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Tsakonians
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Tsakonians (Greek: Τσάκωνες Tsákones) are an ethnic Greek population group, speakers of the Tsakonian dialect, or more broadly, inhabitants of Tsakonia and followers of certain Tsakonian cultural traditions, such as the Tsakonian dance.
The term Tsakonas or Tzakonas first emerges in the writings of Byzantine chroniclers who derive the ethnonym from a corruption of Lakonas, a Laconian/Lacedaemonian (Spartan) - a reference to the Doric roots of the Tsakonian language and the people's relatively late conversion to Christianity and practice of pagan Hellenic customs. Tsakonians were noted as fierce warriors and were heavily recruited to serve in the Byzantine army based on their supposedly "Spartan" qualities.
According to the Byzantine historian
George Pachymeres, some Tsakonians were resettled by the Byzantine emperor
Michael VII Ducas in
Propontis. They lived in the villages of Vatka and Havoutsi, where the river Gösen River (Aesepus) empties into the sea. However, based on the preservation of features common to both Propontis and the Peloponnesian dialects, Prof. Athanasios Costakis thinks that the date of settlement must have been several centuries later.
Tsakonians in later time were known for their
masonry skills. Many were also shepherds. A common practice was for a small crew of men under a
mastora to leave their village after the feast of
Saint Demetrius and to return at
Easter. They would travel as far as
Attica doing repairs and white-washing houses. The Tsakonian village of Kastanitsa was known for its
chestnuts and derives its name from the Greek word for the nut.
See also