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| History |
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Lefkada or Lefkadia owes its name to the steep white cliffs
on its southermost cape, Lefkata. Here is where legend
states the poetess Sappho took her own life because of
her thwarted love for Phaon. The first traces of life on the
island date to 8,000 years BC. Important settlement finds
near Nydri, from around 2,000 BC, bear witness to a
unique culture, related to the one on the continental
shores opposite.
The Leleges, the first inhabitants, were defeated by the Cephalonians and Laertes, the father of Odysseus. In fact, according to the archaeologist Dorptfeld, Lefkada can lay claim to being the Homeric Ithaca. During the 7th century B.C. Nirikos, south of the town of Lefkada, was one of the largest Greek towns. The island was present at the Naval Battle of Salamis, at the battle of Plataia, in the Peloponessian War against the Spartans and it also participated in the campaign of Alexander the Great and resisted the Romans in the 3rd century B.C. During the Byzantine period, the island was incorporated into the Despotate of Epirus. In 1293 it was claimed by Count Orsini, the later ruler of Cephalonia and Zakynthos, who built the fortress of Ayia Mavra for protection from pirates. This was followed by the long period of the Venetian occupation and the struggle against the Turks who conquered the island in 1503 and stayed for 180 years. In 1684 Lefkada returned to Venetian rule and was granted a rudimentary constitution and acquired a state organization. Later it fell into the hands of the French briefly and the Lefkadians were strongly influenced by the liberal ideas ot the French Revolution. The British appeared in 1810. Structural works were built during that period as well as the first antiseismic edifices. The Lefkadians fought with all the means at their disposal in the Greek War of Independence of 1821. The island was unified with Greece in 1864 along with the rest of the Ionian Islands. It began its economic recovery in the 1960's and during recent years tourism has offered a great deal to its development. |
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