| Didymoteicho (Διδυμότειχο) | |
|---|---|
A church in Didymoteicho |
|
| Location | |
| Coordinates | Coordinates: |
| Time zone: | EET/EEST ([[UTC+2]]/[[UTC+3|3]]) |
| Elevation (center): | m ( ft) |
| Government | |
| Country: | Greece |
| Periphery: | East Macedonia and Thrace |
| Prefecture: | Evros |
| Mayor: | Christos Tokamanis |
| Population statistics (as of 2001) | |
| City Proper | |
| - Population: | |
| - Area:[1] | km² ( sq mi) |
| - Density: | /km² ( /sq mi) |
| Codes | |
| Postal codes: | 683 00 |
| Area codes: | 25530 |
| License plate codes: | OP |
| Website | |
| www.didymoteicho.gr | |
Didymoteicho (also spelled Didimoteixo, Didimoticho), (Greek,
Modern: Διδυμότειχο, Ancient/
Forests dominate the banks and parts of the plain. Much of the area is used for farming. The main produce is cattle, fruits and vegetables and some flowers. The hills dominate further west.
The town was sacked by the Romans in 204. In medieval times it was an important market town. Under Turkish rule it was known as Dimetoka or Demotika. The Ottoman sultan Bayezid II was born there. After the Poltava campaign King Charles XII of Sweden lived in the town (1713-1714). During the Ottoman period, the town was a major center for the Bektashi Sufi order.
The city's remains from Roman times, known as "Kale", are located near the Ancient Roman city of Plotinopoulis on the Evros River. Plotinopoulis was founded by the Emperor Trajan as he marched up the Evros River valley on his way to subjugating the Dacians in what is now Romania, and was named after Trajan's wife Pompeia Plotina. In the 1980s, a solid gold bust of the head of Trajan was found on the site of Plotinopoulis and is now in the museum at Komotini.
After the 1920s, Didymoteicho became entirely a part of Greece. The Second World War devastated Didymoteicho. In December 2001, illegal immigrants entered Didymoteicho, they were later arrested by the police. On July 17, 2004, the Olympic flame reached Didymoteicho and was lit in the castle.
The town was considerably affected by the Evros river flooding of February 17 to 22, 2005. Flood warnings were reported at that time. It devastated much of the town on Wednesday, March 2, 2005 and continued for several days. On Friday, March 4, flood waters began to ebb slowly. Over 5,000 mm of rainfall caused the river to overflow its banks. Buildings, properties and stores were flooded, leaving people stranded. It was the worst flood in nearly 50 years. The railway line south of Didymoteicho and near the station was also flooded and was closed. Serious flooding was also experienced in March 2006 throughout the city and the general Evros area.
| Year | Population | Change |
|---|---|---|
| 1981 | - | - |
| 1991 | 19,450 | - |
| 2001 | 18,998 | -452/-2.32% |
| North: Orestiada | |||
| West: Metaxades |
Didymoteicho | East: Turkey | |
| Southwest: Lavara | Southeast: Turkey |
| Municipalities of the Evros Prefecture |
|---|
| Alexandroupoli • Didymoteicho • Feres • Kyprinos • Metaxades • Orestiada • Orfeas • Samothrace • Soufli • Traianoupoli • Trigono • Tychero • Vyssa |
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