Agrafa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 62.154.222.232 (talk) at 09:54, 28 August 2008. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

For the sayings of Jesus that are not found in the canonical Gospels, see Agrapha
Agrafa
Άγραφα
Settlement
CountryGreece
Administrative regionCentral Greece
Elevation
800 m (2,600 ft)
Population
 (2001)[1]
 • Total3,691
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
360 73
Area code(s)22370
Vehicle registrationΚΗ

Agrafa (Greek: Άγραφα) is a mountainous region in Eurytania and Karditsa prefectures in mainland Greece. It consists mainly of small villages, including Krioneri, Morfovouni (Vounesi), and others. The Agrafa is famous for its complete autonomy throughout the entire 400 years of Ottoman Turkish occupation of Greece and the Balkans. The word agrafa literally translates to "unwritten" or uncharted. Because the Turks were unable to conquer this region, the area and its population were not recorded in the Sultan's tax register. As a result the people were free to conduct their business and their customs as they pleased without Ottoman influence.[2]

Agrafa is the third largest community in Evrytania (evrytania.gr) after Domnitsa and Karpenisi. Agrafa is accessed with the road linking with GR-38 and the northern villages with a poor road to the Karditsa Prefecture. Agrafa located WNW east of Karpenisi, ENE of Agrinio, south of Karditsa and ESE of Arta. The Agrafiotis River flows to the west and further east is the Megdova River. Agrafa are part of the Pindus Mts (pindostrek.net) which is the Greek extension of the Alps. Today, many ski resorts are being planned for the region.

The Agrafa region has been populated for approximately 2,500 years. The fiercely independent spirit of its people, known as Agrafiotes, is matched by a harsh and forbidding landscape. The central Agrafiotis River valley is surrounded on three sides by a steep 2,000-meter wall of mountains, and on its south side the river drains via a series of narrow and often impassable gorges into the man-made Lake Plastiras.

Most of the surrounding forests in the region were controlled by Greek Orthodox monasteries for many hundreds of years and throughout the Turkish occupation of the Balkans. The residents of the Agrafa purchased tracts of land from the monasteries hundreds of years ago and these forests remain in the communal hands of the current inhabitants. Agrafa was a center of literacy during the 400 years of domination and slavery by the Turks. Since the monasteries were independent from the Sultan, it was here that the Greek language was kept alive; reading and writing were taught in secrecy, generation after generation as the Turks forbade the general population from learning how to read and write their own language. Unlike the majority of Greeks, many Agrafiotes can trace their family histories back for generations since they were free to read, write, and record births, baptisms, and deaths.

Subdivisions

Municipal districts

Historical population

Year Population Change Municipal district population Municipal population Change
1981 399 - - - -
1991 184 -215/-53.88% - 1,012 -
2001 616 +432/+234.78% 1,065 3,691 +127/+1.24%%

Modernization

Before modernization, most people's occupations in the Agrafa involved harvesting nuts and fruits from orchards, farming, shepherding, and textile manufacturing. Most of the produce from the Agrafa are traditional cold weather crops or crops which can survive in poor soil. The beans grown in the Agrafa are second to none for flavor and quality. The proceeds of the timber sales from the forests purchased from the Greek Orthodox monasteries continue to benefit the community as a whole.

Spring in Agrafa

The most famous person from the Agrafa and the driving force behind modernization was General Nikolaos Plastiras. It was General Plastiras' vision to create a hydroelectric dam in the region so that nearly all of mainland Greece, excluding the Peloponese, would be supplied with electricity, particularly the many fractured villages and rural communities. A spin-off from this project was the mass irrigation system developed to supply the farmers in the plains of Thessaly with water and increase the yields of cash crops such as cotton. Construction began during the peaceful era of the 1950s after World War II and the Greek Civil War. Once completed General Plastiras' hydroelectric dam propelled the Greek nation into the modern era. The majority of the workers on this project were Agrafiotes themselves. As a result of their years of dedication and sacrifice to the project, the residents of the region enjoy free water up until this day. The Agrafa, originally one of the poorest and most isolated regions of Greece, is quickly becoming a hot tourist destination, as the area's beauty is reminiscent of the Alps of Austria and Switzerland.

Many Agrafiotes left their villages and settled in the major metropolitan cities in Greece as well as in the United States, Canada, Australia, and Germany, seeking an escape from the abject poverty and lack of opportunities which once haunted the area. The migration from the region first began in the 1920s and has nearly ceased after the military junta which had ruled Greece from 1967–1974 was toppled. Recently in the 1990s, the population like the rest of the prefecture boomed rapidly and was much above and nearly tripled and it restored a part of the population that was in the early 20th century, it was the fastest in the prefecture and one in Greece that it became the third largest community in Greece.

Other

Agrafa has a school, a lyceum or a middle school, a gymnasium or a secondary school, churches, a post office, banks, and a few squares (plateies).

External links

See also

References

  1. ^ De Facto Population of Greece Population and Housing Census of March 18th, 2001 (PDF 39 MB). National Statistical Service of Greece. 2003.
  2. ^ Paul D. Hellander (2006). Greece. Lonely Planet. p. 248. ISBN 1740597508. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)

Template:Evrytania