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Lat, Lng: 35.517421, 24.017857
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Address: Captain Vassilis
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Address: Captain Vassilis
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Chania - Hasan Pasha Mosque


Chania is the second largest settlement on the island after Heraklion.
This area appears to have been inhabited since the Neolithic Age. It was built as a city in the Minoan period (3000–1900 BC) under the name Kudonija. According to ancient tradition, the city was founded by the mythical King Minos. Cydonia reemerged after the end of the Minoan period as an important city-state. The first major wave of settlers from mainland Greece was by the Dorians who came around 1100 BC. In Homer's Odyssey the inhabitants of Kydonia are mentioned twice.
After centuries of war between the Cretan cities, the island became a Roman province in 67 BC. Due to its pro-Roman stance, the city was granted the status of a free city. The Roman conquest of Crete marked the end of the civil wars and the beginning of a long period of peace and economic prosperity.
After the end of the Roman Empire and the division of the empire in 395, Chania was ruled by the Byzantine Empire (395–824) and then by the Emirate of Crete (824–961). During the second Byzantine period (961–1204), the city was known in Greek as Chania. To ward off further Arab invasion, the Byzantines heavily fortified the city, using materials from ancient buildings in the surrounding area.After the fall of Constantinople during the 1204 Fourth Crusade, Crete was sold to the Venetians In 1252, the Venetians managed to subdue the Cretans and Chania flourished as a commercial centre of a fertile agricultural region. Contact with Venice led to close intertwining of Cretan and Venetian cultures.
The city walls were reinforced at this time, but could notnot prevent an Ottoman army from capturing it from the Venetians after a two-month siege. Many Cretans fled to escape persecution while numerous Turkish Muslim settlers arrived changing the ethnic mix of the city. The city remained under Ottoman control despite fighting during the Greek War of Independence and the Cretan Revolts in the 19th century until Crete moved towards independence that eventually led to Crete's union with Greece on 1 December 1913.
The Hasan Pasha Mosque was built in honour of the first Turkish garrison commander Küçük Hasan Pasha on the site of a small Byzantine church after the Ottoman conquest of Chania in 1645. From 1880, porticoes with seven small domes were added to the north and west sides. The mosque served as a place of worship until 1923, when the Turkish inhabitants of the island emigrated during the population exchange between Greece and Turkey. It was then used successively as a storage area, a folk art museum, and a tourist information office.
The minaret was demolished in the 20th century.
Translate into English
This area appears to have been inhabited since the Neolithic Age. It was built as a city in the Minoan period (3000–1900 BC) under the name Kudonija. According to ancient tradition, the city was founded by the mythical King Minos. Cydonia reemerged after the end of the Minoan period as an important city-state. The first major wave of settlers from mainland Greece was by the Dorians who came around 1100 BC. In Homer's Odyssey the inhabitants of Kydonia are mentioned twice.
After centuries of war between the Cretan cities, the island became a Roman province in 67 BC. Due to its pro-Roman stance, the city was granted the status of a free city. The Roman conquest of Crete marked the end of the civil wars and the beginning of a long period of peace and economic prosperity.
After the end of the Roman Empire and the division of the empire in 395, Chania was ruled by the Byzantine Empire (395–824) and then by the Emirate of Crete (824–961). During the second Byzantine period (961–1204), the city was known in Greek as Chania. To ward off further Arab invasion, the Byzantines heavily fortified the city, using materials from ancient buildings in the surrounding area.After the fall of Constantinople during the 1204 Fourth Crusade, Crete was sold to the Venetians In 1252, the Venetians managed to subdue the Cretans and Chania flourished as a commercial centre of a fertile agricultural region. Contact with Venice led to close intertwining of Cretan and Venetian cultures.
The city walls were reinforced at this time, but could notnot prevent an Ottoman army from capturing it from the Venetians after a two-month siege. Many Cretans fled to escape persecution while numerous Turkish Muslim settlers arrived changing the ethnic mix of the city. The city remained under Ottoman control despite fighting during the Greek War of Independence and the Cretan Revolts in the 19th century until Crete moved towards independence that eventually led to Crete's union with Greece on 1 December 1913.
The Hasan Pasha Mosque was built in honour of the first Turkish garrison commander Küçük Hasan Pasha on the site of a small Byzantine church after the Ottoman conquest of Chania in 1645. From 1880, porticoes with seven small domes were added to the north and west sides. The mosque served as a place of worship until 1923, when the Turkish inhabitants of the island emigrated during the population exchange between Greece and Turkey. It was then used successively as a storage area, a folk art museum, and a tourist information office.
The minaret was demolished in the 20th century.
Dimas Sequeira has particularly liked this photo
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Martin M. Miles club has replied to Dimas Sequeira clubBefore travelling to Crete, I had tried to prepare myself by learning as much as I could about the different ‘Minoan layers’ and a little about the Byzantine, Venetian and Ottoman past. But I had no idea about the terrible tragedies that took place in the 20th century.
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