Agios Georgios Nileias

Agios Georgios Nileias
Άγιος Γεώργιος Νηλείας
Location
Agios Georgios Nileias
Coordinates
Government
Country: Greece
Region: Thessaly
Regional unit: Magnesia
Municipality: South Pelion
Municipal unit: Milies
Population statistics (as of 2001)
Village
 - Population: 1,092
Other
Time zone: EET/EEST (UTC+2/3)
Auto: ΒΟ

Agios Georgios Nileias (Greek: Άγιος Γεώργιος Νηλείας) is a Greek village located 20 km east of Volos in the Magnesia prefecture. Agios Georgios Nileias is built amphitheatrically at the elevation of 700 m on the slopes of Pelion. Agios Georgios Nileias is in the municipal unit of Milies. Its population in 2001 was 1,092 for the municipal district. Agios Georgios Nileias is located between Agios Vlasios and Pinakates

Contents

Subdivisions

Nearest places

Population

Year Population village Municipal district population
1991 - 1,243
1991 161 -
2001 179 1,092

Geography

The area is mountainous and heavily forested, although there are some grasslands and bushes. Farmland lies around the village, which produces olives and other crops.

History

The first inhabitants of the village were foresters, and settled around the 15th century. The Aigiorgeites lived in the village in the summer and in the winter moved down to towns at lower elevations, such as Agia Triada, Ano Gatzea and Kato Gatzea.

The town was a battleground during the Greek War of Independence of 1821, but the town fell into Turkish hands for the next sixty years and the village was burnt. The village and its settlements were freed from the Ottoman and joined the rest of Greece in 1881. The village became a part of the old municipality of Nileias, but this municipality was dissolved in 1914 and downgraded to the communities of Ano and Kato Lechonia, Agios Vlassios (then Karabasi), Agios Georgios, Drakeia, Agios Lavrentios and Agria. It remained an autonomous commune until 1998. Nileia was an ancient city located close to modern Volos.

The village had a excellent lifestyle from the late-19th century up until World War II. Water was plentiful, and had lots of water and rich in production which includes olives and apple. Many fortunes of its village residents left for Egypt and elsewhere.

The village declined after the Second World War and the Greek Civil War. Many residents emigrated to lower elevations. Today, Agios Georgios Nileios has fewer residents, many homes.

About the village

Agios Georgios Nileias features a municipal museum named after Nikolas Pavlopoulos. The museum is open on weekdays with the historian Kostas Liapis who wrote the periodical I vigla.

Persons

See also

References

External links

References