Kouros |
Dionisos
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Afroditi
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Andrianos
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Alexander
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Mousa |
Hunting
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Kastri
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Kikladitiko
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Kouros |
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The
history of Thassos Greece in the Past 3000 years.
Thassos has
been inhabited since prehistoric times. Neolithic tools and crude pottery, similar
to those discovered on Limnos and Samothraki and at Troy, have been found at
various sites on the island. The inhabitants in prehistoric times were Thracians. Thassos is
first mentioned by Herodotus, the father of history, who had
visited the island. He tells us that it took its name from Thassos,
son of Agenor the Phoenician king of Tyre. Greek mythology goes on to say that
Thassos arrived on the island in search of his sister Europa, who
had been abducted by Zeus. Thassos the island was settled by
the Phoenicians who for many years exploited its gold mines, its iron ore and
its rich timber resources. The Phoenicians also brought the worship of Hercules.
In
the 7th Century BC Telesicles, King of Paros,
received an oracle from Delphi saying: “Tell the Parians,
Telesicles, that I order you to build upon the isle of Aeria a city that
will be visible everywhere”. Telesicles took his son (the famous
poet Archilochus), and others from Paros, and
seized Thassos and settled here. Later they also founded
a series of settlements on the opposite coast. And so Thassos developed
until it could count more than 60,000 inhabitants and was known as “the
Athens of the North”. This growth was founded on the islands
rich natural resources (marble, iron and gold), as well as on its products,
especially its wine. The inhabitants minted coins which remained in
circulation throughout the Mediterranean for hundreds of years, and Thassian
wines were much praised by almost all of the poets of antiquity.
477 BC: Member of the Delian League.
465 BC: Thassos revolts and is subdued by
the Athenians, who destroy its ships and its walls.
404 BC: The Spartans occupy Thassos.
393 BC: The Athenians return, bringing democracy
and giving Thassos its independence.
338 BC: Philip II, father of Alexander the Great, takes
controf Thassos and seizes its mines.
281 BC: The Gauls defeat the Macedonians but
do not seize the island, which remains independent.
202 BC: The Macedonians regain control.
197 BC: The Thassians welcome
the Romans as liberators. The ancient theatre
and the old town are restored, and Thassian ships resume trading
in freedom.
AD 52: The Apostle Paul, passes
the coasts of Thassos on his way to Philippi, and
probably stops here. He brings the Christian Faith, building
churches on the ruins of the ancient temples and marking the
end of an era.
AD 365: A terrible earthquake brings destruction,
and parts of the islanddisappear
beneath the sea.
565: The
island is occupied by the Arabs, but liberated again by Heraclitus.
7th Century: The rise of piracy in the Aegean.
765: Thassos is pillaged by Slav pirates.
900: Occupied by the Saracens.
961: The Saracens are defeated by Nicephorus
Phocas, and withdraw.
1161: The French count Raymond de Poitiers seizes,
pillages and destroys the island. The inhabitants are sold into
slavery.
From the 10th to the 16th Century the
islanders live in fear in caves and refuges while successive waves of conquerors
come and go. Genoese,
Venetians, Slavs, pirates and Ottomans compete in theft, murder
and pillage. The coastal settlements are deserted and new ones built in the
interior.
1327: The Byzantine emperor Andronicus
III brings new settlers to the island, whose population
has declined.
1414: Emperor Manuel
II seizes Thassos and offers it as a gift to the Gatiluzzi family
of Genoa.
1434: The village of Kastro and
a number of other castles are built.
1455: Mohammed II occupies
Thassos and the period of Turkish rule begins.
1459: The Thassians rebel against him but the
island is destroyed and its inhabitants are taken to Constantinople.
From 1566 the islanders are allowed to elect their own leaders
and there is no Turkish military force on the island.
1770: Thassos is seized by the Russian
admiral Orlov.
1774: Retaken by the Turks.
1813: Thassos is ceded to the Egyptian vizier Mehemet
Ali, who was born in Kavala and had
grown up in a Greek family in the village of Rachoni. He
grants the islanders total freedom and abolishes taxes. This
situation lasts on and off for almost a century.
1902: The Turks reassert their authority over
the island.
18 October 1912: A company of Greek infantry
land on the island and liberate it.
31 July 1913: King Constantine and Prince
George come ashore unexpectedly at the harbour in Limenas.
1922: Refugees from Asia Minor arrive and settle
at Limenas and Limenaria.
1941-1944: Under Bulgarian occupation.
1945-1949: Scarred by the Civil War.
Since 1960: The rise of tourism and the present
day
Historical
details and dates from “Istoria tis Thassou” (History of Thassos)
by Sotiris Gerakoudis.
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