(excerpt from the book: Homeric Ithaca, H. Putman Cramer / G. Metaxas)
Recent excavations and archaeological
research[i]
have shown that the Pronnoi (Πρόννοι) district, in the South eastern part of Kephallenia (Kefalonia), contains a great many
prehistoric sites. The outstanding find in this area has been the monumental
Mycenaean royal tholos tomb[ii]
outside the village
of Tzannata ,
which attests to the existence of a major city of some importance beyond its
own borders, ruled by a Mycenaean prince.[iii]
Aerial photograph of the Mycenaean royal tholos tomb
at Arès near Tzannata, just outside the impressive Poros gorge, which was
excavated from 1992 to 1994 by Dr. Lazaros Kolonas, who became later the General Director of Antiquities in the
Ministry of Culture.
(Photo: Lazaros Kolonas)
It is a fact that after more than a
hundred years of excavations in the Ionian Islands – mostly on Ithaki,[iv]
where finds attesting to Mycenaean habitation have been few and far between –
it appears from the
archaeological evidence that Kephallenia as a whole was the
undisputed Mycenaean centre in the islands of western Greece .[v]
It is therefore reasonable to ask whether the Mycenaean sites in the Pronnoi
district could possibly be connected with the centre of Homeric (Mycenaean?) Ithaca, for which the archaeologist’s spade
has been searching for so long.[vi]
A map
of 1798 showing Aitolia, Akarnania, the north-west Peloponnese and the islands
of Kephallenia, Ithaki and Lefkada. The city-state of Pronnoi (Pronaea) is
marked at the south-eastern tip of Kephallenia. (Map collection
of Fotis Kremmydas).
Evidently the territory
of Pronnoi was one of the most
important areas of Kephallenia (Kefalonia) from early historical times[i]
by virtue of its strategic geographical location, since it lies in a key
position[ii]
for controlling ship movements in the central Ionian Sea and is the closest
part of the island to the mainland of Central Greece and the Peloponnese .[iii]
(See map, satellite images and photographs.)
Its main marketable resource was the
timber from the Mount Ainos fir
forests (see coins of the city-state of Pronnoi), which the Pronnaians
processed and exported from the only point on the coast where there was an
outlet from the hinterland, the mouth of the Vohynas torrent, which served as
the port for all the surrounding area. Their other sources of income were
shipping, hunting, piracy and cultivation of the fertile and well-watered
valleys of Iraklio, Skala, Katelios and Elios, where they also grazed their
livestock. All these resources made the Pronnoi district an ideal location for
the establishment of a flourishing Mycenaean city, and the existence of such a
city has been confirmed by the archaeological finds mentioned above.
Poros . South eastern part of Kephallenia (Kefalonia)
The impressive Poros gorge . In the background is Mount Ainos
Since the analysis and interpretation of the
archaeological evidence is obviously a matter for archaeologists, in this site we shall try to demonstrate that the principal settlements in the Pronnoi district have been connected
through the ages with those of the centre
of Homeric (Mycenaean?) Ithaca and are clearly to be identified with them.
[i] Stamatina Zapanti, «Η συμμετοχή των
Πρόννων Κεφαλληνίας στη Β’ Αθηναϊκή Συμμαχία», Κεφαλληνιακά Χρονικά 5 (1986) 193-200.
[ii] Georgios Souris, «Η Σημασία της
Κεφαλλωνιάς για τα Ελληνιστικά κράτη και τη Ρώμη», Κεφαλληνιακά Χρονικά 1 (1976) 113.
[iii] Polybios V 3.9-4.
[i] Ioannis Moschos,
«Μυκηναϊκή κατοίκηση στην Κεφαλληνία. Πληθυσμιακοί πυρήνες, κατάλογος των
θέσεων και συμπεράσματα», paper presented to the VII Panionian Conference,
Lefkada 2002.
[iii] Lazaros Kolonas, «Αρχαίες εγκαταστάσεις
νοτιοανατολικής Κεφαλονιάς, θέσεις στρατηγικού ελέγχου του θαλάσσιου και χερσαίου
χώρου της περιοχής», Proceedings of the VII Panionian Congress, II, 37-46.
[v] S. Iakovidis, «Κεφαλληνία,
Ιθάκη και Ζάκυνθος κατά την Μυκηναϊκή περίοδο», Proceedings of the VII Panionian Congress, I, 85-103.
[vi] Lazaros Kolonas, «Αρχαίες
εγκαταστάσεις νοτιοανατολικής Κεφαλονιάς, θέσεις στρατηγικού ελέγχου του
θαλάσσιου και χερσαίου χώρου της περιοχής»,
Proceedings of the VII Panionian Congress, II, 37-46.
Few and far between, yes, at Ithaca, if you ignore the giant palace found there. Notably, no such complex has been found on another Ionian island.
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