Citadel

Department Archive
Collection Byzantine Research Fund
Reference No. BRF/02/01/14/119
Level Item
Place Monemvasia
Dates Nov-06
Donor/Creator Wace, Mr Alan John Bayard
Scope and Content Distant view. The photograph is initialed in pencil at the back (A.J.B. Wace). Further annotation in pencil survives.
Further information Monemvasia is built on a steep rock rising majestically from the sea a short distance from the most south-eastern extremity of the Peloponnese. Naturally fortified and in a strategic position (its name is translated as: only one entrance) it was inhabited as early as the 6th c. and reached its peak in the 14th c. Combined forces of the Franks and the Venetians besieged Monemvasia in 1246 while in 1262 it returned to Byzantine hands. Under Andronikos II it became the seat of the tenth bishopric of the Byzantine empire. After a short period of independence, having seen off Sultan Mehmed in 1460 and enjoying for three years the protection of Pope Pius II, it was conquered alternately by the Venetians and the Turks. The circuit walls of the acropolis, a rectangular fortress with corner towers, which enclosed a very large area, although having Byzantine origins cannot be dated earlier than 1460. Considerable sections of the south and east ramparts still survive in excellent condition.
Related records [BSA SPHS 01/1080.2898], Monemvasia: Kastro [castle], 1906
Reference 1907. JHS 27 (2): 238, fig.3. Link to article