Listed 2 sub titles with search on: History for destination: "LEROS Island DODEKANISSOS".
The island of Leros has a rich historical past which has developed
due to its strategic position in the S.E. Aegean.
Evidence of its early importance dates as far back as the Neolithic period and
artifacts have been discovered at Partheni
which date from about 8000 to 3000 BC.
The first inhabitants of Leros were the Carians, the Leleges, the
Phoenicians and the Cretans (led by Radamanthys, the brother of King Minos). The
island was then conquered at a later date by the Dorians. The great poet, Homer,
writes of Leros and its neighbouring island, Kalymnos
as being involved in the Trojan wars and, according to the historian, Herodotus,
Leros developed close commercial, political and intellectual links with the Ionians
of Miletos. During the 5th
century Leros blossomed intellectually as a result of influences from such cultural
ancient heroes as the satirical poet, Dimodikos and the historian, Pherekydes.
The island became part of the Athens Alliance following the Persian
Wars and there is evidence that it was visited by great and wealthy persons. Such
proof of this has been found in the excavation of coins and funerary steles from
the period. This is not surprising as it was an important location for shipping
and the moral philosopher, Plutarch, refers to the capture of Julius Caeser’s
island of Farmako which lies
next to Leros.
During the Byzantine period, Constantine the Great incorporated Leros
into the theme of Samos and many magnificent Christian churches were built as
well as the castle and the Panayia (Blessed Virgin) church on the hills overlooking
what is now Platanos. A further castle of Lepides, known today as Paliokastro,
was also built and its ruined walls can still be seen, as well as many other outstanding
Byzantine monuments such as the early Christian church at Partheni,
the church of Ayia Varvara (St. Barbara) which was built from the marbled ruins
of ancient Lerian monuments.
Occupation by foreign powers has chequered the history of this small
but strategically important Aegean island. In 1314, Leros was occupied by the
tyrannical Knights of St. John of Rhodes who governed it despotically until the
Turks invaded and took command of the entire Aegean
archipelago, plundering the islands in their wake. To the credit of the Lerians
during the Turkish occupation, they managed to hold on to an element of autonomy
and later, when the Greek Revolution broke out, some of the people of Leros were
the first to resist their oppressors.
After the independence of Greece
in 1829 all the Dodecanese
islands were ceded to Turkey
by the London Protocol in exchange for Euboea.
From 1912 to 1943, the island was occupied by the Italians and during this time,
the intention was to develop Leros into an Italian naval base. Over several decades
important defence work was carried out and military installations built with a
new deep sea port created at Laki.
Many buildings were demolished and in their place grand buildings were erected
in the then, new, modern style that is now associated with Fascist architecture
of the 1930s.
During World war two, the Greek Sacred Battalion, together with the
British alliance liberated the island from the Italian capitulation. However,
after almost 50 days of bombardment from German air raids, the Germans went on
to occupy the island until the end of the war in 1945. This was further followed
by a two year occupation by English armed forces, which culminated in March 1948,
with Leros and the whole of the Dodecanese
finally being united with Greece.
Anaximenes of Lampsacus says that the Milesians colonized the islands Icaros and Leros.
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