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Sagiada
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Sagiada |
| name_local | Σαγιάδα |
| type | municipal unit |
| image_map | DE Sagiadas.svg |
| map_caption | Location within the regional unit |
| periph | Epirus |
| periphunit | Thesprotia |
| municipality | Filiates |
| pop_municunit | 1580 |
| population_as_of | 2021 |
| pop_community | 515 |
| area_municunit | 87.8 |
| coordinates | |
| licence | ΗΝ |
| image_skyline | Sagiada-strand-camping.JPG |
| caption_skyline | Beach of Sagiada |
Sagiada () is a village and a former municipality in Thesprotia, Epirus, Greece. Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality Filiates, of which it is a municipal unit. The municipal unit has an area of 87.803 km2. In 2021 its population was 515 for the village and 1,580 for the municipal unit. The seat of the municipality was in Asprokklisi.
Location
Sagiada stretches between the Ionian Sea to the west and Albania to the north. It is the westernmost point of mainland Greece. The river Thyamis flows into sea 4 km south of the village Sagiada. There are plains in the southern part of the municipal unit, and mountains on the Albanian border. The village Sagiada is 10 km west of Filiates, 15 km northwest of the capital of Thesprotia, Igoumenitsa, and 4 km south of the Albanian town of Konispol.
History
In the late medieval era (14th century) the fort of Sagiada and its lucrative salt mines was contested among various local lords and the Angevins from Corfu. In 1386 it was captured by Gjon Zenebishi, an Albanian lord from Gjirokaster. However, in 1387 it passed to Esau de' Buondelmonti of the Despotate of Epirus. Zenevisi retook control in 1399 as he claimed in the final agreement with the Venetians that they belonged to his ancestors. After his death it came under the control of the Venetian Republic (1418).
Sagiada is recorded in the 1431 Ottoman Arvanid defter, as part of the nahiye/vilayet of Vagenetia in the Sanjak of Albania as one of the villages whose tax rights were given to timar holders. In 1473 the illustrious man (egregius vir) Johannes Volassi (or Vlassi) temporarily captured Sagiada and various surrounding Ottoman controlled regions after approval from Venice.
In the 16th century, the region was harassed by the Venetians and the inhabitants of Venetian Corfu in violation of the Ottoman-Venetian treaty of 1540 who were offering lower prices to merchants in order for them to use the ports of Corfu instead of Sagiada. In 1566, Sagiada is described as small village with 30 households inhabited by Albanians (habitato puro de albanesi). In the late 18th era, Sagiada (in Albanian, Sajadha) was a small port in the northern parts of the territories of the Cham Albanians. Athanasios Psalidas (1767–1829), counselor of Ali Pasha of Ioannina noted that the town was inhabited by an ethnic Greek community. Sagiada was the port of Filiates and as trade expanded from 1675 to 1706 consuls of England, Holland and Venice responsible for communication with the inland regions resided in Sagiada.
During the late Ottoman period (1820-1913) Sagiada was among the Greek speaking areas on the coastal part of Chameria. At 1875 a vice consulate of Greece was already established in Sagiada. At 1893 two ground level Greek schools were operating in the town.
During World War II the town of Sagiada was primarily inhabited by a Greek population. After the war new settlement was built near the coast. After WWII and the expulsion of Cham Albanians, like many other settlements, it was partially repopulated by an Aromanian-speaking community.
The survivors of the 1943 destruction were forced to move to the adjacent coast, where the new settlement was built after the end of World War II. The old town has been declared a protected area.
Subdivisions
The former municipal unit of Sagiada was subdivided into the following communities:
- Sagiada
- Asprokklisi
- Kestrini
- Ragi
- Smertos
References
Sources
References
- "ΦΕΚ B 1292/2010, Kallikratis reform municipalities". [[Government Gazette (Greece).
- "Population & housing census 2001 (incl. area and average elevation)". National Statistical Service of Greece.
- (1999). "Σχέσεις της Βενετικής διοίκησης της Κέρκυρας με τις ηγεμονίες του Ιονίου (1386-1460)". Peri Istorias.
- (30 August 1984). "The Despotate of Epiros 1267-1479: A Contribution to the History of Greece in the Middle Ages". Cambridge University Press.
- (2001). "Exportland Albanien: Ein Ausflug in die Vergangenheit". Südosteuropa-Gesellschaft.
- Sathas, Kōnstantinos N.. (1888). "Documents inédits relatifs à l'Histoire de la Grèce au Moyen Âge, tome 7". Maisonneuve et Cie.
- Vakalopoulos, Kōnstantinos Apostolou. (2003). "Historia tēs Ēpeirou: apo tis arches tēs Othōmanokratias hōs tis meres mas". Hērodotos.
- (2020). "Rebels, Believers, Survivors: Studies in the History of the Albanians". Oxford University Press.
- Giakoumis, Konstantinos. (2016). "Self-identifications by Himarriots, 16th to 19th Centuries". Erytheia.
- (2003). "Το ύστερο Γιαννιώτικο Πασαλίκι: χώρος, διοίκηση και πληθυσμός στην τουρκοκρατούμενη Ηπειρο (1820-1913)". Κέντρο Νεοελληνικών Ερευνών, (Ε.Ι.Ε.).
- (2001). "The Relations Between the Greeks and the Albanians During the 19th Century: Political Aspirations and Visions (1875–1897)". [[University of Ioannina]].
- (2001). "Η ελληνική δημοτική εκπαίδευση στην Ήπειρο της ύστερης τουρκοκρατίας (1861 - 1913): θεωρία και πράξη". University of Ioannina.
- Meyer, Hermann Frank. (2008). "Blutiges Edelweiß: Die 1. Gebirgs-division im zweiten Weltkrieg [Bloodstained Edelweiss. The 1st Mountain-Division in WWII]". Ch. Links Verlag.
- (December 2015). "Violence, resistance and collaboration in a Greek borderland: the case of the Muslim Chams of Epirus "Qualestoria" n. 2, dicembre 2015". Qualestoria.
- (2002). "The Secret Past of the Greek Albanian Borderland". LIT Verlag Münster.
- Asterios Koukoudes. ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=01JoAAAAMAAJ The Vlachs]''. 2003. p.293. "After the Axis Occupation and the Civil War, most of them gradually rehabilitated in villages and towns in the prefecture of Thesprotia and Preveza in the gaps left by the departed local Moslem Albanians, the ''Çams'', and also in various villages in the Pogoni and Kourenda areas in Ioannina prefecture. Their most important settlements in villages and towns in Thesprotia and Preveza prefectures are in Sayada, Asproklissi, Igoumenitsa, Agios Vlassios (Souvlassi), Parapotamos (Varfani), Plataria, Myli (Skefari), Paramythia, Ambelia (Vrestas), Rahoula (Tsifliki), Xirolofos (Zeleso), Karvounari, Skandalo, Hoika, Perdika (Arpitsa), Milokokkia, Katavothra (Ligorati), Margariti, Kaloudiki, Morfi (Morfati), Dzara, Parga, and their largest settlement, Themelo (Tabania) in Preveza prefecture."
- Markou, 2012, p. 39
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