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Pogon, Albania

Coordinates:40°8′N20°21′E/ 40.133°N 20.350°E/40.133; 20.350
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Pogon
Πωγώνι
Pogon is located in Albania
Pogon
Pogon
Coordinates:40°8′N20°21′E/ 40.133°N 20.350°E/40.133; 20.350
CountryAlbania
CountyGjirokastër
MunicipalityDropull
Area
• Total177.6 km2(68.6 sq mi)
Population
(2011)
• Total432
• Density2.4/km2(6.3/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1(CET)
• Summer (DST)UTC+2(CEST)
Postal Code
6007[1]

Pogon(Albanian:PogonorPogoni,Greek:Πωγώνι,Pogoni), is a formercommunein theGjirokastër County,southernAlbania.At the 2015 local government reform it became a subdivision of the municipalityDropull.[2]The population at the 2011 census was 432.[3]It consists of seven villages which are mostly Greek speaking:Poliçan;Skore;Hllomo;Sopik;Mavrojer;ÇatistëandSelckëof whichPoliçanis the administrative center.[4]The administrative unit of Pogon is inhabited byethnic Greeks.

Demographics

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Greek is spoken in Poliçan, Skore, Hllomo, Sopik, Mavrojer and Çatistë and those villages along withDrymadeson the Greek side of the border comprise the sub-region of Paleo-Pogoni (Old Pogoni),[5]part of the wider region of Pogoni. Traditionally Greeks of Pogoni in Albania practisedendogamyby intermarrying within their group, although occasionally brides fromZagoriwere taught to speak Greek.[5]Poliçan is the northernmost Greek-speaking village in the Pogoni area, as villages north west of Poliçan are Albanian-speaking, while those south of Poliçan are Greek-speaking.[6]Selckë,part of a wider region ofLunxhëria,is traditionally inhabited by an Orthodox Albanian population[5]as well as later Aromanian migrants, while the rest of the villages belong to theGreek minorityzone.[7]

History

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In 15th century Pogon came underOttomanrule and became part of theSanjak of Ioannina.[8]It was anahiyacentre as "Pogun" at Pogun kaza (Its centre wasVoştina) inErgirisanjak ofYanya Vilayettill 1912. As part of Albania, the municipality is part of the recognizedGreek Minority Zone.[9]

Historically each village of Pogon has its own variation of traditional costumes and dresses.[5]The area is part of Pogoni, a region that also includes parts of nearbyPogonion the Greek side of theborder.

Culture

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The villages of Pogon (except Selckë) are part of the wider Pogoni region, which is divided between Greece (40 villages) and Albania (7 villages).[10][6]Polyphonic singing,although shared among several ethnic groups, tends to be mostly identified with the Pogoni area.[10]

Notable people

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References

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  1. ^"Kodi Postar, Qarku Gjirokastër"[Postal Code, Gjirokastër County](PDF).Posta Shqiptare.2017.
  2. ^"Law nr. 115/2014"(PDF)(in Albanian). p. 6371.Retrieved25 February2022.
  3. ^2011 census resultsArchived2016-03-04 at theWayback Machine
  4. ^Greece – Albania Neighbourhood ProgrammeArchived2012-03-27 at theWayback Machine
  5. ^abcdHammond, Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière (1967).Epirus: the Geography, the Ancient Remains, the History and Topography of Epirus and Adjacent Areas.Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 29.ISBN9780198142539."Pogoni, or Paleo-Pogoni as the people call it, consists of seven Greek-speaking villages nearly 3,000 ft. above sea level (Poliçan, Skorë, Hlomo, Sopik, Mavrojer, Çatistë, and the Greek side of the frontier, Drimadhes).... The Pogoniates normally only marry within their own group, but occasionally a bride may be taken from Zagorië and she is taught Greek."; p.213."Selck, an Albanian speaking village of some thirty-five houses"
  6. ^abHammond 1967,pp.213"With a population of 2,500 Poliçan is the largest village in the long-rift within the double range of Nemerçkë. The villages to the north-west are Albanian-speaking, while those to the south speak Greek as their mother tongue. Poliçan therefore regards itself as the most northerly village of the area Pogoni."
  7. ^Malo, Foto,Emra vendesh në krahinën e Lunxhërisë (Toponyms in Lunxhëri region)(in Albanian), Tribuna, archived fromthe originalon 2014-04-30,retrieved2013-08-29
  8. ^H. Karpat, Kemal (1985).Ottoman population, 1830-1914: demographic and social characteristics.University of Wisconsin Press. p. 146.ISBN9780299091606.Retrieved22 September2011.
  9. ^Green, Sarah F. (2005).Notes from the Balkans: locating marginality and ambiguity on the Greek-Albanian border.Princeton, NJ [u.a.]: Princeton Univ. Press.ISBN978-0-691-12198-7.
  10. ^abTziovas, Dimitris, ed. (2003).Greece and the Balkans: identities, perceptions and cultural encounters since the Enlightenment.Aldershot, England: Ashgate. p. 196.ISBN9780754609988.Although it characterizes many local communities and ethnic groups, such as Vlach and Albanian speakers, it tends to be mostly identified with the Pogoni area, which, ironically enough, is divided between Greece and Albania, seven villages belonging to the latter. Of the rest, about forty villages belong to Greece)

Further reading

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  • ΖΩΤΟΥ, ΜΕΝΕΛΑΟΥ; ΓΙΑΝΝΑΡΟΥ, ΧΡΙΣΤΟΦΟΡΟΥ. Η ΠΟΛΥΤΣΑΝΗ ΤΗΣ ΒΟΡΕΙΟΥ ΗΠΕΙΡΟΥ. ΕΚΔΟΣΕΙΣ, ΙΩΑΝΝΙΝΑ, 1989.(in Greek)
  • Politsanitika Nea Newspaper, Tel. +30 210 5238058(in Greek)

See also

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