TRACHONI

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Trachoni is a village situated on the Akrotiri peninsula in the Limassol district, approximately eight kilometers west of the city of Limassol and one kilometer from Cherkez village. The origin of the name is obscure. However it is widely suggested that it could mean “rocky” or “stony” place in ancient Greek (trachon). A huge part of its administrative area is included in the territory of the British Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri/Episkopi. Turkish Cypriots adopted the alternative name Kayakale in 1958. It means “stone fortress” (www.trachoni.com).  
 
Historical Population

Throughout the Ottoman and British periods, the population of the village was mixed. According to the 1831 census, Christians (Greek Cypriots) constituted the majority; this was the case in the 1891 British census as well. The latter census recorded that Greek Cypriots constituted almost 73% of the population. Interestingly, throughout the British period the same demographic ratio continued. For instance, in 1960 the Greek Cypriot share of the population was 72%.

Displacement:

No one was displaced during the emergency years of the late 1950s. The first conflict-related displacement took place in early January 1964, when most of the Trachoni/Kayakale Turkish Cypriots fled the village, seeking refuge in Asomatos(259). However, they were only able to remain there until 9 February, when an intercommunal shooting incident provoked the flight of all Turkish Cypriots from Asomatos(259). This time they took refuge in the villages of Episkopi/Yalova(262) and Kato Polemidia/Binatlı(277). Richard Patrick listed the village as abandoned in 1971. However the 1973 micro-census of the Republic of Cyprus recorded 21 Turkish Cypriots staying in the village. In July 1974, both those who had returned to Trachoni and those who had remained where they had sought refuge were displaced again when they all fled to the Sovereign British Base Areas. They were all evacuated from the Base Areas to north Cyprus via Turkey by February 1975.

Current Inhabitants:

Currently the village is inhabited by its original Greek Cypriot villagers and many displaced Greek Cypriots from the island’s north. In 1976, the population of the village was 609, but not long after that census the village received a large number of displaced Greek Cypriots. Refugee self-help housing settlements were created in the vicinity of the village, with a total of 543 building plots. In 1982 the inhabitants of the village (including the displaced Greek Cypriots who settled there) numbered 1,758. The last Cypriot census of 2001 put the total population at 4,651.

  


 
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