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Listed 14 sub titles with search on: Information about the place  for wider area of: "KRANIDI Municipality ARGOLIS" .


Information about the place (14)

Miscellaneous

Halieis

ALIIS, ALIA (Ancient city) KRANIDI
The city was inhabited by fishermen from Hermione and by inhabitants from Tiryns. It did not exist in the time of Strabo.

Greek & Roman Geography (ed. William Smith)

Halieis

  The name of a sea-faring people on the coast of Hermionis, who derived their name from their fisheries. (Strab. viii. p. 373.) They gave their name to a town on the coast of Herinionis, where the Tirynthians and Hermionians took refuge when they were expelled from their own cities by the Argives. (Ephor. ap. Byz. s. v. Halieis; Strab. viii. p. 373.) This town was taken about Ol. 80 by Aneristus, the son of Sperthias, and made subject to Sparta (hos heile Halieas [not alieas] tous ek Tirunthos, Helod. vii. 137). The district was afterwards ravaged on more than one occasion by the Athenians. (Thuc. i. 105, ii. 56, iv. 45; Diod. xi. 78.) After the Peloponnesian War the Halieis are mentioned by Xenophon as an autonomous people. (Xen. Hell. iv. 2. 6, vi. 2, § 3.)
  The district is called e Halias by Thucydides (ii. 56, iv. 45), who also calls the people or their town Halieis; for, in i. 105, the true reading is es Halias, i.e. Halieas. (See Meineke, and Steph. B. s. v. Halieis.) In an inscription we find en Halieusin. (Bockh, Inscr. no. 165.)
  Scylax speaks of Halia as a port at the mouth of the Argolic gulf. Callimachus calls the town Alycus (Alukos, Steph. B. s. v.), and by Pausanias it is named Halice (Halike), and its inhabitants Halici. (Paus. ii. 36. § 1.) The town was no longer inhabited in the time of Pausanias, and its position is not fixed by that writer. He only says that, seven stadia from Hermione, the road from Halice separated from that to Mases, and that the former led between the mountains Pron and Coccygius, of which the ancient name was Thornax. In the peninsula of Kranidhi, the French Commission observed the remains of two Hellenic sites, one on the southern shore, about three miles from Hermione and the same distance from C. Musadki, the other on the south-western side, at the head of a deep bay called Kheli or Bizati: the former they suppose to represent Halice, and the latter Mases, and, accordingly these two places are so placed in Kiepert's map. But Leake, who is followed by Curtius, observes that the ruins which the French Commission have named alice are probably some dependency of Hermione of which the name has not been recorded, since the position is too near to Hermione to have been that of Halice, and the harbour is too inconvenient for a people who were of considerable maritime importance. It is far more likely that such a people possessed the port of Cheli, the situation of which at the mouth of the Argolic gulf agrees exactly with the description of Scylax. Mases probably stood at the head of the bay of Kiladhia.

This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited May 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Mases

MASSIS (Ancient city) KRANIDI
  he Masetos, Eth Masetios. An ancient city in the district Hermionis, in the Argolic peninsula, mentioned by Homer along with Aegina. In the time of Pausanias it was used as a harbour by Hermione. (Hom. Il. ii. 562; Strab. viii. p. 376; Paus. ii. 36. § 2; Steph. B. s. v.) It was probably situated on the western coast of Hermionis, at the head of the deep bay of Kiladhia, which is protected by a small island in front. The possession of this harbour on the Argolic gulf must have been of great advantage to the inhabitants of Hermione, since they were thus saved the navigation round the peninsula of Kranidhi: The French Commission, however, place Mases more to the south, at port Kheli, which we suppose to have been the site of Halice.

This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited June 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Individuals' pages

Links

Lambagiana, Philanoreia

FOURNI (Village) KRANIDI
A valley W of the modern village of Phournoi in the S part of the region.

Local government Web-Sites

Municipality of Kranidi

KRANIDI (Municipality) ARGOLIS

Local government WebPages

Kranidi

KRANIDI (Small town) ARGOLIS
  Perched high up in the steep hills, halloed by the idyllic pine tree forest of Agia Anni, Kranidi supervises from above the entire peninsula of Ermionis. Located in a most charismatic position, in the midst of the peninsula's plains, Kranidi today,- the capital of Ermionis- is built on the boundaries of the ancient city of Masitos, which also included the area of today's Kilada as well as a section of the near by community of Fourni.
   Kranidi acquires its recent name in the beginning of the 16th century, but it has been inhabited since the 13th, when the Byzantine emperor Andronikos II allotted the area to Theodoros Nomikopoulos. Its name is possibly credited to another version of the word Koronida which was the name of the small islet of Kilada.
   With its permanent residents occupying themselves with agriculture and cattle breeding but also with commerce and shipping, Kranidi started to develop around the chapel of Agios Ioannis - the Metropolis of Kranidi today- and reached a great economic peak which allowed it to have a leading role in Greece's effort to overthrow the Turks and win back its independence. Kranidi took part in the revolution with a part of its fleet, soldiers and material goods needed. It is the birthplace of the great monk and fighter of 1821's revolution Paparsenis Krestas who, as the leader of the battalion of Kranidi participated in the battle and freed Palamidi. During the civil war in 1823, Kranidi will become the seat of the Executing Committee for a few months.
   After the revolution and until the beginning of the 20th century, Kranidi owned a large commercial fleet. But the weakness of its people to respond to the challenges of the time and to replace their boats with steam -driven ones, led commercial activities to a deadlock.
   Irrefutable proof of its economic flourishing is the traditional and characterized as preservable settlement with its impressive mansions resembling- not by coincidence- those of Spetses. The sweet-smelling yards, the freshly painted walls and fountains, the rooms and old balconies, all create a unique sensation. The characteristic buildings of the local architectural style like the Town Hall and the Library, the five big churches of the 19th century- the most important one being the Metropolis of Agios Ioannis- the Well of Pyrgos, the three fully restored windmills and the traditional oilmills, make you feel as if you have traveled back in time. Wherever you look, you will see small white chapels embracing the city. One is located at the top of Agia Anna's hill offering a great, panoramic view and the chapels of Agios Ioannis Theologos at Artiki and of prophet Eliseos are also worth seeing. The most important one of all though is the Byzantine chapel of Agia Triada in the area of Pikrodafni. It was built in 1224 by "lord" Michael Mourmoura deputy of the Franks in the area. The church has the shape of a cross and its saddled roof valuable murals have survived until today.

This text is cited Oct 2002 from the WebSite of the Prefecture of Argolis


Portocheli

PORTO HELI (Village) ARGOLIS
(Following URL information in Greek only)

Perseus Project index

The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites

Halieis

  On an excellent harbor near the S tip of the peninsula. Occupied from Protogeometric times, it enters recorded history with Athens unsuccessful attack in 460 B.C. Not long before, refugees from Tiryns in the Argive Plain had settled here, probably without displacing the natives. Sometime before 431 B.C. the town was captured by Sparta but with the outbreak of the Peloponnesian War it was subject to further raids by the Athenians to whom the use of acropolis and harbor was granted in 424-423 B.C. by treaty. In the next century Halieis appears as a Spartan ally through 370-369 B.C., after which there is no sure historical reference. Under the name Tirynthioi coinage was issued in the 4th c. as from an independent city-state. The site was abandoned near the end of the century. Scattered remains, including a calidarium built on classical fortifications, testify to some occupation in late Roman times.
   The town is located on the slopes and shore below a low hill on the S side of the circular harbor, across from the modern village of Porto Cheli. From at least the 8th c. B.C. mudbrick walls enclosed a small acropolis, the site of the shrine of an unidentified goddess. The military role of the hill is shown by a series of fortifications and associated structures, culminating before the mid 4th c. in an impressive semicircular tower. By the shore a settlement from at least the early 7th c. had a separate wall. In the Classical period a circuit with no less than four gates and a number of rectangular and round towers ran down from the acropolis to, and along, the shore. Private houses and workshops of mudbrick on stone socles have been found over the whole site, affording a rare glimpse at the plan of a provincial town. Changes in sea level have covered up to 50 m of the town along the shore; there appears to have been a small war harbor enclosed within the circuit of the walls.
   On the E side of the bay, some 500 m from the city, a Sanctuary of Apollo has been found at a depth of ca. 2 m below sea level. A temple (27 x 4 m) divided into three chambers was probably in existence by ca. 675 B.C.; it has yielded quantities of metal and votive pottery and much of a marble statue of the god. To the S of the temple are the foundations of a long altar and a stadium with two stone starting lines, 167 m apart. The temple appears to have been destroyed near the mid 5th c., perhaps in the Athenian attack, and never rebuilt on that site. Athletic activities occasioned the construction of various other buildings and flourished until close to the end of the city's life. Finds from the city, sanctuary, and necropolis are kept in the Nauplion Museum.

M. H. Jameson, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites, Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Oct 2002 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains 11 image(s), bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


Halieis

Though only a small place(Tiryns) in Classical times, it sent a contingent to fight at Plataia and was a thorn in the side of Argos until the Argives destroyed it, probably in the sixties of the 5th c. B.C. The exiled Tirynthians settled in Halieis in the S Argolid. . . The exile of the Tirynthians at Halieis (Porto Cheli) is confirmed by Tirynthian coins found in excavations there

This extract is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites, Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Oct 2002 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


Halieis

Epidauros and Troizen on the east coast were independent of Argos, as were the three small poleis, Hermione, Halieis, and Mases in southern Argolid. According to tradition, Halieis was settled by Tirynthians after their defeat by the Argives, and none of the cities in the north or south ever lived in anything more than an uneasy truce with one another. . There was no lasting peace after the Peloponnesian War, and as a consequence Halieis and other sites were abandoned early in the Hellenistic period.
A Classical and early Hellenistic polis at the southern tip of the Argolid. The town was laid out in the 5th century B.C. on an orthogonal street plan, perhaps the earliest use of this system in Greece, and was occupied until 300-280 B.C. when the town was abandoned. American archaeologists excavating since 1962 have revealed religious buildings on the acropolis and blocks of houses on the slopes below the acropolis. Early use of underwater excavation techniques were used here to explore an early stone temple of Apollo with a stoa and stadium and nearby house blocks that had been submerged by rising sea level in the last 2000 years. The underwater remains may be viewed from a boat or by snorkeling, and many typical houses are still visible in the trenches on the east side of the Porto Kheli bay.

This extract is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites, Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Oct 2002 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


Lambagiana (Philanoreia, Philanorion)

FILANORION (Ancient city) KRANIDI
  A valley W of the modern village of Phournoi in the S part of the region. It has been identified with the Philanoreia found in inscriptions; Pausanias mentions Philanorion. About 200 m from the Argolic Gulf, the watchtower of a small border fort is preserved to a height of several courses, with traces of adjoining structures. The large blocks of coursed polygonal masonry suggest a date in the late 5th or 4th c. B.C.

M. H. Mc Allister, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites, Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Nov 2002 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


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