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Greece - Monument of Zalongo

The Monument of Zalongo - placed in 1961 - commemorates the so called ‘Dance of Zalongo’, referring to a mass suicide of women and children in 1803 during the Souli War.

Ali Pasha, an Ottoman Albanian ruler who served as pasha of Epirus and the western parts of Thessaly and Greek Macedonia, wanted to finish once and for all with the Souliotes; the people of Souli who were creating problems for him and the Sultan. An agreement was signed, in which one part concerned the safe evacuation of women and children from Souli. But Ali Pasha failed to comply with the agreement and his troops attacked a group of Souliotes - among them women and children - in the mountains of Zalongo.

It is said that the Souli women came closer to the edge of a terrifying cliff. In order to avoid capture, enslavement and humiliation, the women held hands and started singing and dancing (Dance of Zalongo) and threw their children off that cliff and then they jumped to their death themselves one by one.
Despite the fact that some historians doubt wether there was an actual dance and song, the self-sacrifice of the Souli women in order not to fall in the hands of the Ottomans is indisputable.

The Monument of Zalongo - made by sculptor George Zongolopoulos - is visible several hundred meters high upon the edge of Mount Zalongo's cliff above Agios Dimitrios Monastery (PiP1). The monument depicts six abstract dancing female figures of the Souliot women. It is 18 meters long and 13 meters high. The figures are made of reinforced concrete, lined with about 4.300 limestone blocks, 40x30x25 cm. The construction took six years.

The Monument of Zalongo is accessible by climbing a rather steep stone paved path (PiP2) with more than 400 steps, which starts just behind the monastery. .
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125 comments

Nouchetdu38 said:

Amazing and interesting!!!!!!
4 years ago ( translate )

Jean said:

The story of these women still resonates. A good series of images showing the scale of this impressive monuments.
4 years ago

Erika Akire said:

...interesting with the explanation and the PiPs, HFF...
4 years ago

John Cass said:

Great capture, nice PiP's, very interesting info Jaap - HFF, Have a nice weekend.
4 years ago

Peter Castell said:

Wonderful silhouettes and interesting information, I hope you have a HFF and a good weekend Jaap
4 years ago

Anji. said:

Merci, Jaap, pour ce document ! Avec, en plus, une photo magnifique !
HFF, Jaap, et bonne fin de semaine !
4 years ago ( translate )

Rosalyn Hilborne said:

A beautiful memorial to such a sad event Jaap. You have pictured it beautifully. The PiP's are so beautiful as well.
Wishing you a good weekend.
4 years ago

Old Owl said:

What a fine sculpture, imposing but with a feminine delicacy in the arms. Truly wonderful. HFF to you and yours, Jaap.
4 years ago

Madeleine Defawes said:

Quel courage d'avoir monté ces 400 marches ! Bravo pour les superbes photos !
Have a nice weekend
4 years ago ( translate )

Gudrun said:

A very touching monument! HFF and a giid weekend, Jaap!
4 years ago

Soeradjoen (limited… said:

Hallo Jaap, mooie opname van een wel speciaal monument.
Prettig weekend.
4 years ago ( translate )

HappySnapper said:

quiet a story to this monument Jaap, I feel there could be some merit in this story as it only happened several 100 years ago.
4 years ago

Roger (Grisly) said:

Magnificent series of images Jaap.
HFF and a great weekend
4 years ago ( translate )

TOZ said:

Super Image Jaap as Maurice said quiet a story.
HFF have a nice weekend
TOZ
4 years ago ( translate )

Maria W. said:

Super!!! Havu belan semajnfinon Jaap:)))
4 years ago ( translate )