Sunday 24 August 2014

History of Tinos


Originally Tinos was called Ophiousa because it had a lot of snakes (not anymore, don't worry) and also Ydrousa because it had a lot of water. (It still does, by Cyclades standards anyway). In Koinia there was a temple to Poseidon who had sent a flock of storks to get rid of the snakes (See, I told you). Tinos has been populated at least since the Bronze age and its history can be traced back to the Mycenaean period. The main town of the island was the big stone mountain of Xobourgo, the most defensible spot on Tinos. By the 5th Century the town had moved to the location of the present day Hora and the Temple of Poseidona was built in Kionia where its ruins can still be seen. To a lesser extent than nearby Delos, Tinos was an important religious center during the pre-Christian era and attracted many pilgrims who came for the ceremonies known as the Poseidona held in January and February. In the third century the worship of Amphitre, the wife of Poseidon became popular and the temple was renovated and enlarged. As many others were, it was destroyed by the Christians in the 4th Century AD.
During the Persian wars the Tinians were subjects of the Persians. A Tireme commander from Tinos named Panaitios Sosimenous deserted the Persian fleet to inform the Greeks of their plans enabling the Greeks to prepare and win the greatest naval battle in ancient history and stop the advance of the Persians. Were it not for Sosimenous we might all be speaking Farsi today. Tinos fought against the Persians in the great battle at Plataea and became a member of the Delian alliance before becoming part of the empires of Macedonia, the Ptolemies and finally the Romans in the 2nd century AD.
During the Byzantine period once again the islanders moved back to the defensible interior to avoid the raids of  Arab and Saracen pirates who preyed on all the islands of the Aegean. In 1203 the European Christians of the 3rd Crusade on their way to liberate the Holyland, decided to liberate their Christian neighbors in Constantinople of their wealth instead and in the process burned down the city. They tortured and massacred their fellow Christians, destroyed churches, palaces, monasteries and even sculptures made by Phedias and Praxiteles. They stole icons, relics and anything of value and they burned countless ancient Greek manuscripts. Tinos and the other islands of the Cyclades fell into the hands of the Venetians Ghizzi dynasty which ruled the island until 1390 when Tinos and Mykonos fell under the direct jurisdiction of Venice and were sent a governor. Tinos remained a part of the Venetian empire until 1715 long after the rest of Greece had fallen to the Turks and maintained a society that was far more advanced than what was found in the other islands in terms of art, culture, food production, agriculture, pottery and even the production of silk. It was also a place of refuge for people trying to escape the other parts of Greece which were occupied by the Turks.
When Tinos finally passed from Venetian into Turkish hands they were allowed rights and privileges which were unheard of on other islands under Turkish occupation. They were the only people in the Ottoman empire not required to wear the red stockings, could wear local dress and were allowed to build churches and schools. The Turkish fleet was not permitted within 12 miles of Tinos and there were no permanent Turkish residents. Even the representatives of the Ottoman government were rarely around. Though Turkish rule was almost non-existent compared to other parts of Greece, Tinians still left the island for the cities of Constantinople, Smyrna and Alexandria with their large Christian populations and economic opportunities. With all these Tinians in business in foreign ports the island became quite wealthy and was known as 'Little Paris' with a population of almost 30,000. During this period the fortifications of Xobourgo were dismantled and people bean to move to the present day Hora, known as the Limani (harbor) of Agios Nikolaos, named for the small church there. From 1770 to 1774 the Russians occupied Tinos and built the Church of Agia Katerini and the Kechrovouni Convent was renovated. But as the Ottoman empire began to decline the privileges of the Tinians began to disappear and Tinos joined the Revolution of 1821 on April 20th.
The people of Tinos with their wealth, culture, education and seafaring abilities played an important role in the Revolution giving ships, sailors, and heroes. Over two thousand of them died in the war. The island became something of a refugee center with as many as thirty thousand of them finding shelter there from the vengeance of the Turks. It was on January 30 1833 when icon of the Panagia (Virgin Mary ) was discovered and seen as a blessing for the success of the revolution. Many of Greece's greatest heroes of the revolution came to Tinos to pay respect to it including Kolokotronis, Kanaris, Miaoulis, and Makryiannis and after the war the town was established as a Pan Hellenic religious center. Many of the marble workers moved to Athens to build the new capital of Greece.
Light cruiser, Elli, Tinos, GreeceOn August 15th 1940 during the Panagiri (religious festival) for the Virgin Mary, the Greek light cruiser Elli, which was anchored outsider the harbor of Tinos for the festivities, was torpedoed by the Italian submarine Delfino. 9 sailors were killed and 24 were wounded. It was the beginning of Greece's involvement in the Second World War. Though there was much suffering during the occupation and many people died from hunger, Tinos played an important role in the resistance as a passageway out of the country for evacuating soldiers and as a source of information on German ship movement.
Since then Tinos has become the capital of Religious Tourism in Greece. This increase in tourism drew people from the villages into the Hora for a period of time though now this seems to have reversed and villages which had been mostly deserted are again prospering as not only foreigners discover the island but the Greeks themselves many who have become bored with the decedent style of mass tourism found on the other more popular Cyclades islands. As more people return to the villages, more businesses open, farmers can plant more because they can sell more, craftsmen return because they now have a market for their goods, tavernas open or re-open because once again there are people to eat in them. Because of its size, agricultural areas, and beauty the island of Tinos seems to have a great future, if they make the right decisions.
For more on Greek History see www.ahistoryofgreece.com


Tinos

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tinos (GreekΤήνος [ˈtinos]) is a Greek island situated in the Aegean Sea. It is located in the Cyclades archipelago. In antiquity, Tinos was also known as Ophiussa (from ophisGreek for snake) and Hydroessa (fromhydorGreek for water). The closest islands are AndrosDelos, and Mykonos. It has a land area of approximately 194 square kilometres (75 sq mi) and a 2011 census population of 8,636 inhabitants.
Tinos is famous amongst Greeks for the Church of Panagia Evangelistria, its 80 or so windmills,[1] about 1000 artistic dovecotes, 50 active villages and its Venetian fortifications at the mountain, Exobourgo. On Tinos, both Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholic populations co-exist, and the island is also well known for its famous sculptors and painters, such as Nicholaos GysisYannoulis Chalepas and Nikiforos Lytras.
The island is located near the geographical center of the Cyclades island complex, and because of the Panagia Evangelistria church, with its reputedly miraculous icon of Virgin Mary that it holds, Tinos is also the center of a yearly pilgrimage that takes place on the date of the Dormition of the Virgin Mary (15 August, "Dekapentavgoustos" in Greek). This is perhaps the most notable and still active yearly pilgrimage in the region of the eastern Mediterranean. Many pilgrims make their way the 800 metres from the ferry wharf to the church on their hands and knees as sign of devotion.

History


Map of Tinos by Giacomo Franco (1597).

Volax village, postcard of 1907
Following the capture of Constantinople by the Fourth Crusade, Tinos was one of several islands ruled by private Venetian citizens and belonged to Geremia Ghisi, whose heirs held it until 1390 when the last member of the family branch bequeathed both Tinos and Mykonos to Venice.[2][3] It was ruled by Venice until 1715, when Tinos was captured by theOttoman Empire (see Ottoman–Venetian War), and became known as İstendil. The Ottomans held Tinos until 1821 when the inhabitants joined in the Greek War of Independence.[4]
The tumult of the period gave raise to an increase in piracy in the region. In 1825 HMS Cambrian was lead vessel of a small squadron in anti-piracy operations in the Archipelago, at Alexandria, and around the coasts of Syria. On 27 July 1826 Cambrian's boats captured a pirate bombard and burnt a mistico on Tinos. Five pirates were killed and several wounded.
The date of 15 August also commemorates the 1940 sinking in Tinos's harbour of the Greek cruiser Elli by an Italian submarine during peacetime, while she rode at anchor, by the Italian submarine Delfino near the island of Tinos. The Elli was participating in the celebrations of the Feast of the Dormition. One of the three torpedoes fired hit the Elli under the one operating boiler and she caught fire and sank. Nine petty officers and sailors were killed and 24 were wounded. The same submarine attempted to torpedo the passenger ships M/V Elsi and M/V Esperos anchored in the port. This attempt failed and the torpedoes only damaged only a section of the port's wharf.

Geography


Landscape of the island

View of Tinos town

Kardiani village

The entrance of the church
Tinos has a varied landscape. From the shores of Panormos and Kolimbithra on the North Shore to Kionia, Agios Yannis O Portos, and Agios Sostis on the Southern Shore, Tinos has many beaches, just to name a few. Tsiknias is the highest mountain on the island at 750 meters and hides the quaint village of Livada. The mountain of Exobourgo is quite distinct, and unlike its more rounded Cycladic neighbors, has a more jagged appearance that would be more at home in the Alps. Between Tsiknias and Exobourgo lies the fruitful plain of Falatados. This area is unique on the island as its relatively flat (yet with an elevation of ~ 300 metres) terrain is rare on the island. This made it a strong candidate for an as yet unbuilt airport on the island. The Meltemi winds and valid concerns of local villagers of the towns of Falatados, and Steni have all but halted the project. The area around Volax is a surreal and very unusual landscape with giant boulders some the size of multistory buildings. The village of Volax lies at the center of this amazing landscape. To the west, the mountains surrounding Pyrgos are full of some of the most beautiful green marble in all of Greece.
All around the island of Tinos, the islanders have made the most incredible things out of stone. The hills are all terraced with stone walls; every little village is connected to its most proximate neighbors by stone walkways set between a parallel set of stone walls.
The island's mineral resources include marble, Verde antico, asbestos and a granite mine near Volax (also known as Volakas).


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