Astipalea (or Astypalea or Astypalaia, Greek:
Αστυπάλαια; Italian: Stampalia)
is a Greek island with 1.238 residents (2001 Census). It belongs to
the Dodecanese, an island group of twelve major islands in the
southeastern Aegean Sea. The Island is 18 Km. long, 13 Km. wide at
the most, and covers an area of 99 Km. The coasts of Astypalea are
rocky with many small pebble-strewn beaches. A small band of land of
roughly 10 kilometres, almost separates the island in two sections.
The capital and main harbour of the island is Astypalea or Hora, as
it is called by the locals. Astypalea has ferry connections with
Piraeus and the other islands of the Dodecanese and flight
connections with Athens.
In Greek mythology, Astypalaia was a woman abducted by
Poseidon in the form of a winged fish-tailed leopard.It was
colonized by Megara, and its constitution and buildings are known
from numerous inscriptions. The Roman emperors recognized it as a
free state.During the Middle Ages it belonged to the Byzantines
until 1207, when - in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade - it
became fee of the Querini, a noble Venetian family, until 1522. The
Querini built a castle that is still in place and added the name of
the island to their family name, that became Querini Stampalia.
Astypalea became Turkish in 1522, and the Ottomans kept it until
1912, with only two interruptions: from 1648 until 1668, during the
War of Crete, it was occupied by Venice, and from 1821 to 1828 it
joined the insurgents during the Greek War of Independence.
Occupied again by the Ottomans in 1828, on April 12th, 1912,
(during the War of Libya) a detachment of the Regia Marina landed on
Astypalea, which became so the first island of the Dodecanese to be
occupied by Italy. From there the Italians, on the night between 3rd
and 4th of May, landed on Rhodes. The island remained under Italian
governance until WWII. In 1947, together with the whole Dodecanese,
it joined Greece.