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Nafpaktos
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===Medieval and early modern history=== The town and its hinterland were hit by an epidemic coming from Italy in 747/8 and almost deserted.{{sfn|Veikou|2012|pp=466–468}} From the late 9th century, probably the 880s, it was capital of the [[Byzantine]] ''[[Theme (Byzantine district)|thema]]'' of [[Nicopolis (theme)|Nicopolis]]. At the same time, its bishopric was elevated to a [[metropolitan see|metropolis]]. During the 9th–10th centuries, the town was an important harbour for the [[Byzantine navy]] and a strategic point for communication with the [[Catepanate of Italy|Byzantine possessions]] in southern Italy.{{sfn|Veikou|2012|pp=466–468}}{{sfn|Nesbitt|Oikonomides|1994|pp=9–10, 18}} A rebellion of the local populace, which led to the death of the local ''[[strategos]]'' George, is recorded during the early reign of [[Constantine VIII]] (r. 1025–28).{{sfn|Gregory|1991|pp=1442–1443}} In 1040, the town did not take part in the [[uprising of Peter Delyan]], and although attacked by the rebel army, alone among the towns of the theme of Nicopolis, it resisted successfully.{{sfn|Gregory|1991|pp=1442–1443}} [[Nicholas the Pilgrim|St. Nicholas of Trani]] is recorded as having departed for [[Otranto]] in 1094 from the port.<ref>Testimony of his companion on the voyage [http://www.traniviva.it/magazine/contenuti/la-storia-di-san-nicola/ Bartholomew the Monk] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140504191751/http://www.traniviva.it/magazine/contenuti/la-storia-di-san-nicola/ |date=2014-05-04 }} excerpted from ''"San Nicola Pellegrino - Vita, Critica Storica e Messaggio Spirituale"'' by Gerardo Cioffari (published to coincide with the 900th anniversary of his death in 1994) – at ''TraniViva'' city web portal (Italian); access date: 30 January 2017</ref> The history of the town over the next two centuries is obscure; during the visit of [[Benjamin of Tudela]] in 1165, there was a Jewish community of about 100 in the town.{{sfn|Gregory|1991|pp=1442–1443}} Following the dissolution of the Byzantine Empire after the [[Fourth Crusade]], it became part of the [[Despotate of Epirus]].{{sfn|Gregory|1991|pp=1442–1443}}{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=65}} Under its metropolitan, [[John Apokaukos]], the see of Naupactus gained in importance and headed the local [[synod]] for the southern half of the Epirote domains.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=115}} In 1294, the town was ceded to [[Philip I, Prince of Taranto]] as part of the dowry of [[Thamar Angelina Komnene]]. The ruler of [[Thessaly]], [[Constantine Doukas of Thessaly|Constantine Doukas]], attacked Epirus in the next year and captured Naupactus, but in 1296 handed most of his conquests back to the [[Capetian House of Anjou|Angevins]], and Naupactus became a major Angevin base on the Greek mainland.{{sfn|Fine|1994|pp=236–237}} In 1304 or 1305, the Epirotes recovered Naupactus during a war with the Angevins, but handed it back when peace was concluded in 1306.{{sfn|Fine|1994|pp=239–240}} The town briefly became part of the Serbian Empire during the 1350s. [[File:Lepanto naupactus venecian fortress.JPG|thumb|right|The Venetian fortress.]] In 1361 the town was captured by the [[Catalan Company|Catalans]] of the [[Duchy of Athens]].{{sfn|Gregory|1991|pp=1442–1443}} In 1376 or 1377 it fell to [[John Bua Spata]], an Albanian [[Despotate of Arta|despot of Arta]]. It was briefly occupied [[Knights Hospitaller]] in 1378, and, now wedged between the expanding lands of the [[Count of Cephalonia]] [[Carlo I Tocco]] and the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] possessions, sold to the [[Republic of Venice]] by [[Paul Spata]] in 1407.{{sfn|Fine|1994|pp=352, 356, 401}} After 1449, the town was an isolated Venetian exclave in Ottoman territory, as the Ottomans completed their conquest of the rest of Epirus and Aetolia-Acarnania.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=544}} The town was important to Venice, as it secured their trade through the [[Corinthian Gulf]], and the Republic took care to erect strong fortifications to secure its possession.{{sfn|Gregory|1991|pp=1442–1443}} In the end, the fortress fell to the Ottomans in 1499, during the [[Second Ottoman–Venetian War]].{{sfn|Gregory|1991|pp=1442–1443}} [[File:Battle of Lepanto 1571.jpg|right|thumb|''The Battle of Lepanto'', [[National Maritime Museum]], Greenwich/London.]] Under the Ottomans, Naupactus was known as ''Aynabahtı, İnebahtı'' and was the seat of [[Sanjak of İnebahtı|an Ottoman province]]. In 1521 ([[Hijri year|Hijri]] 927) the town had 509 Christian, 84 [[Ottoman Jews|Jewish]], and 28 [[Romani people|Roma]] households.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=GÖKBİLGİN |first=M. TAYYİB |date=1956 |title=KANUNÎ SULTAN SÜLEYMAN DEVRİ BAŞLARINDA RUMELİ EYALETİ, LİVALARI, ŞEHİR VE KASABALARI |url=https://belleten.gov.tr/tam-metin-pdf/1214/tur |journal=BELLETEN |volume=20 |issue=78 |page=277 |issn=0041-4255 |eissn=2791-6472 |via=BELLETEN}}</ref> The mouth of the [[Gulf of Lepanto]] was the scene of the great sea battle in which the naval power of the [[Ottoman Empire]] was nearly completely destroyed by the united Spanish, Papal, and Venetian forces ([[Battle of Lepanto (1571)|Battle of Lepanto]], October 7, 1571). In 1687 it was [[Morean War|recaptured]] by the Venetians, but was again restored to the Ottomans in 1699, by the [[Treaty of Karlowitz]]. Among those who fought in the [[Battle of Lepanto]] was [[Miguel de Cervantes]], the most famous Spanish writer; there is a statue located at the port, in his honour.
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