The island
Milos or Melos is a volcanic Greek island in the Aegean Sea, just north of the Sea of Crete. Milos is the southwestern-most island in the Cyclades group.
The island is famous for the statue of Aphrodite (the "Venus de Milo", now in the Louvre), and also for statues of the Greek god Asclepius (now in the British Museum) and the Poseidon and an archaic Apollo in Athens. It is also famous for its variety of wonderful beaches. The Municipality of Milos also includes the uninhabited offshore islands of Antimilos and Akradies. The combined land area is 160.147 square kilometres (61.833 sq mi) and the 2011 census population was 4,977 inhabitants.
Geography
History
During the second phase of the Peloponnesian War, in 416 BCE, Athens attacked Melos, with an army of over 3,000 soldiers, for refusing to submit tribute and refusing to join Athens' alliance against Sparta. The Athenians executed all the adult men they caught, and sold the women and children into slavery.
Later, Milos followed the fate of the other Cyclades islands, subjugated to the Macedonians, the Romans and then the Byzantines. In the early Christian times there were in Milos several Jewish residents and therefore Christianity was spread quite quickly. During Frankish period, Marco Sanudo seized Milos and in 1207 joined it with the duchy of Naxos. In 1537, Hayredin Barbarossa, one of the greatest pirates of all time, as head of the Turkish fleet, pillaged and destroyed most of the islands of the Aegean, but Milos spared by his destructive fury. Since 1566 Milos passed by the Venetians to the Turks. Throughout the Turkish occupation, it was a base for pirates.
Since 1830, according to the London Protocol, Milos, as all Cyclades islands, were included in the newly established Greek state.On May 9, 1941, the German occupation was imposed on the island, by way of exception, in relation to the other islands of the Cyclades, which joined the Italian occupation zone.