| The island was inhabited at around
3200 B.C. when Cretes showed up.
The influence of the Minoan
culture on the island was obvious when excavations started on Akrotiri
and found a whole village with houses decorated with wallpaintings similar
to those found in the
Minoan
palace in Crete.
Before the volcano started
its destructive work the island was called Stroggili, from its shape.
But in 1500 B.C. happened
something that completely changed the story of the ancient world.
It was the explosion of the volcano
which was in the center of the island and the greater part sunk.
The tidal wave which was caused
by the explosion , estimated at around 100m high, destroyed the palace
of Knossos and did a lot of damage at the north coast of Crete.
The site of Ancient Thira,
through which Phoenicians, Dorians, Romans and Byzantines all passed,
is of particular interest. The city is divided down the middle by the Sacred
Way.
Apart from the clusters of buildings
dating from various different eras, there are the agoras, public baths,
theatres, a number of sanctuaries, the House of Ptolemy Euergetes,
tombs from the Archaic and
Classical periods, Early Christian
relies, etc.
Graffiti etched out of the nearby
rocks record in the ancient Thiran alphabet appellations to the
god Apollo and the names of men and youths who danced at the gods
festival. At Akrotiri
ruins of a Minoan city destroyed by an eruption of the island's
volcano around 1500 B.C. |