Antiquity and Byzantine era Methoni has been identified as the city of Pedasus, which
Homer mentions under the name "
ampeloessa" (of vine leaves), as the last of the seven (
eunaiomena ptoliethra) (well-peopled cities) that
Agamemnon offers
Achilles in order to subdue his rage.
Pausanias knew the city as
Mothone, named either after the daughter of
Oeneus or after the rock Mothon, which protects the harbour, and mentioned a temple to
Athena Anemotis there. The Oinoussai complex of islands protected the port of Methoni from the turbulent sea. Along with the rest of
Messenia, the town gained its independence from the Spartans in 369 BC. Like other Mediterranean coastal settlements, Methoni was probably heavily affected by the tsunami that followed the
earthquake in AD 365. Roman historian
Ammianus Marcellinus wrote that as a result of the earthquake some ships had been "hurled nearly two miles from the shore", giving as an example a
Laconian vessel that was stranded "near the town of Methone". During the Byzantine years Methoni retained its remarkable harbor and remained one of the most important cities of the Peloponnese, seat of a bishopric.
First Venetian era by
Conrad Grünenberg, 1487 The
Republic of Venice had its eye on Methoni (Modon) since the 12th century, due to its location on the route from
Venice to the Eastern markets. In 1125, they launched an attack against pirates based at Methoni, who had captured some Venetian traders on their way home from the east. In the mid-12th century, the Muslim traveller and geographer
al-Idrisi mentioned Methoni as a fortified town with a citadel. At the time of the
fall of Constantinople to the
Fourth Crusade, one of the Crusaders,
Geoffrey of Villehardouin, was shipwrecked near Methoni, and he spent the winter of 1204/5 there. He came into contact with a local Greek magnate—identified by some scholars with a certain John Kantakouzenos—and aided him in subduing much of the region. Villehardouin's sojourn there was brief, however, since the Greek magnate died, and his son and successor turned against Villehardouin, who was forced to flee Messenia, and made for the
Argolid, where a Crusader army under
Boniface of Montferrat had arrived. From there, Villehardouin and another Crusader,
William of Champlitte, led the conquest of the Peloponnese from the local Greeks and the establishment of a Crusader principality, the
Principality of Achaea. In the treaty of partition of the Byzantine Empire by the Crusaders, the
Partitio Romaniae, most of the peninsula had been assigned to the Republic of Venice in the treaty of partition, but the Venetians did not take action to pre-empt or hinder Champlitte and Villehardouin. It was not until 1206 or 1207 that a Venetian fleet under Premarini and the son of the Doge
Enrico Dandolo arrived in the Peloponnese, and captured Methoni, along with
Koroni. Venice and the Principality of Achaea quickly came to terms, recognizing each other's possessions in the
Treaty of Sapienza (1209). Koroni was fortified, but Methoni was, for the time being, left without walls.
Roman Catholic bishops were installed in the two local dioceses, who were both
suffragans of the
Latin Archbishopric of Patras; and in 1212 the Pope placed the
Latin Bishopric of Modon under his personal protection. Under Venetian rule, the town experienced its zenith, becoming an important center for trade with Egypt and the
Levant, enjoying great prosperity. Methoni became an important staging point on the route between Venice and the
Holy Lands, and many descriptions of it survive in pilgrims' accounts. By the second half of the 14th century, the towns population was a mixture of Greeks, Jews, Albanians and Latins.
Ottoman era With the
Ottoman conquest of the
Despotate of the Morea, the town came under threat; Christian and Jewish refugees from the rest of the Peloponnese flocked to its walls, while the Turks raided its environs. In 1499–1500,
Ottoman ships raided the town from the sea, while Sultan
Bayezid II in person arrived to supervise its siege. After 28 days, on 9 August 1500, Methoni fell. The populace was either massacred or sold off as slaves. In 1532, the
Knights Hospitaller briefly recaptured the fortress and left with reportedly 1,600 Muslim prisoners. The Venetians returned under
Francesco Morosini in 1686 during the
Morean War. A Venetian census shortly afterwards lists Methoni with only 236 inhabitants, indicative of the general depopulation of the region during that time. The
second period of Venetian rule lasted until 1715, when the
Grand Vizier Damad Ali Pasha invaded the Peloponnese. Although strengthened by the garrisons of
Navarino and Koroni, who fled their fortresses, Methoni surrendered quickly once the Ottoman army arrived and began to besiege it. Nevertheless, the Grand Vizier ordered his troops to kill all Christians in the town, and as a result many chose to convert on the spot to Islam to save themselves. Following the Ottoman recapture of the town, the pre-1684 owners were allowed to claim their former property. A period of recovery followed, particularly after 1725, when the town once more became a hub of trade with the Ottoman provinces of
North Africa. In 1770, during the Russian-sponsored
Orlov Revolt, the castle was besieged for a long time by the Russians under Prince
Yuri Vladimirovich Dolgorukov. Unable to storm the castle, the siege was dominated by artillery duels until Turks and Albanians from the interior of the Peloponnese came to the aid of the garrison and drove away the Russians after a fierce battle in May 1770. The Russians suffered heavy casualties, and were forced to abandon most of their guns. They fled to their base in Navarino, which they also abandoned soon afterwards.
Greek War of Independence By the time of the outbreak of the
Greek War of Independence in 1821, the town was inhabited by Turks, some 400 to 500 fighting men, who also owned most of the land in the area. Outside the walls, the region was populated almost exclusively by Greeks. When the Greek revolution broke out, Methoni was put under siege, along with Koroni and Navarino. In July 1821, the
Ottoman fleet succeeded in reprovisioning the town, but not Navarino, which on 8 August capitulated to the Greeks. The garrison of Methoni had set out to aid them, but were stopped by the Greek rebels en route. Thereafter, the Greek pressure on Methoni slackened, and the town remained in Ottoman hands throughout the conflict, albeit only thanks to frequent reprovisioning by the fleet. Consequently, the town was one of the main bases for
Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt's expedition against the Greeks in 1825–28. The fortress surrendered to the French
Morea Expedition on 8 October 1828, and in 1833 the departing French turned over its control to the newly established
Kingdom of Greece. ==Methoni in art and literature==