Assos Castle

Coordinates: 38°22′59″N 20°31′48″E / 38.383°N 20.530°E / 38.383; 20.530
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Assos Castle
Κάστρο της Άσσου
View of the Assos Castle
Map
General information
Town or cityAssos, Cephalonia
CountryGreece
Construction started1593
Design and construction
Architect(s)Marino Gentillini

The Assos Castle (Greek: Κάστρο της Άσσου, romanizedKastro tis Assou) is a Venetian fortification on Cephalonia island in western Greece.

Together with St George's Castle, the castle of Assos is a fine example of military architecture of the island of Cephalonia—British general Charles James Napier described it as 'stronger than Gibraltar'—and one of its main tourist attractions. It overlooks the bay of Agia Kyriaki, north of Paliki, and could act as a base from which to defend the island, to protect against pirates as well as a naval invasion.[1] The castle stands on the top of a 170 m high rocky hill, which encompasses the entire peninsula of Assos. The castle is protected by a wall of 2000 meters length, and covers an area of 44,000 sq. meters.[citation needed]

History[edit]

1690 plan of Assos castle, by Jacob Peeters

While Cephalonia was under Venetian rule, in 1584, a petition by the nobles of Cephalonia was presented to the Venetian Senate for the creation of a new fortress, as the Castle of Saint George (the other castle of Cephalonia) could not defend the entire island against the Turkish threat and the pirate raids.[2] At the time Venice had a plan for protecting territories in the east by founding a city within the castle and moving their administration there from St. George's. Building commenced in 1593 under the supervision of Ambrosius Cornelius (Ven. Ambroso Corner), as the sign outside the main gate shows. The castle was built by the Venetian architect Marino Gentillini, between 1593-6. Gentillini eventually married and settled in Cephalonia, and his name was inscribed in the Libro d'Oro of noble families. His descendants today preserve the pioneering Gentillini winery.[3]

Assos has always had a small population. Its location meant that under siege its supplies, including water, could be cut off. Still, the castle became the capital of northern Cephalonia as a large fort with a small settlement inside. In 1684, the Venetians took Lefkas from the Turks and the Assos castle lost its strategic importance. In 1757, with piracy and the Turkish threat reduced, the Venetians founded Argostoli, which became the main town of the island. Asos remained the seat of the Venetian provveditore until the Fall of the Republic of Venice and the end of Venetian rule in Cephalonia. In 1822, about 1700 people came from Souli to stay in the Assos fortress and the whole area became a quarantine area, resulting in a settlement within the fortress named Souli. For the next century, Assos continued to be a fortress without a military role. In the late 1920s, a prison was started there which after the World War II hosted political prisoners, who kept vineyards and crops of cereal. The Ionian Islands were badly damaged by the Ionian Earthquake in 1953. After that, most people of the castle left and the prison was closed. The 1961 census found only 6 people living in the fortress, the last of whom left in 1963. They had been known as the "Kastrinoi" ("people of the castle"), comprising large families who mainly cultivated olives and grapes.[4]

Access[edit]

Today the castle is open daily with no entry fee.[4] Access to the castle is by a renovated stone path. Parts of the walls and an arched entrance gate with the Venetian Lion of Saint Mark[5] are the mainly preserved sections. Visitors can see within the ruins the small church of St. Mark and the house of the Venetian High Commissioner. Close to the castle is the small, abandoned, church of the Prophet Elias which was built in 1888 on the ruins of another small church dating from 1500. Near the church are the ruins of a Venetian building owned by the Gentilini family.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Bittlestone, Robert; Diggle, James; Underhill, John (2005-09-19). Odysseus Unbound: The Search for Homer's Ithaca. Cambridge University Press. p. 435. ISBN 9780521853576. assos%20castle.
  2. ^ Papathanassiou, Manolis. "Assos Fortress - Greek Castles". www.kastra.eu. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  3. ^ www.gentilini.gr. "GENTILINI Winery & Vineyards - About us". www.gentilini.gr. Archived from the original on 2017-02-25. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  4. ^ a b nathan. "The Assos Fortress, Kefalonia Greece". www.agni.gr. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  5. ^ "Castle of Assos in Kefalonia island - Greeka.com". Greeka. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  6. ^ martin. "Assos Fortress". www.ionian-island.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2016-12-21. Retrieved 2016-09-22.

38°22′59″N 20°31′48″E / 38.383°N 20.530°E / 38.383; 20.530