ARCADIA


'Arcadia' or 'Arkadía' (Greek Αρκαδία; see also List of traditional Greek place names) is a region of Greece in the Peloponnesus. It takes its name from the mythological character Arcas.

Contents
Modern Arcadia
Provinces
Municipalities and communities
Climate
History
Communications
Sports teams
Persons
References in popular culture
External links

Modern Arcadia


Arcadia has its present-day capital at Tripoli. It forms the largest prefecture on the Peloponnesian peninsula. It currently covers about 18% of the entire peninsula, although it once extended to about 20 to 25% of the peninsula.
The prefecture has a skiing resort on Mount Maenalus, the Mainalon, located about 20 km NW of Tripoli. The other mountains include the Parnon in the southeast, the Artemisio, the Saita, the Skiathio, the Lykaia and Tsiberou.
The Greek National Road 7 (E65) highway, which was extended after 1997 and in 2003, runs through Arcadia on a north-west to south-east axis and nearly forms in the southwest the end of the highway. A thermoelectric power station which produces electricity for most of southern Greece, operates to the south of Megalopolis, along with a coal mine.
Arcadia has two tunnels. The Artemisio Tunnel opened first, followed by the tunnel east of Megalopolis; both serve traffic flowing between Messenia and Athens.
In agriculture, potato farms (dominant in central and northcentral Arcadia), mixed farming, olive groves, and pasture dominate the plains of Arcadia, especially in the area around Megalopolis and between Tripoli and Levidi. One of these cuisines were featured on Mega Channel's cooking show hosted by Mamalakis that was shown on prime time.
Theodoros Kolokotronis (1770 - 1843), a general in the Greek War of Independence (1821 - 1832), lived in Arcadia.
Dimitris Plapoutas (1786-1864), a general in the Greek War of Independence, also lived in Arcadia.
==Ancient and modern towns and cities==
The chief cities and communities in the prefecture include Tripoli, Astros, Vytina, Dimitsana, Lagkadia, Leonidio, Leontari, Levidi, Megalopolis Paloumba and Stemnitsa.
Ancient cities include Asea, Astros, Athinaio, Daseae, Falaisia (Phalesia), Gortys, Hypsus (Stemnitsa, Irea, Lykaio, Megalopoli, Tegea, Thoknia,. Trapezus, Tropaia, Tripoli and more.

Provinces


Arcadia has 4 provinces:

Gortynia Province - Dimitsana

Kynouria Province - Leonidio

Mantineia Province - Tripolis

Megalopoli Province - Megalopolis

Municipalities and communities


Municipality YPES code Seat (if different) Postal code
Apollonas 0501 Tyros 220 29
Dimitsana 0506 220 07
Falanthos 0523 Davia 221 00
Falaisia 0522 Leontari 220 21
Gortyna 0505 Karytaina 220 22
Iraia 0507 Paloumba 220 28
Kleitor 0507 Mygdalia 220 28
Kontovazaina 0509 220 15
Korythio 0510 Steno 221 00
Lagkadia 0512 220 03
Leonidio 0514 223 00
Levidi 0513 220 02
Mantineia 0515 Nestani 220 05
Megalopoli 0516 222 00
North Kynouria 0503 Astros 220 01
Skyritida 0517 Vlachokerasia 220 16
Tegea 0518 Stadio 220 12
Trikolonoi 0519 Stemnitsa 220 24
'Tripoli' 0520 221 00
Tropaia 0521 220 08
Valtetsi 0502 Asea 220 27
Vytina 0504 220 10
Community YPES code Seat (if different) Postal code
Kosmas 0511 230 58

See also: List of settlements in the Arcadia prefecture

Climate


The climate consists of hot summers and mild winters in the eastern part, the southern part, the low lying areas and the central area at altitudes lower than 1,000 m. The area primarily receives rain during fall and winter months in the rest of Arcadia. Winter snow occurs commonly in the mountainous areas for much of the west and the northern part, the Taygetus area, the Mainalon.

History


''Les Bergers d’Arcadie'' by Nicolas Poussin.

Due to its remote, mountainous character, Arcadia has always been a classical refuge. So during the Dorian invasion, when Mycenaean Greek was replaced with Doric Greek along the coast of the Peloponnes, it survived in Arcadia, developing into the Arcadocypriot dialect of Classical Antiquity. Arcadocypriot never became a literary dialect, but it is known from inscriptions. Tsan is a letter of the Greek alphabet occurring only in Arcadia, shaped like Cyrillic И; it represents an affricate that developed from labiovelars in context where they became ''t'' in other dialects. Tsakonian Greek , still spoken on the coast of the modern prefecture of Arcadia, in the Classical period considered the southern Argolid coast immediately adjoining Arcadia, is a descendant of Doric Greek, and as such is an extraordinary example of a surviving regional dialect of archaic Greek. The capital of Tsakonia is the Arcadian coastal town of Leonidio.
One of the birthplaces reported for Zeus is Mount Lycaeum in Arcadia. Lycaon, a cannibalistic Pelasgian king, was transformed into a werewolf by Zeus. Lycaon's daughter was Callisto. It was also said to have been the birthplace of Zeus' son, Hermes.
Arcadia remained a rustic, secluded area, and its inhabitants became proverbial as primitive herdsmen leading simple pastoral
unsophisticated yet happy lives, to the point that ''Arcadia'' may refer to some imaginary idyllic paradise, immortalized by Virgil's Eclogues, and later by Jacopo Sannazaro in his pastoral masterpiece, ''Arcadia'' (1504); see also Arcadia (utopia).
Arcadia later joined the Roman Empire and later the Byzantine Empire. In the early-1st millennium, the area became a part of the Frankish Empire. In the mid-15th century, the region fell into the hands of the Ottoman Turks with some exceptions in the 16th century for a couple of years. During these periods, many towns and villages were founded.
The Latin phrase ''Et in Arcadia ego'' which is usually interpreted to mean "I am also in Arcadia" or "I am even in Arcadia" is an example of ''memento mori'', a cautionary reminder of the transitory nature of life and the inevitability of death. The phrase is most often associated with a 1647 painting by Nicolas Poussin, also known as "The Arcadian Shepherds". In the painting the phrase appears as an inscription on a tomb discovered by youthful figures in classical garb.
After 400 years of occupation by the Ottomans, Arcadia was the epicentre of the Greek War of Independence which saw victories in their battles including one in Tripoli which saw the Greek revolutionaries slaughter around 30,000 Turks. After a victorious revolutionary war, Arcadia was finally incorporated into a newly-created Greek state. Arcadia saw economic growth and small emigration.
In the 20th century, Arcadia experienced extensive population loss through emigration, mostly to the Americas. Many Arcadian villages lost almost half their inhabitants, and fears arose that they would turn into ghost towns. Arcadia now has a smaller population than Corinthia. Demographers expected that its population would halve between 1951 and the early 21st century. The prefectural population is in a range to a point that could fall below the 100,000 mark which could make it the next prefecture in Greece to have less than a 100,000 people.
After World War II and the Greek Civil War, many villages and towns were being rebuilt.
An enormous earthquake rumbled within a 5 Richter scale range that shook Megalopoli and the surrounding area. Many buildings were destroyed which left people homeless, in a couple of years, the buildings were rebuilt anti-seismically. In 1967, the Megalopoli Power Plant began construction and operated in 1970 producing electricity to southern Greece, with that, a mining area is south a plant which made it the largest mining area in the peninsula and continues to the present day with one settlement moved.
Water problems haunted its residents when they were protesting over the rights of water usage with the Argolida and its new reservoir near Saga on July 3, 2007. Later on July 27, a wildfire started in Gortynia in the western portion and threatened several nearby villages and burnt a small portion of the forested area. Another forest fire less than a month later occurred and was a minor one near Tropaia on Thursday August 23.
==Transport==

★ Major roads or highways:


Greek National Road 7


Greek National Road 33, N


Greek National Road 37, Cen, S


Greek National Road 66, N


Greek National Road 74, NW, N


Greek National Road 76, W, SW

★ Secondary roads:


★ Leontari-Dyrrachi Road


Leonidi-Monemvasia Road


Karytaina-Dimitsana Road


★ Megalopoli-Lykaio Road


Sparta-Leonidi Road


Tripoli-Dimitsana Road


Tripoli-Leonidi Road


★ Tripoli-Nestani Road


Tripoli-Vytina Road


Veligosti-Vasta Road


Vourvoura-Leonidi Road

Communications


==Television==

Arkadiki Radiophonia Teleorassi - ART

Sports teams



★ Arcadia Shepherds is the South African football (soccer) club from the city of Pretoria. The club was formed in 1903 and has been a source of players from its youth system that have gone on to higher profile careers overseas. The club's glory year was 1974, when it won every competition entered.

Asteras Tripolis is the Greek soccer club from the city of Tripoli.

★ Leonidio FC is the Greek soccer club from the town of Leonidio.

Persons



Ancient Olympic victors:


Androsthenes of Maenalus, won gold in 420 and 416 BC


Euthymenes of Maenalus, won gold in 400 and 392 BC

Angelos Angelopoulos, economist, professor of the University of Athens

Mimis Fotopoulos (April 1913 in Zatouna Gortynias - 1986 in Athens)

Nikos Gatsos, poet

Costas Gavras, actor

Kostas Karyotakis (October 30, 1896July 20, 1928 in Preveza)

Yiannis Kouros, ultramarathon runner

Giorgos Merikas, doctor

Georgios Mistriois, philologist

Dimitris Mitropoulos

Vasileios Oikonomou, lawman

Giannis Panou, poet

Vasilis Papakonstantinou, singer and director

★ Dimitrios Paparrigopoulos

Giorgos Santas, with Manolis Glezos, he was famous for restoring the Greek flag at the Acropolis after nearly three and a half years of non-Greek occupation of the Battle of Greece in 1944, a part of World War II.

Ilias Simopoulos, poet

Georgios Stamatopoulos

Kostas Tournas, director?, poet and singer

Babis Tsertos, singer

Stavros Tsiolis, actor

Georgios Valkans, chemist

Thanassis Valtinos, poet

★ Kollias the Vytinioti

Simos Chatzis, soccer player

References in popular culture


The area of the prefecture were featured in several ERT programs including documentaries on the Megalopoli Mine and Ladon Lake

External links



Pan-Arcadian Congress

★ http://www.arcadians.gr

University of Patras, Arkadia-Project

Arcadia, Greece

Unknown Arcadia

★ http://flyingbrick.freeyellow.com/arcadia.htm

★ http://www.arcadianet.gr/en/

★ http://www.tripolis.gr

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