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CHIOS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 237 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHIOS  , an

island on the west coast of
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Asia Minor, called by the Greeks Chios (Xios, 'o- T~ Rio) and by the
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Turks
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Saki Adasi; the soft pronunciation of X before i in
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modern Greek, approximating to sh, caused Xio to be Italianized as Scio . It forms, with the islands of Psara, Nikaria, Leros, Calymnus and Cos, a sanjak Of the
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Archipelago vilayet . Chios is about 3o m. long from N. to S., and from 8 to 15 M. broad; pop . 64,000 . It well deserves the epithet " craggy " (aaclraXoeQVa) of the Homeric hymn . Its
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figs were noted in ancient times, but wine and gummastic have always been the most important products . The
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climate is healthy; oranges, olives and even palms grow freely . The wine grown on the N.W. coast, in the
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district called by Strabo Ariusia, was known as vinum Arvisium . Early in the 7th century s.c . Glaucus of Chios discovered the
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process of welding iron (icoXMo-ts: see J . G . Frazer's
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Pausanias, note on x .

16 . 1, vol. v. pp . 313-314), and the iron stand of a large

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crater whose parts were all connected by this process was constructed by him, and preserved as one of the most interesting relics of antiquity at Delphi . The long
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line of Chian sculptors (see GREEK
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ART) in marble bears witness to the fame of Chian art . In literature the chief glory of Chios was the school of epic poets called Homeridae, who helped to create a received text of Homer and gave the island the reputation of being the poet's birthplace . The chief
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town, Chios (pop . 16,000), is on the E. coast . A theatre and a temple of Athena Poliuchus existed in the ancient city . About 6 m . N. of the city there is a curious monument of antiquity, commonly called " the school of Homer "; it is a very ancient sanctuary of Cybele, with an altar and a figure of the goddess with her two lions, cut out of the native rock on the
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summit of a hill . On the west coast there is a monastery of
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great
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wealth with a church founded by
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Constantine IX . Monomachus (1042–1054) .

Starting from the city and encompassing the island, one passes in

succession the promontory Posidium; Cape Phanae, the
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southern extremity of Chios, with a harbour and a temple of Apollo; Notium, probably the south-western point of the island; Laii, opposite the city of Chios, where the island is narrowest; the town Bolissus (now Volisso), the home of the Homerid poets; Melaena, the north-western point; the wine-growing district Ariusia; Cardamyle (now Cardhamili); the north-eastern promontory was probably named Phlium, and the mountains that
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cross the
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northern
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part of the island Pelinaeus or Pellenaeus . The
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history of Chios is very obscure . According to Pherecydes, the
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original inhabitants were
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Leleges, while according to other accounts Thessalian Pelasgi possessed the island before it became an Ionian state . The name Aethalia,
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common to Chios and Lemnos in very early times, suggests the original existence of a homogeneous population in these and other neighbouring islands . Oenopion, a mythical hero, son of Dionysus or of Rhadamanthus, was an early king of Chios . His successor in the
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fourth generation,
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Hector,
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united the island to the Ionian confederacy (Pausan. vii . 4), though Strabo (xiv. p . 633) implies an actual
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conquest by Ionian settlers . The
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regal government was at a later time exchanged for an oligarchy or a democracy . The names of two tyrants, Amphiclus and Polytecnus, are mentioned . The products of the island were largely exported on the
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ships of Miletus, with which city Chios formed a close mercantile
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alliance in opposition to the
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rival
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league of Phocaea and
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Samos . Similar commercial considerations determined the Chian in their attitude towards the Persian conquerors: in 546 they submitted to Cyrus as eagerly as-Phocaea resisted him; during the Ionian revolt their
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fleet of too
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sail joined the Milesians in offering a desperate opposition at Lade (494) .

The island was subsequently punished with great rigour by the Persians . The Chian ships, under the

tyrant Strattis, served in the Persian fleet at
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Salamis . After its liberation in 479 Chios joined the Delian League and long remained a
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firm ally of the Athenians, who allowed it to retain full autonomy . But in 413 the island revolted, and was not recaptured . After the Peloponnesian War it took the first opportunity to renew the Athenian alliance, but in 357 again seceded . As a member of the Delian League it had regained its prosperity, being able to equip a fleet of 50 or 6o sail . Moreover, it was reputed one of the best-governed states in
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Greece, for although it was governed alternately by oligarchs and democrats neither party persecuted the other severely . It was not till
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late in the 4th century that
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civil dissension became a danger to the state, leaving it a prey to Idrieus, the dynast of
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Caria (346), and to the Persian
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admiral
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Memnon (333) . During the Hellenistic age Chios maintained itself in a virtually
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independent position . It supported the Romans in their Eastern
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wars, and was made a "
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free and allied state." Under
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Roman and
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Byzantine
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rule industry and commerce were undisturbed, its chief export at this time being the Arvisian wine, which had become very popular . After temporary occupations by the Seljuk Turks (1089–1092) and by the Venetians (1124–1125, 1172, 1204–1225), it was given in
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fief to the Genoese
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family of Zaccaria, and in 1346 passed definitely into the hands of a Genoese maona, or trading
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company, which was organized in 13 t der the name of " the
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Giustiniani." This mercantile brotherhooil~formerly a privileged class, alone exploited the mastic trade; at the same time the Greeks were allowed to retain their rights of self-government and continued to exercise their
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industries . In 1415 the Genoese became tributary to the Ottomans .

In spite of occasional secessions which brought severe

punishment upon the island (1453, 1479), the rule of the Giustiniani was not abolished till 1566 . Under the
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Otto-man government the prosperity of Chios was hardly affected . But the island underwent severe periods of suffering after its capture and reconquest from the Florentines (1595) and the Venetians (1694-1695), which greatly reduced the number of the Latins . Worst of all were the massacres of 1822, which followed upon an attack by some Greek insurgents executed against the will of the natives . In 1881 Chios was visited by a very severe
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earthquake in which over 5600 persons lost their lives and more than
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half the villages were seriously damaged . The island has now recovered its prosperity . There is a harbour at Castro, and steam
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flour-mills, foundries and tanneries have been established . Rich antimony and
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calamine mines are worked by a French undertaking, and good marble is quarried by an
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Italian company .

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