Agrambela, Achaia
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Agrampela or Agrambela Αγράμπελα |
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Statistics | |
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Prefecture: | Achaia |
Province: | Kalavryta |
Municipality: | Aroania |
Municipal district: | Agrampela' (seat) |
Number of subdivisions: | 2 (Agrampela and Platanitsa) |
Location: Latitude: Longitude: |
37.9215 (37° 55' 22") N 21.8434 (21° 50' 34") E |
Population: (2001) -Village -Municipal district -Percent of the municipal district -Percent of the municipality |
180 (+91 or +102.25%) 340 0.06% |
Altitude: -lowest: -centre: |
about 600 m 840 m about 1,600 to 1,800 m |
Postal code: | GR-250 12 |
Car designation: | AX |
Agrampela or Agrambela (Greek: Αγράμπελα), accented forms: Agrámpela and Agrámbela is a village in the municipality of Akrata, Achaia prefecture, Greece. As of 2001, it had a population of 180 for the village 340 for the municipal district. The village is situated in the mountains
Contents |
[edit] Municipal district
- Platanitsa
[edit] Nearest places
[edit] Population
Year | Population | Change | Municipal district population | Percent of the municipal district | Percent of the municipality |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1896 | 268 | - | - | - | - |
1935 | 159 | -109 or -40.67% | unexisted at the time | ||
1951 | 155 | -4 or 2.52% | unexisted at the time | ||
1981 | 217 | +61 or + 39.35% | - | - | - |
1991 | 89 | -128 or -58.99% | - | - | - |
2001 | 180 | +91 or 102.25% | 340 | 7.06% | 13.33% |
[edit] Location and transportation
Agrambela is located 10 km from Psofida, south of Patras, southwest of Kalavryta, west-northwest of Tripoli and northeast of Olympia and Pyrgos.
The village has about 4 km of paved road and about 6 to 8 km of gravel road. It has about 5 km of hydro lines, and about 4 km of phone lines.
[edit] The village today
Agrambela has a school for the entire municipal district, a church, a post office, and a square (plateia). Its nearest gymnasium (middle school) and lyceum (secondary school) are in Psofida.
[edit] History
Agrambela was ruled by the Ottoman Turks with the exception from 1681 until 1715 with the last of the Venetian rule. During that period, in the 1700 census, it had 29 families. Agrambela finally became a part of Greece after the Greek War of Independence. In its early years, it was a municipal district of Lampeia in 1912 along with Platanitsa, it became an independent community. The village was known as Poretso (Πορετσό) until the early 20th century. Its inhabitant name Poretsanos which later several people had the surname.During that time, one was in Achaia and another was in Ilia. In the ancient times, the area was part of ancient Psophis. In 1896, it had 268 inhabitants, 159 in 1935 and 155 in 1951.
After World War II and the Greek Civil War, its buildings were rebuilt and emigration occurred at a higher rate until 1981 through to 1991, when the population decreased by three-fourths to four-fifths, but later recovered and doubled between the years of 1991-2001. Agrambela became connected with asphalt in the 1960smid to late 20th century. more pavement was available in recent years. Electricity, radio and automobiles were introduced in the mid-20th century, television in the late-20th century and computer and internet at the turn of the millennium. In the late-1990s, the ex-community (now a village and a municipal district) joined to become the newly formed municipality of Aroania.
[edit] Notable people
- Athanasios Logos
- Panagiotis Balkamos
- Giannis Poretsanos
- Anagnostis Triantafyllopoulos
- Panagos Bramos?
[edit] Economy
Its main economy is based on agriculture.
[edit] See also
- List of places in the Achaia prefecture
- Administrative divisions in the Achaia prefecture
[edit] External links
- Agrambela at the GTP Travel Pages
- Map and aerial photos:
- Street map information from: Mapquest, LiveLocal or Google or Yahoo! Maps
- Satellite images: Google or Microsoft Virtual Earth - image now available
- Coordinates:
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