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Heraklion
Heraklion is close to the
ruins of the palace of Knossos, which in
Minoan times was the biggest centre of
population on Crete. It is thus very
likely that there was a port here as long
ago as 2000 BC. There is,however, no
archaeological evidence of the
port.
The present city of Heraklion was founded
in 824 AD by the Saracens (an Arabic
Muslim people). They built a moat around
the city for protection, and named the
city Handaq, 'moat'. The Saracens allowed
the port to be used as a safe haven for
pirates, much to the annoyance of the
nearby Byzantine Empire.
In 961, the Byzantines,
under the command of Nikiforos Fokas,
later to become Byzantine Emperor,
attacked and defeated the city,
slaughtered the Saracens, looted the
city, and burned it to the ground. They
remained in control of the rebuilt
Khandak for the next 243 years.
In 1204, the city was
bought by the Republic of Venice as part
of a complicated political deal which
involved among other things, the
Crusaders of the Fourth Crusade restoring
the deposed Byzantine emperor Isaac II
Angelus to his throne. The Venetians
improved on the ditch by building
enormous fortifications, most of which
are still in place, including a giant
wall, in places up to 40 m thick, with 7
bastions, and a fortress in the harbour.
Khandak was renamed to Candia in Italian
and became the seat of the Duke of
Candia. As a result, the Venetian
administrative district of Crete became
known as "Regno di Candia" (Kingdom of
Candia). The city retained the name of
Candia for centuries and the same name
was often used to refer to the whole
island of Crete as well. To secure their
rule, Venetians began in 1212 to resettle
families from Venice on Crete. The
coexistence of two different cultures and
the influence of Italian Renaissance lead
to a flourishing of letters and the arts
in Candia and Crete in general, that is
today known as the Cretan
Renaissance.
After the Venetians came
the Ottoman Empire. They besieged the
city for 22 years in a bloody war in
which 30,000 Cretans and 120,000 Ottoman
soldiers died.[citation needed] The
Venetians surrendered in 1669. Under the
Ottomans, the city was known officially
as Kandiye (again also applied to the
whole island of Crete) but informally as
Megalo Kastro 'Big Castle'. During the
Ottoman period, the harbour silted up, so
most shipping shifted to Hania in the
west of the island.
In the period of autonomy
under Great Power supervision
(1898-1908)Candia was part of the British
zone. With the rest of Crete, it became
part of the Cretan State in 1908, and was
incorporated into the Kingdom of Greece
in 1913. Upon its union with Greece it
was renamed "Heraklion", after the Roman
port of Heracleum 'Heracles' city' whose
exact location is unknown. The biggest
monument of the city is the Venetian
medieval fortress Rocca al Mare (also
known as Koules) located at the port.
All information's found
at Wikipedia
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