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[BACK
TO CHIOS]
Chios
Chios
is known to have been inhabited sincethe Early Bronze Age, but it
only enters the mainstream of the Aegean history when the Ionians
settled there since about 1100 BC. These Ionians are said to be
originally from the mainland of Greece. They colonized a series of
islands and cities along the shores of Asia Minor and were taking
the lead in advancing Greek culture. It has been generally accepted
that Homer was a native of Chios in the 8th century BC. In the
following centuries Chios produced other influential individuals
including the 5th century tragic poet Ion, the 4th century historian
Theopompus, and several important sculptors in the 6th and 5th
centuries, one of whom, Glaucus, was credited with inventing the
soldering of metals.
Although Chios formed a loose confederation with the other Ionian
city-states and islands, they were conquered by the Persians in the
second half of the
6th
century BC. And then, it was the revolt of Chios and these other
Ionian states that brought Athens into direct conflict with the
Persians and led to Marathon and Salamis. After the Greek-Persian
Wars, Chios joined the Athenian League, but soon grew restive under
Athenian ambitions. Athens punished the rebellious Chiots in 412 BC,
and Chios moved back into alliance with Athens until regaining
independence in 354 BC.
Christianity took hold and Chios came under the Byzantine Greeks,
but Saracens abused the island in the 8th century. In the 13th
century, in the aftermath of the 4th Crusade, first the Venetians
and then the Genoese moved in. Chios actually prospered under the
Genoese, but in 1566 the Turks took over. In 1821 Chios joined Samos
in the general revolt of Greeks against the Turks, and the next year
the Turks singled out Chios for particular punishment, slaughtering
an estimated 25.000 Chiots and enslaving 80.000; those who escaped
went to other islands or on to major cities around the world. Later
that year the Greek admiral Kanaris, entered the harbour of Chios at
night and blew up the Turkish flagship. Chios gained revenge of sort
by entering the immortal realm of art when both Delacroix and Hugo
commemorated the terrible massacre of 1822. A major earthquake in
1881 also left many islanders dead, but it has long since recovered,
and since 1912 it has been formally joined to the Greek Nation.
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