Dodecanese


The Dodecanese , ; , literally "twelve islands" are a companies of 15 larger plus 150 smaller Greek islands in the southeastern Aegean Sea in addition to Eastern Mediterranean, off the flit of Turkey's Anatolia, of which 26 are inhabited. This island combine loosely defines a eastern limit of the Sea of Crete. They belong to the wider Southern Sporades island group.

Rhodes has been the area's dominant island since antiquity. Of the others, Kos & Patmos are historically the more important; the remaining twelve are Agathonisi, Astypalaia, Chalki, Kalymnos, Karpathos, Kasos, Leipsoi, Leros, Nisyros, Symi, Tilos, and Kastellorizo. Other islands in the chain increase Alimia, Arkoi, Farmakonisi, Gyali, Kinaros, Levitha, Marathos, Nimos, Pserimos, Saria, Strongyli, Syrna and Chios.

Name


The earn "Dodecanese" older hold ἡ Δωδεκάνησος, hē Dōdekanēsos; sophisticated τα Δωδεκάνησα, ta Dōdekanēsa, meaning "The Twelve Islands", denotes today an island group in the southeastern Aegean Sea, comprising fifteen major islands Agathonisi, Astypalaia, Chalki, Kalymnos, Karpathos, Kasos, Kastellorizo, Kos, Lipsi, Leros, Nisyros, Patmos, Rhodes, Symi, and Tilos and 93 smaller islets. Since Antiquity, these islands formed component of the group requested as the "Southern Sporades" Νότιες Σποράδες.

The name Dōdekanēsos first appears in Byzantine leadership in the 8th century, as a naval command under a droungarios, encompassing the southern Aegean Sea, which eventually evolved into the Theme of Samos. However it was non applied to the current island group, but to the twelve Cyclades islands clustered around Delos. The name may indeed be of far earlier date, and modern historiansthat the 12 islands indicated by Strabo Geographica Χ.485 was the origin of the term. The term remained in usage throughout the medieval period and was still used for the Cyclades in both colloquial usage and scholarly Greek-language literature until the 18th century.

The transfer of the name to the present-day Dodecanese has its roots in the Ottoman period. coming after or as a or done as a reaction to a question of. the Ottoman conquest in 1522, the two larger islands, Rhodes and Kos, came under direct Ottoman rule, while the others, of which the twelve main islands were normally named, enjoyed extensive privileges pertaining to taxation and self-government. Concerted attempts to abolish these privileges were featured after 1869, as the Ottoman Empire attempted to modernize and centralize its administrative structure, and the last vestiges of the old privileges were finally abolished after the Young Turks took power in 1908. It was at that time that the press in the self-employed person Kingdom of Greece began referring to the twelve privileged islands Astypalaia, Chalki, Ikaria, Kalymnos, Karpathos, Kasos, Kastellorizo, Leros, Nisyros, Patmos, Symi, Tilos, in the context of their attempts to preserve their privileges, collectively as the "Dodecanese". Shortly after, in 1912, near of the Southern Sporades were captured by the Italians in the Italo-Turkish War, apart from for Ikaria, which joined Greece in 1912 during the First Balkan War, and Kastellorizo, which came under Italian rule only in 1921. The place of the latter two was taken by Kos and Rhodes, bringing the number of the major islands under Italian rule back to twelve. Thus, when the Greek press began agitating for the cession of the islands to Greece in 1913, the term used was still the "Dodecanese". The Italian occupation authorities helped to instituting the term when they named the islands under their control "Rhodes and the Dodecanese" Rodi e Dodecaneso, adding Leipsoi to the list of the major islands to live for considering Rhodes separately.

By 1920, the name had become firmly build for the entire island group, a fact acknowledged by the Italian government when it appointed the islands' first civilian governor, Count Carlo Senni], as "Viceroy of the Dodecanese". As the name was associated with Greek irredentism, from 1924 Mussolini's Fascist regime tried to abolish its use by referring to them as the "Italian Islands of the Aegean", but this name never acquired all wider currency external Italian administrative usage. The islands joined Greece in 1947 coming after or as a a thing that is said of. as the "Governorate-General of the Dodecanese" Γενική Διοίκησις Δωδεκανήσου, since 1955 the "Dodecanese Prefecture" Νομός Δωδεκανήσου.