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Topography |
samosin / Topography / Villages / Mytilinioi | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Three km to the north of Chora, on the road that conncets Pythagoreio-Chora-Mytilinioi-Samos, you’ll find the village of Mytilinioi at the west end of the homonymous valley. The village is surrounded by hills that make it invisible by the sea. It’s one of the biggest and most vibrant villages of Samos. Its name derives from its first inhabitants who came from the neighbouring island of Mytilene. In the village you’ll also find the Paleontological and Folclore Museum with rare speciments of animal fossils that were found in the area. Excavations for that purpose were initially performed in 1887 and 1888, but many of the findings are in museums out of Samos adorning foreign collections. Signs of ancient fortification and other remands were found around the village, signs that this area was inhabited since ancient times. The village, at its height, was the first in tobacco production in Samos generating more the 1280 tons annually. Three km to the east is the monastery of Holy Trinity (Agia Triada). It’s one of the most recent on the island as it was built in 1924. The settlements of Kamara with 4 residents, Agia Triada with 4, Potami with 79 and Rizovrachos with 10 residents also belong to the village of Mytilinioi.
Its
highest ever-recorded population was recorded in the 1928 census, 5519
residents.
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| Copyrights & Web Design by Jiannis E. Kiloukiotis © 1999 - 2003 Samos Text Evaggelos J. Kiloukiotis Translation Yiannis E. Koulas | ||||||||||||||||||||||||