Melos,
island, most southwesterly of the major islands of the Greek Cyclades
in the Aegean Sea. The greater portion of the 150.6-sq-km island,
of geologically recent volcanic origin, is rugged, culminating
in the west in Mt. Profitis Ilias 751 m.
Its obsidian exports to Phoenicia helped to make it an important
centre of early Aegean civilization. The
bay, 165-330 ft deep, is a submerged crater created out of a violent
volcanic eruption that left an isthmus approximately 2.4 km wide
on the south. Mílos, the capital and chief town, lies just
north of the chief port, Adhámas. Southwest of the town
are catacombs in which early Christians from the Greek mainland
sought refuge. On the ancient acropolis of Adamanda the famous
Venus (Aphrodite) of Milo was found in 1820.
The British School at Athens excavated (1896-99) the ancient acropolis
of Klima (1000-800 BC) above Milos, uncovering a palace and a
gymnasium and a Roman theatre of later date. The most significant
civilization uncovered on Melos by the British School, however,
was that of Phylakopi, a site near Apollonia, the second port
of Melos, on the promontory of Pláka. Phylakopi was a flourishing
settlement at the time of the late Bronze Age eruption of neighbouring
Thera. Evidence discovered at Phylakopi in 1974 tended to reverse
earlier assumptions that the eruption had destroyed the island:
no break in continuity was established. The oldest city dates
from between 2300 and 2000 BC. On the same site a second city
rose (from 2000 to 1550 BC). The third city (1550-1100), dating
largely from the Mycenaean Age, represents the fullest flowering
of Melos' Cycladic civilization. Phylakopi was destroyed about
1100 by Dorian settlers.
The
Athenian outrage of slaying the entire male population (416) in
reprisal for the islanders' neutrality during the Peloponnesian
War inspired the playwright Euripides to write and stage before
his fellow Athenians his work Trojan Women, an anti-war play that
continues as part of modern dramatic repertories. The historian
Thucydides, in his "Melian Dialogue," preserved the
speeches made in negotiations between the Athenians and Melians
which preceded the military action. The Spartan soldier-statesman
Lysander (died 395 BC) restored the island to its Dorian possessors,
but it never recovered its prosperity. Under Frankish rule the
island formed part of the duchy of Naxos.
In classical times Melos' sulfur, alum, and obsidian mines gave
it wide commercial prominence; the Melian earth was used as a
pigment by painters. Bentonite, perlite, kaolin, barium, gypsum,
millstones, and salt are exported, and oranges, olives, grapes,
cotton, and barley are cultivated. The island is no longer famous
for the ornamental vases and the goldsmiths' art produced in the
7th century BC.
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