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Leros (Greek: ΛΕΡΟΣ)is a Greek island
in the Dodecanese, in the southern Aegean Sea.
Leros, the island of Artemis (Goddess of the hunt) is a beautiful, friendly
island 171 nautical miles (317 km) from the mainland port city of Piraeus (45
min flight to Leros airport (IATA code: LRS), from Athens or 11 hour ferry
ride from the port city of Pireaus); an island of 53 square kilometres having
a coastline of 71 km. A member of the Dodecanese archipelagos, Leros, has a
population of 8,500 although this figure swells to over 15,000 during the
summer peak. It is home to the fabulous Panagia Castle as well as two ancient
fortifications.Very near to Leros is Patmos, Lipsi, Kalymnos and the small
islands of Agia Kyriaki, Farmakos, Marathi island and Pigianousa.
History
According to Homer, Leros took part in the Trojan war (from 1193 – 1184 B.C.)
under the leaders Antifos and Feidotos, grandchildren of Hercules. Thoukididis
stressed the special importance of the bays and the harbours of Leros during
the period of the Peleponnese War (431 – 404 B.C.), where Leros supported the
democratic Athenians. After the end of the war Leros came under the sovreignty
of the Spartans. It then followed the fate of the rest of the Dodecanese
Islands during the years of Alexander the Great and his successors, the Roman
years and the Byzantine period.
On his campaign east, Alexander the Great passed through Leros as evidenced by
the funerary steles and coins from that period found on the island.
Constantine the Great, founder of Constantinople (Istanbul) and builder of the
Byzantine Empire brought Leros into his empire by incorporating it into the
Theme of Samos. In the year 1309 the Knights of St John of Rhodes seized and
fortified Leros. In 1505 the Ottoman Admiral Kemal Reis along with three
galleys and other seventeen war sailing vessels besieged the castle but could
not seize it. The operation was repeated in 1508 with more ships but again
nothing was achieved. On 24 December 1522 a treaty was signed between the
Sultan Suleiman and the Grand Magister of the Knights Adam Villers de Ille,
and Leros was passed into Ottoman hands.
During the Ottoman occupation Leros, along with the other islands, enjoyed a
regime of privilege with partial autonomy and self–government. During the
Greek revolution of 1821, the island became an important base for the
re-supplying of the Greek Navy. After the struggle for revolution the island
became a part of the free parts of Greece and it came under the jurisdiction
of the Temporary Committee of the Eastern Sporades.
With the Treaty of London on the 3rd February 1830 which determined the
borders of the newly – established Greek state, the Dodecanese were given over
to Turkey again. In the "Diary of the Prefecture of the Archipelagos" of 1886,
Leros along with the islands of Patmos, Lipsos and Fournoi belonged to the
Turks. The administrative council was made up of both Greeks and Turks.
The Italian Period
From 1911 to 1912 the Italians occupied all of the Dodecanese islands. In 1912
the island was seized by the Italian battleship "San Giorgio" during the war
between Italy and Turkey. Under the watchful eye of Mussolini, a new town,
Portolago, was created in the 1930s, with its now infamous Italian Rationalist
art-deco architecture and streets wide enough for military parading. The
Greeks later renamed it Lakki. The Italians tried to "Italianise" the island
and the inhabitants responded by declaring the autonomy of the islands under
the title "The Aegean State", with the aim of reunification with Greece.
During the 35 years that the Italians remained in Leros, the Italians set up a
great plan to build and fortify the island, as a result of considering both
its strategic position and its physical form with its large natural harbours,
the largest of which, Lakki, is the largest deep water harbour in the
Mediterranean Sea. The fortification of Leros and the creation of a major
naval base at Lakki, ensured that the Italians had control over an area of
vital interest to the Allies (the Aegean, the Dardanelles and the Near East).
Mussolini saw Leros as a crucial base for Italian domination of the eastern
Aegean, even building a mansion for himself in the town of Portolago (now
Lakki).
World War Two
In 1940 as Italy was on the side of Germany, Leros suffered attacks and
bombing by the British Royal Air Force. As a result of the naturally protected
coves and the protection they provided to warships, the island was the second
most bombed during World War Two (after Crete). On 8 September 1943, as Italy
could not continue the war on the German side, it signed an armistice and came
over to the Allied camp. After the Italian armistice, British reinforcements
arrived on Leros and the island suffered continuous German bombing. One of the
largest attacks was on the Greek Navy's Flagship, the Queen Olga, sunk by
German bombers on Sunday September 26, 1943. The British Royal Navy ship, HMS
Intrepid, was also sunk on that day in Portolago.
Modern History
On the 7 March 1948, Leros as with all the Dodecanese, was reunited with the
rest of Greece. After approximately 400 years the Dodecanese became officially
Greek once more. During the post-war years the Greek governments used many
buildings in Leros for various reasons. In 1959 the mental hospital of Leros
was founded, whose original primitive conditions have been improved to such an
extent that today it is considered a model for the reformation of psychiatric
care in the whole of Greece.
Tourist Highlights
Leros has a number of charming small towns and beaches.
Agia Marina has a number of bars, nightclubs and restaurants, all located in a
strip which overlooks Alinda Bay. They include Meltemi Bar, Apothiki
(Warehouse) Nightclub, Music House and the 24 hour cafe/restaurant, Glaros
(The Seagull). Further down the road in Mproutsi you will find the famous
Faros Bar, a bar built into a cave underneath the old lighthouse. The bar has
an outdoor area which has a platform on the water, overlooking the entry to
Alinda Bay and a breakwater.
Pandeli is also a well known area, littered with wonderful restaurants which
are perched right on the water's edge. At one end of Pandeli Bay sits the
famous Savana Bar, run by two Englishmen, Peter and Simon. The bar is well
known for its Scandinavian barflys, "Aussie" breakfasts and multitudes of
tourists who take advantage of the bar's location next to the pier after they
moor their yachts in the harbour during a Leros stopover.
Travel Information
Leros has an Airport at Partheni that connects daily the island with Athens.
There are also ferry connections to and from Athens and the other islands of
the Dodecanese. The Catamaran Dodekanissos Express (all year) and the
Hydrofoils (only during the summer) connecting Leros with the most of the
Dodecanese islands. For those who want to visit Leros the alternative way to
Ferry travel (8-10 hours) is to fly to Athens and then fly to Leros with
domestic flight or fly direct to Kos and then to Leros by boat (1 - 2 hours).
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