Kilkis

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Kilkis
Κιλκίς
Location
Kilkis (Greece)
Kilkis
Coordinates 40°59′N 22°52′E / 40.983, 22.867Coordinates: 40°59′N 22°52′E / 40.983, 22.867
Time zone: EET/EEST (UTC+2/3)
Elevation (center): 280 m (919 ft)
Government
Country: Greece
Periphery: Central Macedonia
Prefecture: Kilkis
Mayor: Dimitrios Terzedis
Population statistics (as of 2001[1])
City Proper
 - Population: 24,812
 - Area:[2] 306.557 km² (118 sq mi)
 - Density: 81 /km² (210 /sq mi)
Codes
Postal: 611 00
Area: 23410
Auto: ΚΙ
Website
www.dhmoskilkis.gr

Kilkis (Greek: Κιλκίς) is an industrial city in Central Macedonia, Greece. As of 2001 there were 17,430 people living within the city and a total of 24,812 people living in the administrative area of the municipality of Kilkis. It is also the capital city of the prefecture (or nomos) of Kilkis and the capital of one of the two local provinces (or eparchia) of its prefecture. The city was known in Bulgarian: Кукуш, Kukuš,and in Turkish: Kılkış)

Contents

[edit] History

There have been important findings excavated at various regions of the prefecture of Kilkis with elements dating back to as early as the Bronze and Iron Age. Their remains as well as ancient tombs of the 2nd millennium BC provide invaluable information about lifestyle at that time. The town of Paeonia, near the Axios River , is cited for the first time in the Homer’s Epics. As early as the 8th century BC, the wider region of Kilkis was established as a Greek region and ruled as part of the Macedonian kingdom. At that time, many towns flourished, such as Idomeni, Atalanti, Gortynia, Fiska, Terpillos, Evropos and Kallindria. In 148 BC, the Romans take over for two and a half centuries and eventually gave way to invasions of barbaric tribes, such as the Goths, the Huns, the Avars and the Slavs who gradually settled in the Balkan Peninsula.

Kilkis changed hands several times. In the Byzantine era it finally flourished. During the reign of the Palaeologus dynasty in particular, important infrastructure works were realized in this prefecture. The period of prosperity ended in 1430, when Thessalonica and the entire region came under the Ottomans.

[edit] First and Second Balkan Wars

In the First Balkan War of 1912 it was briefly taken over by Bulgaria. In the Second Balkan War of 1913, the Greek army captured the city after a three-day battle between June 19-June 21. Although costly, with over 5,000 casualties on the Greek side and 7,000 on the Bulgarian, the Greek victory proved a decisive step towards victory in the war. Kilkis was almost completely destroyed during the battle and virtually all of its pre-war 7,000 Bulgarian inhabitants were expelled into Bulgaria. The new town was built closer to the railway to Thessaloniki, around the Greek church of Saint George, and was settled by Greeks transferred from Bulgaria and the Ottoman Empire.

In the mid-twenties, after the Asia Minor Catastrophe when Greece lost its Asia Minor territories to Turkey, waves of destitute refugees washed into Kilkis, thus giving a new boost to the region and contributing to the increase of its population. Likewise, the Turks (a generic term for the Moslem population) of the region had to leave for the new Turkish state in the exchange of populations. Barely two decades later, the Second World War broke out and devastated the region once again.

[edit] World War II

The significance of the Battle of Kilkis-Lahanas can be appreciated by the fact that Greece named a battleship after the city. However, Kilkis was sunk by a German Junkers Ju 87 (Stuka) dive-bomber on April 23, 1941, along with its sister-ship, in the third week of the invasion of Greece by Nazi Germany. The city of Kilkis came under the Axis of Bulgarian occupation in 1943 when the Bulgarian zone of occupation was expanded to include the prefectures of Kilkis and Halkidiki. The new authorities pursued a policy of "Bulgarianisation" to annex the region to Bulgaria, but were forbidden from doing so by their German allies, who feared destabilising Greece if the Bulgarians proceeded. The region became a major centre for Greek partisan resistance activity before being recaptured by Greece in 1944.

[edit] Municipal districts

[edit] Subdivisions

[edit] Famous inhabitants of Kilkis

[edit] References

  1. ^ PDF (875 KB) 2001 Census (Greek). National Statistical Service of Greece (ΕΣΥΕ). www.statistics.gr. Retrieved on 2007-10-30.
  2. ^ (Greek) Basic Characteristics. Ministry of the Interior. www.ypes.gr. Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
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