Dipotamia Explained

Dipotamia
Name Local:Διποταμία
Type:community
Coordinates:40.4881°N 20.9867°W
Periph:Western Macedonia
Periphunit:Kastoria
Municipality:Nestorio
Municunit:Akrites
Population As Of:2021
Population:391
Georegion:Macedonia

Dipotamia (Greek, Modern (1453-);: Διποταμία, before 1927: Ρέβανη – Revani;[1] Albanian: Revan) is a village and a community in Kastoria Regional Unit, Macedonia, Greece. The community includes the villages Kali Vrysi and Mesovracho.

Revani was populated by Albanian speaking Muslim inhabitants and they used to intermarry with the nearby Muslim villages of Menkulas, Vidohovë and Miras (now in Albania). The Greek census (1920) recorded 721 people in the village and in 1923 there were 673 inhabitants (or 85 families) who were Muslim. Following the Greek-Turkish population exchange, the Muslim population of Revani went to Turkey in 1924 and Anatolian Orthodox Christians settled in the village.[2] In 1926, 130 refugee families from Pontus were in Revani. The Greek census (1928) recorded 468 inhabitants. In 1928 there were 128 refugee families (493 people).[3] After the population exchange, the site where the village mosque stood was replaced by the present church, the Assumption of the Virgin, built in 1925.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Institute for Neohellenic Research. Name Changes of Settlements in Greece: Revani – Dipotamia. Pandektis. 30 March 2022.
  2. Book: de Rapper, Gilles. Religion on the border: Sanctuaries and Festivals in Post-Communist Albania. Valtchinova. Galia. Religion and Boundaries: Studies from the Balkans, Eastern Europe and Turkey. 2010. Isis Press. 9789754284126. 4.
  3. Pelagidis. Efstathios. 1992. Η αποκατάσταση των προσφύγων στη Δυτική Μακεδονία (1923–1930). The rehabilitation of refugees in Western Macedonia: 1923–1930. Ph.D.. el. Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. 28 March 2022. 76.
  4. Stavridopoulos. Ioannis. 2015. Μνημεία του άλλου: η διαχείριση της οθωμανικής πολιτιστική κληρονομιάς της Μακεδονίας από το 1912 έως σήμερα. Monuments of the other: The management of the Ottoman cultural heritage of Macedonia from 1912 until present. Ph.D.. el. University of Ioannina. 28 March 2022. 271.