Sellades

Sellades
Σελλάδες
Location
Sellades
Coordinates
Government
Country: Greece
Region: Epirus
Regional unit: Arta
Municipality: Nikolaos Skoufas
Municipal unit: Kompoti
Population statistics (as of 2001)
Community
 - Population: 754
Other
Time zone: EET/EEST (UTC+2/3)

Sellades (Greek: Σελλάδες) is a village in the municipal unit of Kompoti in the regional unit of Arta, Greece. In 2001 its population was 687 for the town and 754 for the community (including the village Alonia). Sellades is linked with the road connecting the GR-5/E55 ((Patras - )Antirrio - Agrinio - Arta - Ioannina) and the Pindus mountains. Sellades is located north of Amfilochia and Agrinio, northwest of Kompoti, east-northeast of Preveza, southeast of Arta. The Ambracian Gulf is to the south.

Contents

Nearest places

Population

Year Village population Municipal district population
1981 683 -
1991 718 -
2001 687 754

Origin of the name

Its origin of the name came from various sources other that it does not have as now. One of the origin of the name were the first inhabitants of the villages known as Selloi, they were people that arrived from Dodona in the Ioannina Prefecture. Another one was that its inhabitants moved and constructed horse lights and a third one was named that way in which it was constructed as a horse light. Strabo described the area as the area of Makrynoros Selaida (Σελαΐδα). Another origin was its first inhabitants had as their last name Selladitis or Seladitis (Σελλαδίτης). There is no explanation of its origin of Sellades.

History

In its Venetian documents and sources dating from 1696 said that Sellades along with the neighbouring village Megarchi paid several subjections to the Venetians. It was ruled again by the Ottomans for the next two and a half centuries. There is no written document between 1696 and the Greek War of Independence on its history except on its names which took place in the revolutionary war. The Turks recaptured the village and continued ruling the region until 1881.

Sellades finally joined Greece during the liberation of the modern southeastern Arta which included most of Thessaly that ended the Ottoman Turkish rule in 1881 and was one of the few towns to annex early to Greece. Its economy slowly improved.

Electricity and automobiles arrived in the 1960s, it was linked with pavement in the late-20th century, television arrived in the 1980s. Internet and computers arrived in the late-1990s.

External links

References