Karydi, Itanos
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Karydi (), officially Καρύδιον (Σητείας), is a village in the highlands of east
Crete Crete ( ; , Modern Greek, Modern: , Ancient Greek, Ancient: ) is the largest and most populous of the Greek islands, the List of islands by area, 88th largest island in the world and the List of islands in the Mediterranean#By area, fifth la ...
,
Greece Greece, officially the Hellenic Republic, is a country in Southeast Europe. Located on the southern tip of the Balkan peninsula, it shares land borders with Albania to the northwest, North Macedonia and Bulgaria to the north, and Turkey to th ...
, part of the municipal unit
Itanos Itanos () is a municipal unit (demotike enoteta) of the municipality (demos) Siteia in the Lasithi regional unit, eastern Crete, Greece. A former municipality itself, it was included in Siteia as part of the 2011 local government reform. The muni ...
. Under the
Kallikratis Programme The Kallikratis Programme () is the common name of Greek law 3852/2010 of 2010, a major administrative reform in Greece. It brought about the second major reform of the country's administrative divisions following the 1997 Kapodistrias reform. ...
of 2011 it was made a local community (topiki koinoteta). Its chain of civic jurisdiction is as follows: municipal unit (demotike enoteta) Itanos, municipality (demos) Sitia, regional unit (periphereiakes enotetas) Lasithi, region (periphereia) Crete. The population record, and to some extent the population, varies to such a degree that it is not possible to find credible documentation of it. The Greek-speaking population is on the move from the country to the city, from the hill villages, which in many cases are closing down, to the ports and the plains. Athens, once a ruined and nearly abandoned city, now is home to half the population of Greece. The cities offer a full run of services available to any large city in Europe. In the case of Itanos the movement is from the settlements to Palaikastro and Siteia. The latter, housing several thousand, has the airport and seaport, the hospital and the educational institutions. The villages are by no means isolated. They are connected to Siteia by good roads, automobiles, and a bus service. In addition to making wine and oil, herding sheep and growing fruits and vegetables, they cater to the tourist business, resulting in an increase of summer populations in villages otherwise abandoned or nearly so. Some industry also has found a place in the rural countryside, dotting it with scattered factories. The improvement of the power grid has made this last trend possible. Karydi is a community with a long tradition. It first appears in the deeds and maps of the 16th century, although not in the Venetian census of 1583. The name appears to be based on the Greek word for walnut. There are, however, no walnut trees in the area. By chance a plaque of the times embossed with a walnut tree was found at Koutsounara, which might be hypothesized to be a heraldic symbol. Perhaps a family displaying that symbol founded Karydi. Koutsounara, however, is on the south coast. Any supposition of a heraldic symbol or an unknown family or any connection to Karydi is entirely guesswork.


Geography

The higher mountains of Crete are not in east Crete. Its geology features parallel rows of NE-SW trending hills or low mountains up to a few thousand feet, mostly less, broken by cross-ravines draining to the ocean or the nearest valley. The terrain is
karst Karst () is a topography formed from the dissolution of soluble carbonate rocks such as limestone and Dolomite (rock), dolomite. It is characterized by features like poljes above and drainage systems with sinkholes and caves underground. Ther ...
, full of caves and deeply-cut crevices. A ravine can be a steep-sided gorge displaying rare or endemic plants, home to endemic birds and reptiles, or unusual configurations of minerals, or it can be a grassed and forested valley, typically used for agriculture and especially dendriculture. The soil is very fertile. Karydi is at elevation. Otherwise the terrain is arid, grassless, and covered with a scattering of drought-resistant shrubs. Streams are intermittent, running in steep-sided chasms. Settlements are never found on the dry heights, always in or on the ravines. The road network also follows the ravines, usually built on their sides to avoid rockfall and intermittent flooding problems. The heights are abandoned except that in the late 20th and early 21st centuries scattered wind and solar farms have been placed there by the
Public Power Corporation The Public Power Corporation S.A. (, abbreviated PPC, or DEIInfoCuriaCommission of the European Communities v Hellenic Republic Case C-394/02, published 2 June 2005, accessed 5 October 2022) is the largest electric power company in Greece. PPC ...
. Crete has nationalized, plug-in power, which it offers as a network fed by many sources. There is a
wind farm A wind farm, also called a wind park or wind power plant, is a group of wind turbines in the same location used to produce electricity. Wind farms vary in size from a small number of turbines to several hundred wind turbines covering an exten ...
near Toplou, and a
solar farm A photovoltaic power station, also known as a solar park, solar farm, or solar power plant, is a large-scale grid-connected photovoltaic power system (PV system) designed for the supply of merchant power. They are different from most building ...
near Karydi. The easternmost row of elevations in Crete is the Coastal Hill Range, which sits partly in the Srait of
Kasos Kasos (; , ), also Casos, is a Greek island municipality in the Dodecanese. It is the southernmost island in the Aegean Sea, and is part of the regional unit Karpathos-Kasos. The capital of the island is Fri. , its population was 1,223. ...
. The next rows to the east, known generally as the Siteia (or Sitia, or Sitiaka) mountains, institute a certain degree of isolation from the rest of Crete, which probably fostered the political independence of east Crete. The Siteia mountains are subdivided into two rows, the Zakros mountains on the east, and a row comprising, south to north, the
Thrypti Thrypti () is a mountain range in Lasithi in eastern Crete, Greece. It trends to the northeast from Ierapetra in the southwest in the direction of Sitia. However, it only goes half-way in that direction. The rest of the distance is completed by t ...
range, the Ornon range, and the
Western Siteia Foothills The Western Siteia Foothills are a range of foothills in Lasithi in eastern Crete, Greece. They are transitional in altitude between the Ornon Mountains, which trends from west to east starting at Kavousi in Ierapetra and ending at Praesos in ...
on the west. Between the two is the valley of the intermittent Rema Pentelis, where Rema means "river," which flows for about due north from the vicinity of the highland plateaus of the Zakros mountains called Handros and Armeni (hence Handro-Armeni valley) after the settlements, about opposite Azali to the Bay of Sitia just east of Sitia. The lower river is totally controlled. Karydi sits in the middle of the massif of the Zakros Mountains. At that point a ravine crosses from the heights near the Pentelis valley to the Zakros Basin on the other side, which is the valley between the Zakros Mountains and the Coastal Hill Range. In 2015 the Siteia mountains were defined to be Sitia UNESCO Global
Geopark A geopark is a protected area with internationally significant geology within which Sustainability, sustainable development is sought and which includes tourism, conservation, education and research concerning not just geology but other relevant s ...
to protect its gorges, its 170 caves, and its numerous plant and animal fossils. The park area is .


Notes


Citations


Reference bibliography

*


External links

{{Siteia div Populated places in Lasithi Sitia