Giannitsa Lake

Former lake of Greece
40°41′17″N 22°23′20″E / 40.68806°N 22.38889°E / 40.68806; 22.38889TypePost-glacial lakeEtymologyNamed after the town of Giannitsa.Primary inflowsLoudias RiverPrimary outflowsLoudias RiverSurface areac. 40.5 km2 (15.6 sq mi)SettlementsGiannitsaMap

Giannitsa Lake (Greek: Λίμνη Γιαννιτσών), also known as Loudias Lake (Greek: Λίμνη Λουδία) is a former post-glacial lake in Central Macedonia, Greece, south of the town of Giannitsa and north of Gidas (later renamed Alexandreia). It or the surrounding marshland were sometimes called Borboros 'slime' or Borboros Limen.[1] Shallow, swampy, and variable-sized, it was drained from 1928 to 1932 and became agricultural land.

History

It was fed by the Loudias River and the plain of Roumlouki stretched to its south.

In Bulgarian the lake was called Enidzhevardarsko Lake (Ениджева̀рдарското езеро) or Pazarsko Swamp (Пазарското блато).

The Lake played a major role in the Macedonian Struggle between the Greeks and Bulgarians, as it provided hiding places for the armed bands of both sides. The conflict for control of the Lake is the central historical event of Penelope Delta's 1937 novel The Secrets of the Swamp.

The lake was drained in 1928-1932 by the New York Foundation Company.[2]

Gallery

  • Greek revolutionaries Tellos Agras and Ioannis Demestichas at Giannitsa Lake c. 1906
    Greek revolutionaries Tellos Agras and Ioannis Demestichas at Giannitsa Lake c. 1906
  • Bulgarian revolutionary Apostol Petkov at Giannitsa Lake c. 1906
    Bulgarian revolutionary Apostol Petkov at Giannitsa Lake c. 1906

Notes

  1. ^ Ghilardi; Théophile Alphonse Desdevises-du-Dezert, Géographie ancienne de la Macédoine (A. Durand, 1863)
  2. ^ Eugene N. Borza, In the shadow of Olympus: the emergence of Macedon (1992) ISBN 0-691-00880-9, p. 289; Matthieu Ghilardi et al., "Human occupation and geomorphological evolution of the Thessaloniki Plain (Greece) since mid Holocene", Journal of Archaeological Science 35:1:111-125 (January 2008)

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Giannitsa Lake.
  • Google Earth view of Giannitsa and the drained lakebed
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