KORONE CASTLE

Korone castle is located inside Korone village about 5 minutes away from Infinity Blue Villas is open all day and night free of charge to visit and is one of the last Castles in greece with people actually living inside it

A castle with impressive fortifications at the southwestern end of Peloponnese which existed since the 7th century AD and was completed and reconstructed by the Venetians in the 13th century. The city flourished in the following centuries, but it was constantly in the middle of the long conflict between Venetians and Turks.

History

An ancient acropolis existed at the location of the castle since before the Trojan war. Its name was Aisini and it was one of the 7 cities offered by Agamemnon to Achilles to ease his anger according to Homer.

In the 6th or 7th century AD, the Byzantines built a fortress there.

As many castles in Peloponnese, the city became important and flourished after the 13th century and the Frankish occupation.

Following the fall of Constantinople to the Fourth Crusade in 1204, a Venetian fleet under Premarini and the son of Dandolo occupied it in 1206, and converted the port into a provisioning station “where all passing ships could receive a month’s rations”, a custom maintained, we are told, when the place became a regular Venetian colony.

Since 1205 Koroni belonged to the Frankish Principality of Achaea. In 1209, the ruler of Achaea Geoffroi de Villehardouin I had no choice than to cede officially the castle-city to the Venetians.

The Venetians made a major reconstruction and expansion of the castle which finished around the end of that century.

The fortress and town were captured by the Ottoman troops of Sultan Bayezid II, who led personally the operation, in 1500.

In 1532, the Habsburg emperor Charles V ordered the Genoese admiral Andrea Doria to attack Koroni as a diversion to the Turkish campaigns in Hungary. Doria managed to capture the city, and to lay waste to the surrounding coast.
In spring 1533, the Ottoman Emperor Suleiman the Magnificent sent 60 galleys to retake the city. They blockaded the harbour, but they were defeated by Doria, highlighting the weakness of the Ottoman Navy at that time. An Ottoman land army however was successful in laying a siege around the city, forcing its surrender on 1 April 1534. The weakened Spanish garrison was allowed to leave the city unharmed

In 1685 the Venetians under general Morozini returned and stayed until 1715. But the golden age of the city was not revived.

After that, Koroni remained under Turkish occupation. The fortress suffered serious damages after a heavy bombardment during the Orlof events in 1770. In the Greek revolution, the Greek fighters were unable to capture the city.

Koroni was liberated in 1828 by the French General Nicolas Joseph Maison, after the battle of Navarino.

The most important monuments of the site are:

  • The Byzantine Castle. In the 13th century it was fortified by the Venetians who were responsible for the construction of towers and machicolations.
  • Byzantine church of Aghia Sophia (Holy Wisdom). Three-aisled basilica with colonnades. A second church was built over the prothesis, also dedicated to Aghia Sophia and was reconstructed at the beginning of the century.
  • Church of St. Charalambos. Spacious, single-aisled, wooden-roofed church built at the beginning of the second Venetian occupation. It was originally dedicated to St. Rocco.
  • Church of Panaghia Eleistria. Spacious, single-aisled, wooden-roofed church, dated to the end of the 19th or the beginning of the 20th century.

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