Modern
Greek Thera, also called Santorini, island, southernmost island
of the Cyclades group, Greece, in the Aegean Sea, sometimes included
in the Southern Sporades group. The island has an area of 76 square
km and, together with other islands, forms an eparkhia "eparchy"
of the nomos department of Cyclades. Geologically, Thera is the
remaining eastern half of an exploded volcano. Its
bow-shaped rim and the remnant isles of Thirasia and Aspronisi
form an open lagoon that measures 60 km in circumference. In the
centre of the lagoon are two active volcanic islets, Nea Kameni
("New Burnt Island") and Palaia Kameni ("Old Burnt
Island"). Thera proper consists largely of lava and pumice,
the latter of which is the island's main export. Red-wine grapes
are also grown. The lagoon is rimmed by red, white, and black
striped volcanic cliffs rising to almost 300 m. The summit of
Thera is the 566-metre limestone Mount Profitis Ilias in the southeast.
The chief town, Thira (locally called Fira), was badly damaged
by earthquake in 1956. Other settlements include Emboríon
and Pírgos to the south and the port of Oia at the north
entrance to the lagoon, which was destroyed by the 1956 earthquake.
Known as Calliste ("Most Beautiful") in antiquity, Thera
was occupied before 2000 BC. One of the largest volcanic eruptions
known occurred on the island. This is thought to have occurred
about 1500 BC, although, based on evidence obtained during the
1980s from a Greenland ice-core and from tree-ring and radiocarbon
dating, some scholars believe that it occurred earlier, during
the 1620s BC. Ash and pumice from the eruption have been found
as far away as Egypt and Israel, and there has been speculation
that the eruption was the source of the legend of Atlantis and
of stories in the Old Testament book of Exodus.
During the Bronze Age the island of Crete, some 110 km south of
Thera, was the centre of Minoan civilization. About
1450 BC most major settlements in central and southern Crete were
destroyed by fire and abandoned. In 1939 the Greek archaeologist
Spyridon Marinatos suggested that the eruption on Thera had led
to the collapse of the Minoan civilization; his theory was widely
accepted. During the 1980s, however, archaeologists found evidence
that Minoan culture continued to flourish for some time after
the eruption. Archaeological evidence also indicated that the
amounts of ash from the eruption that fell on Crete were not enough
to cause significant damage to crops or buildings.
About the beginning of the first millennium BC, Dorian settlers
from the mainland landed on Thera. About 630 the important Theran
colony of Cyrene was settled on the north coast of Africa, in
accord with a command of the Delphic oracle. From 308 to 145 the
island, a member of the Cycladic League, was a Ptolemaic protectorate.
From that period date many of the ruins of the ancient city of
Thera, unearthed (1895-1903) by a German archaeologist on the
east coast. The earliest excavations by the French School at Athens
(1869) uncovered a Middle Minoan, or Cycladic (c. 2000-c. 1570
BC), city beneath the pumice at the northern tip of Thirasia.
Of even greater significance was the excavation begun by Marinatos
during the 1960s south of Akrotiri village, which revealed a rich
Minoan city buried under the volcanic debris just as it stood
at the time of the eruption. The city (still being excavated)
consisted of large, well-built, multi-story houses that contain
some of the finest Minoan frescoes found in the Mediterranean.
The discoveries show that strong links existed during the Bronze
Age between Crete and Thera.
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