The resistance of the Psariots ended the next day with a last stand at the town's old fort of Palaiokastro (alternative name
Mavri Rachi, literally "Black Ridge"). Hundreds of soldiers and also women and children had taken refuge there when an Ottoman force of stormed the fort. The refugees first threw a white flag with the words "Freedom or Death" (Greek: "
Ἐλευθερία ἤ Θάνατος"). Then, the moment the Turks entered the fort, the local
Antonios Vratsanos lit a fuse to the gunpowder stock, in an explosion that killed the town's inhabitants along with their enemies — thus remaining faithful to their flag up to their death. A French officer who heard and saw the explosion compared it to a volcanic eruption of
Mount Vesuvius. As a result of the invasion, Greeks were killed or
sold into slavery. Part of the population managed to flee the island, scattered through what is now Southern Greece.
Theophilos Kairis, a priest and scholar, took on many of the orphaned children and developed the famous school the
Orphanotropheio of Theophilos Kairis. Psara was deserted and remained in the hands of the
Ottomans until it was recaptured by the
Greek navy on 21 October 1912 during the
First Balkan War. The population of Psara before the massacre was about . Since the massacre, the population of the island never rose over inhabitants. == Reaction and commemoration ==