Skyros

Population: 2,994 (2011)

 

ISLAND OVERVIEW

 

Skyros is the southernmost of the Sporades, an archipelago in the Aegean Sea. At 209 square kilometres (81 sq mi) it is the largest island of the Sporades. The north of the island is covered by a forest, while the south, dominated by the highest mountain, called Kochila, (792 m), is bare and rocky. 

Skyros is the least touristically developed island of the chain. The island’s capital is also called Skyros (Chora).  On a hill above Chora sits an imposing Byzantine castle and the monastery of Saint George, one of the most important landmarks of Skyros.  The main port, on the west coast, is Linaria. The Hellenic Air Force has a major base in Skyros, because of the island’s strategic location in the middle of the Aegean.

The island has a unique breed of Skyrian ponies and is a great destination for trekking, as a hiking path network crosses the whole island. There are many beaches with crystal clear waters.

Ferries to Skyros depart from Kimi port in Evoia, while there are frequent ferries to Skyros from Skopelos and Alonissos during the summer.

Crete mountain goat

The Island & Its History

 

click image to view in Google Maps

In ancient times the island was called ‘The Island of the Magnetes’ then Pelasgia, Dolopia and later Skyros. In 340 BC the Macedonians took over the island and dominated it until 192 BC when King Philip V of Macedon and the Roman Republican forces restored it to Athens.  In c. 475 BC, Cimon defeated the Dolopians and conquered the entire island. From that date, Athenian settlers colonized it and it became a part of the Athenian Empire. The island lay on the strategic trade route between Attica and the Black Sea (Athens depended on supplies of grain reaching it through the Hellespont).  After the Fourth Crusade of 1202–1204, the island became part of the domain of Geremia Ghisi. The Byzantines retook it in 1277. After the Fall of Constantinople, Venetians ruled again the island until 1538, when it passed to the Ottoman Empire.  It became part of the new Greek state in 1830.

In 1915, Rupert Brooke, the famous English poet, was buried on Skyros then in 1918, during the Spanish flu, approximately one-third of the island’s population died in less than 30 days.

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