PELOPONNESUS

pĕlˌəpənēˈsəs or Pelopónnisospâˌlôpôˈnyēsôs, formerly Moreamōrēˈə, peninsula (1991 pop. 1,086,935), c.8,300 sq mi (21,500 sq km), S Greece. It is linked with central Greece by the Isthmus of Corinth, and it is washed by the Aegean Sea on the east and southeast, by the Ionian Sea on the southwest and west, and by the gulfs of Pátrai and Corinth on the north. Its deeply indented south coast terminates in Cape Matapan. Mainly mountainous, the region includes the Taygetus, Kyllene, and Erímanthos mts. The Evrótas and Alfiós are the chief rivers.

Economy

Predominately agricultural and pastoral, the Peloponnesus produces currants, grapes, figs, citrus fruit, olives, tobacco, and wheat. The most fertile parts of the peninsula are the coastal strips in the north and west. Sheep and goat raising, textile manufacturing, fishing, and sericulture are major sources of income. There are deposits of pyrite, manganese, lignite, and chromium. The peninsula attracts many tourists; the port cities of Pátrai, Corinth, Kalamata, and Návplion are the main modern centers of the Peloponnesus.

History

Originally populated by Leleges and Pelasgians (said to have been the builders of Mycenae and Tiryns), the peninsula was later occupied by the Achaeans and then by the Dorians, who dominated the Peloponnesus in historic times. The chief ancient divisions of the Peloponnesus were Elis, Achaea, Argolis, and the city-state of Corinth in the north; Arcadia in the center; and Lacedaemonia (comprising Messenia and Laconia) in the south. Sparta, Corinth, Argos, and megalopolis were among its chief cities in ancient times.

With the exception of Achaea and Argos, the whole peninsula participated in the Persian Wars (500–449 b.c.). At the time of the Peloponnesian War (5th cent. b.c.) almost the entire peninsula was dominated by Sparta. Spartan hegemony, which after the defeat of Athens extended over all Greece, was broken in the 4th cent. b.c. by Epaminondas of Thebes, who thus prepared the way for the establishment of Macedonian supremacy over the Peloponnesus by Philip II of Macedon. The Second Achaean League, unable to shake off the Macedonian yoke, was ended in 146 b.c. by the Roman conquest of the Peloponnesus. Under Roman and Byzantine rule the Peloponnesus was reduced to provincial status and in the centuries that followed was repeatedly raided and invaded by Slavs, Bulgars, and Pechenegs.

When, in 1204, the leaders of the Fourth Crusade established the Latin Empire of Constantinople (see Constantinople, Latin Empire of), the French Villehardouin family received the principality of Achaia or Achaea (i.e., the Peloponnesus) as fief, except for several ports, which passed to Venice. A French feudal state was created and enjoyed a period of great prosperity and chivalrous culture under the Villehardouin princes. Many castles remain to show the unique mixture of French feudal culture and Hellenistic civilization that flourished in the Peloponnesus in the 13th cent. After the death (1278) of William of Villehardouin, the last prince, the principality passed first to the Angevin dynasty of Naples (by marriage), later to various nobles, and in 1383 to a body of Navarrese soldier-adventurers.

The Byzantine Greeks meanwhile had gradually recovered a good part of the peninsula, and in 1432 they achieved complete control. Their triumph, however, was short-lived, for by 1460 Sultan Muhammad II had conquered the peninsula and annexed it to the Ottoman Empire. In the Turko-Venetian Wars from the 15th cent. until the Treaty of Passarowitz (1718), Venice held parts of the Peloponnesus at various times and the entire peninsula from 1687 to 1715. As a result of the Greek War of Independence (1821–29) the peninsula passed to independent Greece.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Peloponnesus
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books on: Peloponnesus  - 870 results

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...Etolian bands, they crossed to the Peloponnesus between Naupactus, where they constructed...Dorian migration, or the conquest of Peloponnesus by the Dorians and AEtolians, according...crossed the northern portion of the Peloponnesus without making a settlements, and...
...tactics with considerable success in the Peloponnesus. Small bands of thirty to a hundred...000 GDA combatants active in the Peloponnesus. 77 Having already suppressed the...Grivas X organization in the southern Peloponnesus, the Greek government undertook to...
...regions of Epirus, Macedonia, and Peloponnesus. A similar result holds for females...Albanian pattern and Greek Epirus and Peloponnesus. It is also clear that the more that...than the Greek regions of Epirus and Peloponnesus. The regions located in the east of...
...Figure 2.1). Spartas hold on the Peloponnesus was slipping fast, Theban power was...recognized a fundamental imbalance in the Peloponnesus and the need to correct this permanently...require an armed expedition into the Peloponnesus itself, an action to unite the Peloponnesians...
...the archons and local notables of the Peloponnesus and the Greek continent. Many of these...the countries of the Danube and the Peloponnesus. Early in 1821, the leader Alexander...Etairists proclaimed the revolution in the Peloponnesus, on the Greek continent, and on the...
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journal articles on: Peloponnesus  - 30 results

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...that Istmos of Corinth the neck, Peloponnesus the head. If this allusion hold...that Istmos of Corinth the neck, Peloponnesus the head" (1:24). But Burton...scapulae positae sunt. Isthmus collum, Peloponnesus caput arx totius Graeciae". This...
...to the island, in the armpit of the Peloponnesus, had neighbored heaven. The five...with a small wind from the central Peloponnesus; with almost the warmth of a warm...the big mountains of the Central Peloponnesus - snow-covered, like pink clouds...
...against Sparta, to the south in the Peloponnesus, more or less continuously since 431...positioned off the southeast coast of the Peloponnesus. Operating from bases on the island...cruising off the west coast of the Peloponnesus, ostensibly to succor embattled democrats...
...claims of Argos, the epitome of the Peloponnesus, and the arch-typal mythic hero...rests the royal house of Sparta and the Peloponnesus.(22) The importance of the myth...further African claim to Greece and the Peloponnesus in their attempts to reclaim their...
...to Eocene carbonate rocks and an upper Eocene flysch. On Peloponnesus and Crete (Fig. 2a), a thin anchimetamorphosed Permo...metamorphism for the rocks exposed on Kithira and southern Peloponnesus are estimated at 450 30 C and 13-17 kbar (e.g. Theye...
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...challenged Spartas overlordship of the Peloponnesus. In retaliation the Spartan king...his victory, Epaminondas invaded the Peloponnesus, freed the provinces of Messenia and...600 years since they had occupied the Peloponnesus following the Dorian invasion. Thebes...
...the minister of wars winery in the Peloponnesus (southern peninsula). "The battalion...pillboxes in mountainous terrain in the Peloponnesus. Peddicords plan was to approach from...cleared from central Greece and the Peloponnesus, in part because the Americans demanded...
...complete infantry division and four commando units to the Peloponnesus peninsula, where some 4,000 insurgents were known to be...success. By mid-January 1949 all sabotage had ceased in the Peloponnesus, and by 16 March the Greek government was able to announce...
...Strabo in Book 8) described the hydrologic connection between Katavothra (Ponors) in Pheneos polje to Ladon Spring in the Peloponnesus of Greece, by observing seasonal rains and the resulting increased discharge from the spring. * Poseidonios (135-50...
...deep blue waters of the Aegean Sea. A fusion of stone, sunlight and sparkling sea, the Cyclades lie to the east of the Peloponnesus and southeast of the coast of Attica--they stretch as far as Samos and Ikaria to the east, and are bounded to the south...
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...the Gibraltar of Greece," on the southeastern corner of Peloponnesus. At one time about 50,000 Byzantine Greeks lived in the...site is Mistras, for two centuries the Byzantine capital of Peloponnesus. Today, it is stone foundations and walls of monasteries...
...the Yuan dynasty in 1368. Coleridge probably based the river Alph in the poem on the Alpheus, the longest river in the Peloponnesus, which rises in the Taygetus Mountains in Greece. From there it flows northwards through a series of deep gorges, past...
...long before that date. The word Olympiad comes from the Greek place called Olympia, a plain in Elis in the northwestern Peloponnesus where the ancient Olympic games were held. An "Olympiad" signified the four- year intervals between games, and was a...
...title of a 1958 nonfiction book by British-born author Patrick Leigh Fermor, "Mani," refers to a distinct region of the Peloponnesus in southern Greece characterized by mountainous terrain pierced through with stone towers. Forbidding land, to say the...
...the Minoan settlements were abandoned, with only Knossos still occupied. The next dominant civilization was at Mycenae in Peloponnesus, whose king, Agamemnon, according to the "Iliad," was the most powerful of the Greek leaders at that time. There are...
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encyclopedia articles on: Peloponnesus  - 53 results

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PELOPONNESUS pel p ne s s or Peloponnisos pa lopo...Predominately agricultural and pastoral, the Peloponnesus produces currants, grapes, figs...are the main modern centers of the Peloponnesus. History Originally populated by Leleges...
...Southern Greece is made up of the Peloponnesus . The fourth region of Greece comprises...speaking Achaeans migrated into the Peloponnesus during the 14th and 13th cent. b...were particularly devastating in the W Peloponnesus. The perceived slow government response...
...French noble family that ruled the Peloponnesus from 1210 to 1278. Geoffroi I de Villehardouin...out on the conquest of Morea (as the Peloponnesus was then called) in 1205, with his...Jerusalem, comprised virtually the whole Peloponnesus save several ports held by the Venetians...
...region of ancient Greece, in the northern part of the Peloponnesus on the Gulf of Corinth. It lay between Sicyon and Elis...Achaea, or Achaia, was given to a Roman province in the Peloponnesus. ____________________ Copyright 2009...
...connecting central Greece (Attica and Boeotia) with the Peloponnesus , between the Gulf of Corinth and the Saronic Gulf. It is...6th cent. a.d.) by Byzantine emperors to defend the Peloponnesus. Near the eastern end of the wall are ruins of the sanctuary...
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