Native name: Γυάρος or Γιούρα | |
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Geography | |
Coordinates | 37°37′N 24°43′E / 37.617°N 24.717°E |
Archipelago | Cyclades |
Area | 23 km2 (8.9 sq mi) |
Highest elevation | 489 m (1,604 ft) |
Highest point | Mt. Gyaros |
Administration | |
Greece
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Region | Southern Aegean |
Regional unit | Syros |
Demographics | |
Population | 0 (2001) |
Postal code | 840 00 |
Area code(s) | 228x0 |
Vehicle registration | EM |
Gyaros (Greek: Γυάρος pronounced [ˈʝaɾos]), also locally known as Gioura (Greek: Γιούρα, unrelated to Gioura of Thessaly, also unpopulated), is an arid and unpopulated Greek island in the northern Cyclades near the islands of Andros and Tinos, with an area of 23 square kilometres (9 sq mi). It is a part of the municipality of Ano Syros, which lies primarily on the island of Syros. This and other small islands of the Aegean Sea served as places of exile for important persons in the early Roman empire. The extremity of its desolation was proverbial among Roman authors, such as Tacitus and Juvenal. It was a place of exile for leftist political dissidents in Greece from 1948 until 1974. At least 22,000 people were exiled or imprisoned on the island during that time. It is an island of great ecological importance as it hosts the largest population of monk seal in the Mediterranean.
The pseudo-Aristotelian work On Marvellous Things Heard (25) recounts the tale that on Gyaros the mice eat iron.
In the Aeneid of Virgil, Gyaros and Mykonos are said to be the two islands to which the god Apollo tied the holy island of Delos to stop its wandering over the Aegean Sea. In his recounting of the myth of the war between Minos and Aegeus, the king of Athens, the poet Ovid speaks of Gyaros as one island that refused to join the campaign of the Cretan king.