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Echinades




The Echinades are mentioned by Homer, who, in the Iliad , says that Meges , son of Phyleus , led 40 ships to Troy from Dulichium and the sacred islands Echinae, which are situated beyond the sea, opposite Elis . (Hom. ''Il.'' ii. 625.) Phyleus was the son of Augeas , king of the Epeians in Elis, who emigrated to Dulichium because he had incurred his father's anger. In the Odyssey , Dulichium (which may be an island in the Echniades) is frequently mentioned along with Same ( Kefalonia ), Zacynthus , and Ithaca as one of the islands subject to Ulysses , and is celebrated for its fertility. (Hom. ''Od.'' i. 245, ix. 24, xiv. 397, xvi. 123, 247; Hymn. in Apoll. 429; Πολύπυρον, ''Od.'' xiv. 335, xvi. 396, xix. 292.) Strabo, and most modern writers, place Dulichium among the Echinades, most identifying it with the island of Makri . Euripides (in '' Iphigeneia At Aulis '') identifies the Echinades with the islands of Taphos (Taphiae Insulae). However, most modern scholars, including the editors of the Barrington Atlas Of The Greek And Roman World , place the island of Taphos at Meganissi east of Lefkada , quite northwest of the Echinades; hence, the islands of Taphos would include Meganissi, Kalamos , Kastos , and surrounding islands.

Homer, as we have already seen, describes the Echinades as inhabited; but both Thucydides and Scylax represent them as deserted.. (Thuc. ii. 102; Scylax, p. 14.) Strabo simply says that they were barren and rugged (x. p. 458). Stephanus Of Byzantium names a town Apollonia situated in one of the islands (s. v. ). Pliny The Elder gives us the names of nine of these islands — Aegialia , Cotonis , Thyatira , Geoaris , Dionysia , Cyrnus , Chalcis , Pinara , Mystus (iv. 12. s. 19). Another of the Echinades was Artemita (), which became united to the the mainland. (Strab. i. p. 59; Plin. iv. 1. s. 2.) Artemidorus spoke of Artemita as a peninsula near the mouth of the Achelous, and Rhianus connected it with the Oxeiae islands. (Steph. B. s. v. ) The Oxeiae () are sometimes spoken of as a separate group of islands to the west or south of the Echinades (comp. Plin. iv. 12. s. 19), but are included by Strabo under the general name of Echinades (x. p. 458). The Oxeiae, according to Strabo, are mentioned by Homer under the synonymous name of Thoae or Thoai (, ''Od.'' xv. 299).

The Echinades derived their name from the ''echinus'' or the Sea Urchin , in consequence of their sharp and prickly outlines. For the same reason they were called Oxeiae, or the Sharp Islands, a name which one of them still retains under the slightly altered form of Oxeia (Oxiés, Oxiá, or Oxia). Leake remarks that the Echinades are divided into two clusters, besides Petalas (Petalá), which, being, quite barren and close to the mainland, is not claimed, or at least is not occupied by the Ithacans, though anciently it was undoubtedly one of the Echinades. The northern cluster is commonly called the Drakoneras (Dhragonares), from Drakonera (Dhragonára), the principal island; and the southern, the Oxeias (Oxiés or Scrofés). By the Venetians they were known as the islands of '''Kurtzolári''', which name belongs properly to a peninsula to the left of the mouth of the Achelous, near Oxeia. Seventeen of the islands have names, besides the four Modhia (Stamodio or Módi Islands), two of which are mere rocks, and nine of the seventeen are cultivated. These are, beginning from the south — Oxeia (Oxiá), Makri (Makrí), Vrómonas (Vromotas or Vrómona), Pontikos (Pondikónisi), Karlonísi (Karlónísi), Prováti , Lampriní (Lambrinó), Sofía (Sofiá), Drakonera (Dhragonára). Oxeia alone is lofty (421 Meter s). Makri and Vrómonas are the two islands next in importance. (Kruse, ''Hellas'', vol. ii. pt. ii. p. 455, seq.; Leake, ''Northern Greece'', vol. iii. pp. 30, seq., 50, seq.; Mure, ''Tour in Greece'', vol. i. p. 104.)

Administratively, the Echinades form part of Kefalonia Prefecture in Greece. Many of the islands are privately owned and periodically one comes up for sale.


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