- Gyaros
Infobox Greek Isles
name = Gyaros
native_name = Γυάρος or Γιούρα
skyline =
sky_caption =
coordinates = coord|37|37|N|24|43|E
chain = Cyclades
isles =
area = 23
highest_mount = Mt. Gyaros
elevation = 489
periph =Thessaly
prefect =Cyclades
capital = Uninhabited
population = 0
pop_as_of = 2001
postal = 840 00
telephone = 228x0
license = EM
website =Gyaros ( _el. Γυάρος) is an arid and unpopulated Greek island of the northern
Cyclades near in the islandsAndros andTinos , with an area of 23 square kilometres. It is a part of the municipality ofAno Syros , which lies primarily on the island ofSyros . This and other small islands of theAegean Sea served as places of exile for important persons in the earlyRoman empire . The extremity of its desolation was proverbial among Roman authors, such asTacitus andJuvenal . It was a place of exile for leftist political dissidents in Greece from 1948 until 1974. At least 22,000 people were exiled or imprisoned on the island during that time.Fact|date=February 2007Mythology and early history
The pseudo-Aristotelian work "On Marvelous Things Heard" (25) recounts the tale that on Gyaros the mice eat iron.
In the "
Aeneid " ofVirgil , Gyaros andMykonos are said to be the two islands to which the godApollo tied the holy island ofDelos to stop its wandering over theAegean Sea . [col-begin: Amid the sea a land is worshiped, a land most sacred: to the mother of theNereids and to Aegean Neptune,: which, the dutiful bow-bearing god bound fromMyconos : and from steep Gyaros, as it wandered the shores and coasts,: and he made it immobile and to have contempt for the winds.: "sacra mari colitur medio gratissima tellus": "Nereidum matri et Neptuno Aegaeo,": "quam pius arquitenens oras et litora circum": "errantem Mycono e celsa Gyaroque reuinxit,": "immotamque coli dedit et contemnere uentos.": Aeneid 3.73-77] In his recounting of the myth of the war betweenMinos andAegeus , the king of Athens, the poetOvid speaks of Gyaros as one island that refused to join the campaign of the Cretan king. [ col-begin: But Oliaros and Didyme and Tenos and Andros: and Gyaros and Peparethos (bountiful in gleaming olives): did not assist the Knossian fleet; …: "At non Oliaros Didymeque et Tenos et Andros": "et Gyaros nitidaeque ferax Peparethos olivae": "Cnosiacas iuvere rates; …": Metamorphoses 7.469-71]
In the 1st century CE,
Pliny the Elder wrote in his Natural History that the island, which had a city, was 15 miles in circumference and lay 62 miles fromAndros . [ "Gyara cum oppido, circuitu XV, abest ab Andro LXII, ab ea Syrnos LXXX" (NH 4.69). These are Roman miles, but his geography is still considerably in error. ] He also records that the inhabitants of Gyaros were once put to flight by (a plague of) mice. [ "ex Gyara Cycladum insula incolas a muribus fugatos" (NH 8.104).The visitors of the island can see many small pieces of pottery on the ground mostly in the river bed of the northern most and bigger mini valley where was the prisoners camp and its headquarters. No archaeological excavations have been conducted up to the year 2007. It is significant to note that there are remains of narrow terraces along the slopes of the easter part of the island, proving that some rudimentary agriculture was driven in the past. Probably as back as the Prehistoric times used as refuge in times of raides by invading forces as well as the Roman times and later. ] The island is also mentioned by the Roman orator
Cicero , and other notable Latin authors, indicating a broad awareness of Gyaros among the educated elite of the 1st century BCE to the 2nd century CE. [ Letters to Atticus 5.12.1 ]Exile island during the early Roman Empire
The island ( _la. Gyaros or Gyara) also served as a place of exile during the early
Roman Empire . Writing in the early 2nd century CE, the Roman historianTacitus records that, whenSilanus , theproconsul of the province of Asia was accused of extortion and treason, and it had been proposed in theRoman Senate that he be exiled to Gyaros, theRoman Emperor Tiberius allowed him to be sent to the nearby island ofCythnos instead, since Gyaros was “harsh and devoid of human culture” ("Annales" 3.68-69). [ … "addidit insulam Gyarum immitem et sine cultu hominum esse:" In the "Annales", Tiberius is portrayed as extraordinarily cruel and vengeful, making his hesitance to exile a criminal to Gyaros particularly pointed. ] When confronted with another recommendation to exile a defendant to Gyaros, Tiberius once more declined, noting that the island was deficient in water, and that those granted their lives ought to be granted the means to live (4.30). The defendant was allowed to go into exile onAmorgos instead. [ "id quoque aspernatus est, egenam aquae utramque insulam referens dandosque vitae usus cui vita concederetur." Serenus, a son prosecuting his own father without justification, was accused of attemptedparricide , and the Senate recommended the old punishment of being thrown unto theTiber river sewn in a bag with a snake, a dog, a rooster, and a monkey. Tiberius vetoed that proposal, and the Senate next proposed exile to Gyaros as a suitably terrible punshment. ] The Roman poetJuvenal , a near-contemporary of Tacitus, mentions this island twice in his "Satires": first as a place of exile for particularly vile criminals (1.73), and second as a symbol of claustrophobic imprisonment (10.170). In the second reference, Juvenal compares the restlessness ofAlexander the Great to that of a man imprisoned:: One globe was not enough for the youth fromPella , : He seethed within the narrow confines of the world,: as if he were hemmed in by the cliffs of Gyara or by tinySeriphos .: "unus Pellaeo iuueni non sufficit orbis,": "aestuat infelix angusto limite mundi": "ut Gyarae clausus scopulis paruaque Seripho;": (1.168-70)Exile island during the 20th century
There is a red brick prison building which during the years 1948 to 1953 held approximately 10,000 men in custody due to their participation in the
Greek Resistance organizationEthniko Apeleftherotiko Metopo (EAM). Many of them were also involved in the Greek civil war (1945-1949) which broke out when EAM decided to oppose the elected government.The prison was used again during the years 1957 to 1964 and during theGreek military junta of 1967-1974 . The structures are decaying due to weathering, and no maintenance is conducted. In four separate places north of the prison building, there are also the ruins of the camps where the men lived in tents, both summer and winter. Once a year, the men and women who are alive and in good health (most of them were born between the 1910s and 1930s) who were formerly imprisoned on the island for their political views, pay tribute by visiting the island and hold a ceremony in the cemetery of the men who left their last breath on this island.The Greek government used the island as a target range for the
Hellenic Navy until the year 2000. Since that time, the island has been open to the public.References
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