the German Army, which succeeded in occupying the island with the Battle of Rhodes. In great measure, the German occupation caused the British failure in the subsequent Dodecanese Campaign.

After September 1943, the Jews, who had been protected by the Italian government, were persecuted by the Nazi Germans and sent to concentration camps. However, the Turkish Consul Selahattin Ülkümen succeeded, at considerable risk to himself and his family, in saving 42 Jewish families, about 200 persons in total, who had Turkish citizenship or were members of Turkish citizens' families.

 
Indian soldiers taking over a sentry post from a German soldier following the German surrender in 1945

On 8 May 1945, the Germans under Otto Wagener surrendered Rhodes as well as the Dodecanese as a whole to the British, who soon after then occupied the islands as a military protectorate.[54]

At the Paris Peace Treaties, Rhodes, together with the other islands of the Dodecanese, was united with Greece in February 1947. 6,000 Italian colonists were forced to abandon the island and returned to Italy.

Contemporary period

In 1949, Rhodes was the venue for negotiations between Israel and Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria, concluding with the 1949 Armistice Agreements. [55]

Archaeology

 
Fountain square at the ancient site of Kameiros
 
Medieval castle of Monolithos

The Colossus of Rhodes was considered to be one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. This giant bronze statue was documented as once standing at the harbour. It was completed in 280 BC and destroyed in an earthquake in 224 BC. No trace of the statue remains today.

Historical sites on the island of Rhodes include the Acropolis of Lindos, the Acropolis of Rhodes with the Temple of Pythian Apollo and an ancient theatre and stadium,[56] ancient Ialysos, ancient Kamiros, the Governor's Palace, Rhodes Old Town (walled medieval city), the Palace of the Grand Masters, Kahal Shalom Synagogue in the Jewish Quarter, the Archaeological Museum, the ruins of the castle of Monolithos, the castle of Kritinia, St. Catherine Hospice and Rhodes Footbridge.

Religion

 
Filerimos Monastery in Ialysos

Christianity

The predominant religion is Greek Orthodox; the island is the seat of the Metropolis of Rhodes.

There is a Latin Catholic[57] minority on the island of 2,000, many of whom are descendants of Italians who remained after the end of the Italian occupation, pastorally served by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Rhodes.[citation needed]

Islam

Rhodes has a Turkish Muslim minority, which includes Greek Muslims whose ancestors from Crete and the Dodecanese converted to Islam in the Ottoman period. Although a remnant from Ottoman Turkish times they were not required in the population exchange of 1923–24 to resettle in Turkey like the Turkish, Greek, and other Muslim communities living mainly in Macedonia and other parts of Northern Greece because unlike these areas the Dodecanese Islands were under Italian administration at the time. They are organized around the Turkish Association of Rhodes (Turkish: Rodos Türk Derneği), which gives the figure 3,500 for the population they bring together and represent for the island.[58] The number of the Turks in Rhodes could be as many as 4,000.[59][60][61]

Judaism

The Jewish community of Rhodes[62] goes back 2,300 years.[63] Kahal Shalom Synagogue, established in 1557, during the Ottoman era, is the oldest synagogue in Greece and still stands in the Jewish quarter (La Juderia) of the old town of Rhodes. At its peak in the 1920s, the Jewish community was one-third of the town's total population.[64] In the 1940s, there were about 2000 Jews of various ethnic backgrounds. The Nazis deported and killed most of the community during the Holocaust. Kahal Shalom has been renovated with the help of foreign donors but few Jews live year-round in Rhodes today, so services are not held on a regular basis.[65]

The Jewish Museum of Rhodes was established in 1997 to preserve the Jewish history and culture of the Jews of Rhodes. It is adjacent to the Kahal Shalom Synagogue.

Government

 
View of Archangelos
 
View of Lindos with the Acropolis
 
St Paul's Bay, Lindos

The present municipality Rhodes was formed at the 2011 local government reform by the merger of the following 10 former municipalities, that became municipal units (constituent communities in parentheses):[2]

The municipality has an area of 1400.681 km2.[67][failed verification] It covers the island of Rhodes and a few uninhabited offshore islets. Rhodes city was the capital of the former Dodecanese Prefecture. Rhodes is the most populated island of the South Aegean Region.[citation needed]

Towns and villages

Rhodes has 43 towns and villages:

Town/Village Population Municipal unit
Rhodes City 50,636 Rhodes
Ialysos 11,331 Ialysos
Afantou 6,329 Afantou
Archangelos 5,476 Archangelos
Kremasti 5,396 Petaloudes
Kalythies 4,832 Kallithea
Koskinou 3,679 Kallithea
Pastida 3,641 Petaloudes
Lindos 3,087 Lindos
Paradeisi 2,667 Petaloudes
Maritsa 1,808 Petaloudes
Lardos 1,380 Lindos
Soroni 1,278 Kameiros
Embonas 1,242 Attavyros
Malona 1,135 Archangelos
Massari 1,004 Archangelos
Fanes 858 Kameiros
Psinthos 853 Kallithea
Apollona 845 Kameiros
Theologos 809 Petaloudes
Asklipio 646 South Rhodes
Archipoli 582 Afantou
Gennadi 671 South Rhodes
Damatria 641 Petaloudes
Pylona 627 Lindos
Salakos 576 Kameiros
Kritinia 503 Attavyros
Kalavarda 502 Kameiros
Kalathos 502 Lindos
Apolakkia 496 South Rhodes
Dimylia 465 Kameiros
Laerma 361 Lindos
Agios Isidoros 355 Attavyros
Vati 323 South Rhodes
Kattavia 307 South Rhodes
Profilia 304 South Rhodes
Istrios 291 South Rhodes
Arnitha 215 South Rhodes
Platania 196 Kameiros
Monolithos 181 Attavyros
Mesanagros 155 South Rhodes
Lachania 153 South Rhodes
Siana 152 Attavyros

Economy

 
View of the market (Nea Agora) of Mandraki (Rhodes city), built during the Italian period

The economy is tourist-oriented, and the most developed sector is service. Tourism has elevated Rhodes economically, compared to the rest of Greece.[68]

Small industries process imported raw materials for local retail, though other industry includes agricultural goods production, stockbreeding, fishery and winery.

Transportation

Air

 
Diagoras Airport, arrivals terminal

Rhodes has two airports, but only one is public. Diagoras Airport, southwest of Rhodes City, is the fourth biggest by passenger volume in Greece, and the main entrance/exit point to the island for both locals and tourists. The island is well connected with other major Greek cities and islands as well as with major European capitals and cities via charter flights. Until 1977, Rhodes Maritsa Airport, built in 1938, was a public airport; it is now used by the Hellenic Air Force and occasionally for car races.

There are also two inoperative airfields. Kalathos Airfield, north of Lindos, and Kattavia Airstrip, to the south of the island, were built by the Italians during the Second World War. Neither remain operational.

Two pilot schools offer aviation services (small plane rental and island hopping).

Sea

 
Louis Majesty at the harbour of Rhodes
 
The Kameiros Skala Dock

Rhodes has five ports, three of them in Rhodes City, one in the west coast near Kamiros and one in east coast near Lardos.[citation needed]

  • Central Port: located in the city of Rhodes serves exclusively international traffic consisting of scheduled services to/from Turkey, cruise ships and yachts. Since Summer 2012, the port is also a homeport for Costa Cruises during the summer period.
  • Kolona Port: opposite and north of the central port, serves intra-Dodecanese traffic and all sizes yachts.
  • Akandia Port: the new port of the island, south and next to the central port, being built since the 1960s, for domestic, cargo and general purpose traffic. Since 2017 summer a passenger terminal is finally in use hosting a cafe and waiting lounges.[69]
  • Mandraki Port: the oldest port of the island, in the center of Rhodes city. Many cruise boats begin their daily trips to Symi island or to the southern east coast until Lindos.[70]
  • Kamiros Skala Dock: 30 km (19 mi) south west of the city near Ancient Kamiros ruins serves mainly the island of Halki
  • Lardos Dock: formerly servicing local industries, now under development as an alternative port for times when the central port is inaccessible due to weather conditions. It is situated in a rocky shore near the village of Lardos in south east Rhodes.

Road network

The road network of the island is mostly paved and consists of 3 national roads plus one planned, 40 provincial and numerous local. These are the four major island arteries:

  • Rhodes-Kamiros Province Avenue: Province road 2 till Kalavarda village and 21 from there till Kamiros with two lane that runs through the west coast north to south and connects Rhodes City with Diagoras Airport and Kamiros.[citation needed]
  • Rhodes-Lindos National Avenue (Greek National Road 95): Four and two lane, runs mainly inland north to south and connects Rhodes City with Lindos.[citation needed] Part from Rhodes Town until Kolympia is now 4 lanes, the rest until Lindos is 2 lanes.
  • Rhodes-Kallithea-Faliraki Province Avenue 4: Two lanes, runs through the east coast north to south and connects Rhodes City with Kallithea monument and Faliraki Resort.[citation needed]
  • Tsairi-Airport National Avenue (Greek National Road 100): Four and two lane, runs inland east to west and connects the east coast with the west and the airport.[citation needed]
  • Lindos-Katavia Province Road 1: Two lane, begins just before Lindos and though villages and resorts leads to Katavia village, the southernmost of the island, from where a further deviation leads to Prasonissi.[citation needed]
  • Rhodes Town Ring Road (Phase 1): Beginning from the new marina and ending to Rhodes-Kallithea province avenue is a four lane expressway.

Future roads:[citation needed]

  • Further widening of Rhodes-Lindos National Avenue (Greek National Road 95) from Kolympia to Lindos. This is to be four lane with a jersey barrier in the middle. A tender is expected to take place by end of 2019 so as constructions can begin.
  • Ring Road phases 2, 3, and 4 pending; phase 2 will extend the expressway to Greek National Road 95 and then to Rhodes General Hospital where it supposedly will connect to also planned new Rhodes City-Airport expressway. In June 2018 Rhodes municipality stated that plans for the final 700 meters of the ring road leading to Akandia Port are pending approval.[71] Phases 3 and 4 which plan to run the ring road from hospital hill down to Ixia and then through Kritika back to the town will most probably never occur.
  • Plans also exist for a new four lane express road connecting Rhodes Town with Diagoras Airport. The road, recognised as National back in 2014,[72] will follow existing Provincial Road 3 routing with a total length of 8.6 km and including 3 main junctions and is intended to relieve congestion on the coastal west avenue. The so-called Leoforos Mesogeion is vastly anticipated and is a top priority for local authorities.

Bus

Bus services are handled by two operators:[73]

  • RODA: Municipal bus company that serves Rhodes city as well suburban areas (Koskinou, Faliraki, Ialysos, Kremasti, Airport, Pastida, Maritsa, Paradeisi) and the west coast of the island
  • KTEL: Limited liability private transport company that serve villages and resorts in the east coast of the island

Cars and motorbikes

Families in Rhodes often own more than one car, along with a motorbike. Traffic jams are common particularly in the summer months as vehicles more than double while parking spots downtown and around the old town are limited and can't cope with demand. Moreover, the island is served by 450 taxis and some 200 public and private buses adding to the traffic burden.

Sports

 
Diagoras Stadium in the city of Rhodes
  • Football: AS Rodos and Diagoras F.C. are the island's biggest teams and rivals. The latter competed in the 2018–19 season at the national level third tier (Gamma Ethniki) along with GAS Ialysos and both achieved promotion to (Greek Football League). AS Rodos competed in 1st tier of the local league and ranking 1st achieved promotion and is returning after one year to (Gamma Ethniki) which from 2019–20 season becomes tier 4. Local football leagues (organized at the prefecture-level) contain three divisions with more than 50 teams.[74] Many stadiums are grass-covered.[75]
  • Basketball: Colossus BC sponsors professional basketball and after more than a decade of presence in the top-level Greek Basket League was relegated to Greek A2 Basket League. The local league includes a single division with two groups, one for Rhodes and the other for the other islands, with 7 and 5 teams respectively.[76] Three indoor courts exist in Rhodes City, and one each in Ialysos, Kremasti, and Faliraki. Archangelos town will also get an indoor court according to Rhodes municipality planned works and regional government's approved funds.[77]
  • Volleyball: Rodion Athlisis managed to escape local obscurity and until 2018–19 season competed at the national level second-tier failing to achieve promotion to the first level in playoffs for three consecutive seasons.[78] This unlucky streak caused team sponsors to withdraw from the men's team and focus solely on developing youth academies.[79]
  • Water polo: mostly amateur-based. There is not any single public indoor pool on the island.
  • Rugby: introduced in 2007. Teams compete at the national level.[citation needed]
  • Tennis: Rhodes Tennis Club (Ροδιακός Όμιλος Αντισφαίρισης) promotes officially tennis since 1949. Club operates on two separate locations, one downtown next to the casino and one next to Kallipateira National Athletic Centre.[80]
  • Sailing: Island has competed at the international level[citation needed]
  • Cycling: For a long period of time Rhodes had the only velodrome in Greece. For the moment, the island is the seat of the Dodecanissos Local Cycling Committee. Most notable cycling clubs are Rodilios CC, Diagoras GC, Elafos CC, Iviskos CC, all based in the city of Rhodes, plus Antaios SC of Kremasti and Athlos SC of Paradeisi. In Rhodes, the International Tour of Rhodes, part of UCI Europe Tour Cycling Calendar, is annually organized.
  • Rhodes competed in the bi-annual Island Games, which it hosted in 2007.[81] Since 2019 is suspended from competition.

Cuisine

 
Pitaroudia, a traditional chickpea dumpling from Rhodes and Dodecanese
 
Melekouni

Rhodian tradition in cuisine is rich. Koriantolino and Souma (colorless alcoholic beverage produced from grape distillation) are the main alcoholic drinks of Rhodes. Local foods include:

  • Escharitis, type of bread
  • Pitaroudia
  • Milla and Tsiriggia, meat fat
  • Pougia pie
  • Lakani, goat meat with chickpeas
  • Lópia (beans) with goat
  • Matsi, hand made pasta used to make Koulouría, a traditional recipe
  • Synoro, traditional cheese
  • Tahinopita
  • Zvigoi, type of loukoumades
  • Melekouni
  • Fanouropita
  • Takakia (Mantinades)
  • Katimeria (tiganites, pancakes)
  • Amygdalota, white almond cookies
  • Moschopougia

Notable people

 
Diagoras of Rhodes carried in the stadium by his two sons

Tourism

Rhodes is one of the most attractive tourist destinations in Greece. After Crete, the island is the most visited destination in Greece, with arrivals standing at 1,785,305 in 2013. In 2014 they stood at 1,931,005, while in 2015 the arrival number reduced slightly and stood at 1,901,000.[citation needed] The average length of stay is estimated at 8 days. Guests from Great Britain, Israel, France, Italy, Sweden and Norway are the ones that constitute the biggest portion in terms of the arrivals by country. In Rhodes, the supply of available rooms is high, since more than 550 hotels are operating in the island, the majority of which are two star hotels.

In popular culture

Panoramas

 
Rhodes harbor in 2017
 
Rhodes panorama in 2017

See also

Citations

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  3. ^ "census 2022" (PDF).
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  5. ^ Paul Hellander, Greece, 2008
  6. ^ Duncan Garwood, Mediterranean Europe, 2009
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  8. ^ Harry Coccossis, Alexandra Mexa, The challenge of tourism carrying capacity assessment: theory and practice, 2004
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  15. ^ "Rhodes, Greece, 1481". Jan Kozak Collection: KZ13, The Earthquake Engineering Online Archive. from the original on 10 June 2007. Retrieved 15 July 2008.
  16. ^ Ambraseys, N. N.; Adams, R. D. (1998). "The Rhodes earthquake of 26 June 1926". Journal of Seismology. 2 (3): 267–292. Bibcode:1998JSeis...2..267A. doi:10.1023/A:1009706415417. S2CID 127587361.
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General and cited sources

External links

  • Official website

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largest and the historical capital of the Dodecanese islands of Greece Administratively the island forms a separate municipality within the Rhodes regional unit which is part of the South Aegean administrative region The principal town of the island and seat of the municipality is Rhodes 2 The city of Rhodes had 50 636 inhabitants in 2011 In 2022 the island has population of 124 851 people 3 It is located northeast of Crete southeast of Athens Rhodes has several nicknames such as Island of the Sun due to its patron sun god Helios The Pearl Island and The Island of the Knights named after the Knights of Saint John of Jerusalem who ruled the island from 1310 to 1522 4 Rhodes RodosIsland and MunicipalityFlagSealNickname Island of the SunLocation in the South Aegean administrative region of GreeceCoordinates 36 10 N 27 55 E 36 17 N 27 92 E 36 17 27 92 Coordinates 36 10 N 27 55 E 36 17 N 27 92 E 36 17 27 92Country GreeceAdministrative regionSouth AegeanPrefectureDodecaneseRegional unitRhodesSeatRhodesGovernment MayorAntonios Kambourakis 1 New Democracy Area Total1 400 68 km2 540 81 sq mi Highest elevation Attavyros 1 216 m 3 990 ft Lowest elevation0 m 0 ft Population 2011 Total115 490 Density82 km2 210 sq mi Demonym s Rhodian Rhodiot or Rhodiote rare Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Postal code851 00 851 31 851 32 851 33 for Rhodes town Telephone2241 2244 2246Websitewww wbr rhodes wbr grGeneral view of the village of Lindos with the acropolis and beaches island of Rhodes Greece Historically Rhodes was famous for the Colossus of Rhodes one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World The Medieval Old Town of the City of Rhodes has been declared a World Heritage Site Today it is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Europe 5 6 7 8 Contents 1 Name 2 Geography 2 1 Flora 2 2 Fauna 2 3 Earthquakes 2 4 Climate 3 History 3 1 Prehistory 3 2 Minoan Era 3 3 Mycenaean Era 3 4 Archaic Era 3 5 Classical Era 3 6 Hellenistic and Roman periods 3 7 Byzantine period 3 8 Crusader and Ottoman rule 3 9 Modern history 3 10 Italian occupation 3 11 Contemporary period 4 Archaeology 5 Religion 5 1 Christianity 5 2 Islam 5 3 Judaism 6 Government 6 1 Towns and villages 7 Economy 8 Transportation 8 1 Air 8 2 Sea 8 3 Road network 8 4 Bus 8 5 Cars and motorbikes 9 Sports 10 Cuisine 11 Notable people 12 Tourism 13 In popular culture 14 Panoramas 15 See also 16 Citations 17 General and cited sources 18 External linksName EditThe island has been known as Rodos Rodos in Greek throughout its history It was also called Lindos Ancient Greek Lindos 9 10 In addition the island has been called Rodi in Italian Rodos in Turkish and רודי Rodi or רודיס Rodes in Ladino Other ancient names were Rodh Rode Telxinis Telchinis and Hlias Helias The Travels of Sir John Mandeville incorrectly reports that Rhodes was formerly called Collosus through a conflation of the Colossus of Rhodes and Paul s Epistle to the Colossians which refers to Colossae 11 The island s name might be derived from erod Phoenician for snake since the island was home to many snakes in antiquity 12 Geography Edit Topographic map of Rhodes Akramitis mountain Detailed map of Rhodes Kos and nearby lands The island of Rhodes is shaped like a spearhead 79 7 km 49 5 mi long and 38 km 24 mi wide with a total area of approximately 1 400 km2 541 sq mi and a coastline of approximately 220 km 137 mi Limestone is the main bedrock 13 The city of Rhodes is located at the northern tip of the island as well as the site of the ancient and modern commercial harbours The main airport is the Diagoras International Airport IATA code RHO located 14 km 9 mi to the southwest of the city in Paradisi The road network radiates from the city along the east and west coasts Outside the city of Rhodes the island is dotted with small villages of whitewashed homes and spa resorts among them Faliraki Lindos Kremasti Haraki Pefkos Archangelos Afantou Koskinou Embona Attavyros Paradisi and Trianta Ialysos Rhodes is situated 363 km 226 mi east southeast from the Greek mainland and 18 km 11 mi from the southern shore of Turkey Mount Attavyros at 1 216 m 3 990 ft is the island s highest point of elevation Flora Edit Further information Natural history of Rhodes The interior of the island is mountainous sparsely inhabited and covered with forests of pine Pinus brutia and cypress Cupressus sempervirens While the shores are rocky the island has arable strips of land where citrus fruit wine grapes vegetables olives and other crops are grown Many flowering plants for which the island is named are abundant Fauna Edit Further information Natural history of Rhodes The Rhodian population of fallow deer was found to be genetically distinct in 2005 and to be of urgent conservation concern 14 In Petaloudes Valley Greek for Valley of the Butterflies large numbers of tiger moths gather during the summer months Earthquakes Edit Earthquakes include the 226 BC earthquake that destroyed the Colossus of Rhodes one on 3 May 1481 which destroyed much of the city of Rhodes 15 and one on 26 June 1926 16 On 15 July 2008 Rhodes was struck by a 6 3 magnitude earthquake causing minor damage to a few old buildings and one death 17 Climate Edit Rhodes has a hot summer Mediterranean climate Csa in the Koppen climate classification with mild winters and hot summers The South East of the island experiences a significantly warmer climate with Lindos registering for the period 2010 2019 a mean annual temperature of 21 9 C 71 4 F 18 making it the warmest area in Greece 19 20 Moreover according to the Hellenic National Meteorological Service South East Rhodes records the highest mean annual sunshine in Greece with over 3 100 hours 21 Climate data for Rhodes AirportMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 22 0 71 6 22 0 71 6 27 4 81 3 30 6 87 1 34 8 94 6 36 2 97 2 39 0 102 2 41 2 106 2 35 4 95 7 33 2 91 8 28 4 83 1 22 8 73 0 41 2 106 2 Average high C F 15 1 59 2 15 2 59 4 17 63 20 0 68 0 24 1 75 4 28 3 82 9 30 4 86 7 30 7 87 3 28 1 82 6 24 5 76 1 20 2 68 4 16 7 62 1 22 5 72 6 Daily mean C F 12 0 53 6 12 0 53 6 13 5 56 3 16 3 61 3 20 0 68 0 24 2 75 6 26 4 79 5 26 7 80 1 24 4 75 9 20 7 69 3 16 7 62 1 13 5 56 3 18 9 66 0 Average low C F 9 2 48 6 9 1 48 4 10 5 50 9 13 55 16 3 61 3 20 4 68 7 22 7 72 9 23 2 73 8 21 70 17 4 63 3 13 7 56 7 10 8 51 4 15 6 60 1 Record low C F 4 0 24 8 1 6 29 1 0 2 32 4 5 2 41 4 8 6 47 5 12 6 54 7 16 8 62 2 17 0 62 6 10 6 51 1 7 2 45 0 2 4 36 3 1 2 34 2 4 0 24 8 Average rainfall mm inches 151 8 5 98 101 7 4 00 68 9 2 71 29 4 1 16 16 4 0 65 1 8 0 07 0 3 0 01 0 2 0 01 6 3 0 25 56 9 2 24 89 6 3 53 152 8 6 02 676 1 26 63 Average rainy days 15 5 12 7 10 5 7 6 4 6 1 2 0 2 0 1 1 5 6 7 9 5 15 4 85 5Average relative humidity 70 1 69 1 68 7 66 5 64 4 58 5 57 6 59 9 61 4 67 5 71 4 72 4 65 6Mean daily sunshine hours 5 0 6 0 7 0 9 0 11 0 13 0 14 0 13 0 11 0 8 0 6 0 5 0 9 0Percent possible sunshine 50 55 58 69 79 87 100 100 92 73 60 50 73Source 1 Hellenic National Meteorological Service 1955 2010 averages 22 Source 2 NOAA 1961 1977 record temperatures taken from Maritsa Airport and 1977 1990 from Rhodes International Airport 23 24 Weather Atlas sunshine data 25 Climate data for RhodesMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage sea temperature C F 17 9 64 2 17 0 62 6 17 1 62 8 17 6 63 7 20 1 68 2 23 4 74 1 25 9 78 6 27 2 81 0 26 7 80 1 23 8 74 8 20 9 69 6 18 8 65 8 21 4 70 5 Mean daily daylight hours 10 0 11 0 12 0 13 0 14 0 15 0 14 0 13 0 12 0 11 0 10 0 10 0 12 1Average Ultraviolet index 2 3 5 7 8 10 10 9 7 5 3 2 5 9Source Weather Atlas 25 History EditIt has been suggested that this section be split out into another article titled History of Rhodes Discuss April 2022 Prehistory Edit The island was inhabited in the Neolithic period although little remains of this culture Minoan Era Edit Main article Minoan civilization In the 16th century BC the Minoans came to Rhodes Later Greek mythology recalled a Rhodian race called the Telchines and associated the island of Rhodes with Danaus it was sometimes nicknamed Telchinis Mycenaean Era Edit Main articles Doric Hexapolis Mycenaean Greece and Greek Dark Ages Mycenean necklace of carnelian found in Kattavia In the 15th century BCE Mycenaean Greeks invaded After the Bronze Age collapse the first renewed outside contacts were with Cyprus 26 In the Digesta seu Pandectae 533 the second volume of the codification of laws ordered by Justinian I 527 565 of the Eastern Roman Empire a legal opinion written by the Roman jurist Paulus at the beginning of the Crisis of the Third Century in 235 AD was included about the Lex Rhodia Rhodian law that articulates the general average principle of marine insurance established on the island of Rhodes in approximately 1000 to 800 BC as a member of the Doric Hexapolis plausibly by the Phoenicians during the proposed Dorian invasion and emergence of the purported Sea Peoples during the Greek Dark Ages c 1100 c 750 that led to the proliferation of the Doric Greek dialect 27 28 29 The law of general average constitutes the fundamental principle that underlies all insurance 28 Homer mentions that Rhodes participated in the Trojan War under the leadership of Tlepolemus 30 Archaic Era Edit Main article Archaic Greece Warrior headed vase Camirus Rhodes 590 575 BC In the 8th century BC the island s settlements started to form with the coming of the Dorians who built the three important cities of Lindos Ialyssos and Kameiros which together with Kos Cnidus and Halicarnassus on the mainland made up the so called Dorian Hexapolis Greek for six cities In Pindar s ode the island was said to be born of the union of Helios the sun god and the nymph Rhodos and the cities were named for their three sons The rhoda is a pink hibiscus native to the island Diodorus Siculus added that Actis one of the sons of Helios and Rhode travelled to Egypt He built the city of Heliopolis and taught the Egyptians astrology 31 In the second half of the 8th century BC the sanctuary of Athena received votive gifts that are markers for cultural contacts small ivories from the Near East and bronze objects from Syria At Kameiros on the northwest coast a former Bronze Age site where the temple was founded in the 8th century BC there is another notable contemporaneous sequence of carved ivory figurines The cemeteries of Kameiros and Ialyssos yielded several exquisite exemplars of the Orientalizing Rhodian jewelry dated in the 7th and early 6th centuries BC 32 Classical Era Edit Temple of Apollo at the Acropolis of Rhodes Main article Classical Greece The Persians invaded and overran the island but they were in turn defeated by forces from Athens in 478 BC The Rhodian cities joined the Athenian League When the Peloponnesian War broke out in 431 BC Rhodes remained largely neutral although it remained a member of the League The war lasted until 404 BC but by this time Rhodes had withdrawn entirely from the conflict and decided to go her own way In 408 BC the cities united to form one territory They built the city of Rhodes a new capital on the northern end of the island Its regular plan was according to Strabo superintended by the Athenian architect Hippodamus In 357 BC the island was conquered by the king Mausolus of Caria then it fell again to the Persians in 340 BC Their rule was also short Hellenistic and Roman periods Edit Main articles Hellenistic Greece and Greece in the Roman era Rhodes then became a part of the growing empire of Alexander the Great in 332 BC after he defeated the Persians The Colossus of Rhodes as depicted in an artist s impression of 1880 Following the death of Alexander his generals Diadochi vied for control of the kingdom Three Ptolemy Seleucus and Antigonus succeeded in dividing the kingdom among themselves Rhodes formed strong commercial and cultural ties with the Ptolemies in Alexandria and together formed the Rhodo Egyptian alliance that controlled trade throughout the Aegean in the 3rd century BC 33 The city developed into a maritime commercial and cultural center its coins circulated nearly everywhere in the Mediterranean Its famous schools of philosophy science literature and rhetoric shared masters with Alexandria the Athenian rhetorician Aeschines who formed a school at Rhodes Apollonius of Rhodes who wrote about Jason and Medea in the Argonautica the observations and works of the astronomers Hipparchus and Geminus and the rhetorician Dionysius Thrax Its school of sculptors developed under Pergamese influence a rich dramatic style that can be characterized as Hellenistic Baroque Agesander of Rhodes with two other Rhodian sculptors carved the famous Laocoon group now in the Vatican Museums and the large sculptures rediscovered at Sperlonga in the villa of Tiberius probably in the early Imperial period 34 In 305 BC Antigonus directed his son Demetrius to besiege Rhodes in an attempt to break its alliance with Egypt Demetrius created huge siege engines including a 180 ft 55 m battering ram and a siege tower called Helepolis that weighed 360 000 lb 163 293 kg Despite this engagement in 304 BC after only one year he relented and signed a peace agreement leaving behind a huge store of military equipment The Rhodians sold the equipment and used the money to erect a statue of their sun god Helios the statue since called the Colossus of Rhodes The Rhodians celebrated in honour of Helios a grand festival the Halieia 35 Throughout the 3rd century BC Rhodes attempted to secure her independence and her commerce most especially her virtual control over the grain trade in the eastern Mediterranean Both of these goals were dependent upon no one of the three great Hellenistic states achieving dominance and consequently the Rhodians pursued a policy of maintaining a balance of power among the Antigonids Seleucids and Ptolemies even if that meant going to war with her traditional ally Egypt To this end they employed as leverage their economy and their excellent navy which was manned by proverbially the finest sailors in the Mediterranean world If we have ten Rhodians we have ten ships 36 The Rhodians also established their dominance on the shores of Caria across from their island which became known as the Rhodian Peraia It extended roughly from the modern city of Mugla ancient Mobolla in the north and Kaunos bordering Lycia in the south near the present day Dalyan Turkey Rhodes successfully carried on this policy through the course of the third century BC an impressive achievement for what was essentially a democratic state By the end of that period however the balance of power was crumbling as declining Ptolemaic power made Egypt an attractive target for Seleucid ambitions In 203 2 BC the young and dynamic kings of Antigonid Macedon and Seleucid Asia Philip V and Antiochus III agreed to accept at least temporarily their respective military ambitions Philip s campaign in the Aegean and western Anatolia and Antiochus plan for Egypt Heading a coalition of small states the Rhodians checked Philip s navy but not his superior army Without a third power to which to turn the Rhodians along with ambassadors from Pergamum Egypt and Athens appealed in 201 BC to the Roman Republic 37 38 Medieval gate at the Acropolis of Lindos Silver drachma of Rhodes 88 42 BC Obverse radiate head of Helios Reverse rose rhodon ῥodon the symbol of Rhodes Despite being exhausted by the Second Punic War against Hannibal 218 201 BC the Romans agreed to intervene still angry over the Macedonian alliance with Carthage that had led to the First Macedonian War from 214 205 BC The Senate saw the appeal from Rhodes and her allies as the opportunity to pressure Philip The result was the Second Macedonian War 200 196 BC which Rome won and greatly reduced Macedon s power prestige and territory Rhodian independence was preserved Rhodian influence in the Aegean was cemented through the organization of the Cyclades into the Second Nesiotic League under Rhodian leadership The Romans withdrew from Greece after the end of the conflict but the resulting power vacuum quickly drew in Antiochus III and subsequently the Romans The Roman Seleucid War lasted from 192 188 BC with Rome Rhodes Pergamon and other Roman allied Greek states defeated the Seleucids and their allies the last Mediterranean power that might even vaguely threaten Roman dominance Having provided Rome with valuable naval help in her first foray into Asia the Rhodians were rewarded with territory and enhanced status by the Treaty of Apamea 188 BC 39 The Romans once again evacuated the east the Senate preferred clients to provinces but it was clear that Rome now ruled the Mediterranean and Rhodian autonomy was ultimately dependent upon good relations with them Those good graces soon evaporated in the wake of the Third Macedonian War 171 168 BC In 169 BC during the war against Perseus Rhodes sent Agepolis as ambassador to the consul Quintus Marcius Philippus and then to Rome in the following year hoping to turn the Senate against the war 40 Rhodes remained scrupulously neutral during the war but in the view of hostile elements in the Senate she had been a bit too friendly with the defeated King Perseus Some actually proposed declaring war on the island republic but this was averted In 164 BC Rhodes became a permanent ally of Rome which was essentially a reduction to client state of nominal but meaningless independence It was said that the Romans ultimately turned against the Rhodians because the islanders were the only people they had encountered who were more arrogant than themselves After surrendering its independence Rhodes became a cultural and educational center for Roman noble families It was especially noted for its teachers of rhetoric such as Hermagoras and the unknown author of Rhetorica ad Herennium At first the state was an important ally of Rome and enjoyed numerous privileges but these were later lost in various machinations of Roman politics Cassius eventually invaded the island and sacked the city In the early Imperial period Rhodes became a favorite place for political exiles 41 In the 1st century AD the Emperor Tiberius spent a brief term of exile on Rhodes By tradition Paul the Apostle evangelized and helped establish an early Christian church on the island during the first century 42 In ancient times there was a Roman saying Hic Rhodus hic salta Here is Rhodes jump here as translated from Ancient Greek Aὐtoῦ gὰr kaὶ Ῥodos kaὶ phdhma an admonition to prove one s idle boasts by deed rather than boastful talk It comes from an Aesop s fable called The Boastful Athlete and was cited by Hegel Marx and Kierkegaard Byzantine period Edit Main article Byzantine Greece In 395 with the division of the Roman Empire the long Byzantine period began for Rhodes In Late Antiquity the island was the capital of the Roman province of the Islands headed by a praeses hegemon in Greek and encompassing most of the Aegean islands with twenty cities Correspondingly the island was also the metropolis of the ecclesiastical province of Cyclades with eleven suffragan sees 43 Beginning from ca 600 AD its influence in maritime issues was manifested in the collection of maritime laws known as Rhodian Sea Law Nomos Rhodion Nautikos accepted throughout the Mediterranean and in use throughout Byzantine times and influencing the development of admiralty law up to the present citation needed In 622 3 during the climactic Byzantine Sasanian War of 602 628 Rhodes was captured by the Sasanian navy 44 45 46 Rhodes was occupied by the Islamic Umayyad forces of Caliph Muawiyah I in 654 who carried off the remains of the Colossus of Rhodes 43 47 The island was again captured by the Arabs in 673 as part of their first attack on Constantinople When their fleet was destroyed by Greek fire before Constantinople and by storms on its return trip however the Umayyads evacuated their troops in 679 80 as part of the Byzantine Umayyad peace treaty 48 In 715 the Byzantine fleet dispatched against the Arabs launched a rebellion at Rhodes which led to the installation of Theodosios III on the Byzantine throne 43 49 From the early 8th to the 12th centuries Rhodes belonged to the Cibyrrhaeot Theme of the Byzantine Empire and was a centre for shipbuilding and commerce 43 In c 1090 it was occupied by the forces of the Seljuk Turks after the long period of chaos resulting from the Battle of Manzikert 50 Rhodes was recaptured by the Emperor Alexios I Komnenos during the First Crusade Part of the late medieval fortifications of Rhodes As Byzantine central power weakened under the Angeloi emperors 1185 1204 in the first half of the 13th century Rhodes became the centre of an independent domain under Leo Gabalas and his brother John 43 until it was occupied by the Genoese in 1248 1250 The Genoese were evicted by the Empire of Nicaea after which the island became a regular province of the Nicaean state and after 1261 of the restored Byzantine Empire In 1305 the island was given as a fief to Andrea Morisco a Genoese adventurer who had entered Byzantine service Crusader and Ottoman rule Edit Further information Ottoman Greece and Hospitaller Rhodes Ottoman Janissaries and defending Knights of Saint John at the Siege of Rhodes in 1522 from an Ottoman manuscript Rhodes in the 19th century In 1306 1310 the Byzantine era of the island s history came to an end when the island was occupied by the Knights Hospitaller 43 Under the rule of the newly named Knights of Rhodes the city was rebuilt into a model of the European medieval ideal Many of the city s famous monuments including the Palace of the Grand Master were built during this period Palace of the Grand Master in the city of Rhodes The strong walls which the knights had built withstood the attacks of the Sultan of Egypt in 1444 and a siege by the Ottomans under Mehmed II in 1480 Eventually however Rhodes fell to the large army of Suleiman the Magnificent in December 1522 The Sultan deployed 400 ships delivering 100 000 men to the island 200 000 in other sources Against this force the Knights under Grand Master Philippe Villiers de L Isle Adam had about 7 000 men at arms and their fortifications The siege lasted six months at the end of which the surviving defeated Hospitallers were allowed to withdraw to the Kingdom of Sicily Despite the defeat both Christians and Muslims seem to have regarded the conduct of Villiers de L Isle Adam as extremely valiant and the Grand Master was proclaimed a Defender of the Faith by Pope Adrian VI see Knights of Cyprus and Rhodes The knights would later move their base of operations to Malta Rhodes was thereafter a possession of the Ottoman Empire see Sanjak of Rhodes for nearly four centuries Modern history Edit 5 soldi Austrian Levant stamp cancelled in brown RHODUS 51 Palazzo Governale today the offices of the Prefecture of the Dodecanese built during the Italian period In the 19th century the island was populated by ethnic groups from the surrounding nations including Jews whose presence goes back 2 300 years 52 Under Ottoman rule they generally did fairly well but discrimination and bigotry occasionally arose In February 1840 the Jews of Rhodes were falsely accused by the Greek Orthodox community of ritually murdering a Christian boy This became known as the Rhodes blood libel Austria opened a post office at RHODUS Venetian name before 1864 53 as witnessed by stamps with Franz Joseph s head Italian occupation Edit See also Italian colonists in the Dodecanese In 1912 Italy seized Rhodes from the Ottomans during the Italo Turkish War The island s population was spared the exchange of the minorities between Greece and Turkey Rhodes and the rest of the Dodecanese Islands were assigned to Italy in the Treaty of Ouchy Turkey ceded them officially to Italy with the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne It then became the core of their possession of the Isole Italiane dell Egeo The island was greatly improved mainly the capital called Rodi in Italian under the more than thirty years of the Kingdom of Italy s rule Citation needed Thousands of Italian colonists settled in the island mainly in the capital Rodi while some of them founded farm villages like Peveragno Rodio 1929 Campochiaro 1935 San Marco 1936 and Savona 1938 in the Dodecanese islands was officially proposed the creation in 1940 of the Provincia italiana di Rodi In the late 1930s Mussolini embarked on a program of Italianization attempting to make the island of Rhodes a transportation hub that would facilitate the spread of Italian culture in Greece and the Levant The Fascist program coincided with improvements to infrastructure Following the Italian Armistice of 8 September 1943 the British attempted to get the Italian garrison on Rhodes to change sides This was anticipated by the German Army which succeeded in occupying the island with the Battle of Rhodes In great measure the German occupation caused the British failure in the subsequent Dodecanese Campaign After September 1943 the Jews who had been protected by the Italian government were persecuted by the Nazi Germans and sent to concentration camps However the Turkish Consul Selahattin Ulkumen succeeded at considerable risk to himself and his family in saving 42 Jewish families about 200 persons in total who had Turkish citizenship or were members of Turkish citizens families Indian soldiers taking over a sentry post from a German soldier following the German surrender in 1945 On 8 May 1945 the Germans under Otto Wagener surrendered Rhodes as well as the Dodecanese as a whole to the British who soon after then occupied the islands as a military protectorate 54 At the Paris Peace Treaties Rhodes together with the other islands of the Dodecanese was united with Greece in February 1947 6 000 Italian colonists were forced to abandon the island and returned to Italy Contemporary period Edit In 1949 Rhodes was the venue for negotiations between Israel and Egypt Jordan Lebanon and Syria concluding with the 1949 Armistice Agreements 55 Archaeology Edit Fountain square at the ancient site of Kameiros Medieval castle of Monolithos The Colossus of Rhodes was considered to be one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World This giant bronze statue was documented as once standing at the harbour It was completed in 280 BC and destroyed in an earthquake in 224 BC No trace of the statue remains today Historical sites on the island of Rhodes include the Acropolis of Lindos the Acropolis of Rhodes with the Temple of Pythian Apollo and an ancient theatre and stadium 56 ancient Ialysos ancient Kamiros the Governor s Palace Rhodes Old Town walled medieval city the Palace of the Grand Masters Kahal Shalom Synagogue in the Jewish Quarter the Archaeological Museum the ruins of the castle of Monolithos the castle of Kritinia St Catherine Hospice and Rhodes Footbridge Religion Edit Filerimos Monastery in Ialysos Christianity Edit The predominant religion is Greek Orthodox the island is the seat of the Metropolis of Rhodes There is a Latin Catholic 57 minority on the island of 2 000 many of whom are descendants of Italians who remained after the end of the Italian occupation pastorally served by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Rhodes citation needed Islam Edit Main article Turks of the Dodecanese Rhodes has a Turkish Muslim minority which includes Greek Muslims whose ancestors from Crete and the Dodecanese converted to Islam in the Ottoman period Although a remnant from Ottoman Turkish times they were not required in the population exchange of 1923 24 to resettle in Turkey like the Turkish Greek and other Muslim communities living mainly in Macedonia and other parts of Northern Greece because unlike these areas the Dodecanese Islands were under Italian administration at the time They are organized around the Turkish Association of Rhodes Turkish Rodos Turk Dernegi which gives the figure 3 500 for the population they bring together and represent for the island 58 The number of the Turks in Rhodes could be as many as 4 000 59 60 61 Judaism Edit See also Selahattin Ulkumen The Jewish community of Rhodes 62 goes back 2 300 years 63 Kahal Shalom Synagogue established in 1557 during the Ottoman era is the oldest synagogue in Greece and still stands in the Jewish quarter La Juderia of the old town of Rhodes At its peak in the 1920s the Jewish community was one third of the town s total population 64 In the 1940s there were about 2000 Jews of various ethnic backgrounds The Nazis deported and killed most of the community during the Holocaust Kahal Shalom has been renovated with the help of foreign donors but few Jews live year round in Rhodes today so services are not held on a regular basis 65 The Jewish Museum of Rhodes was established in 1997 to preserve the Jewish history and culture of the Jews of Rhodes It is adjacent to the Kahal Shalom Synagogue Government Edit View of Archangelos View of Lindos with the Acropolis St Paul s Bay Lindos The present municipality Rhodes was formed at the 2011 local government reform by the merger of the following 10 former municipalities that became municipal units constituent communities in parentheses 2 Afantou Afantou Archipoli Archangelos Archangelos Malonas Masari Attavyros Embonas Kritinia Monolithos Siana Agios Isidoros Ialysos Kallithea Kalythies Koskinou Psinthos Kameiros Soroni Apollona Dimylia Kalavarda Platania Salakos Fanes Lindos Lindos Kalathos Laerma Lardos Pylona Petaloudes Kremasti Pastida Maritsa Paradeisi Theologos Damatria Rhodes South Rhodes Gennadi Apolakkia Arnitha Asklipieio Vati Istrios Kattavia Lachania 66 Mesanagros Profilia The municipality has an area of 1400 681 km2 67 failed verification It covers the island of Rhodes and a few uninhabited offshore islets Rhodes city was the capital of the former Dodecanese Prefecture Rhodes is the most populated island of the South Aegean Region citation needed Towns and villages Edit Rhodes has 43 towns and villages Town Village Population Municipal unitRhodes City 50 636 RhodesIalysos 11 331 IalysosAfantou 6 329 AfantouArchangelos 5 476 ArchangelosKremasti 5 396 PetaloudesKalythies 4 832 KallitheaKoskinou 3 679 KallitheaPastida 3 641 PetaloudesLindos 3 087 LindosParadeisi 2 667 PetaloudesMaritsa 1 808 PetaloudesLardos 1 380 LindosSoroni 1 278 KameirosEmbonas 1 242 AttavyrosMalona 1 135 ArchangelosMassari 1 004 ArchangelosFanes 858 KameirosPsinthos 853 KallitheaApollona 845 KameirosTheologos 809 PetaloudesAsklipio 646 South RhodesArchipoli 582 AfantouGennadi 671 South RhodesDamatria 641 PetaloudesPylona 627 LindosSalakos 576 KameirosKritinia 503 AttavyrosKalavarda 502 KameirosKalathos 502 LindosApolakkia 496 South RhodesDimylia 465 KameirosLaerma 361 LindosAgios Isidoros 355 AttavyrosVati 323 South RhodesKattavia 307 South RhodesProfilia 304 South RhodesIstrios 291 South RhodesArnitha 215 South RhodesPlatania 196 KameirosMonolithos 181 AttavyrosMesanagros 155 South RhodesLachania 153 South RhodesSiana 152 AttavyrosEconomy Edit View of the market Nea Agora of Mandraki Rhodes city built during the Italian period The economy is tourist oriented and the most developed sector is service Tourism has elevated Rhodes economically compared to the rest of Greece 68 Small industries process imported raw materials for local retail though other industry includes agricultural goods production stockbreeding fishery and winery Transportation EditAir Edit Diagoras Airport arrivals terminal Rhodes has two airports but only one is public Diagoras Airport southwest of Rhodes City is the fourth biggest by passenger volume in Greece and the main entrance exit point to the island for both locals and tourists The island is well connected with other major Greek cities and islands as well as with major European capitals and cities via charter flights Until 1977 Rhodes Maritsa Airport built in 1938 was a public airport it is now used by the Hellenic Air Force and occasionally for car races There are also two inoperative airfields Kalathos Airfield north of Lindos and Kattavia Airstrip to the south of the island were built by the Italians during the Second World War Neither remain operational Two pilot schools offer aviation services small plane rental and island hopping Sea Edit Louis Majesty at the harbour of Rhodes The Kameiros Skala Dock Rhodes has five ports three of them in Rhodes City one in the west coast near Kamiros and one in east coast near Lardos citation needed Central Port located in the city of Rhodes serves exclusively international traffic consisting of scheduled services to from Turkey cruise ships and yachts Since Summer 2012 the port is also a homeport for Costa Cruises during the summer period Kolona Port opposite and north of the central port serves intra Dodecanese traffic and all sizes yachts Akandia Port the new port of the island south and next to the central port being built since the 1960s for domestic cargo and general purpose traffic Since 2017 summer a passenger terminal is finally in use hosting a cafe and waiting lounges 69 Mandraki Port the oldest port of the island in the center of Rhodes city Many cruise boats begin their daily trips to Symi island or to the southern east coast until Lindos 70 Kamiros Skala Dock 30 km 19 mi south west of the city near Ancient Kamiros ruins serves mainly the island of Halki Lardos Dock formerly servicing local industries now under development as an alternative port for times when the central port is inaccessible due to weather conditions It is situated in a rocky shore near the village of Lardos in south east Rhodes Road network Edit The road network of the island is mostly paved and consists of 3 national roads plus one planned 40 provincial and numerous local These are the four major island arteries Rhodes Kamiros Province Avenue Province road 2 till Kalavarda village and 21 from there till Kamiros with two lane that runs through the west coast north to south and connects Rhodes City with Diagoras Airport and Kamiros citation needed Rhodes Lindos National Avenue Greek National Road 95 Four and two lane runs mainly inland north to south and connects Rhodes City with Lindos citation needed Part from Rhodes Town until Kolympia is now 4 lanes the rest until Lindos is 2 lanes Rhodes Kallithea Faliraki Province Avenue 4 Two lanes runs through the east coast north to south and connects Rhodes City with Kallithea monument and Faliraki Resort citation needed Tsairi Airport National Avenue Greek National Road 100 Four and two lane runs inland east to west and connects the east coast with the west and the airport citation needed Lindos Katavia Province Road 1 Two lane begins just before Lindos and though villages and resorts leads to Katavia village the southernmost of the island from where a further deviation leads to Prasonissi citation needed Rhodes Town Ring Road Phase 1 Beginning from the new marina and ending to Rhodes Kallithea province avenue is a four lane expressway Future roads citation needed Further widening of Rhodes Lindos National Avenue Greek National Road 95 from Kolympia to Lindos This is to be four lane with a jersey barrier in the middle A tender is expected to take place by end of 2019 so as constructions can begin Ring Road phases 2 3 and 4 pending phase 2 will extend the expressway to Greek National Road 95 and then to Rhodes General Hospital where it supposedly will connect to also planned new Rhodes City Airport expressway In June 2018 Rhodes municipality stated that plans for the final 700 meters of the ring road leading to Akandia Port are pending approval 71 Phases 3 and 4 which plan to run the ring road from hospital hill down to Ixia and then through Kritika back to the town will most probably never occur Plans also exist for a new four lane express road connecting Rhodes Town with Diagoras Airport The road recognised as National back in 2014 72 will follow existing Provincial Road 3 routing with a total length of 8 6 km and including 3 main junctions and is intended to relieve congestion on the coastal west avenue The so called Leoforos Mesogeion is vastly anticipated and is a top priority for local authorities Bus Edit Bus services are handled by two operators 73 RODA Municipal bus company that serves Rhodes city as well suburban areas Koskinou Faliraki Ialysos Kremasti Airport Pastida Maritsa Paradeisi and the west coast of the island KTEL Limited liability private transport company that serve villages and resorts in the east coast of the islandCars and motorbikes Edit Families in Rhodes often own more than one car along with a motorbike Traffic jams are common particularly in the summer months as vehicles more than double while parking spots downtown and around the old town are limited and can t cope with demand Moreover the island is served by 450 taxis and some 200 public and private buses adding to the traffic burden Sports Edit Diagoras Stadium in the city of Rhodes Football AS Rodos and Diagoras F C are the island s biggest teams and rivals The latter competed in the 2018 19 season at the national level third tier Gamma Ethniki along with GAS Ialysos and both achieved promotion to Greek Football League AS Rodos competed in 1st tier of the local league and ranking 1st achieved promotion and is returning after one year to Gamma Ethniki which from 2019 20 season becomes tier 4 Local football leagues organized at the prefecture level contain three divisions with more than 50 teams 74 Many stadiums are grass covered 75 Basketball Colossus BC sponsors professional basketball and after more than a decade of presence in the top level Greek Basket League was relegated to Greek A2 Basket League The local league includes a single division with two groups one for Rhodes and the other for the other islands with 7 and 5 teams respectively 76 Three indoor courts exist in Rhodes City and one each in Ialysos Kremasti and Faliraki Archangelos town will also get an indoor court according to Rhodes municipality planned works and regional government s approved funds 77 Volleyball Rodion Athlisis managed to escape local obscurity and until 2018 19 season competed at the national level second tier failing to achieve promotion to the first level in playoffs for three consecutive seasons 78 This unlucky streak caused team sponsors to withdraw from the men s team and focus solely on developing youth academies 79 Water polo mostly amateur based There is not any single public indoor pool on the island Rugby introduced in 2007 Teams compete at the national level citation needed Tennis Rhodes Tennis Club Rodiakos Omilos Antisfairishs promotes officially tennis since 1949 Club operates on two separate locations one downtown next to the casino and one next to Kallipateira National Athletic Centre 80 Sailing Island has competed at the international level citation needed Cycling For a long period of time Rhodes had the only velodrome in Greece For the moment the island is the seat of the Dodecanissos Local Cycling Committee Most notable cycling clubs are Rodilios CC Diagoras GC Elafos CC Iviskos CC all based in the city of Rhodes plus Antaios SC of Kremasti and Athlos SC of Paradeisi In Rhodes the International Tour of Rhodes part of UCI Europe Tour Cycling Calendar is annually organized Rhodes competed in the bi annual Island Games which it hosted in 2007 81 Since 2019 is suspended from competition Cuisine Edit Pitaroudia a traditional chickpea dumpling from Rhodes and Dodecanese Fanouropita Melekouni Rhodian tradition in cuisine is rich Koriantolino and Souma colorless alcoholic beverage produced from grape distillation are the main alcoholic drinks of Rhodes Local foods include Escharitis type of bread Pitaroudia Milla and Tsiriggia meat fat Pougia pie Lakani goat meat with chickpeas Lopia beans with goat Matsi hand made pasta used to make Koulouria a traditional recipe Synoro traditional cheese Tahinopita Zvigoi type of loukoumades Melekouni Fanouropita Takakia Mantinades Katimeria tiganites pancakes Amygdalota white almond cookies MoschopougiaNotable people Edit Diagoras of Rhodes carried in the stadium by his two sons Agesander 1st century BC sculptor Apollonius Molon fl 70s BC Greek rhetorician had a celebrated school on the island his students included Marcus Tullius Cicero Apollonius 3rd century BC epic poet Chares of Lindos 3rd century BC sculptor Cleobulus of Lindos 6th century BC philosopher and one of the Seven Sages of Ancient Greece Diagoras 5th century BC boxer multiple Olympic winner Dinocrates 4th century BC architect and technical adviser for Alexander the Great Hecato c 100 BC Stoic philosopher Hieronymus c 290 c 230 BC Peripatetic philosopher Hipparchus 2nd century BC astronomer mathematician geographer founder of trigonometry Joannicius II of Constantinople Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople Leonidas 2nd century BC athlete Memnon 380 333 BC commander of mercenary army Mentor 385 340 BC mercenary soldier brother of Memnon Panaetius c 185 c 110 109 BC Stoic philosopher Timocreon 5th century BC poet Braith Anasta rugby league player and NRL premiership winner ancestral ties to the island through his father Petros Peter Anastasakis Lawrence Durrell writer and poet author of The Alexandria Quartet resided on Rhodes 1945 1947 In 1953 his travel book about Rhodes Reflections on a Marine Venus was published Stergos Felegakis professional football player Resit Galip Turkish politician one of the first ministers of education of the Republic of Turkey Nick Galis basketball player FIBA Hall of Fame and Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame member his father was born in a small village called Agios Isidoros Ferruccio Lamborghini 1916 1993 Italian automobile designer was stationed on the island as an air force mechanic in WW2 George Marshall 1781 1855 author and Master Gunner United States Navy Murat Reiz Plaku Albanian Navy Commander Panagiotis Rodios revolutionary and Hellenic Army officer Niki Xanthou long jumper Ioannis Zigdis 1913 1997 politician and economistTourism EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rhodes news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Rhodes is one of the most attractive tourist destinations in Greece After Crete the island is the most visited destination in Greece with arrivals standing at 1 785 305 in 2013 In 2014 they stood at 1 931 005 while in 2015 the arrival number reduced slightly and stood at 1 901 000 citation needed The average length of stay is estimated at 8 days Guests from Great Britain Israel France Italy Sweden and Norway are the ones that constitute the biggest portion in terms of the arrivals by country In Rhodes the supply of available rooms is high since more than 550 hotels are operating in the island the majority of which are two star hotels In popular culture Edit Hic Rhodus hic salta a phrase from antiquity Movies shot on the island include The Guns of Navarone 1961 Kiss the Girls by Giannis Dalianidis 1965 and Escape to Athena 1979 Rhodes was also the setting of Agatha Christie s Triangle at Rhodes Panoramas Edit Rhodes harbor in 2017 Rhodes panorama in 2017See also Edit Greece portal95th National Guard Higher Command Greece Ancient regions of Anatolia Brygindara Medieval RoseCitations Edit O Dhmarxos Rhodes gr Archived from the original on 14 January 2020 Retrieved 14 January 2020 a b FEK A 87 2010 Kallikratis reform law text in Greek Government Gazette Archived from the original on 23 October 2021 Retrieved 7 September 2021 census 2022 PDF Rhodes Visit Greece Archived from the original on 29 December 2014 Retrieved 29 December 2014 Paul Hellander Greece 2008 Duncan Garwood Mediterranean Europe 2009 Ryan Ver Berkmoes Oliver Berry Geert Cole David Else Western Europe 2009 Harry Coccossis Alexandra Mexa The challenge of tourism carrying capacity assessment theory and practice 2004 SOL Search www cs uky edu Archived from the original on 18 September 2019 Retrieved 29 September 2019 SOL Search www cs uky edu Archived from the original on 31 December 2020 Retrieved 29 September 2019 Anthony Bale trans The Book of Marvels and Travels Oxford 2012 ISBN 0199600600 p 16 and footnote Rhodes island Greece Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 31 August 2015 Retrieved 11 February 2018 Geography and Geomorphology South Aegean www aegeanislands gr Archived from the original on 4 July 2020 Retrieved 15 June 2016 Marco M Cavallaro A Pecchioli E amp Vernesi C 11 November 2006 Artificial Occurrence of the Fallow Deer Dama dama dama L 1758 on the Island of Rhodes Greece Insight from mtDNA Analysis Human Evolution 21 2 167 175 doi 10 1007 s11598 006 9014 9 S2CID 84328010 Rhodes Greece 1481 Jan Kozak Collection KZ13 The Earthquake Engineering Online Archive Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 15 July 2008 Ambraseys N N Adams R D 1998 The Rhodes earthquake of 26 June 1926 Journal of Seismology 2 3 267 292 Bibcode 1998JSeis 2 267A doi 10 1023 A 1009706415417 S2CID 127587361 Earthquake s aftermath Discover Rhodes 16 July 2008 Archived from the original on 21 November 2008 Retrieved 16 July 2008 Climate normals National Observatory of Athens Retrieved 30 April 2022 The warmest area of the country is National Observatory of Athens Archived from the original on 11 July 2021 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Lindos Rhodes Iefimerida 22 August 2019 Archived from the original on 18 July 2021 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Climate Atlas Archived 4 February 2022 at the Wayback Machine climatlas hnms gr Accessed 31 August 2002 Climatology Rodos Hellenic National Meteorological Service Archived from the original on 25 March 2017 Retrieved 24 March 2017 Documents Archived 16 June 2022 at the Wayback Machine itia ntua gr Accessed 31 August 2022 Rhodes Climate Normals 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved 1 March 2015 a b Rhodes Greece Climate data Weather Atlas Archived from the original on 25 March 2017 Retrieved 24 March 2017 B d Agostino Funerary customs and society on Rhodes in the Geometric Period some observations in E Herring and I Lemos eds Across Frontiers Etruscans Greeks Phoenicians and Cypriots Studies in Honour of D Ridgway and F R Serra Ridgway 2006 57 69 The Civil Law Volume I The Opinions of Julius Paulus Book II Constitution org Translated by Scott S P Central Trust Company 1932 Archived from the original on 24 June 2021 Retrieved 16 June 2021 TITLE VII ON THE LEX RHODIA It is provided by the Lex Rhodia that if merchandise is thrown overboard for the purpose of lightening a ship the loss is made good by the assessment of all which is made for the benefit of all a b The Documentary History of Insurance 1000 B C 1875 A D Newark NJ Prudential Press 1915 pp 5 6 Retrieved 15 June 2021 Duhaime s Timetable of World Legal History Duhaime s Law Dictionary Archived from the original on 24 June 2021 Retrieved 9 April 2016 Iliad 2 653 654 Archived 6 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine The Historical Library of Diodorus Siculus Book V ch III Retrieved 24 January 2010 A Orientalizing Rhodian Jewellery in the Aegean Archived 29 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine Cultural Portal of the Aegean Archipelago Athens 2007 A Agelarakis Demographic Dynamics and Funerary Rituals as Reflected from Rhodian Handra Urns Archival Report Archaeological and Historical Institute of Rhodes 2005 Boardman pp 199 201 Smith s v Halia Archived 16 June 2022 at the Wayback Machine perseus tufts edu Accessed 31 August 2022 Ancient Greek Ἡmeῖs deka Ῥodioi deka nῆes ἐpὶ tῶn ἀlazoneyomenwn This is a bragging proverb from Pseudo Diogenes collected in von Leutsch E L Schneidewin F G 1839 Corpus paroemiographorum Graecorum Vol I Diogeniani Century V 18 in Ancient Greek and Latin Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht p 254 In a footnote they cite the adage in Latin Nos decem Rhodii decem naves De iactubundis We are ten Rhodians we have ten ships On boasting in Michael Apostolius ed Daniel Heinsius Paroemiae Graece et latine IX 85 Archived 9 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine in Ancient Greek and Latin Leiden Elsevir 1616 pg 116 Errington Robert Malcolm 1990 A History of Macedonia University of California Press p 201 ISBN 978 0520063198 Willoughby Jack James 2018 Interventions by the Roman Republic in Illyria 230 167 BC PDF D Phil thesis University of Exeter pp 119 120 Archived PDF from the original on 9 July 2021 Retrieved 28 June 2021 Livy 1905 Rhys Ernest ed History of Rome vol V Translated by Rev Canon Roberts London J M Dent amp Sons pp 38 39 Archived from the original on 17 June 2009 Retrieved 1 July 2021 Polybius 1889 Friedrich Otto Hultsch ed The Histories of Polybius London Macmillan amp Co pp xxviii 14 15 xxix 4 7 On Rhodes in antiquity see esp R M Berthold Rhodes in the Hellenistic Age Cornell University Press 1984 See Acts 21 although note that Acts was probably not written by an actual companion of Paul by modern scholars see Authorship of Luke Acts a b c d e f Gregory Timothy E 1991 Rhodes In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 1791 1792 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Kia 2016 p 223 Greatrex amp Lieu 2005 p 197 Howard Johnston 2006 p 33 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford California Stanford University Press p 313 ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford California Stanford University Press pp 325 327 ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford California Stanford University Press p 344 ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 Brownworth Lars 2009 Lost to the West The Forgotten Byzantine Empire That Rescued Western Civilization Crown p 233 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 Mueller Edwin 1930 Die Poststempel auf der Freimarken Ausgabe 1867 von Osterreich und Ungarn Rhodes United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 8 September 2009 Mueller Edwin 1961 Handbook of Austria and Lombardy Venetia Cancellations on the Postage Stamp Issues 1850 1864 p 217 Germans surrender Dodecanese to British Archived 25 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine greekherald com au Accessed 31 August 2022 1949 Armistice Agreements Historical Documents Archived 1 September 2022 at the Wayback Machine History state gov Accessed 31 August 2022 Acropolis if Rhodes Information Archived from the original on 5 August 2012 Retrieved 15 May 2013 Ka8olikh Ekklhsia Ths Rodoy Catholicchurchrhodes com Archived from the original on 20 March 2008 Retrieved 22 March 2009 Rodos ta misket havasi caldi Milliyet Archived from the original on 6 August 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Urkek bir siyasetin tarih onundeki agir vebali Oniki ada hatali kararlar aci kayiplar at Google Books MUM GIBI ERIYORLAR www batitrakya 4mg com Archived from the original on 1 July 2017 Retrieved 10 October 2014 T C Disisleri Bakanligi ndan Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Retrieved 6 September 2014 See Angel Marc The Jews of Rhodes The History of a Sephardic Community Sepher Hermon Press Inc and The Union of Sephardic Congregations New York 1978 1st ed 1980 2nd ed 1998 3rd ed Rhodes United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 8 September 2009 History of Jewish Greece Jewishvirtuallibrary org Archived from the original on 29 April 2011 Retrieved 24 January 2010 The Virtual Jewish History Tour Greece Jewishvirtuallibrary org Archived from the original on 29 April 2011 Retrieved 24 January 2010 F Fornol Lachania Archived 19 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine Population amp housing census 2001 incl area and average elevation PDF in Greek National Statistical Service of Greece Archived from the original PDF on 21 September 2015 3comma14 gr www 3comma14 gr Archived from the original on 24 April 2014 Retrieved 24 April 2014 Anamorfwnetai teleiws to limani ths Akantias 2 September 2017 Archived from the original on 2 September 2017 Retrieved 6 June 2018 rhodes sea cruises 3 September 2020 Archived from the original on 22 October 2020 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Anafer8hke se ola ta erga poy ektelei trexontws o Dhmos 15 June 2018 Archived from the original on 19 June 2018 Retrieved 19 June 2018 Archived copy Archived from the original on 16 July 2018 Retrieved 16 July 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Bus schedule PDF Ministry of Economy Development and Tourism Archived PDF from the original on 25 March 2017 Retrieved 24 March 2017 EPS Dwdekanhsoy Arxikh Selida www epsdod gr Archived from the original on 11 June 2018 Retrieved 6 June 2018 EPS Dwdekanhsoy Ghpeda www epsdod gr Archived from the original on 16 June 2018 Retrieved 6 June 2018 LOCAL COMMITTEE OF DODECANESE BASKETBALL TOPIKH EPITROPH E O K DWDEKANHSOY www 12basket gr Archived from the original on 6 August 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Kleisto Arxaggeloy Ena oneiro etoimo na parei sarka kai osta H RODIAKH 19 July 2019 Archived from the original on 19 June 2018 Retrieved 19 June 2018 A2 Andrwn Mparaz anodoy A omiloy Apollwn A8hnwn Rodiwn A8lhsis 3 1 photos 31 March 2018 Archived from the original on 19 June 2018 Retrieved 19 June 2018 Rodiwn A8lhsis SOK Telos to Rodiwn A8lhsis Bolei Archived from the original on 12 February 2020 Retrieved 11 June 2019 Rodiakos Omilos Antisfairishs rhodes tennis club Rhodestennis gr Archived from the original on 19 June 2018 Retrieved 26 February 2022 International Island Games Association website Archived 6 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 27 June 2018 General and cited sources EditBoardman John ed The Oxford History of Classical Art 1993 OUP ISBN 0198143869 Greatrex Geoffrey Lieu Samuel N C 2005 The Roman Eastern Frontier and the Persian Wars AD 363 628 Routledge ISBN 978 1134756469 Howard Johnston J D 2006 East Rome Sasanian Persia and the End of Antiquity Historiographical and Historical Studies Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0860789925 Kia Mehrdad 2016 he Persian Empire A Historical Encyclopedia 2 volumes A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1610693912 Nicolle David 1996 Sassanian Armies the Iranian Empire Early 3rd to Mid 7th Centuries AD Stockport Montvert ISBN 978 1 874101 08 6 External links EditRhodes at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rhodes amp oldid 1129649234, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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