Antiquity In
Greek mythology, Oeta is chiefly celebrated as the scene of
Heracles' death, and
Roman authors even gave the demi-god the epithet . Prepared to die, he ascended Mount Oeta,
where he built a funeral pyre, gave his bow and arrows to
Philoctetes, and laid himself down on the pile, his head resting on his club, and his lion's skin spread over him, and commanded Philoctetes to apply the torch to the pyre. Another version of the story claims that
Zeus threw a lightning bolt on the site of Heracles' death, and that from this place sprung forth the Gorgopotamos river. The remains of a 3rd-century BC
Doric temple dedicated to Heracles and his funeral pyre (Πυρὰ Ἡρακλέους), as well as an altar and ruins of adjacent buildings, still survive at the entrance of the Katavothra plateau at a height of 1,800 m, near the village of Pavliani. The temple complex remained in use until late
Roman times. In historical times, the area of Oeta belonged to southern
Thessaly, forming its southernmost district, that of
Oetaea (). The women of Hypate were associated with witchcraft in Antiquity: the sorceresses Mycale and Agaonice, called the Pharmacidae, inhabited the area. Even in more recent times, the precipice of Anemotrypa near the town was said to be the haunt of the crone Lyousa Armagou.
Middle Ages Hypate is still mentioned in the 6th century by the historian
Procopius of Caesarea, who recorded repairs to its walls by Emperor
Justinian I, and in the
Synecdemus. The city may have been abandoned after the Slavic invasions of the 7th century, and reappears in the 10th century under the name
Neai Patrai ("New Patras") or
Patrai Helladikai ("Patras in [the
theme of]
Hellas"). Until the 13th century, the city is mentioned only as an ecclesiastical center, being a
metropolitan bishopric with one (10th century) and eventually twelve (12th century)
suffragans. The city played a major role in the latter 13th century, when it was the capital of the independent Greek rulers of
Thessaly,
John I Doukas,
Constantine Doukas and
John II Doukas. The
Catalan Company seized Neopatras and much of Phthiotis and southern Thessaly in 1319, forming the new
Duchy of Neopatras, a vassal of the
Duchy of Athens. It was one of the last remaining Catalan possessions in Greece, and fell to the
Ottoman Turks in 1394. In the 13th and 14th centuries, the fortress town of
Siderokastron was also located on the eastern slopes of Oeta. The
Agathonos Monastery, dating at least to the 15th century, lies on the northern slopes of the mountain near Ypati.
Modern era The area played an important role in the
Greek Resistance movement against the
Axis occupation of Greece during
World War II. The
destruction of the Gorgopotamos viaduct on 25 November 1942 by a joint effort of Greek Resistance forces and British saboteurs is ranked as one of the most spectacular sabotage actions in
occupied Europe. ==References==