GREECE
DESTINATIONS
-
RHODES
GREEK
CITIES
AND
GREEK
ISLANDS
ABOUT
RHODES

General
Information
Rhodes
Greece is
the biggest
island of
the
archipelago
called
Dodecanese
and is the
capital of
the group of
Greek
Islands. It
is world
known for
its
colossus. It
is located
between
Karpathos
and
Kos
and
it is, along
Santorini
and Mykonos,
one of the
most famous
islands of
Greece. The
capital lies
outside and
within the
walls of a
very well
preserved
Venetian
castle,
built by the
Knights of
Saint John.
Its
interesting
sites and
its many
Byzantine
churches
make
this Greek
island one
of the most
popular
islands of
Greece.
This section
of Rhodes
Island
provides
much
information:
pictures,
map,
villages,
history,
museums,
architecture,
excursions,
weather and
more such as
a large
range of
hotels.
Geography
Topography
of
Rhodes
The
island of
Rhodes
is
shaped like
a spearhead,
79.7 km
(49.5 mi)
long and 38
km (24 mi)
wide, with a
total area
of
approximately
1,400 square
kilometres
(541 sq mi)
and a
coastline of
approximately
220 km (137
mi). The
city of
Rhodes is
located at
the northern
tip of the
island, as
well as the
site of the
ancient and
modern
commercial
harbours.
The main air
gateway
(Diagoras
International
Airport,
IATA code:
RHO)
is located
14 km (9 mi)
to the
southwest of
the city in
Paradisi.
The road
network
radiates
from the
city along
the east and
west coasts.
In terms of
flora and
fauna,
Rhodes is
closer to
Asia Minor
than to the
rest of
Greece.
The interior
of the
island is
mountainous,
sparsely
inhabited
and covered
with forests
of pine (Pinus
brutia)
and cypress
(Cupressus
sempervirens).
The island
is home to
the Rhodian
deer. In
Petaludes
Valley (Greek
for "Valley
of the
Butterflies"),
large
numbers of
tiger moths
gather
during the
summer
months.
Mount
Attavyros,
at 1,216
metres
(3,990 ft),
is the
island's
highest
point of
elevation.
While the
shores are
rocky, the
island has
arable
strips of
land where
citrus
fruit, wine
grapes,
vegetables,
olives and
other crops
are grown.
Outside of
the city of
Rhodes,
the island
is dotted
with small
villages and
beach
resorts,
among them
Faliraki,
Lindos,
Kremasti,
Haraki,
Pefkos,
Archangelos,
Afantou,
Koskinou,
Embona
(Attavyros),
Paradisi,
and
Trianta
(Ialysos).
Tourism is
the island's
primary
source of
income.
Earthquakes
Rhodes has
experienced
severe
earthquakes.
Notable are
the 226 BC
earthquake
that
destroyed
the Colossus
of Rhodes;
the one on 3
May 1481
which
destroyed
much of the
city of
Rhodes;[2]
and the one
on 26 June
1926.[3]
July 15,
2008,
Rhodes
was
struck by a
6.3
magnitude
earthquake
causing
minor damage
to a few old
buildings.
One woman
lost her
life when
she fell
down the
stairs,
while trying
to flee her
home.
History
Ancient
times
Further
information:
Rhodes,
Greece
Deer statues
in
Mandraki
harbor,
where the
Colossus
of
Rhodes
possibly
once stood
The island
was
inhabited in
the
Neolithic
period,
although
little
remains of
this
culture. In
the 16th
century BC
the Minoans
came to
Rhodes, and
later Greek
mythology
recalled a
Rhodian
race
they called
the
Telchines,
and
associated
Rhodes with
Danaus;
it was
sometimes
nicknamed
Telchinis.
In
the
15th century
BC the
Achaeans
invaded. It
was,
however, in
the 11th
century BC
that the
island
started to
flourish,
with the
coming of
the Dorians.
It was the
Dorians who
later built
the three
important
cities of
Lindos,
Ialyssos and
Kameiros,
which
together
with
Kos,
Cnidus and
Halicarnassus
(on
the
mainland)
made up the
so-called
Dorian
Hexapolis.
In
Pindar's
ode,
the island
was said to
be born of
the union of
Helios the
sun god and
the nymph
Rhode, and
the cities
were named
for their
three sons.
The rhoda is
a pink
hibiscus
native to
the island.
Diodorus
Siculus
added
that Actis,
one of the
sons of
Helios and
Rhodes
traveled to
Egypt where
he built the
city of
Heliopolis
and
he taught
the
Egyptians
the science
of
astrology.
[5]
Invasions by
the
Persians
eventually
overran the
island, but
after their
defeat by
the forces
from Athens
in
478 BC,
the cities
joined the
Athenian
League. When
the
Peloponnesian
War broke
out in
431 BC,
Rhodes
remained
largely
neutral,
although it
remained a
member of
the League.
The war
lasted until
404 BC,
but by this
time Rhodes
had
withdrawn
entirely
from the
conflict and
had decided
to
go
her own way.
In
408 BC
the
cities
united to
form one
territory,
and built a
new capital
on the
northern end
of the
island, the
city of
Rhodes:
its
regular plan
was
superintended
by the
Athenian
architect
Hippodamus.
However the
Peloponnesian
War had so
weakened the
entire Greek
culture that
it lay open
to invasion.
In 357 BC
the island
was
conquered by
the king
Mausolus of
Caria,
then fell to
the Persians
340 BC. But
their rule
was also
short and to
the great
relief of
its
citizens,
Rhodes
became a
part of the
growing
empire of
Alexander
III
of Macedon
in 332
BC
after
he defeated
the
Persians.
The
Acropolis
of
Lindos
Following
the death of
Alexander
his
generals
vied for
control of
the kingdom.
Three of
them,
Ptolemy,
Seleucus,
and
Antigonus,
succeeded in
dividing the
kingdom
among
themselves.
Rhodes
formed
strong
commercial
and cultural
ties with
the
Ptolemies in
Alexandria,
and together
they formed
the
Rhodo-Egyptian
alliance
which
controlled
trade
throughout
the Aegean
in the 3rd
century BC.
The city
developed
into a
maritime,
commercial
and cultural
center and
its coins
were in
circulation
almost
everywhere
in the
Mediterranean.
Its famous
schools of
philosophy,
science,
literature
and
rhetoric,
shared
masters with
Alexandria:
the
Athenian
rhetorician
Aeschines
who
formed a
school at
Rhodes;
Apollonius
of
Rhodes; the
observations
and works of
the
astronomers
Hipparchus
and
Geminus,
the
rhetorician
Dionysios
Trax.
Its
school of
sculptors
developed a
rich,
dramatic
style that
can be
characterized
as "Hellenistic
Baroque".
In
305 BC,
Antigonus
had
his son,
Demetrius
besiege
Rhodes
in an
attempt to
break its
alliance
with Egypt.
Demetrius
created huge
siege
engines
including a
180 ft (55
m) battering
ram and a
siege tower
named
Helepolis
that
weighed
360,000
pounds
(163,293
kg). Despite
this
engagement,
in 304 BC,
after only
one year he
relented and
signed a
peace
agreement,
leaving
behind a
huge store
of military
equipment.
The Rhodians
sold the
equipment
and used the
money to
erect a
statue of
their sun
god, Helios,
the statue
now known as
Colossus of
Rhodes.
In
164 BC,
Rhodes
signed a
treaty with
Rome,
and became
an
educational
center for
Roman noble
families,
and was
especially
noted for
its teachers
of rhetoric,
such as
Hermagoras
and the
author of
the
Rhetorica
ad
Herennium.
At first the
state was an
important
ally of Rome
and enjoyed
numerous
privileges,
but these
were later
lost in
various
machinations
of Roman
politics.
Cassius
eventually
invaded the
island and
sacked the
city.
Woodcut
engraving
depicting
the city of
Rhodes
by
Hartmann
Schedel
(1493)In the
1st
century AD,
the Emperor
Tiberius
spent a
brief term
of exile on
Rhodes.
Saint Paul
brought
Christianity
to the
island.(cf.
Acts 21)
Rhodes
reached her
zenith in
the third
century. In
395,
the long
Byzantine
Empire
period began
for Rhodes,
when the
Roman Empire
was split
and the
eastern half
gradually
became a
Greek
empire.
Although
part of
Byzantium
for the next
thousand
years,
Rhodes was
nevertheless
clarification
needed]
repeatedly
attacked by
various
forces. It
was first
occupied by
Muslim
forces of
Muawiyah I
in 672. Much
later,
Rhodes was
recaptured
by the
Byzantine
Emperor
Alexius I
Comnenus
during
the First
Crusade.
Medieval
period
Historic map
of Rhodes by
Piri ReisIn
1309
the
Byzantine
era came to
an end when
the island
was occupied
by forces of
the
Knights
Hospitaller.
Under the
rule of the
newly named
"Knights
of Rhodes",
the city was
rebuilt into
a model of
the European
medieval
ideal. Many
of the
city's
famous
monuments,
including
the Palace
of the Grand
Master, were
built during
this period.
The strong
walls which
the Knights
had built
withstood
the attacks
of the
Sultan of
Egypt in
1444, and of
Mehmed II
in
1480.
Ultimately,
however,
Rhodes fell
to the large
army of
Suleiman the
Magnificent
in December
1522, long
after the
rest of the
Byzantine
empire
had been
lost. The
few
surviving
Knights were
permitted to
retire to
the Kingdom
of Sicily.
The Knights
would later
move their
base of
operations
to Malta.
The island
was
thereafter a
possession
of the
Ottoman
Empire
for
nearly four
centuries.
Modern
history
Mortar of
the Knights
of
Saint John
of Jerusalem
(Knights
Hospitaller),
Rhodes,
1480–1500,
fired 260 lb
(118 kg)
cannon
balls. In
February
1840, the
Jews of
Rhodes were
falsely
accused of
ritually
murdering a
Christian
boy in what
became known
as the
Rhodes blood
libel.
In 1912,
Italy seized
Rhodes from
the Turks.
The island
thus
bypassed
many of the
events
associated
with the
"exchange of
the
minorities"
between
Greece and
Turkey.
Due to the
Treaty of
Lausanne the
island—together
with the
Dodecanese—was
officially
assigned to
Italy, and
became the
core of the
possession
of the Isole
Italiane
dell'Egeo.
Following
the Italian
Armistice of
September
8th,1943,
the British
attempted to
get the
Italian
garrison on
Rhodes to
change
sides. This
was
anticipated
by the
German Army,
which
succeeded in
occupying
the island.
In great
measure this
resulted in
the British
failure in
the
subsequent
Dodecanese
Campaign.
On July 19,
1944
the
island’s
1700 Jewish
inhabitants
were rounded
up by the
Gestapo and
sent to
extermination
camps, of
whom some
160
survived.
The Turkish
Consul
Selahattin
Ülkümen
succeeded,
at
considerable
risk to
himself and
his family,
in saving 42
Jews who had
Turkish
citizenship
or were
family
members of
Turkish
citizens.
In 1948,
together
with
the other
islands of
the
Dodecanese,
Rhodes was
united with
Greece.
In 1949,
Rhodes
was
the venue
for
negotiations
between
Israel and
Egypt,
Jordan,
Lebanon, and
Syria,
concluding
with the
1949
Armistice
Agreements.
Archaeology
Ruins of
Apollo
Temple at
the
Acropolis of
Rhodes
Palace of
the (Prince)
Grand
Master—RhodesIn
ancient
times,
Rhodes was
home to one
of the Seven
Wonders of
the
World—the
Colossus of
Rhodes. This
giant bronze
statue once
stood in the
harbour. It
was
completed in
280 BC but
was
destroyed in
an
earthquake
in 224 BC.
No trace of
the statue
remains
today.
Historical
sites
on
the island
of Rhodes
include the
Acropolis of
Lindos, the
Acropolis of
Rhodes, the
Temple of
Apollo,
ancient
Ialysos,
ancient
Kamiros, the
Governor's
Palace,
Rhodes Old
Town (walled
medieval
city), the
Palace of
the Grand
Masters,
Kahal Shalom
Synagogue in
the Jewish
Quarter, the
Archeological
Museum, the
ruins of the
castle of
Monolithos,
the castle
of Kritinia
and St.
Catherine
Hospice.
Religion
The
predominant
religion is
Greek
Orthodox.
There is a
significant
Roman
Catholic[6]
minority on
the island,
many of whom
are
descendants
of Italians
who remained
after the
end of the
Italian
occupation.
Rhodes has a
Muslim
minority, a
remnant from
Ottoman
Turkish
times.
The Jewish
community of
Rhodes[7]
goes
back to the
1st century
CE. In 1480,
the Jews
actively
defended the
walled city
against the
Turks. At
its peak in
the 1920s,
the Jewish
community
was
one-third of
the total
population.[8]
The
community
was mostly
wiped out in
the
Holocaust.
Kahal
Shalom,
established
in 1557, is
the oldest
synagogue in
Greece. It
is still
standing in
the Jewish
quarter of
the Old Town
of Rhodes.
It has been
renovated
with the
help of
foreign
donors but
very few
Jews live
year-round
in Rhodes
today, and
services are
not held on
a regular
basis.
Government
Rhodes is
the capital
of the
Dodecanese
Prefecture
and the most
populated
island of
the South
Aegean
Region. The
local
association
of
municipalities
and
communities
of the
Dodecanese,
TEDKD,[10]
is
responsible
for the
administration
of the
island and
the
prefecture
as a whole.
Economy
The
economy is
tourist-oriented.
The most
developed
sector is
service.
Small
industries
process
imported raw
materials
for local
retail.
Other
industry
includes
agricultural
goods
production,
stockbreeding,
fishery and
winery.
Road network
The
road network
of the
island is
mostly
modern and
paved. There
are four
major
arteries:
Rhodes-Kamiros
Province
Avenue:
Two
lane, runs
through the
west coast
north to
south and
connects
Rhodes City
with
Diagoras
Airport and
Kamiros.
Rhodes-Lindos
National
Avenue
(Greek
National
Road 95):
Four and two
lane, runs
mainly
inland north
to south and
connects
Rhodes City
with Lindos.
Rhodes-Kallithea
Province
Avenue: Two
lane, runs
through the
east coast
north to
south and
connects
Rhodes City
with
Faliraki
Resort.
Tsairi-Airport
National
Avenue: Four
and two
lane, runs
inland east
to west and
connects the
east coast
with the
west and the
airport.
Future
roads:
Further
widening of
E-95 from
Faliraki to
Lindos. This
is to be
four lane
with jersey
barrier in
the
middle,about
36 km (22
mi) in
length, with
the first
part
scheduled to
start in
August 2007.
Plans also
exist for a
new four
lane express
road
connecting
Rhodes Town
with
Diagoras
Airport that
will reduce
congestion
on the
coastal west
avenue
The first
phase of
construction
of the
Rhodes City
ringway was
begun a few
years ago,
but progress
has been
slow.
Cars and
motorbikes
Families in
Rhodes often
own more
than one
car, along
with a
motorbike.
Traffic jams
are common
particularly
in the
summer
months. The
island is
served by
450 taxis.
Bus
Bus services
are handled
by two
operators
RODA:
Rhodes City
company that
also
services
suburban
areas
(Faliraki,
Ialysos,
Kremasti,
Airport,
Pastida,
Maritsa,
Paradeisi)
and the
entire west
coast
(blue-white
colored).
KTEL:
State-owned
buses that
serve
villages and
resorts in
the east
coast
(yellow-orange
colored).
Air
The ATC
tower and
part of the
terminal
of
Diagoras
AirportRhodes
has three
airports but
only one is
public.
Diagoras
Airport, one
of the
biggest in
Greece, is
the main
entrance
/exit point
for both
locals and
tourists.
The island
is well
connected
with other
major Greek
cities and
islands as
well as with
major
European
capitals and
cities via
charter
flights.
Diagoras
International
Airport:
public
airport, 16
km (10 mi)
south west
of Rhodes
City, third
in
international
passenger
volume and
fourth in
total
passenger
volume in
Greece.
Maritsa Air
Force
Airfield:
closed to
public, near
Maritsa
village,
used to be
the public
airport of
the island
until 1977.
Nowadays
serves the
Greek Army
and is
sometimes
used for car
races.
Kalathos Air
Strip:
served as a
landing
strip during
World War
II, near the
village of
Kalathos.
Inoperative.
Two pilot
schools
offer
aviation
services
(small plane
rental,
island
hopping).
Sea
Rhodes has
five ports,
three of
them in
Rhodes City,
one in the
west coast
near Kamiros
and one in
east coast
near Lardos.
Central
Port:
located in
the city of
Rhodes
serves
domestic and
international
traffic.
Kolona Port:
opposite the
central
port, serves
intra-Dodecanese
traffic and
large
yachts.
Akandia
Port:
the
new port of
the island
next to the
central
port, being
built since
1960s, for
domestic and
international
traffic. At
the moment
serves
cruise ships
on peak
days.
Kamiros
Skala Dock:
30 km
(19 mi)
south west
of the city
near Ancient
Kamiros
ruins serves
mainly the
island of
Halki
Lardos Dock:
formerly
servicing
local
industries,
now under
development
as an
alternative
port for
times when
the central
port is
inaccessible
due to
weather
conditions.
It is
situated in
a rocky
shore near
the village
of Lardos in
south east
Rhodes.
Culture
Sports
Football:
AS
Rodos and
Diagoras
F.C., both
Rhodes City
based teams,
compete
professionally
at the
national
level. Local
football
leagues
(organized
at the
prefecture
level)
contain
three
divisions
with more
than 50
teams. Many
stadiums are
grass
covered.
Basketball:
Colossus BC
sponsors
professional
basketball
and has
joined the
Greek A1
League. The
local league
includes two
divisions
with 14
teams. Two
indoor
courts exist
in Rhodes
City, and
one each in
Ialysos and
Kremasti.
Several
other are
planned for
Rhodes City
Pales De
Sports,
Faliraki,
Afantou, and
South
Rhodes.
Volleyball:
local
teams only.
Water Polo:
mostly
amateur
based. There
is no single
indoor pool
on the
island.
Rugby:
introduced
in 2007.
Teams
compete at
the national
level.
Tennis:
tennis has a
long history
on the
island.
Sailing:
widely
developed,
offers
competition
at the
international
level.
Cycling:
for a
long period
of time
Rhodes had
the only
cycling
track in
Greece,
producing
Olympics
level
competitors.
Rhodes
competes in
the
bi-annual
Island
Games, which
it hosted in
2007.[11]
Popular
culture
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(May 2009)
To get
detailed
information
about
Rhodes, its
sightseeing,
Rhodes
hotels,
Rhodes map,
facilities
and Rhodes
tours,
please click
on the link
below: