AIGIO


'Aigio' (Greek: Modern: Αίγιο, Ancient/Katharevousa: -on, Latin: Aegium) also, 'Egio' or 'Egion' is a town in northeast Achaea, Greece, that has a population of around 30,000, with quite a few squares, a bus terminal and a fountain downtown. Aigio is one of the oldest cities in Greece and the Balkans. Aigion is surrounded by trees in the north and cliffs in the northwest. The city can be accessed by GR-8A from the south and west with one full and one partial interchange, and has a rest area and is also bounded. Mountains neighbor the southern part. The town sits on arable land which covers over a quarter of the community. The mountains of the Panachaicus and Erymanthus are rarely seen. The commune was known as 'Vostitsa' or 'Vostitza' in the Middle Ages to the late 20th century.

Contents
About the city
History
Antiquity
Frankish/Ottoman Era
Modern Era
2007 Forest Fires
Transportation
Municipal districts
Settlements
Nearest places
Historical population
Newspapers
Sporting clubs
See also
References
External links

About the city


There are beautiful beaches only 5 to 10 minutes drive from the city centre. The sites of interest includes a Mycenean House dating back to ancient times. The location is near the cliffs. Windmills are located in farmlands and groved SW of the community boundary. Hills are southwest of the city.
There are squares, one closer to the hospital and a circle shaped-square slightly from the city hall are in the SW with some bushes and a fountain and is located on the old highway. The city has a hospital founded slightly west of the city and a rest area situated south of the city at GR-8A/E65. Residential houses are within and in the western part of Aigio.

History


Antiquity

Before the founding of the city, the area had a Neolithic settlement. Aegium was founded during Homeric times. It became a part of the Achaean League in around 800 BC. During that peroid, it had several Olympic athletes including Straton (Στράτων), Athenodorus (Αθηνόδωρος) and more. From 330 BC until 281 BC, it was part of the Kingdom of Macedonia. It was later the capital of the Achaean League from 281 BC until the annexation with the Roman Empire in 146 BC, after the fall of Greece, the Romans removed the wall of the city and Aigio lost its importance. Aegium took the territory of Helike. Aegium split from the Roman Empire and became a part of the Eastern Roman Empire and later the Byzantine Age, during that time, it was renamed Vostitsa (Βοστίτσα) after the Slavic invasion in 805, its origin of the name came from the Old Church Slavonic words vosta and vostan which meant the city of gardens or the garden city.
Frankish/Ottoman Era

It was handed to the Franks in the 1200s and later in the 1457 joined the Ottoman Empire with brief interruptions by the Venetians from 1463 until 1470 and from 1685 until 1715 before being conquered and returned to Ottoman hands. It was renamed after the Greek Independence. It was the first city to be liberated on March 26 during the revolution of 1821. Its economy improved after 600 years of non-Greek rule, 370 years without a nation and 300 years of Turkish rule. Agriculture was expanded and several farmlands were created around the area. Its population expanded later on and received its train station.
Modern Era

After World War II and the Greek Civil War, many buildings were rebuilt and four to five storey buildings were built. A bypass was opened in 1972, its hospital was opened and the economy expanded.
A mid-1995 earthquake rumbled and damaged buildings in downtown core with a few casualties. In 1995, an earthquake shattered Aigio. It devastated the southwestern subdivision destroying houses.
Agricultural protests in February, 2004. It had blocked GR-8A. The protests lasted several days, and blockades were created and closed main highways for two days. It was followed by rioting in the groves and rioting at a building in the night. On February 4, 2004, riots over demanding wage hikes for farmers took place in the 172nd km interchange or the Aigio interchange, a sign, a 172nd km post facing the westbound lanes, some bushes were damaged as they clashed with the police. Another one a day later took place near the olive grove and trapped some people. Supertrucks were blocking the superhighway. On January 28, 2005, tractors from the rural areas near Aigio were blocking streets so the farmers can demand better wages. It happened between noon and afternoon hours.
2007 Forest Fires

South of Aigio on Thursday July 19, 2007, a forest fire struck in the area of Dervenaria causing panic to its residents and danger. Residents were evacuated to their families outside the danger zone. Firefighters with their fire trucks and their emergency vehicles battled the enormous blaze and took hours to contain. One of the vehicles were on a straight road that contains forests. Alongside, helicopters and planes battled the fire. The fire quickly spreaded over the mountains and into the settlement. Some of its blazes were towering as high as 30 m on a fir (Greek Fir) tree. Several residents were cut off with hydro. Several houses and properties were destroyed along with a part of the village, one report included two cars and carriage trucks being burnt in its entirely leaving without a cover. The ground was unfavorably transformed into a groggy ashy scenery from its natural beauty. The fire disintegrated on July 20. The fire was seen around area and across in Fokida.
Six days later on July 25 that was also a heatwave that staggered the southern and the southeastern portion of the continent, a larger fire consumed several villages in south of Aigio and includes Mavriki, Kounina, Paraskevi and Pyrgaki, Pteri and Koumari, it later spreaded to almost the entire municipality including Mamoussia, Ano Diakopto and Zachloritika outside the municipality, fires are almost entirely founded sporadically and burnt approximately one-third of the area. It rapidly consumed forests and pine trees especially the area of Dervenakia. It became the areas' worst fire in years and decades in the peninsula. Several firefighters, planes and helicopters battled the blaze that several were towering. The fire was seen in the Fokida prefecture but the haze was limited. Its smokes were towering and residents were panicking yet again. Hundreds of properties were damaged along with several farms. The fire slowed on July 28 and ended in the northwestern portions including Kounina and parts of Chatzi, it later ended in its entirety on July 29. Several more villages stopped its fires in central Aigialeia. It transformed a natural view into an ugly unpopular scenery. One report was that a house built on the hilltop saw its rooftop burnt and another one uphill and nearly surrounded with forests. The fire did not affect the villages of Dafnes, Valmitika, Temeni, the northwestern portion and the city of Aigio along with almost the entire plain.

Transportation


The Port of Aigion serves ferry service to Agios Nikolaos in the northeast. Ferry service is very small and only has a few boats. It is on a road off the old highway. The port is crossed by rail. East of the port is a railway station and some buildings. The city is bounded by a river in the east and west. It can be accessed by another highway for Temeni, Pteri and Kalavryta on GR-31.

Municipal districts


Location of Aegion municipality (Δήμος Αιγίου) in Achaia perfecture.


★ 'Aigio'

Chantzi

Dafnes


Agios Ilias

Digeliotika

Kouloura

Koumari

Kounina


Agia Anna


Pelekistra


Petrovouni

Mavriki


Ano Mavriki


Agios Ioannis


Kato Mavriki

Melissia


Lakka


Pyrgaki

Paraskevi

Pteri or Fteri


Achladea


Agios Andreas


Agios Panteleimonas


Boufouskia


Kato Pteri

Pirgaki

Selinountas

Temeni

Valimitika
Settlements


Agios Nikolaos

Foniskaria

Sotiras
Nearest places


Myrtia, west

Temeni, east

Historical population


Year Communal population Change Municipal population Change
1981 20,955 - - -
1991 22,178 +1,223/+5.84% 28,903 -
2001 21,255 -923/-4.16% 27,741 -1,091/-3.77%

Newspapers



★ ''Filodimos''

★ ''Proti tis Aigialeias''

Sporting clubs



Aris Valimitika

Egieas Egion

Olympiakos Aigio

Panaigialeios - fourth division

T.A.D. '93 Aigiou

Thyella Aigio

See also



List of settlements in the Achaea prefecture

Gabriel Aghion

References


External links



Official website of the city of Aigio

The directory of the city of Aigio

GTP - Aigio

GTP - Municipality of Aigio

Ancient Aegium
'North:' ''Gulf of Corinth''
'West:' Sympoliteia
'Aigio' 'East:' Diakopto
'South:' Kalavryta, Leontio (independent commune)


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