Zarko

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Zarko
Ζάρκο or Ζάρκος
Statistics
Prefecture: Trikala
Province: Trikala
Municipality: Farkadona
Municipal district: Zarkos (seat)
Location:
Latitude:
Longitude:

39.442 (39° 26' 25") N
22.1225 (22° 7' 21") E
Population: (2001)
-Town (Change)
-Percent of the municipality

1,498 (-213 or -12.45% from 1991)
21.12%

Altitude:
 -lowest:
 -centre:

about 120 m (south)
130 m
about 800 to 1,000 m (north)
Postal code: GR-420 30
Car designation (as of 2006): TK
View of Zarko from the small church of Agios Nikolaos
View of Zarko from the small church of Agios Nikolaos

Zarko (Greek, Modern: Ζάρκο), older form: -on or Zarkos, part of the Farkadona municipality, is a village in the Trikala Prefecture, Greece. Zarko had a 2001 population of 1,498 and is ranked fourth when it is up to villages and towns in the municipality, since the turn of the millennium, it fell below Grizano's population. Zarko is located southwest of Tyrnavos, west of Larissa, north-northeast of Karditsa and east of the city of Trikala. Zarko is located in the Thessalian Plain, the mountains dominate the north.

Contents

[edit] Population

Year Village population Change Percent of the municipality
1981 1,825 - -
1991 1,711 -114 or -6.25% -
2001 1,498 -213 or -12.45% 21.12%

[edit] History

Zarko's initial name was ‘Faytos’, however still it is not clear at which exactly point the name changed to 'Zarko'.

There is also loads of speculation regarding the source of its current name. Some people say that deer (zarkadia) used to live around the area, while others believe that this is actually the name (Zarko) of a Yugoslavian General who helped in a way to liberate the whole area.

The fact is that it all started thousands of years ago as archaeological excavations in the wider area brought up buildings of a prehistoric settlement, probably of around 6500-5800 BC.

During the Turkish occupation years Zarko was one of the main centres of the wider Thessaly area. There was more than a 5000 population and there was a Greek, a Turkish and a Jewish area. Zarko's people were mainly working in the fields producing cotton and they were quite capable of producing fabrics of the highest quality; in the late 19th century the 'Zarkina pania' (cotton fabrics of Zarko) were well-known in the area.

Zarkos was not Greek until the liberation of much Thessaly as well as the modern south-eastern Arta Prefecture in 1881. Now-days you can still see the Turkish and the Greek forts that were build in the 19th century in order to define the borders between the 2 countries.

After World War II and the Greek Civil War, the population steadily declined as residents moved to larger towns and cities. Many people also left as immigrants to countries like Germany and the United States.

In the mid 50’s Zarko was the very first village in the area to start modernising the traditional way of agriculture. It introduced the first ‘fabric made water-pipes’ that were used in order to water the cotton fields, as well as bringing in the area the first tractors.

Electricity and automobiles arrived in the 1960s, it was linked with pavement in the late-20th century while television arrived in the 1970s. Internet and computers arrived in the late-1990s.

A special note needs to be done regarding the 12th century St. John’s monastery which is located around 2 kilometres north of Zarkos. Deserted for many years it is now reconstructed and occupied with nuns.

[edit] Other

Zarko has an elementary school, a gymnasium (secondary school), a few churches, a post office and a square (plateia).

Many hunters choose the area for taking up their hobby, due to the large number of birds and animals that live there.

Zarko is also a relatively often used persons name in the ex Yugoslavian countries.

[edit] External links

[edit] See also

Municipal districts of the municipality of Farkadona
Achladochori | Diasello | Farkadona | Grizano | Keramidi | Panagitsa | Pineias | Zarkos
Greece | Thessaly | Karditsa | Trikala | Palaiokastro

Coordinates: 39°37′N, 22°08′E

Languages