Page 60 - MYCONIAN COLLECTION MAGAZINE 2023
P. 60

HISTOR Y





                                                        Marvel at white churches,
                                                        old houses and traditional
                                                        buildings alongside your
                                                        island tour. It’s time to step
                                                        back in time to partake in
                                                        the charming secrets of
                                                        Myconian history.
             ACCORDING to Hesychios, Mykonos
             derives from the word Mykon,
             meaning heap and themonia; heap of
             stones on account of the impressive
             granite boulders that seem to have
             been heaped by some supernatural
             hand. Ancient Greeks had created the
             myth that under the island’s rocks were
             buried the giants killed by Hercules,
             who came to the aid of his father Zeus
             during the Gigantomachy.
             Archaeological finds on Mykonos
             indicate the existence of a significant
             civilisation on the island, dating back
             to the Late Neolithic period (5th & 4th
             millennium BC). Later, Ionians settle on
             Mykonos, colonising it after expelling
             its previous inhabitants.
             Later on, when Delos was highly
             populated, Mykonos became very
             important as a significant port for
             supplies and transit. It was also an
             important cultural and religious
             centre, and many travelled frequently
             between the two islands. During the
             time of the Roman occupation and
             the Middle Ages, Mykonos was part
             of the Roman Empire and then the
             Byzantine Empire. The Byzantines
             defended it against the Arabs in the
             7th century and maintained control
             until the 13th century, when it came
             under the control of the Ghizzi dynasty
             in 1207 and was eventually handed
             to the Venetians in 1390. In 1537, still
             under the Venetians, Mykonos was
             attacked by Hayreddin Barbarossa,
             a legendary admiral of Suleiman the
             Magnificent. The Ottomans took over,
             imposing a system of self-governance
             which consisted of a governor and an
             appointed council of syndics.
             After centuries of foreign rule, the
             Mykonians took over a leading role
             in the Greek Revolution of 1821
             against the Ottomans, spearheaded
             by acclaimed national heroine Mando
             Mavrogenous. Mykonos was part of
             the free Greek State since the first day
             of its independence in 1830. Sailors
             and merchants quickly revived the
             island’s economy, consolidating trade
             relations with South Russia, Moldavia


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