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Thasos

Thasos or Thassos (Greek: Θάσος, Thásos) is a Greek island in the North Aegean Sea. It is the northernmost major Greek island, and 12th largest by area.

Thasos
Περιφερειακή Ενότητα / Δήμος
Θάσου
Limenas (port) of Thasos, capital of the island
Thasos within East Macedonia and Thrace
Coordinates: 40°41′N 24°39′E / 40.683°N 24.650°E / 40.683; 24.650Coordinates: 40°41′N 24°39′E / 40.683°N 24.650°E / 40.683; 24.650
CountryGreece
RegionEast Macedonia and Thrace
CapitalThasos
Area
 • Total380 km2 (150 sq mi)
Elevation
1,205 m (3,953 ft)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total13,055
 • Density34/km2 (89/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal codes
640 04
Area codes25930
Car platesΚΒ
Websitewww.thassos.gr

The island has an area of 380 km2 and a population of about 13,000. It forms a separate regional unit within the East Macedonia and Thrace region. Before the local administration reform of 2011, it was part of the Kavala Prefecture. The largest town and the capital is Thasos, officially known as Limenas Thasou, "Port of Thasos", situated at the northern side. It is connected with the mainland by regular ferry lines between Keramoti and Thassos town, and between the regional centre of Kavala and Skala Prinou.

Thasos's economy relies on timber from its forests, marble quarries, olive oil, and honey. Tourism has also become important since the 1960s, although not to the level of other Greek islands.

History

Mythology

Staphylus (Ancient Greek: Στάφυλος), the beloved son of god Dionysus, lived in Thasos.[1]

Prehistory

Lying close to the coast of Eastern Macedonia, Thasos was inhabited from the Palaeolithic period onwards,[2] but the earliest settlement to have been explored in detail is that at Limenaria, where remains from the Middle and Late Neolithic relate closely to those found at the mainland's Drama plain. In contrast, Early Bronze Age remains on the island align it with the Aegean culture of the Cyclades and Sporades, to the south; at Skala Sotiros[3] for example, a small settlement was encircled by a strongly built defensive wall. Even earlier activity is demonstrated by the presence of large pieces of 'megalithic' anthropomorphic stelai built into these walls, which, so far, have no parallels in the Aegean area.

There is then a gap in the archaeological record until the end of the Bronze Age c 1100 BC, when the first burials took place at the large cemetery of Kastri in the interior of the island.[4][5] Here built tombs covered with small mound of earth were typical until the end of the Iron Age. In the earliest tombs were a small number of locally imitated Mycenaean pottery vessels, but the majority of the hand-made pottery with incised decoration reflects connections eastwards with Thrace and beyond.

Antiquity

 
Plan of Thasos
 
Ancient Agora of Thasos
 
City walls of Thasos

The island was colonised at an early date by Phoenicians, attracted probably by its gold mines; they founded a temple to the god Melqart, whom the Greeks identified as "Tyrian Heracles", and whose cult was merged with Heracles in the course of the island's Hellenization.[6] The temple still existed in the time of Herodotus.[7] An eponymous Thasos or Thasus, son of Phoenix (or of Agenor, as Pausanias reported) was said to have been the leader of the Phoenicians, and to have given his name to the island.[8]

Around 650 BC, or a little earlier, Greeks from Paros founded a colony on Thasos.[9] A generation or so later, the poet Archilochus, a descendant of these colonists, wrote of casting away his shield during a minor war against an indigenous Thracian tribe, the Saians.[10] Thasian power, and sources of its wealth, extended to the mainland, where the Thasians owned gold mines even more valuable than those of the island; their combined annual revenues amounted to between 200 and 300 talents. Herodotus says that the best mines on the island were those opened by the Phoenicians on the east side of the island, facing Samothrace. Archilochus described Thasos as "an ass's backbone crowned with wild wood." The island's capital, Thasos, had two harbours. Besides its gold mines, the wine, nuts and marble of Thasos were well known in antiquity.[8] Thasian wine was quite famous. Thasian coinage bore images of the wine-god Dionysos and grape bunches.[11]

During the Ionian revolt against Persia, Thasos was under Persian domination. After the capture of Miletus (494 BC) Histiaeus, the Ionian leader, laid siege to Thasos, without success. In response, the Thasians built warships and strengthened their fortifications, but this provoked the suspicions of Darius I of Persia, who compelled them to surrender their ships and pull down their walls.[12] After the defeat of Xerxes I the Thasians joined the Delian League but left in a disagreement over their mainland mines and markets.[8]

 
Silver tritartemorion struck in Thasos c. 411–404 BC. Satyr on the obverse and dolphins on the reverse

The Athenians eventually defeated Thasos' navy, and took the capital after a two-year siege. The Thasians were made to destroy their walls, surrender their ships and their mainland possessions, and pay a regular indemnity. In 411 BC, during a period of political instability at Athens, Thasos accepted a Lacedaemonian governor; but in 407 BC the partisans of Lacedaemon were expelled, and the Athenians under Thrasybulus were admitted.[8]

After the Battle of Aegospotami (405 BC), Thasos again fell into the hands of the Lacedaemonians under Lysander but the Athenians must have recovered it, for it formed one of the subjects of dispute between them and Philip II of Macedonia. In the embroilment between Philip V of Macedonia and the Romans, Thasos submitted to Philip, but received its freedom at the hands of the Romans after the Battle of Cynoscephalae (197 BC), and it was still a nominally "free" state in the time of Pliny.[8]

Excavations of various island sites between March and May 1887 by Theodore and Mabel Bent uncovered an 'Arch of Caracalla', and the collapsed remains of a unique portrait-statue of the emperor Hadrian's wife, the empress Flavia Vibia Sabina, with an inscription dedicated to her as a "high priestess".[13][14]

Middle Ages

 
Byzantine church in Thasos

Thasos was part of the Eastern Roman Empire, now known as the Byzantine Empire, from 395 on. According to the 6th century Synecdemus, it belonged to the province of Macedonia Prima, although the 10th century De thematibus claims that it was part of Thracia.[15] The island was a major source of marble until the disruption of the Slavic invasions in the late 6th/7th centuries, and several churches from Late Antiquity have been found on it.[15] The island remained in Byzantine hands for most of the Middle Ages. It functioned as a naval base in the 13th century, under its own doux, and came briefly under the rule of the Genoese Tedisio Zaccaria in 1307–13. Returning to Byzantine control, its bishopric was raised to an archdiocese by Manuel II Palaiologos. Thasos was captured by the Genoese Gattilusi family c. 1434, who surrendered it to the Ottoman Empire in 1455.[15] Following the Ottoman conquest of the Despotate of the Morea in 1460, the former Despot Demetrios Palaiologos received lands on the island.[15]

It is related that the Byzantine Greek Saint Joannicius the Great (752–846) in one of his miracles freed the island of Thasos from a multitude of snakes.

Ottoman era

Thasos was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1456.[16] Under Ottoman rule, the island was known in Ottoman Turkish as طاشوز - Taşöz. Between 1770 and 1774, the island was briefly occupied by a Russian fleet. By this time its population had gravitated to the inland villages as a protective measure.[17] Nearly 50 years later, a revolt against Ottoman rule arose in 1821, at the outbreak of the Greek War of Independence, led by Hatzigiorgis Metaxas, but it failed. The Ottoman Census of 1831 states that the island was populated exclusively by Greeks and that there were 1,821 Greek males fit to fight. This register excluded women, orphans, Christians below the age of puberty, the mentally or physically incapacitated as well as high-ranking officials, so the actual population would have been over double this.[18] The island had been given in 1813 by the Sultan Mahmud II to Muhammad Ali of Egypt as a personal fiefdom, as a reward for his intervention against the Wahhabites.[citation needed] Egyptian rule was relatively benign (by some accounts Muhammad Ali had either been born or spent his infancy on Thasos) and the island became prosperous, until 1908, when the New Turk regime asserted Turkish control.[citation needed] The island was a kaza (sub-province), lastly of the Sanjak of Drama in the Salonica Vilayet, until the Balkan Wars. On 20 October 1912 during the First Balkan War, Greek navy invaded Thasos and annexed it into Greece after more than 350 years of Ottoman Turkish rule.

Modern era

 
Limenaria in 1950s

The writer Vassilis Vassilikos, whose novel "Z" was the source for the eponymous Academy Award-winning film, was born in Thasos in 1934. He later became Director General of Greek Public Television, and Greece's ambassador to UNESCO.

During the Axis occupation (April 1941 – October 1944) Thasos, along with the region of East Macedonia and Thrace, was assigned by the Nazis to their Bulgarian allies. The Bulgarian government renamed the island "Tasos" and closed its schools. Thasos' mountainous terrain facilitated resistance activity, mainly led by the left-wing National Liberation Front (EAM). After the end of the war and the withdrawal of Axis troops in 1944, the island was caught up in the Greek Civil War. The leader of the communist naval faction, Sarantis Spintzos, was a native of Thasos.[19] Skirmishes and communist guerilla attacks continued until 1950, almost a year after hostilities had ended on the Greek mainland.

In the post-war decades, another native of Thasos, Costas Tsimas, was to attain national recognition; a friend of Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou, he was appointed Director of the National Intelligence Service, the first civilian to hold that post.

Thasos, the capital, is now informally known as Limenas, or "the port". It is served by a ferry route to and from Keramoti a port close to Kavala International Airport, and has the shortest possible crossing to the island. Scala Prinos 20 km south of Thassos town is served by a ferry route to and from Kavala.

Administration

Thasos is a separate regional unit of the East Macedonia and Thrace region, and the only municipality of the regional unit. As a part of the 2011 Kallikratis government reform, the regional unit Thasos was created out of part of the former Kavala Prefecture.[20] The municipality, unchanged at the Kallikratis reform, includes a few uninhabited islets besides the main island Thasos and has an area of 380.097 km2.[21] The province of Thasos (Greek: Επαρχία Θάσου) was one of the provinces of the Kavala Prefecture. It had the same territory as the present municipality.[22] It was abolished in 2006.

Geography

 
Thasos from space, April 1993
 
Detailed map of Thasos

Thasos island is located in the northern Aegean sea approximately 7 km (4 mi) from the northern mainland and 20 kilometres (12 miles) south-east of Kavala, and is of generally rounded shape, without deep bays or significant peninsulas. The terrain is mountainous but not particularly rugged, rising gradually from coast to centre. The highest peak is Ypsario (Ipsario), at 1,205 metres (3,953 feet), somewhat east of centre. Pine forest covers much of the island's eastern slopes.

Historically, the island's population was chiefly engaged in agriculture and stockbreeding, and established villages inland, some of them connected via stairways (known as skalas) to harbors at the shore. The local population gradually migrated towards these shoreline settlements as tourism began to develop as an important source of income. Thus, there are several "paired villages" such as Maries–Skala Maries, with the former inland and the latter on the coast.

Geology

 
Geological and Metallogenic map of Thasos island.

The island is formed mainly by gneisses, schists and marbles of the Rhodope Massif. Marble sequences corresponding to the Falacron Marbles intercalated by schists and gneisses, are up to 500m thick and are separated from the underlying gneisses by a transition zone about 300 m thick termed the T-zone consisting of alternances of dolomitic and calcitic marbles intercalated by schists and gneisses.

The rocks have undergone several periods of regional metamorphism, to at least upper amphibolite facies, and there was a subsequent phase of retrograde metamorphism. At least three periods of regional deformation have been identified, the most important being large scale isoclinal folding with axes aligned north-west. The T-zone is deformed and is interpreted by some authors as a regional thrust of pre-major folding age. There are two major high angle fault systems aligned north-west and north-east respectively. A large low-angle thrust cuts the gneiss, schist and marble sequence at the south-west corner of the island, probably indicating an overthrusting of the Serbomacedonian Massif onto the Rodope Massif.

The Late Miocene oil-producing Nestos-Prinos basin is located between Thassos island and the mainland. The floor of the basin is around 1,500 m deep off the Thassos coast (South Kavala ridge; Proedrou, 1988) and up to 4.000–5.000 m in the axial sector between Thassos and the mainland. The basin is filled with Late Miocene-Pliocene sediments, including ubiquitously repeated evaporite layers of rock salt and anhydrite-dolomite that alternate with sandstones, conglomerates, black shales, and uraniferous coal measures (Proedrou, 1979, 1988; Taupitz, 1985). Stratigraphically equivalent rocks on the mainland are clastic sediments with coal beds, marine to brackish fluvial units and travertines.

Mining history

The earliest mining on the island has been dated to around 13,000 BC, when paleolithic miners dug a shaft at the site of the modern-era Tzines iron mine for the extraction of limonitic ochre.[23] Mining for base and precious metals started around the 7th century BC with the Phoenicians, followed in the 4th century by the Greeks, then the Romans. These later mines were both open-cast and underground, mostly to exploit the island's numerous karst hosted calamine deposits for their lead and silver. Gold, copper and iron were also found; the Byzantines quarried marble on the island.

In the early 20th century, mining companies (most notably the Speidel mining company) exploited the island's zinc-lead rich calamine ores, with a yield of around 2 million tonnes, and a processing plant at Limenaria produced zinc oxide. Iron ore was mined on a significant scale from 1954 to 1964, with a yield of around 3 million tonnes. Since 1964, surveys have established the existence of a deep-level zinc-lead deposit, but the only mining activity on the island has been marble quarrying.

Economy

 
Throumba olives on sale at a supermarket

By far the most important economic activity is tourism. The main agricultural products on the island are honey, almonds, walnuts, olives (such as the local Throumba variety which has a protected designation of origin), olive oil, and wine. The inhabitants also engage in the herding of sheep and goats, and fishing.[24] Other industries are lumber and mining which includes lead, zinc, and marble, especially in the Panagia area where one of the mountains near the Thracian Sea has a large marble quarry. The marble quarries in the south (in the area of Aliki), now abandoned, were mined during ancient times.

Localities

 
Panagia village

Towns and villages with over 100 inhabitants (2011 census) are:

 
Traditional village of Theologos

Historical population

Year Town Municipality
1981 2,312
1991 2,600
2001 3,140 13,765
2011 3,240 13,770

Sights

 
Paradisos beach
  • Archaeological Museum of Thasos and the nearby ancient agora in Thasos town
  • Acropolis of Thasos and ancient theater near Thasos town
  • Polygnotos Vagis Municipal Museum in Potamia
  • Folklore Museum of Limenaria
  • Archangel Michael's Monastery
  • Saint Panteleimon Monastery: it was built in 1843 and became monastery in 1987. According to inhabitants of Thassos, someone wanted to build it in favor of Saint Panteleimon. The workers started the building at a location, but the next day when they wanted to continue with the construction, the part they had built was found destroyed and their tools were missing. The same happened on the following days. One day they saw footprints on the ground and followed them until they found their tools nearby a natural spring. Finally, they built the monastery at that spot.
  • Monastery of the Assumption
  • Kastro: its foundation year is unknown. This village must have been created during the years of Frankish domination.
  • Krambousa Isle: it can be found across the coast of Skala Potamia. The thick vegetation makes it impossible to explore all parts of it. It is full with a special wild vegetable called "Krambi". The little church of Saint Daniel is located at the top of the hill. The inhabitants visit this church on the day of the saint every year.
  • Mount Ypsario (Ipsario) 1,203 meters (3,947 ft)
  • Artificial Lake in Maries

Notable people

Notes

  1. ^ Suda, § th.59
  2. ^ Papadopoulos S., "Recent Field Investigations in Paleolithic, Neolithic and Bronze Age Thasos", International Symposium in Memoriam Mieczislaw Domaradzki, Kazanlak, Archaeological Institute of Sofia, Kazanluk, (in press)
  3. ^ Κουκούλη Χ.- Χρυσανθάκη, "Ανασκαφή Σκάλας Σωτήρος Θάσου", Το Αρχαιολογικό Έργο στη Μακεδονία και Θράκη, 1, ((1987), 1988, 391–406, 2 (1988), 1991, 421–431, 3 (1989), 1992, 507–520, 4 (1990), 1993, 531–545).
  4. ^ Chaidou Koukouli-Chrysanthaki: Πρωτοιστορική Θάσος. Τα νεκροταφεία του οικισμού Κάστρι, Μερος Α και Β, Υπουργείο Πολιτισμού, Δυμοσιέυματα του αρχαιολογικού Δελτίου Αρ. 45, ISBN 960-214-107-7
  5. ^ Agelarakis A., "Reflections of the Human Condition in Prehistoric Thasos: Aspects of the Anthropological and Palaeopathological Record from the Settlement of Kastri". Actes du Colloque International Matières prèmieres et Technologie de la Préhistoire à nos jours, Limenaria, Thasos. The French Archaeological Institute in Greece, 1999. 447–468.
  6. ^ Pausanias, 5.25.12. "The Thasians, who are Phoenicians by descent, and sailed from Tyre, and from Phoenicia generally, together with Thasos, the son of Agenor, in search of Europa, dedicated at Olympia a Herakles, the pedestal as well as the image being of bronze. The height of the image is ten cubits, and he holds a club in his right hand and a bow in his left. They told me in Thasos that they used to worship the same Heracles as the Tyrians, but that afterwards, when they were included among the Greeks, they adopted the worship of Heracles the son of Amphitryon."
  7. ^ Herodotus. Histories, 2.44. "In the wish to get the best information that I could on these matters, I made a voyage to Tyre in Phoenicia, hearing there was a temple of Heracles at that place, very highly venerated. I visited the temple, and found it richly adorned with a number of offerings, among which were two pillars, one of pure gold, the other of smaragdos, shining with great brilliancy at night. In a conversation I held with the priests, I inquired how long their temple had been built, and found by their answer that they, too, differed from the Hellenes. They said that the temple was built at the same time that the city was founded, and that the foundation of the city took place 2,300 years ago. In Tyre I remarked another temple where the same god was worshipped as the Thasian Heracles. So I went on to Thasos, where I found a temple of Heracles, which had been built by the Phoenicians who colonised that island when they sailed in search of Europa. Even this was five generations earlier than the time when Heracles, son of Amphitryon, was born in Hellas. These researches show plainly that there is an ancient god Heracles; and my own opinion is that those Hellenes act most wisely who build and maintain two temples of Heracles, in the one of which the Heracles worshipped is known by the name of Olympian, and has sacrifice offered to him as an immortal, while in the other the honours paid are such as are due to a hero."
  8. ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911, p. 727.
  9. ^ AJ Graham,"The Foundation of Thasos", The Annual of the British School at Athens, Vol. 73 (1978), pp. 61-98.
  10. ^ Zafeiropoulou F., A., Agelarakis, "Warriors of Paros". Archaeology 58.1(2005): 30–35.
  11. ^ Hugh Johnson, Vintage: The Story of Wine pg 39. Simon and Schuster 1989
  12. ^ Agelarakis A., – Y., Serpanos "Auditory Exostoses, Infracranial Skeleto-Muscular Changes and Maritime Activities in Classical Period Thasos Island", Mediterranean Archaeology and Archaeometry, Vol. 10, No. 2, 2010, 45–57.
  13. ^ Sheila Dillon, The Female Portrait Statue in the Greek World, 147-149, 278. Cambridge University Press (2010).
  14. ^ See also Mabel Bent’s diary, January 1888, Istanbul, The Travel Chronicles of Mrs J. Theodore Bent, Vol. 1, p.230 (Oxford, 2006).
  15. ^ a b c d Gregory, Timothy E.; Cutler, Anthony (1991). "Thasos". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. London and New York: Oxford University Press. p. 2031. ISBN 978-0-19-504652-6.
  16. ^ Somel, Selçuk Akşin, The A to Z of the Ottoman Empire, p. 103, Scarecrow Press, Mar 23, 2010
  17. ^ "Greek Islands:Thassos". Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  18. ^ Kemal Karpat (1985), Ottoman Population, 1830-1914, Demographic and Social Characteristics, The University of Wisconsin Press, p. 9 & 114
  19. ^ Κώστας Τσίμας, Σελίδες Ζωής: Αγώνες για την Ελευθερία και τη Δημοκρατία, 2004, σελίδες 36-40
  20. ^ "ΦΕΚ A 87/2010, Kallikratis reform law text" (in Greek). Government Gazette.
  21. ^ (PDF) (in Greek). National Statistical Service of Greece. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-21.
  22. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. (39 MB) (in Greek and French)
  23. ^ Kovkouli et al. 1988.
  24. ^ . thassos-dream.gr. Economy. Archived from the original on 2015-12-08. Retrieved 2015-12-04.
  25. ^ . Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Ancientlibrary.com. p. 74 (v. 1). Archived from the original on 2012-10-07. Retrieved 2012-10-26.

References

  • Agelarakis A., "Linen Thread Fragment". Ed. Chi. Koukouli-Chrysanthaki. "Proto-Historic Thasos", Archaeologiko Deltio 2.45 (1992–1993): 803
  • Agelarakis A., "Investigations of Archaeo-Anthropological Nature at the Classical Necropolis of the Island of Thasos between 1979–1996", Archaiologiko Ergo sti Makedonia kai Thraki, 10B (1997): 770–794.
  • Agelarakis A., "On the Anthropological and Palaeopathological Records of a Select Number of Human Individuals from the Ancient Necropolis of Thasos Island". In <Jewelry from Thasian Graves> by Sgourou M., BSA 96 (2001): 355–364.
  • Agelarakis A., "Investigations of Physical Anthropology & Palaeopathology at the Ancient Necropolis of Thasos", In M. Sgourou, Excavating houses and graves: exploring aspects of everyday life and afterlife in ancient Thasos, BAR International series 1031 (2002): 12–19.
  • Antje and Günther Schwab: Thassos – Samothraki, 1999, ISBN 3-932410-30-0.
  • N. Epitropou et al.: "The discovery of primary stratabound Pb – Zn mineralization at Thassos Island", L' Industria Mineraria n. 4, 1982.
  • N. Epitropou, D. Konstantinides, D. Bitzios: "The Mariou Pb – Zn Mineralization of the Thassos Island Greece.", Mineral deposits of the Alps and of Alpine Epoch in Europe ed. by H. J. Echneibert, Spring – Verlag Berlin Heilderberg, 1983.
  • N. Epitropou et al.: "Le mineralizzazioni carsiche a Pb – Zn dell' isola di Thassos, Grecia.", Mem. Soc. Geol. H. 22, 1981, pp. 139–143.
  • Omenetto P., Epitropou N., Konstantinides D.: "The base metal sulphides of W. Thassos Island in the Geological Metallogenic Frame work of Rhodope and Surrounding Regions.", International Earth Sciences Congress on AEGEAN Regions, 1–6 October 1990, İzmir -Turkey.
  • Epitropou N., Omenetto P., Constantinides D., "Μineralizations a Pb – Zn comparables au type ' Mississippi Valley'. L'example de l'ile de Thassos ( Macedoine, Grece du Nord)", MVT WORKSHOP, Paris, France, 1993.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Thasos". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 727–728.

External links

  •   Media related to Thasos at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Thasos travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Virtual tour of Thasos
  • Ultimate guide of Thasos

thasos, thassos, greek, Θάσος, thásos, greek, island, north, aegean, northernmost, major, greek, island, 12th, largest, area, Περιφερειακή, Ενότητα, ΔήμοςΘάσουregional, unitlimenas, port, capital, island, within, east, macedonia, thracecoordinates, coordinates. Thasos or Thassos Greek 8asos Thasos is a Greek island in the North Aegean Sea It is the northernmost major Greek island and 12th largest by area Thasos Perifereiakh Enothta Dhmos8asoyRegional unitLimenas port of Thasos capital of the islandThasos within East Macedonia and ThraceCoordinates 40 41 N 24 39 E 40 683 N 24 650 E 40 683 24 650 Coordinates 40 41 N 24 39 E 40 683 N 24 650 E 40 683 24 650CountryGreeceRegionEast Macedonia and ThraceCapitalThasosArea Total380 km2 150 sq mi Elevation1 205 m 3 953 ft Population 2021 Total13 055 Density34 km2 89 sq mi Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Postal codes640 04Area codes25930Car platesKBWebsitewww wbr thassos wbr grThe island has an area of 380 km2 and a population of about 13 000 It forms a separate regional unit within the East Macedonia and Thrace region Before the local administration reform of 2011 it was part of the Kavala Prefecture The largest town and the capital is Thasos officially known as Limenas Thasou Port of Thasos situated at the northern side It is connected with the mainland by regular ferry lines between Keramoti and Thassos town and between the regional centre of Kavala and Skala Prinou Thasos s economy relies on timber from its forests marble quarries olive oil and honey Tourism has also become important since the 1960s although not to the level of other Greek islands Contents 1 History 1 1 Mythology 1 2 Prehistory 1 3 Antiquity 1 4 Middle Ages 1 5 Ottoman era 1 6 Modern era 2 Administration 3 Geography 3 1 Geology 3 2 Mining history 4 Economy 5 Localities 6 Historical population 7 Sights 8 Notable people 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditMythology Edit Staphylus Ancient Greek Stafylos the beloved son of god Dionysus lived in Thasos 1 Prehistory Edit Lying close to the coast of Eastern Macedonia Thasos was inhabited from the Palaeolithic period onwards 2 but the earliest settlement to have been explored in detail is that at Limenaria where remains from the Middle and Late Neolithic relate closely to those found at the mainland s Drama plain In contrast Early Bronze Age remains on the island align it with the Aegean culture of the Cyclades and Sporades to the south at Skala Sotiros 3 for example a small settlement was encircled by a strongly built defensive wall Even earlier activity is demonstrated by the presence of large pieces of megalithic anthropomorphic stelai built into these walls which so far have no parallels in the Aegean area There is then a gap in the archaeological record until the end of the Bronze Age c 1100 BC when the first burials took place at the large cemetery of Kastri in the interior of the island 4 5 Here built tombs covered with small mound of earth were typical until the end of the Iron Age In the earliest tombs were a small number of locally imitated Mycenaean pottery vessels but the majority of the hand made pottery with incised decoration reflects connections eastwards with Thrace and beyond Antiquity Edit Plan of Thasos Ancient Agora of Thasos City walls of Thasos The island was colonised at an early date by Phoenicians attracted probably by its gold mines they founded a temple to the god Melqart whom the Greeks identified as Tyrian Heracles and whose cult was merged with Heracles in the course of the island s Hellenization 6 The temple still existed in the time of Herodotus 7 An eponymous Thasos or Thasus son of Phoenix or of Agenor as Pausanias reported was said to have been the leader of the Phoenicians and to have given his name to the island 8 Around 650 BC or a little earlier Greeks from Paros founded a colony on Thasos 9 A generation or so later the poet Archilochus a descendant of these colonists wrote of casting away his shield during a minor war against an indigenous Thracian tribe the Saians 10 Thasian power and sources of its wealth extended to the mainland where the Thasians owned gold mines even more valuable than those of the island their combined annual revenues amounted to between 200 and 300 talents Herodotus says that the best mines on the island were those opened by the Phoenicians on the east side of the island facing Samothrace Archilochus described Thasos as an ass s backbone crowned with wild wood The island s capital Thasos had two harbours Besides its gold mines the wine nuts and marble of Thasos were well known in antiquity 8 Thasian wine was quite famous Thasian coinage bore images of the wine god Dionysos and grape bunches 11 During the Ionian revolt against Persia Thasos was under Persian domination After the capture of Miletus 494 BC Histiaeus the Ionian leader laid siege to Thasos without success In response the Thasians built warships and strengthened their fortifications but this provoked the suspicions of Darius I of Persia who compelled them to surrender their ships and pull down their walls 12 After the defeat of Xerxes I the Thasians joined the Delian League but left in a disagreement over their mainland mines and markets 8 Silver tritartemorion struck in Thasos c 411 404 BC Satyr on the obverse and dolphins on the reverse The Athenians eventually defeated Thasos navy and took the capital after a two year siege The Thasians were made to destroy their walls surrender their ships and their mainland possessions and pay a regular indemnity In 411 BC during a period of political instability at Athens Thasos accepted a Lacedaemonian governor but in 407 BC the partisans of Lacedaemon were expelled and the Athenians under Thrasybulus were admitted 8 After the Battle of Aegospotami 405 BC Thasos again fell into the hands of the Lacedaemonians under Lysander but the Athenians must have recovered it for it formed one of the subjects of dispute between them and Philip II of Macedonia In the embroilment between Philip V of Macedonia and the Romans Thasos submitted to Philip but received its freedom at the hands of the Romans after the Battle of Cynoscephalae 197 BC and it was still a nominally free state in the time of Pliny 8 Excavations of various island sites between March and May 1887 by Theodore and Mabel Bent uncovered an Arch of Caracalla and the collapsed remains of a unique portrait statue of the emperor Hadrian s wife the empress Flavia Vibia Sabina with an inscription dedicated to her as a high priestess 13 14 Middle Ages Edit Further information Byzantine Greece and Frankokratia Byzantine church in Thasos Thasos was part of the Eastern Roman Empire now known as the Byzantine Empire from 395 on According to the 6th century Synecdemus it belonged to the province of Macedonia Prima although the 10th century De thematibus claims that it was part of Thracia 15 The island was a major source of marble until the disruption of the Slavic invasions in the late 6th 7th centuries and several churches from Late Antiquity have been found on it 15 The island remained in Byzantine hands for most of the Middle Ages It functioned as a naval base in the 13th century under its own doux and came briefly under the rule of the Genoese Tedisio Zaccaria in 1307 13 Returning to Byzantine control its bishopric was raised to an archdiocese by Manuel II Palaiologos Thasos was captured by the Genoese Gattilusi family c 1434 who surrendered it to the Ottoman Empire in 1455 15 Following the Ottoman conquest of the Despotate of the Morea in 1460 the former Despot Demetrios Palaiologos received lands on the island 15 It is related that the Byzantine Greek Saint Joannicius the Great 752 846 in one of his miracles freed the island of Thasos from a multitude of snakes Ottoman era Edit Further information Ottoman Greece Thasos was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1456 16 Under Ottoman rule the island was known in Ottoman Turkish as طاشوز Tasoz Between 1770 and 1774 the island was briefly occupied by a Russian fleet By this time its population had gravitated to the inland villages as a protective measure 17 Nearly 50 years later a revolt against Ottoman rule arose in 1821 at the outbreak of the Greek War of Independence led by Hatzigiorgis Metaxas but it failed The Ottoman Census of 1831 states that the island was populated exclusively by Greeks and that there were 1 821 Greek males fit to fight This register excluded women orphans Christians below the age of puberty the mentally or physically incapacitated as well as high ranking officials so the actual population would have been over double this 18 The island had been given in 1813 by the Sultan Mahmud II to Muhammad Ali of Egypt as a personal fiefdom as a reward for his intervention against the Wahhabites citation needed Egyptian rule was relatively benign by some accounts Muhammad Ali had either been born or spent his infancy on Thasos and the island became prosperous until 1908 when the New Turk regime asserted Turkish control citation needed The island was a kaza sub province lastly of the Sanjak of Drama in the Salonica Vilayet until the Balkan Wars On 20 October 1912 during the First Balkan War Greek navy invaded Thasos and annexed it into Greece after more than 350 years of Ottoman Turkish rule Modern era Edit Further information Axis occupation of Greece during World War II Limenaria in 1950s The writer Vassilis Vassilikos whose novel Z was the source for the eponymous Academy Award winning film was born in Thasos in 1934 He later became Director General of Greek Public Television and Greece s ambassador to UNESCO During the Axis occupation April 1941 October 1944 Thasos along with the region of East Macedonia and Thrace was assigned by the Nazis to their Bulgarian allies The Bulgarian government renamed the island Tasos and closed its schools Thasos mountainous terrain facilitated resistance activity mainly led by the left wing National Liberation Front EAM After the end of the war and the withdrawal of Axis troops in 1944 the island was caught up in the Greek Civil War The leader of the communist naval faction Sarantis Spintzos was a native of Thasos 19 Skirmishes and communist guerilla attacks continued until 1950 almost a year after hostilities had ended on the Greek mainland In the post war decades another native of Thasos Costas Tsimas was to attain national recognition a friend of Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou he was appointed Director of the National Intelligence Service the first civilian to hold that post Thasos the capital is now informally known as Limenas or the port It is served by a ferry route to and from Keramoti a port close to Kavala International Airport and has the shortest possible crossing to the island Scala Prinos 20 km south of Thassos town is served by a ferry route to and from Kavala Administration EditThasos is a separate regional unit of the East Macedonia and Thrace region and the only municipality of the regional unit As a part of the 2011 Kallikratis government reform the regional unit Thasos was created out of part of the former Kavala Prefecture 20 The municipality unchanged at the Kallikratis reform includes a few uninhabited islets besides the main island Thasos and has an area of 380 097 km2 21 The province of Thasos Greek Eparxia 8asoy was one of the provinces of the Kavala Prefecture It had the same territory as the present municipality 22 It was abolished in 2006 Geography Edit Thasos from space April 1993 Detailed map of Thasos Thasos island is located in the northern Aegean sea approximately 7 km 4 mi from the northern mainland and 20 kilometres 12 miles south east of Kavala and is of generally rounded shape without deep bays or significant peninsulas The terrain is mountainous but not particularly rugged rising gradually from coast to centre The highest peak is Ypsario Ipsario at 1 205 metres 3 953 feet somewhat east of centre Pine forest covers much of the island s eastern slopes Historically the island s population was chiefly engaged in agriculture and stockbreeding and established villages inland some of them connected via stairways known as skalas to harbors at the shore The local population gradually migrated towards these shoreline settlements as tourism began to develop as an important source of income Thus there are several paired villages such as Maries Skala Maries with the former inland and the latter on the coast Geology Edit This section may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Geological and Metallogenic map of Thasos island The island is formed mainly by gneisses schists and marbles of the Rhodope Massif Marble sequences corresponding to the Falacron Marbles intercalated by schists and gneisses are up to 500m thick and are separated from the underlying gneisses by a transition zone about 300 m thick termed the T zone consisting of alternances of dolomitic and calcitic marbles intercalated by schists and gneisses The rocks have undergone several periods of regional metamorphism to at least upper amphibolite facies and there was a subsequent phase of retrograde metamorphism At least three periods of regional deformation have been identified the most important being large scale isoclinal folding with axes aligned north west The T zone is deformed and is interpreted by some authors as a regional thrust of pre major folding age There are two major high angle fault systems aligned north west and north east respectively A large low angle thrust cuts the gneiss schist and marble sequence at the south west corner of the island probably indicating an overthrusting of the Serbomacedonian Massif onto the Rodope Massif The Late Miocene oil producing Nestos Prinos basin is located between Thassos island and the mainland The floor of the basin is around 1 500 m deep off the Thassos coast South Kavala ridge Proedrou 1988 and up to 4 000 5 000 m in the axial sector between Thassos and the mainland The basin is filled with Late Miocene Pliocene sediments including ubiquitously repeated evaporite layers of rock salt and anhydrite dolomite that alternate with sandstones conglomerates black shales and uraniferous coal measures Proedrou 1979 1988 Taupitz 1985 Stratigraphically equivalent rocks on the mainland are clastic sediments with coal beds marine to brackish fluvial units and travertines Mining history Edit The earliest mining on the island has been dated to around 13 000 BC when paleolithic miners dug a shaft at the site of the modern era Tzines iron mine for the extraction of limonitic ochre 23 Mining for base and precious metals started around the 7th century BC with the Phoenicians followed in the 4th century by the Greeks then the Romans These later mines were both open cast and underground mostly to exploit the island s numerous karst hosted calamine deposits for their lead and silver Gold copper and iron were also found the Byzantines quarried marble on the island In the early 20th century mining companies most notably the Speidel mining company exploited the island s zinc lead rich calamine ores with a yield of around 2 million tonnes and a processing plant at Limenaria produced zinc oxide Iron ore was mined on a significant scale from 1954 to 1964 with a yield of around 3 million tonnes Since 1964 surveys have established the existence of a deep level zinc lead deposit but the only mining activity on the island has been marble quarrying Lead zinc mine at Sellada Iron mine of Koupanada Gold mine Iron mine at Tzines with paleolithic mine tunnel Marble quarry of AlykiEconomy Edit Throumba olives on sale at a supermarket By far the most important economic activity is tourism The main agricultural products on the island are honey almonds walnuts olives such as the local Throumba variety which has a protected designation of origin olive oil and wine The inhabitants also engage in the herding of sheep and goats and fishing 24 Other industries are lumber and mining which includes lead zinc and marble especially in the Panagia area where one of the mountains near the Thracian Sea has a large marble quarry The marble quarries in the south in the area of Aliki now abandoned were mined during ancient times Localities Edit Panagia village Towns and villages with over 100 inhabitants 2011 census are Kallirachi 452 Koinyra 105 Limenaria 2 471 Maries 158 Ormos Prinou 156 Panagia 725 Potamia 1 383 Potos 815 Prinos 1 211 Rachoni 446 Skala Kallirachis 566 Skala Marion 379 Skala Rachoniou 283 Skala Sotiros 376 Thasos Limenas Thasou 3 234 Theologos 636 Traditional village of TheologosHistorical population EditYear Town Municipality1981 2 312 1991 2 600 2001 3 140 13 7652011 3 240 13 770Sights Edit Kouros at the Archaeological Museum of Thasos Polygnotos Vagis Municipal Museum in Potamia Paradisos beach Archaeological Museum of Thasos and the nearby ancient agora in Thasos town Acropolis of Thasos and ancient theater near Thasos town Polygnotos Vagis Municipal Museum in Potamia Folklore Museum of Limenaria Archangel Michael s Monastery Saint Panteleimon Monastery it was built in 1843 and became monastery in 1987 According to inhabitants of Thassos someone wanted to build it in favor of Saint Panteleimon The workers started the building at a location but the next day when they wanted to continue with the construction the part they had built was found destroyed and their tools were missing The same happened on the following days One day they saw footprints on the ground and followed them until they found their tools nearby a natural spring Finally they built the monastery at that spot Monastery of the Assumption Kastro its foundation year is unknown This village must have been created during the years of Frankish domination Krambousa Isle it can be found across the coast of Skala Potamia The thick vegetation makes it impossible to explore all parts of it It is full with a special wild vegetable called Krambi The little church of Saint Daniel is located at the top of the hill The inhabitants visit this church on the day of the saint every year Mount Ypsario Ipsario 1 203 meters 3 947 ft Artificial Lake in MariesNotable people EditArchilochos 7th century BC warrior and poet Aglaophon 6th 5th century BC painter teacher and father of Polygnotus and Aristophon 25 Hegemon of Thasos comedian inventor of parody Leodamas 4th century BC mathematician Neseus of Thasos painter Polygnotos Vagis 1892 1965 Thasos born US sculptor Polygnotus mid 5th century BC painter Stesimbrotos c 470 BC c 420 BC sophist Theagenes of Thasos 480 BC Olympic boxer Pankratiast 476 BC Olympic runner Androsthenes of Thasos 4th century BC Admiral serving under Alexander the Great Vassilis Vassilikos 1934 poet and author Notes Edit Suda th 59 Papadopoulos S Recent Field Investigations in Paleolithic Neolithic and Bronze Age Thasos International Symposium in Memoriam Mieczislaw Domaradzki Kazanlak Archaeological Institute of Sofia Kazanluk in press Koykoylh X Xrysan8akh Anaskafh Skalas Swthros 8asoy To Arxaiologiko Ergo sth Makedonia kai 8rakh 1 1987 1988 391 406 2 1988 1991 421 431 3 1989 1992 507 520 4 1990 1993 531 545 Chaidou Koukouli Chrysanthaki Prwtoistorikh 8asos Ta nekrotafeia toy oikismoy Kastri Meros A kai B Ypoyrgeio Politismoy Dymosieymata toy arxaiologikoy Deltioy Ar 45 ISBN 960 214 107 7 Agelarakis A Reflections of the Human Condition in Prehistoric Thasos Aspects of the Anthropological and Palaeopathological Record from the Settlement of Kastri Actes du Colloque International Matieres premieres et Technologie de la Prehistoire a nos jours Limenaria Thasos The French Archaeological Institute in Greece 1999 447 468 Pausanias 5 25 12 The Thasians who are Phoenicians by descent and sailed from Tyre and from Phoenicia generally together with Thasos the son of Agenor in search of Europa dedicated at Olympia a Herakles the pedestal as well as the image being of bronze The height of the image is ten cubits and he holds a club in his right hand and a bow in his left They told me in Thasos that they used to worship the same Heracles as the Tyrians but that afterwards when they were included among the Greeks they adopted the worship of Heracles the son of Amphitryon Herodotus Histories 2 44 In the wish to get the best information that I could on these matters I made a voyage to Tyre in Phoenicia hearing there was a temple of Heracles at that place very highly venerated I visited the temple and found it richly adorned with a number of offerings among which were two pillars one of pure gold the other of smaragdos shining with great brilliancy at night In a conversation I held with the priests I inquired how long their temple had been built and found by their answer that they too differed from the Hellenes They said that the temple was built at the same time that the city was founded and that the foundation of the city took place 2 300 years ago In Tyre I remarked another temple where the same god was worshipped as the Thasian Heracles So I went on to Thasos where I found a temple of Heracles which had been built by the Phoenicians who colonised that island when they sailed in search of Europa Even this was five generations earlier than the time when Heracles son of Amphitryon was born in Hellas These researches show plainly that there is an ancient god Heracles and my own opinion is that those Hellenes act most wisely who build and maintain two temples of Heracles in the one of which the Heracles worshipped is known by the name of Olympian and has sacrifice offered to him as an immortal while in the other the honours paid are such as are due to a hero a b c d e Chisholm 1911 p 727 AJ Graham The Foundation of Thasos The Annual of the British School at Athens Vol 73 1978 pp 61 98 Zafeiropoulou F A Agelarakis Warriors of Paros Archaeology 58 1 2005 30 35 Hugh Johnson Vintage The Story of Wine pg 39 Simon and Schuster 1989 Agelarakis A Y Serpanos Auditory Exostoses Infracranial Skeleto Muscular Changes and Maritime Activities in Classical Period Thasos Island Mediterranean Archaeology and Archaeometry Vol 10 No 2 2010 45 57 Sheila Dillon The Female Portrait Statue in the Greek World 147 149 278 Cambridge University Press 2010 See also Mabel Bent s diary January 1888 Istanbul The Travel Chronicles of Mrs J Theodore Bent Vol 1 p 230 Oxford 2006 a b c d Gregory Timothy E Cutler Anthony 1991 Thasos In Kazhdan Alexander ed Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium London and New York Oxford University Press p 2031 ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 Somel Selcuk Aksin The A to Z of the Ottoman Empire p 103 Scarecrow Press Mar 23 2010 Greek Islands Thassos Retrieved 4 December 2015 Kemal Karpat 1985 Ottoman Population 1830 1914 Demographic and Social Characteristics The University of Wisconsin Press p 9 amp 114 Kwstas Tsimas Selides Zwhs Agwnes gia thn Eley8eria kai th Dhmokratia 2004 selides 36 40 FEK A 87 2010 Kallikratis reform law text in Greek Government Gazette Population amp housing census 2001 incl area and average elevation PDF in Greek National Statistical Service of Greece Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 21 Detailed census results 1991 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 03 39 MB in Greek and French Kovkouli et al 1988 Why is Thassos important thassos dream gr Economy Archived from the original on 2015 12 08 Retrieved 2015 12 04 Aglaophon Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology Ancientlibrary com p 74 v 1 Archived from the original on 2012 10 07 Retrieved 2012 10 26 References EditAgelarakis A Linen Thread Fragment Ed Chi Koukouli Chrysanthaki Proto Historic Thasos Archaeologiko Deltio 2 45 1992 1993 803 Agelarakis A Investigations of Archaeo Anthropological Nature at the Classical Necropolis of the Island of Thasos between 1979 1996 Archaiologiko Ergo sti Makedonia kai Thraki 10B 1997 770 794 Agelarakis A On the Anthropological and Palaeopathological Records of a Select Number of Human Individuals from the Ancient Necropolis of Thasos Island In lt Jewelry from Thasian Graves gt by Sgourou M BSA 96 2001 355 364 Agelarakis A Investigations of Physical Anthropology amp Palaeopathology at the Ancient Necropolis of Thasos In M Sgourou Excavating houses and graves exploring aspects of everyday life and afterlife in ancient Thasos BAR International series 1031 2002 12 19 Antje and Gunther Schwab Thassos Samothraki 1999 ISBN 3 932410 30 0 N Epitropou et al The discovery of primary stratabound Pb Zn mineralization at Thassos Island L Industria Mineraria n 4 1982 N Epitropou D Konstantinides D Bitzios The Mariou Pb Zn Mineralization of the Thassos Island Greece Mineral deposits of the Alps and of Alpine Epoch in Europe ed by H J Echneibert Spring Verlag Berlin Heilderberg 1983 N Epitropou et al Le mineralizzazioni carsiche a Pb Zn dell isola di Thassos Grecia Mem Soc Geol H 22 1981 pp 139 143 Omenetto P Epitropou N Konstantinides D The base metal sulphides of W Thassos Island in the Geological Metallogenic Frame work of Rhodope and Surrounding Regions International Earth Sciences Congress on AEGEAN Regions 1 6 October 1990 Izmir Turkey Epitropou N Omenetto P Constantinides D Mineralizations a Pb Zn comparables au type Mississippi Valley L example de l ile de Thassos Macedoine Grece du Nord MVT WORKSHOP Paris France 1993 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Thasos Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 26 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 727 728 External links Edit Media related to Thasos at Wikimedia Commons Thasos travel guide from Wikivoyage Virtual tour of Thasos Ultimate guide of Thasos Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thasos amp oldid 1151508159, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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