(Redirected from Aliakmon)
Map showing location of the Haliacmon
The 'Haliacmon' (
Attic ''Haliákmōn'',
Ionic ''Aliákmōn'',
modern Greek Αλιάκμονας ''Aliákmonas'',
South Slavic Бистрица ''Bistritsa'',
Turkish ''İnce Karasu'') is the longest river in
Greece, with a total length of 322 km (200 miles). ''Haliacmon'' is the traditional English name for the river, but many sources cite the formerly official
katharevousa version of the name, ''Aliákmon''. Today, the only
official variant is the
demotic ''Aliákmonas''.
It rises in the northern
Pindus mountains in northern Greece on the border with
Albania, before flowing southeast then northeast through the Greek
peripheries of
West and
Central Macedonia and then into
Lake Kastoria, and into the dam and into the
Thermaic Gulf. It waters an extensive area, making it of great importance to agriculture in the region. The river forms the western portion of the delta of the
Axiós (aka
Vardar). The river runs in the prefectures of
Kastoria,
Grevena,
Kozani,
Imathia, and
Pieria.

Course of the Haliacmon, as seen from the
Terra satellite. (The river course has been highlighted.)
The Haliacmon flows through
Kastoria,
Neapoli, west of
Siatista and into the Grevena prefecture and east of Grevena, and to the south of Kozani and into the
Polyfytos dam which is 20 km long and about 4 to 5 km wide, and southeast of
Aiane, and into the gorges and southeast of
Veria and north of
Aiginio and northeast of
Methone.
In antiquity,
Claudius Ptolemy called the chain of mountains in which the river rises (northern
Pindus) the ''Canalovii''. According to
Julius Caesar, the Haliacmon formed the line of demarcation between
Macedon and
Thessaly. In the upper part of its course it took a southeast direction through
Elimiotis, which it watered; and then, continuing to the northeast, formed the boundary between
Pieria,
Eordaea, and
Imathia. In the time of
Herodotus the Haliacmon was apparently joined by the
Loudias (Herodotus Book 7: Polymnia 127), or discharge of the lake of
Pella; but a change has taken place in the course of the Loudias, which no longer joins the Haliacmon, but flows directly into the
Aegean Sea. The image below shows a
wind gap between the Haliacmon and Loudias
watersheds that is the probable ancient course of the Haliacmon.

Haliacmon_Wind_Gap.png