This vintage postcard shows Skiathos, a small Greek island.
Skiathos (Greek: Σκιάθος, pronounced [sciˈaθos]; Latin forms: Sciathos and Sciathus) is a small Greek island in the northwest Aegean Sea. Skiathos is the westernmost island in the Northern Sporades group, east of the Pelion peninsula in Magnesia on the mainland, and west of the island of Skopelos.
In Ancient times, the island played a minor role during the Persian Wars. In 480 BC, the fleet of the Persian King Xerxes
was hit by a storm and was badly damaged on the rocks of the Skiathos
coast. Following this the Greek fleet blockaded the adjacent seas to
prevent naval invasion and provisions for the enemy of 300 Spartans who stood heroically at Thermopylae pass. The Persian fleet was defeated there at Artemisium and finally destroyed at the Battle of Salamis a year later. Skiathos remained in the Delian League until it lost its independence. The city was destroyed by Philip V of Macedon in 200 BC.
In 1207 the Gyzi brothers captured the island and built the Bourtzi, a small Venetian-styled fortress similar to the Bourtzi in Nafplio,
on an islet just out of Skiathos Town, to protect the capital from the
pirates. But the Bourtzi was ineffective in protecting the population
and in the mid-14th century the inhabitants moved the capital from the
ancient site that lay where modern Skiathos Town is to Kastro
(the Greek word for castle), located on a high rock, overlooking a
steep cliff above the sea at the northernmost part of the island.
In 1704 monks from Athos built the Evangelistria monastery which played a part on the Greek War of Independence as a hide-out for Greek rebels. The first flag of Greece was created and hoisted in the Evangelistria monastery in Skiathos in 1807. Several prominent military leaders (including Theodoros Kolokotronis and Andreas Miaoulis) had gathered there for consultation concerning an uprising, and they were sworn to this flag by the local bishop.
After the War of Independence and demise of piracy in the Aegean,
Kastro became less important as a strategic location. In 1830s, the
island's capital was moved to the original site — where it still
remains. Today, ruins of Kastro are one of tourist attractions.
During the 19th century Skiathos became an important shipbuilding centre in the Aegean
due to the abundance of pine forests on the island. The pine woods of
the island were then almost obliterated. This was brought to a halt
though, due to the emergence of steamboats. A small shipwright remains
north of Skiathos Town, which still builds traditional Greek caiques.
The film Mamma Mia
was partially filmed on Skiathos and nearby island Skopelos. This has
increased it's popularity as a tourist destination since the release of
the successful movie. [wikipedia]
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