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Nea Epidauros (Piada)

Nea Epidauros (Piada)

LOCATION: Argolid

Nea Epidauros (Piada)

  • Position

    The fortress sits atop the rocky heights, above the village of Piada (aka Nea Epidaurus). The location of the fort is strategically placed so as to make it invisible from the sea, which is very close. The choice of the site served to protect the town from pirates.

  • History

    There are many different names for this site attested in western Portolan charts from the beginning of the 14th century: such as Preduia, Pedruia, Predena and Pednera, while in Greek equivalents it turns up with the name Piada, but also as Pigiada, Pegiada, Pyegata, Pleda and Pedroia.

    Piada seems to have been founded during the Byzantine period in order to protect residents from sea-borne pirate attacks occurring at the time. At the time of conflict between the Byzantines and the Franks in the early 13th century, Piada probably served as a major port for the protection of the Byzantine Empire against the break-away Empire of Nicaea. After its capture by the Franks, the settlement belonged to the Castellany of Corinth. It then became part of the dowry of Bartholomée Chauderon, and was given in 1272 as a fief to the Venetian Nicolo Ghisi, of the House of Ghisi of the Duchy of the Archipelago. In 1342, Piada passed into the hands of Nicola Acciaioli, and between 1365 and 1394 was in the sovereignty of Nerio Acciaioli. After 1400, the broader region of Piada was held by the family of the Catalan princes of Aegina, the Caopena. However, in 1463 and 1467, as we learn from paintings of the castles surveyed, Piada had come to the Venetians, and was even mentioned in the Grimani census of 1700, as Pigiada.

    In 1821, the Piada hosted the First National Assembly of the revolutionary Greek State (December 20, 1821), at which the first constitution of Greece was determined, and the Greek flag was adopted as the national symbol.

    Χρονολόγηση: The transitional period (7th-9th centuries), Middle Byzantine period (9th-early 13th century), and the Frankish/Late Byzantine period (13th-15th centuries)

  • Description

     The castle was probably built in Byzantine times and added to in the years of the Frankish rule. It has an irregular shape, as it follows the edge of rock. The ground plan is elongated, with its long axis running EW: it is approximately 120 m long, with a width of between 15 and 20 m. The walls are vertical, with a thickness of about 0.70 m. They are made of roughly hewn stones of medium size, bound with mortar and include fragments of tile.

    Walled fortification exists on just the south, west and east sides, while the north was left unwalled because of its natural defences provided by the steep-sided Vothyla ravine. The gate of the castle was in the east. On the south side are the remains of a horseshoe-shaped bastion(?) and two somewhat damaged quadrangular towers.

    The central tower, of square plan, was set to the north-west, on the highest point of the hill. Only a floor survives that belonged to the cistern, located in the lowest part of the tower: it is coated by a hydraulic mortar (kourasani).

    Inside the castle some building remains have survived, amongst which are the ruins of two single-roomed churches. To the west, a third, single-nave vaulted church, dedicated to Aghios Ioannis the Theologian is preserved in good condition. The church, according to the donor’s inscription, was treated with wall-paintings in 1710; it preserves a relief plaque of Middle Byzantine date built into the wall, with the date of 1708 later cut into it.

  • The castle today

    The monument is legally protected by N. 3028/2002.

  • References

    Γιαμαλίδου Χ., «Αρχαίαι εκκλησίαι Επιδαύρου και των πέριξ χωρίων», Αθηνά 25 (1913), 405-429

    X. Giamalidou (1913). Αρχαίαι εκκλησίαι Επιδαύρου και των πέριξ χωρίων, Αθηνά 25, 405-429.

    E. Karpodini (1993), Κάστρα της Πελοποννήσου, Athens, 240.

    B. Konti (1985), Συμβολή στην Ιστορική γεωγραφία της Αργολίδας (395-1209), Βυζαντινά Σύμμεικτα 6, 185.

    M. Kordosis (2009), Η Φραγκική Καστελλανία της Κορινθου. Τα κάστρα και η περιοχή τους" Πρακτικά Γ΄Παγκορινθακού Συνεδρίου, Kiato, 225-226.

    B. Panagiotopoulos (1987), Πληθυσμός και οικισμοί της Πελοποννήσου, Athens, 247

    I. Sphikopoulos (I987), Τα Μεσαιωνικά κάστρα του Μορηά, 2nd edition, Athens, 110-111.

    A. Bon (1969), La Morée franque. Recherches historiques, topographiques et archéologiques sur la Principauté d'Achaïe (1205-1430), Paris, 183, 210, 339, 485-486.

     

Map

map

General Information

Type Acropolis
Construction date The transitional period (7th-9th centuries), Middle Byzantine period (9th-early 13th century), and the Frankish/Late Byzantine period (13th-15th centuries)
Coordinates Longitude: 37.677487 Β, Longitude: 23.129267 Α
P.E. Argolid
Municipality Epidaurus

Castle Access

  • An easy ascent, beginning from the village, leads one close to the east entrance of the castle.

More on web

<a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/135451210@N02/">Flickr</a>