Obsidian (a glass-like volcanic rock) from Milos was a commodity as early as
15,000 years ago. Obsidian from Milos was traded over long distances and fashioned into extremely sharp
stone tools well before farming began and later: "There is no early farming village in the
Near East that doesn't get obsidian". The mining of obsidian did not lead to the development of permanent habitation or manufacturing on the island. Instead, those in search of obsidian arrived by boat, beaching it in a suitable cove and cutting pieces of the volcanic glass from the quarries. The position of Milos, between mainland Greece and
Crete, and its possession of obsidian, made it an important centre of early
Aegean civilisation. Milos lost its arms-making importance when
bronze became the preferred material for the manufacture of weapons.
The Bronze Age The first settlement at
Phylakopi (
Greek Φυλακωπή) arose in the
Bronze Age, flourishing as the extraction of obsidian was in the decline. The first settlers were
tuna fishermen. revealed a town wall and a
Minoan-inspired structure, dubbed the Pillar room, which contained fragments of vivid wall paintings. The famous fresco of the flying fish was found in the ruins of the Pillar room and was executed with delicate colouring and graphic observation of nature in the graceful movement of a fish. Stylistic similarities to Minoan
frescoes are suggested, and it could perhaps have been the work of a Cretan artist. Part of the site has been washed away by the sea. The antiquities found at the site covered three major periods, from the Early
Cycladic period to the
Mycenaean period. At the site much pottery was excavated, with several changing styles and influences over the site's long occupation. In the early occupation of the site, there are many similarities and imports from other Cycladic islands and the settlement was very small. During the
Middle Bronze Age however, the site expanded significantly and the expansion of Minoan Crete saw an influx of Minoan pottery into the Cyclades, particularly at
Akrotiri on
Thera, though much found its way to Phylakopi. The quantities found at the Cycladic sites have been taken to suggest a Minoan control over the region, though it could also be the consumptive nature of the islanders adopting Cretan fashions. There is more than just pottery at Phylakopi however, the eruption of the Thera volcano saw a reduction in Minoan presence in the Cyclades and it is at this time that Mycenaean involvement on the islands increases. At Phylakopi (and unknown in the rest of the Cyclades) a
megaron structure, which is typically associated with the Mycenaean palaces, such as those at
Tiryns,
Pylos and
Mycenae has been discovered. This has been taken to suggest that the Mycenaeans conquered the settlement and installed a seat of power for a governor. The evidence is not clear, though again it could be a legacy of the islanders adopting foreign elements into their culture. Particularly unexpected was the discovery in the 1970s of a shrine at the site, which contained many examples of
Aegean figurines, including the famous "Lady of Phylakopi". The shrine is unprecedented in the Bronze Age Cyclades and has provided a valuable insight into the beliefs and rituals of the inhabitants of Phylakopi. The site was eventually abandoned and was never reoccupied.
Dorian settlement The first Dorian settlement on Melos was established no earlier than the 1st millennium BC.
Dorians are the ethnic group to which the
Spartans belonged, but the Dorian settlers of Melos made themselves independent. They eventually established a city whose site lies on the eastern shore of the bay, just south-west of the present-day community of
Trypiti. From the 6th century BC up to the siege of 416 BC, Melos issued its own coinage, struck according to the
Milesian weight standard: the base coin was the
stater which weighed just over 14 grams. Melos was the only island in the Aegean Sea to use this standard. Most coins bore the image of an apple, which is a pun because the ancient Greek word for "apple" (
mêlon) sounded similar to the name of the island. The coins also often bore the name of its people: ΜΑΛΙΟΝ (
Malion) or some abbreviation thereof. By the 6th century BC, the Melians had also learned to write, and they used an archaic variant of the
ancient Greek script that exhibited
Cretan and
Theraic influences. It was discarded after the siege of 416 BC. relief depicting Triton and Theseus From at least as early as 470 BC and ending with the siege of 416 BC, the Melians exported
terracotta reliefs, which were typically used as door or chest ornaments and depicted scenes from mythology. During the
second Persian invasion of Greece in 480 BC, the Melians refused to submit to
Persia and contributed two warships to the Greek war effort, which were used at the
Battle of Salamis. After the battle, the Melians returned to their traditional isolationism.
Siege of 416 BC During the
Peloponnesian War (431–404 BC) between Athens and Sparta, the Melians made some small donations to the Spartan war effort, but remained largely neutral despite sharing the Spartans'
Dorian ethnicity. In 426 BC, the Athenians raided the Melian countryside, and the following year demanded tribute, but Melos refused. In the summer of 416 BC, Athens invaded again with 3,400 men, and demanded that Melos ally with them against Sparta, or be destroyed. The Melians rejected this, so the Athenian army laid siege to the city and eventually captured it in the winter. After the city's fall, the Athenians executed all the adult men, and sold the women and children into slavery. They then settled 500 of their own colonists on the island. In 405 BC, with Athens losing the war, the Spartan general
Lysander expelled the Athenian settlers from Melos and repatriated the survivors of the siege. Sparta annexed Melos, which would mean that like other liberated islands, it received a military governor (a
harmost). The cultural distinctiveness of Melos faded away as it was absorbed into mainstream Greek culture. Their coinage switched to the Rhodian standard (
tetradrachms weighing 15.3 g) and ceased bearing the word ΜΑΛΙΟΝ. The production of its
terracotta reliefs also ceased.
The Hellenistic period In 338 BC,
Philip II of Macedon defeated the Greeks at the
Battle of Chaeroneia and became the
overlord of Greece and the
Cyclades. During this time, Melos and the nearby island
Kimolos disputed each other over the ownership of the islands of
Polyaigos, Heterea, and Libea (the last two are probably today's uninhabited islands of
Agios Efstathios and Agios Georgios). In the past, this dispute would have been settled by war, but the two communities took their dispute to
Argos on the Greek mainland. The
Argives decided the islands belonged to
Kimolos.
The Roman and Byzantine period In 197 BC, the
Romans forced Philip V to withdraw from Greece, and Melos subsequently came under Roman influence. During the early 9th century CE the
Cyclades were harassed by
Arab raiders, though how Milos fared at this time is unclear. Milos was mentioned in a
Byzantine chrysobull of 1198, which shows it was still important to the Byzantines.
Medieval period In the aftermath of the
Fourth Crusade (1204), the
Venetian Marco Sanudo seized control of Milos and a number of other islands in the
Cyclades. Sanudo declared himself the
Duke of Naxos, after the island where he established his capital. Sanudo did not make his duchy a vassal of Venice, but instead declared loyalty to the
Latin Emperor. Sanudo's dynasty lasted nine generations, then was succeeded by the
Crispos. Both families were
Catholic. The majority of the population was (and still is)
Greek Orthodox. Up to this point, the population of Melos was overwhelmingly Greek Orthodox Christian, just like the rest of the archipelago. When the Venetians conquered the archipelago, they brought Catholicism with them. The first Catholic bishop of Milos was appointed in 1253.
Ottoman period In 1566 the Venetians handed over the Duchy of Naxos to the
Ottoman Empire, and its last Catholic duke fled to Venice. The Ottoman sultan
Selim II appointed a
Portuguese Jew named
Joseph Nasi as its duke. Upon Nasi's death in 1579, the Ottomans formally annexed the territory. In the early 18th century, the population surpassed 6,000 In 1771 the island was occupied by the
Russian Empire for three years, then retaken by the Ottomans. In the late 18th century, the population declined considerably for uncertain reasons. By 1798, it had fallen below 500 people. Milos became a refuge for refugees from numerous islands, particularly Crete. The port town of
Adamantas was founded by Cretan refugees from the
Cretan Revolt in 1841. When
Theodore Bent toured the island in December 1883, note-taking for his guide to the Cyclades, he found that "There is a lack of energy nowadays in Melos, for
Syra monopolises all the trade that once came here, and the Cretan exiles refuse to cultivate as they ought the fertile centre of the island, for they are only awaiting a favourable turn in events to return to their own island…" During the 19th century, Milos was a major rendezvous point for American and British ships fighting Muslim pirates in the Mediterranean. In February 1943, 14 male civilians were
executed for collecting material owned by the
German occupation forces that was washed up after the sinking of a cargo ship by Allied aircraft. The population peaked in 1928 at 6,562 people. In 2011 it was 4,977. == Geography ==