Ithome

For other uses, see Ithome (disambiguation).
Ithome, Ithomi
Ἰθώμη

The twin peaks, Eva in the fore, Ithome in the back. The view is from the southeast side of Eva looking at the New Monastery in the foreground. Most of the ruins are on the other side.
Highest point
Elevation 800 m (2,600 ft)
Prominence 760 m (2,490 ft)
Coordinates 37°11′10″N 21°55′30″E / 37.18611°N 21.92500°E / 37.18611; 21.92500Coordinates: 37°11′10″N 21°55′30″E / 37.18611°N 21.92500°E / 37.18611; 21.92500
Geography
Ithome, Ithomi

Messenia, Greece

Geology
Mountain type limestone karst
Climbing
Easiest route Zig-zag ancient dirt road on the southeast corner
View of Mavromati from the classical ruins below.

Mount Ithome (Greek: Ἰθώμη) or Ithomi, previously Vourkano or Vurcano before being changed back to Ithome, is the northernmost of twin peaks in Messenia, Greece. Mount Ithome rises to about 800 metres (2,600 feet),[1] about 760 metres (2,490 feet) over Valyra, the seat of Ithomi, the former municipality. The other peak is Mount Eva, 700 metres (2,300 feet), connected to Mount Ithomi by a thin ridge 0.80 kilometres (0.50 miles) long.

Mount Ithome is 25 kilometres (16 miles) north of Kalamata on the Gulf of Messenia, 60 kilometres (37 miles) east of Pylos, seat of Bronze Age Messenia, and 20 kilometres (12 miles) north of Messini, modern namesake of ancient Messene, nestled under the cliffs of Mount Ithome. From the top the whole valley of the Pamisos river can be viewed eastward to Mount Taygetus and southward to the Gulf of Messenia. The site is highly defensible and yet off the main road; in this case, the Kalamata-Pylos road.[2]

Etymology

Ithome

Like most ancient names the etymology of Ithome is not certain. It is also the name of a place in Thessaly, although Reece notes evidence that the one in Thessaly was originally called Thome.[3]

Vurkano

The pre-independence name Vurcano has had many variants: Vourkano, Voulkanos, Vulcano, Voucano, Boulcano, Dorkano, Voulkani, etc. The name is not Greek. Its provenience, meaning and time of assignment are not known, like those of Morea. Ties to Vulcan or Volcano do not fit the geology. Ithome is not volcanic, evidences no volcanic deposits and its springs are not hot; in fact, they are known for their refreshing clarity and coolness.

One of the earliest records of a place called Bulcano is The Domains and Fiefs of the Principality of Achaia, composed for Marie of Bourbon, 1364. The Grand Seneschal of the Kingdom of Naples, Niccolo Acciajuoli, is said to possess Lo Castello de Bulcano (Messene) as a fief.[4] The monastery on top, which dates to no later than the reign of the Byzantine emperor, Andronikos II Paleologus, 1282-1328,[5] was probably known as Vurkano even then. The earliest major incursion of a non-Hellenic ethnic group is the settlement of the Slavic tribes of the Melingoi and Ezerites in the 7th and 8th centuries in Messenia and Sparta around Mount Taygetus as a defensible location. In the 9th and 10th centuries they ruled Messenia. At the time many classical names were changed to Slavic, only to be restored after independence. The Archaeological Museum of Messenia dates the name Vourkano to the 10th century.[6] It, like Morea, is probably Slavic.

Mavromati

Mavromati is segmented mavr-oma-ti, "place of the black eye"[7] from mavros, "dark," and omma, "eye," or ommation, "small eye," a common name for springs.

Geography

The klepsydra, or spring catchment, in Mavromati. Messene was downslope. Ithome looms in the background.
The walls of Messene against a backdrop of Mount Ithome.

The Homeric village of Ithome was probably on the summit, which is flat. In the Bronze Age, a temple dedicated to Zeus Ithomatas (Zeus of Ithome) existed there.[8] It was torn down and rebuilt as a Christian church and monastery no later than the early 14th century from the same stone. In the 17th century this monastery of Panagia Voulkanou, or Moni Voulkanou, was closed, except for a caretaker, to become known as the Old Monastery. The new monastery was constructed on the lower east slope of Eva. It was a staging point in the Greek War of Independence and also houses a noted library containing ancient manuscripts.

The classical town of Ithome was on the lower west flank of Mount Ithome, which forms a bowl in the side of the mountain. The location was selected as the site for the city of Messene (not the same as the modern city of Messini) when it was rebuilt by Epaminondas in 369 BC. Excavations there in recent decades have uncovered evidence of a settlement going back to the stone age. The location of Messene is marked by massive city walls that include the east side of the ridge, where they protect the ancient zig-zagging road to the summit, the top of the ridge, a wide area around the bowl and end against the mountain on the north, an approximately rectangular circuit. The mountain itself protects the east side. These defenses were probably restored, rather than constructed anew, by Epaminondas.

Within the lower part of this wide circuit are the ruins of the ancient city. About 300 metres (980 feet) up the slope is the modern village of Mavromati, occupying a small portion of the ancient city. It is a subdivision of the municipality of Messene. Mavromati is built around the key feature of the city, one which made its large size possible, a large surface spring flowing out of the mountain through a hole in the rocks. A klepsydra, or "spring catchment," has been maintained as a village watering place. That is it is ancient is shown by the ancient system of channels constructed from it to the ancient urban area below. Mavromati is at 419 metres (1,375 feet),[9] thus Messene was essentially at 119 metres (390 feet) and Mount Ithome loomed at 681 metres (2,234 feet) over it.

As the most defensible point in the surrounding territory, Ithome was the center of Messenian resistance to Sparta during the Messenian Wars in the 7th and 6th centuries BC. Ithome was also the center of the Helot revolt in 465 BC after an earthquake in Sparta. This revolt is the Third Messenian War.

See also

Notes

  1. Pausanias (1971). Pausanias: Guide to Greece. Penguin Classics. Volume 2: Southern Greece. Peter Levi, John Newberry, Jeffery Lacey (Translators and Editors). Harmondsworth: Penguin Books Inc. p. 125.
  2. John Stewart Bowman; Sherry Marker; Peter Kerasiotis (2010). Frommer's Greece. Frommer's (7th ed.). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Publishing. p. 310.
  3. Reece, Steve (2009). Homer's winged words: the evolution of early Greek epic diction in the light of oral theory. Leiden; Boston: Brill. pp. 180–185.
  4. Rodd, Rennell (1907). The Princes of Achaia and the Chronicles of Morea: a Study of Greece in the Middle Ages. Vol. II. London: Edward Arnold; openlibrary.org. p. 290.
  5. "Holy Monastery of Voulkanos". Holy Metropolis of Messenia. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  6. "timeline". Archaeological Museum of Messenia. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  7. Meghan C Joyce; Jake A Foley; Michelle Burford; et al. (2008). Let's Go. Greece. Let's go Travel Guide. New York: St. Martin's Press. pp. 178–179.
  8. Christian Habicht. Pausanias' Guide to Ancient Greece, University of California Press, 1998, p.58
  9. Karl Baedeker (Firm) (1894). Greece. Handbook for travellers (2nd rev ed.). Leipsig: K. Baedeker. p. 353.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.