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A
city of more than three thousand years of Greek history and civilisation.
The first Greeks, who arrived on the island from mainland Greece and Asia
Minor, immediately started the process of Hellenising Cyprus and its
civilisation, by giving it Greek characteristics. Historical evidence
links the present population of the island to the very first settlers from
the Greek mainland. The Achaeans (a Greek race in ancient Greece) gave
their name to the coast east of Kyrenia -the coast of the Achaeans.
Remains of people of Achaean origin, their artefacts and bones can be
found in the famous Castle of Kyrenia, where a museum was set up just
before the Turkish invasion in the summer of 1974.
Lycophronas states that Kepheas, an Achaean from Dyme and Oleno in Achaea,
built Kyrenia. Strabo testifies that Dyme was 60 stadia from Araxo and
later, in 756 BC, it was amalgamated with the neighbouring city of Oleno
and other cities. One of these cities was named Kerynia. Some tombs
belonging to this "Kerynia" were found in July 1970. Pausanias
mentions that many Myceneans established themselves in this Greek city. It
was famous for its temple of Eumenides, which had the miraculous power of
sending the impious and murderers mad.
The name Kerynia is very often found in many parts of ancient Greece. A
mountain in Peloponnesos is called Kerynia. There is also another mountain
in Peloponnesos called Kerynia, where a stag with golden horns used to
live and it is known as the "Kerynitis Stag" that was dedicated
to Artemis by the nymph Taigete. It was this stag that Hercules hunted for
a year before he was able to catch it.
Kerynia was one of the Several Kingdoms of Cyprus. The descendants of
their founders ruled these small states. As the descendants of Teucer
ruled Salamis, so the direct descendants of Kepheas ruled Kyrenia.
During its long history, Cyprus inevitably was succumbed to its powerful
neighbours as they periodically ruled the Eastern Mediterranean. Yet
the local kings still ruled the Island's Kingdoms ensuring that their
nationality, language, customs and traditions were preserved. In July
1974, the Turks invaded Kyrenia. They committed atrocities beyond
imagination. They murdered thousands of innocent civilians in cold blood,
attacked and raped defenceless women and young girls at gunpoint and
destroyed Christian churches and many other Greek monuments. They
forcibly expelled all its Greek inhabitants from their homes and colonised
the occupied area with mainland Turks. They systematically embarked in
looting the Greek and English properties. They forcibly transferred,
deported and murdered prisoners of war.
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The
Turkish invaders were euphemistically dubbed by the then Turkish Prime
Minister as "peacemakers", whilst the invasion itself was given
the name of the 'Attila Plan".
Here is how St. Augustine (who died in 604 A.D) in his book "On the
Invasion of the Vandals and the Huns" describes the Hordes of Attila
in Europe, which 13 centuries later could describe the 1974 Turkish
Invasion of Cyprus.
"The Barbarians wasted everything with hostile cruelty. They found a
province well cultivated and plenteous, the beauty of the whole earth.
They carried their destructive arms into every corner of it; they
developed it by their devastation, exterminating everything by fire and
sword. They tortured their prisoners with exquisite cruelty, to force a
discovery of their hidden treasures. The more they discovered the more
they expected, and the more implacable they became. They regarded neither
the infirmities of age nor of sex, neither the dignity of the noble nor
the sanctity of the priest; but the more illustrious their prisoners, the
more barbarously they insulted the Cultivated lands they left wastes
populous cities with scarcely an inhabitant".
In the seventeenth century A.D. the walls were
built all the way around the town in order to defend it and the port
against the Arab raids. The interior walls are still visible but the
harbour is now open to the sea. To the southeast of the modern harbour
lies the old Roman harbour,protected by breakwaters at its north and south
ends.
The fairy castle of St. Hilarion, built on a
mountain peak 2,200 feet above the sea level, is the most impressive of
the three castles on the Kyrenia mountain range. In the past, the site was
called Didymus (twin), being one of the twin peaks on the Kyrenia range.
The castle was named after the humble hermit Hilarion for whom a church
was also built. During the 10th century, the Byzantines built a church and
defensive walls on the site.
During the Lusignan reign, it was eventually
converted into a fortified castle and was also used as the summerhouse of
the Lusignan royal family. The castle of Buffavento (meaning `the definer
of the winds'), built in the 11th century AD, forms part of a defence
scheme, which includes the St. Hilarion and the Kantara castles. It stands
at 3,131 feet above the sea level and is mainly interesting to see the
account of its commanding position. The shattered walls still retain their
outstanding position, high against the passing clouds.
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