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Encyclopedia :
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Himara |
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HimaraHimara (Albanian: Himarė or Himara, Greek: Chimara) is a region along the Albanian Ionian Sea coast, opposite of the northern side of the Epirote Islands (Corfu in particular), about 50 Kilometres in Length and 10 Kilometres in width.The main town of the region is Himara (ancient Chimara) and there are seven other villages (Dhermi,Palase, Vuno, Pilur, Qeparo, Shen Vasil, Kudhes, Ilias). GeographyThe whole region is characterized by high mountains coming down abrupty to meet a crystal clear sea. There are long white sand beaches and the few hills close to the sea are generally terraced and planted with olive , orange and citrus trees. At the north the region begins with the Acroceraunian mountains, (which the Roman poet Horace mentioned as
Testimony to the dangerous driving this road provides is the numerous commemorattive markers on the spots where unfortunate motorists have rolled down the canyon in the past decades. The Journey then continues through rugged mountainous terrain along the sea coast towards the village of Vuno then on to the town of Himara and further down south ending in the village of Qeparo which is the third largest hamlet in the region. HistoryIn antiquity the region was inhabited by the Kaonian Illyrian tribe. Greek contemporaries mention the Kaon as very warlike, engaged mainly goat and sheep herding and trade with the nearby island of Korcyra (corfu). In fact the town of Himara was founded by the greeks as a trading outpost on the Kaonian shore. Little else is known of the Kaonians, except that the men wore white kilts (which are still used to this day, a type of dress also referred to as fustanella. The honor guard at the Greek Parliament in Athens uses the traditional fustanella costume as the uniform of choice out of respect of the many Himariotes and other Epirotes that fought in the Greek war of Independence in 1831). Pliny the younger also mentions the Kaonians in a comment he makes in the context of an Aristophanes play; "This man must be certainly Kaonian because he looks like a mushroom due to his oversized cranium, which is certainly to his advantage because he does not thus need an umbrella to protect himself from glare of the sun". Another anectode about the Kaonians comes in reference to their battle against Phillip of Macedon (the father of Alexander the Great) who attacked Himara in 214 BC. Little else is known about the ancient inhabitants of this region. In pre-Roman times Himara was also part of Epirus one of the successor states of the Alexander the Great's empire under the rule of Pyrrhus of Epirus, well known for his Phyrric victories against the emerging power of Rome. Julius Caesar landed his army at the aforementioned Megalhora in pursuit of Pompey the Great during the Roman civil war, and it is here that he spoke the famous words to his soldiers before attempting to cross over the dangerous Acroceraunians: "Fear not, for you carry the Caesar and his luck". Caesar the proceeded to assemble his army at the place known today as "Pllaja e Qesarit" (Caesar's Plateau) and quickly took the town of Orikum on the other side of the mountain. During the decline of the Roman (and following Byzantine) rule the region of Himara was frequently the target of various attackers including the Serbs, Bulgarians (940AD), Saracens, Normans. Himara became a symbol of resistance to the Ottoman turkish onslaught on Albania in the 13th century AD. The region was in almost continous state of warfare during this time against the turks. The attempt failed, but the Himariotes rose again in 1488, 1494-1509 again without fully acheiving the goal of liberating the rest of the country. Ottoman Sultan Sulejman the Magnificent (or the LawGiver) personaly led a large army in 1537 in a particularly bloody confrontation in Himara which at the time comprised more than 50 villages (the whole region of present day Laberia). He was aided in this campaign by several traitors from Himara, including one Ilia Konomi, born in Palase, who upon converting to Islam had changed his name to Iliaz Pasha and was promised the governorship of Himara by the sultan should he be succesful in subduing the land. The oral lyrical traditions of the region commemorate that war with many folkloric songs about the various events that led to the eventual recognition of de facto indepedence of Himara by the Ottoman Empire. One such song tells the story of the masacre of "faieo". The Sultan apparently sent word to Palasiotes hiding in the mountains that he wanted to make peace and withdraw from their land and invited them to come down to "faieo" for talks. All those who took the turk at his word had all four limbs amputated and the torsos thrown into the "faieo" ravine. Another tells the story of Damianos who came close to killing the sultan himself after which point the Ottoman army retreated and did not come back to Himara until 1571, then again in 1595, 1690 and 1713. In 1799 the region was anexed by Ali Pasha of Ioanina a former Albanian bandit-thief turned ruler of most of southern Albania and Northern Greece. The story goes that Ali ordered his soldiers to set the forest above the village of Dhermi on fire. Many Himariotes from the parts that opposed Ali Pasha migrated at this time only to return after Himara had regained its independence. Ali Pasha's rule over Himara lasted about 20 years, until the time that he was murdered by the Turks in his castle of Ioanina, after which point the Ottoman Empire again recognized and accepted the special status that Himara had enjoyed for centuries in its relations with the Porte and had the agreement imprinted in Bronze tablets at the request of Himariote leaders who wanted the laws (venomet) defining its relation towards the ottomans, printed on a durable medium so as to stress on their importance. These laws (or venomet) as initially set forth by Ottoman Sultan Suleyman the Lawgiver, included such rights as: In 1822-1833 the Himariotes played an important role in the Greek war of Independence, fighting in several major battles including the decisive battle of Messolongio. In 1927 the Protocol of Himara between the region and the Albanian state was signed, recognizing special rights and privileges for the region. During the First World War, the Italians using the Austro-Hungarian war prisoners, build the road that connects Vlora and the region along the "faieo" reducing the isolation of Himara from the rest of the country. In Albanian history, Himara occupies a special place and to this very day nurtures a unique identity from the rest of the country. After the fall of communism in 1992, the people of Himara emigrated in very large numbers especially to Greece. This left many villages into ghost towns inhabited mostly by old people. People would return however, especially during the months of summer. In the last years, after the anarchy of 1997, some people have returned. The main industry that sustains the region is tourism. Edward Lear that visited practically the major part of Albania in 1848, wrote about Himara: " the civilization of this part of Albania seems indeed beyond what I have seen. " This was due in part to the contant migrations and contact with the western world that the region enjoyed for centuries. In 1848 even the village of Dhermi had two doctors graduated in Athens and Vienna, more than several large cities in Albania. Based on this fact the argument has been made that the Greek language in several parts of Himara has been brought in recently, thus not being able to replace older cultural traditions. These arguments about the cultural heritage and nationality of the Himariotes are a new fenomenon, especially this last century due to certain political interests.
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