Petrina, Arcadia

Petrina
Πετρίνα
Location
Petrina
Coordinates
Government
Country: Greece
Region: Peloponnese
Regional unit: Arcadia
Municipality: Megalopoli
Municipal unit: Falaisia
Population statistics (as of 2001)
Community
 - Population: 90
Other
Time zone: EET/EEST (UTC+2/3)

Petrina (Greek: Πετρίνα) is a Greek village in Arcadia, located 4 km south of Voutsara around 15 to 18 km southeast of Megalopoli, 12 km east from the nearest interchange with the GR-7/E65 (Kalamata - Megalopoli - Tripoli) east of Leontari and 60 km from Kalamata, about 40 and 45 km west-southwest of Tripoli and northwest of Sparta. Petrina is connected with the road linking the Megalopoli-Anavryto Road and the Megalopoli-Sparta Road and a branch to the road of the same name. Petrina had a population of 50 in 2001 for the village. Petrina is in the municipal unit of Falaisia. The Laconia prefecture is 4 km to the southeast.

Contents

Villages

Nearest places

Geography

Petrina is situated between the mountains and the hills. The mountains cover the northern and southern portions and are made up of rocks with grasslands and bushes along with a couple of forests and grasses and bushes around the areas. The branch of the Alfeios river lies to the north. Farmlands are also within the village. Its panorama includes the mountains around the area including the northern and the eastern parts, it cannot see the Lykaio mountains to the west. The mountaintop elevating 1,197 m is to the south.

Its residential houses and buildings are within the main road and it is about 400 m long. Much of the houses were stone built until the 1960s. Electricity arrived in the same year. Vehicles arrived in the 1970s, the pavement of the main road and television arrived in the 1980s and computer and internet are rarely known in the beginning of the 21st century and up to date technology are not seen.

Population

Year Population village Population municipal district
1981 145 -
1991 58 -
2001 50 90

History

The village used to have a large population before the beginning of the 20th century. After World War II and the Greek Civil War, the population began to decline as residents moved to larger towns and cities and outside of Greece including North America. The population between 1981 and 1991 declined but it recovered between the 1991 and the 2001 censues.

External links

See also

References