SILIKOU

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Silikou is a village situated in the Kouris valley of the Limassol district, approximately twenty-two kilometers northwest of the city of Limassol and three kilometers southwest of Trimiklini. The origin of the name is obscure. Goodwin suggests that it must derive in some way from schyllos, which means “dog” in Greek, but Menardos, on the other hand, suggests that it is short for Vasilikou, meaning “royal” in Greek. Turkish Cypriots adopted the alternative name Silifke in 1958. Silifke is a town’s name in Turkey and is the corrupted version of Cilicia. 
 
Historical Population

Throughout the Ottoman and British periods, the population of the village was mixed. According to the 1831 census, Muslims (Turkish Cypriots) constituted the majority; however the 1891 British census recorded that the Greek Cypriots constituted the majority (53%). During the British period, the Greek Cypriot proportion of the population increased even further, rising from 53% in 1891 to 61% in 1960.

Displacement:

No one was displaced during the emergency years of the late 1950s. The first conflict-related displacement took place in January 1964, when most of the Silikou/Silifke Turkish Cypriots fled the village and sought refuge in Paramali/Çayönü(274), Kantou/Çanakkale(265), Kato Polemidia/Binatlı(277) and the town of Limassol(269). However, almost one-third returned to their village after 1968. Richard Patrick recorded 55 Turkish Cypriots who were staying in the village in 1971 and he also noted that the Republic of Cyprus government had repaired some of the damaged houses, the village’s Turkish Cypriot school and the mosque. In July 1974, both the Silikou/Silifke Turkish Cypriots who had returned to the village and those who had remained elsewhere were once again displaced, as they all fled to the Sovereign British Base Area. They were all evacuated to north Cyprus via Turkey in February 1975. They were mainly resettled in Morphou villages such as Prastio(091) and Pano Zodeia(083).

Current Inhabitants:

Currently the village is only inhabited by its original Greek Cypriot villagers. The last Cypriot census of 2001 put the total population at 98. 


 
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