In antiquity, the Achelous was the largest and most celebrated river in Greece, rising in
Mount Pindus, and after flowing through the mountainous country of the
Dolopians and
Agraeans, entered the plain of
Acarnania and
Aetolia near
Stratus, and discharged itself into the
Ionian Sea, near the Acarnanian town of
Oeniadae. It subsequently formed the boundary between Acarnania and Aetolia, but in the time of
Thucydides the territory of Oeniadae extended east of the river. It is usually called a river of Acarnania, but it is sometimes assigned to Aetolia. Its general direction is from north to south. Its waters are of a whitish yellow or cream colour, whence it derives a later name of
Aspropotamo or the White river, and to which
Dionysius Periegetes probably alludes in the epithet ἀργυροδίνης. Periegetes places the sources of the river near a place called
Chalcis. It is said to have been called more anciently
Thoas,
Axenus and
Thestius. In the lower part of its course, the plain through which it flows was called in antiquity
Paracheloitis after the river. This plain was celebrated for its fertility, though covered in great part with marshes, several of which were formed by the overflowings of the Achelous. In 1359 the
Battle of Achelous between
Albanian forces under
Peter Losha and the
Despotate of Epirus under
Nikephoros II Orsini took place near the river Achelous. Nikephoros II was defeated and killed during the battle, and two new states were established in the area, the
Despotate of Arta and the
Despotate of Angelokastron and Lepanto. In the 1960s, the
Kremasta Dam in the Aitoloacarnania-Evrytania boundary was under construction. The area is not forested. The dam, made of concrete, took years to complete, eventually flooding a portion of the western part of the prefecture of Eurytania. The dam includes a power station with transformer lines in the east. The dam powers electricity for the western part of Greece and the central part. It caused some soil erosion in some flooded valleys. The
Kastraki Dam is downstream and was completed in 1969. Downstream of Katsiki, the
Stratos Dam was completed in 1989. The arch bridges includes the
Karafilio and the
Ardanovo. The Acheloos River Diversion project has been the center of debate since the 1980s. It calls for four large dams, the
Sykia,
Mesochora,
Mouzaki and
Pyli, along with a channel. The goal of the project is to divert annually from the river west towards the
Thessaly plains in order to help irrigate of mostly cotton crops. Construction on the project has been stalled several times, the latest in 2005, because of environmental and social concerns. ==References==