|
|
PATRAS GREECE - FAMOUS CARNIVAL |

Patras is the capital of the
Achaia Region and the largest city in the
Peloponnese, Greece. It is also is the main port
for sea travel to the Ionian Islands and Italy.
Primarily known for its busy port and ferry
departures to Italy, not to mention the
fantastic carnival held annually to kick off the
Lenten season, Patras and the surrounding area
offer a wealth of things to do and see.
There is a sprawling
metropolis by the sea with a wonderful old
section. Neoclassical buildings, cathedrals,
museums, shops, bars, cafes and vibrant
nightlife make this area a treasure waiting to
be found. Within easy reach are mountains,
lakes, caves, and villages, all with magnificent
natural scenery.
Patras is
easy to reach from Athens by private or rental
car, and by train or public bus. In fact, bus
departures are very frequent throughout the day,
and the trip takes only two and one-half hours,
along a very scenic route.
Patras /
Carnival
The Patras Carnival is a
continuos meeting of myth with reality,
imagination and creation over the years. The
most important elements (records) concerning the
course of the Patras Carnival are drawn from
recent investigations, which sent us back to the
19th century.
From these we can conclude
that the first Carnival Ball in the capital of
Achaia was held in the house of the merchant
Moretis in 1829. The place where art,
imagination and creation meet with the Kind of
Carnival bears the name of the Carnival
Workshop.
There, Carnival imagination has
the power while every design is brought to
space. In this hive of creation, a unique army
hews the floats with equal wisdom every year,
introducing a special proposal to the cultural
events of the country at the same time.
With artistic feeling, talent and patience that
many of us would envy, those heroes of the
Patras Carnival who remain in the background
transform designs and sketches into Carnival
floats with dominant traditional elements.
Patras / Grand Parade

The whole town, plus more
than 300.000 visitors move to the rhythms the
participants impose, and floats with the
Carnival King lead you to the paths of high
spirit, merry making and freedom from care.
What happens in Patras, on the last Sunday
of Carnival, is the pinnacle of the pyramid,
which the Patras Carnival has been built on
every year. The parade starts some time after
noon with high spirit, dancing and participants,
while those taking part in the 'Treasure Hunt
Game' write their own history in their own way
in the streets of the Capital of Achaia.
Patras /
History
Patras' history was known
until recently only by written tradition.
According to it, Patras was founded by the
Achaeans of Sparta who, headed by Preugenes and
his son Patreus, came here after being forced
out by the Dorians.
But similarly the
Achaeans of Argos, also forced out by the
Dorians, headed by Tisamenos, occupied the
eastern Achaia, after besieging Eliki. Up to
then, the whole of Achaia was named after the
Ions and was called Ionia but was also called
Aegialos, either because it was named after the
king of Sikyona, Aegialus, either because the
whole region spread all along the coast
(aegialos).
The Ions firstly went to
Athens and from there to Asia Minor where they
founded twelve cities, the Ionian Dodecapolis,
in remembrance of the twelve cities they had
left behind in Achaia. Preugenes and Patreus
made three Ionian small settlements into one.
Those three were Aroe, Mesati and Antheia
and having as center Aroe they founded a new
city that they called Patres after Patreus. The
city's name was in the plural because of the
unification of many settlements. The oldest of
these three small settlements was Aroe.
Its founder was Eumelos who, helped by
Triptolemos of Eleusina, introduced the
cultivation of grains. Eumelos and Triptolemos
later founded Antheia, which was named after
Eumelos' son, Antheias.
Finally, at the
third settlement of Mesatis, the god Dionysus
was worshiped. According to another tradition,
Eurypylus, Euemonos' son, king of the Thessalie,
heading the Thessales after the Trojan War, he
founded a colony at Aroe.
After the
Mycenaean period and as Patras geographical
position was at the periphery of Greece and
quite far from the big centres of that period,
such as Athens, Sparta, Corinth, Chalkide etc.,
this city does not play an important role in the
significant events and the political evolutions
that occur in the rest of the country.
It
does not found colonies, neither is it active in
the Persian wars, the Peloponnesian war and the
conflicts of the 4th century BC. The initiative
of all movements of that era belongs exclusively
to Eastern Achaia. On the contrary, after 280
BC, Patras plays a significant role in the
foundation of the second Achaian League together
with the cities Dyme, Triteia and Pharai and the
initiative of the political movements is
transferred for the first time at the western
Achaia.
Later on and after the roman
occupation of Greece, in 146 BC, Patras plays
the main role and Augustus founds here a roman
colony in 14 BC. Patras' inactivity in the
political field up to 146 BC seems to be the
cause for which only those events linked to
other big cities are referred by great ancient
historians and not those events of local
importance.
So, we know that even Patras
did not take part in the Peloponnesian war
(431-404 BC), Alkibiades proposed to the
inhabitants of this city to construct the Long
Wall to link the city around the Acropolis to
the port.
Patras /
History after the Excavations
From the elements known so
far, it is obvious that Patras is firstly
inhabited in the third , millennium BC and not
at the end of the second as we used to believe.
These very ancient traces of the city are
located at the region where Aroe is situated
today.
During the next Middle-Helladic
period, in the first half of the second
millennium BC, another settlement is founded at
the region. But Patras starts flourishing for
its first time during the Late Helladic or
Mycenaean period (1580 -1100 BC).
The
plenty of Mycenaean graves that were found at
the city (street Germanou) as well as at the
surroundings, Voudeni, Aroe, Samakia, Girokomio,
Petroto (Achaia Clauss), Krini, Saravali,
Kallithea and elsewhere, prove not only that the
population is significantly risen by then but
that there are also relations developed among
the regions.
At the end of the Mycenaean
period, Patras' synoecism is nothing more than a
religious unification and a foundation of a
common worship of goddess Artemis and it was
called Triklaria after the three settlements
(klaros) that initially existed in the area and
participated in the festivities.
The
temple of Artemis is located at Velvitsi where
three precious sculptures from a gable of a
classic temple were found. Recent discovery of
an inscription gives signs that Mesatis was
situated at the region of Sichena and Voudeni.
If we consider true the testimony of ancient
sources that Patras was founded at Aroe, then we
have to look for it at the place where the
mediaeval fortress and today s Aroe are.
The identification of Antheia remains to be
found but most probably it was at the hill of
Mygdalia at Petroto. Patras' Acropolis, both
Mycenaean and classic, is located under the
mediaeval fortress, at a depth of at least 20
meters and its excavation presents various
problems. From the two periods that followed,
Geometric and Archaic, only few elements have
seen the light and it seems that Patras had
gradually started to decline.
On the
contrary, during the classic period (5th and 4th
century BC), it seems that the politic
settlement of Patras gets organized and becomes
a cit , because at some point of the middle of
5th century the most ancient cemetery of the
city, known as the Northern cemetery , is
founded. Consequently, it seems that the
tradition about Patreus is possibly a more
recent creation, maybe of the Hellenistic
period, when most of the cities in Greece
invented settlers in order to interpret the
origin of their names.
The tradition that
refers to Alcebiades' Long Wall seems to be
based on a real event as traces of the wall have
been found during rescue excavations. During the
Hellenistic period, 323-146 BC, the town is
extended to the sea and a second cemetery, the
South, is established. Though, Patras reaches
its highest peak during the roman period when
its port, because of the destruction of Corinth
s port, plays the first role in the
communication of Greece with Italy.Moreover, the
foundation of a roman colony in 14 BC by August
promotes Patras even more. cadastral map is
drawn up, privileges are given, crafts are
created.
The most important of which was
that of clay oil lamps which were exported
almost to the whole world of that time, two
industrial zones are created, temples are built,
roads that render Patras a communication centre
are opened, streets are paved with flagstones,
foreign worships are introduced etc. The city is
extended up to the sea and the population rises
to the point that another two cemeteries are
founded, the Eastern and the Southeastern.
The land is reorganized and its exploitation
is now done through the farmhouses. Roman
Emperors gave to Patras the privilege to mint
its own coins on which are inscribed the
initials CAAP, previously transcript as Colonia
Augusta Aroe Patrensis, meaning Colony of August
at Aroe of Patras.
Recently though, a
coin with fully written the abbreviation was
found and so we read : Colonia Augusta Achaica
Patrensis, meaning Colony of August at Patras of
Achaia. But the roman emperors also created
public buildings and offered other benefactions
such as the roman amphitheatre, the roman
aqueduct, the roman Odeion.
ll these are
proved by the dedicatory inscriptions found at
those places where emperors are characterized as
benefactors. Patras is by then a cosmopolitan
city. But at the end of the 3rd century AD it
falls into decline, most possibly because of a
strong earthquake that stroke the whole of NE
Peloponnese in 300 AD.
Patras /
Medieval and Modern Period
None the less, there are
still some little flashes, like in the
old-Christian and the first Byzantine period
(4th -6th century AD), when new crafts are
created. It is assumed that during this period,
the Byzantine castle that exists until nowadays
with some reparations and other accretions done
by the Franks and the Turks, is Justinian at the
place of the ancient Acropolis.
The city
is extended only around the fortress. In the
middle of the 9th century D, as we learn from
the tradition of the rich lady Daniilida, Patras
flourishes. Then, it starts following the track
of the Byzantine State. Since the 13th century,
it belongs sometimes to the Franks, sometimes to
the Byzantine, sometimes to the Venetians and
some other times to the Turks.
The most
important points of this track are: the period
from 1266 to 1430 with the occupation of the
Franks, then the Byzantium and in 1458 the
occupation from the Turks. From 1687 to 1715
Patras was once more occupied by the Venetians
and then again from the Turks up to the
Liberation in 1821.
After the liberation
from the Turks, Patras develops fast, thanks to
its port and the commerce that takes place
through it. Beautiful neo-classic buildings
embellish the city whose roads all end up to the
sea so that its bracing force is not cut.
Artistic and spiritual life is very intense.
Gradually the heavy industry develops which has
as result the rise of the population. Today,
Patras is one of the most significant cities in
Greece and its port is still playing that
important role that it had during all its long
history
.
|
| |
|