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Argaka,
is a village of the Pafos district, located in the coastal
plains of Chrysochous at the mid-east section of Chrysochous’s
Bay. It has a distance of about 8 km from Polis (Chrysochous),
while it stands at an altitude of about 90 meters above
sea level.
From a geological perspective, it
is located upon the calcareous sandstones, the sands,
and the marls of the Pleistocene period as well as the
lavas and the magma rocks (northeast of the settlement).
From a morphological aspect, what stand out are the
coastal, alluvial plain, one or two marine terraces,
and a slope that steadily ascends up to 500 meters.
Several streams flow down from the slope toward the
sea, indeed with a relatively large
one flowing next to the village. The river of Makounta,
upon which the Argaka – Makounta dam was constructed,
is located southeast of the village.
Upon the alluvial deposits, the terra
rossa, and the umbers and under an annual average rainfall
that ranges between 450 and 525 millimeters, a huge
variety of produce is grown. Due to the relatively large
tract of land that is irrigated, almost all of the produces
are grown as either non-irrigated or irrigated ones.
Apart from cereals and legumes, forage plants, vegetables
(mainly cucumbers, tomatoes, and from the melon family),
very few grapevines, citrus-fruits, a few fruit-trees,
bananas, almond-trees, and olive trees are also cultivated.
The cultivation of tobacco has also appeared very recently
in the village. The refugees from Karpasia, which settled
in neighboring villages and cultivated tobacco, contributed
to its spreading in Argaka. The hot climate of Argaka
helps the growing of some semi-tropical plants such
as the Indian fig, the loquat, etc. Stockbreeding in
Argaka is relatively developed.
The
settlement of Argaka has two parts. There is Pano Argaka
(Upper) and Kato Argaka (Lower). Upper Argaka represents
the old settlement while Lower Argaka, which followed
the Polis – Pomos – Nicosia road, is the new, linear-type
settlement. The houses of the old settlement are mostly
traditional, made with hewed limestone or with igneous
pebbles. Because of the stream that crosses it (known
as the River of Argaka), of the slope upon which it
is built, and of the road through which it connects
with the new settlement by the sea, the settlement of
Argaka can be characterized as a relatively sparsely
structured one.
Argaka is located between the sea
and a pine forest. While Lower Argaka stands next to
the sea, Upper Argaka stands upon the slope with an
excellent view towards the sea. It is not surprising
because Argaka is covered by urban-planning zones. Neither
should one find peculiar the fact that the east part
of the village has officially been deemed as a region
of excellent natural beauty.
The
village’s population has had a rapid growth from the
previous century until today. The 90 inhabitants of
1881 increased to 156 in 1901, to 240 in 1921, to 404
in 1946, to 546 in 1960, and to 669 in 1973. In 1982
the inhabitants were 642. In the last census that occurred
in 2001, the community’s inhabitants numbered 793. Behind
this increases of population are the fertile land of
the village, the easy-to-use transportation network
between Polis and Nicosia, the neighboring mine of “Limni”
(Lake), the irrigated tracts of land, and the modern
agricultural growth of profitable produce. Including
the village in the irrigation plan of Chrysochous has
benefited the community to the maximum. The village
constantly adjusts to the new socioeconomic conditions
that are created, defying the closing of the “Limni”
mine and the blocking of the direct transportation to
Nicosia (in essence, the road stops after Pachyamos
because of the events of the Turkish-Cypriot mutiny
in 1963 and also because of the Turkish invasion of
1974). It is estimated that today 76% of the village’s
financially active population is fully occupied with
agriculture, another 14% dedicates 10-50% of its time
to agriculture and to non-agricultural occupations and
only a 10% has some non-agricultural occupation outside
the village.
With
regards to transportation, both Upper and Lower Argaka
are located next to the main Polis-Pomos-Nicosia road.
A dirt road east of the village connects Argaka with
the neighboring forest of Pafos.
Argaka is not mentioned by Mas Latri
and so we do not know if it was a feud or a royal estate
during the Lusignan – Venetian period. Furthermore,
it is not mentioned by R. Gunnis, which is a bit of
a strange thing. G. Jeffery, (1918) mentions it as a
modern mini-settlement. The writers and travelers of
the previous century, Sakellarios and Fragkoudis, do
not mention Argaka –probably because today’s Kato Argaka
did not exist on what was their route. As opposed to
the neighboring Makounta, it does not appear in the
Venetian maps. In the map of Kitchener it appears as
Arkaka.
The
country church of Saint Varvara (Saint Barbara) is located
east of the village. It has been extensively renovated
and only the few capitals of columns and the carved
framings around the doors reveal its age, probably being
of the 18th century. I. Tsiknopoullos mentions the following:
“One English mile north of the village of Argaka close
to a spring, the “Agiotafitiko” (a dependency of the
Patriarchate of Jerusalem) Monastery of Saint Varvara
used to operate. In 1821 its Prior was the “Agiotafitis”
Monk Sofronios. Wealthy, owning two houses in Argaka,
he had bee-hives, livestock, and a large flock apart
from the staff of servants and two Deacons. During July
of 1821 he was summoned to Nicosia by the Turkish Authorities
where he martyred along with the other national Martyrs.
Sofronios, versed in the Turkish language, had served
for seven years as the Imam of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople
but he then regretted and reconverted to the religion
of his fathers. Regarding the Monastery of Saint Varvara,
Kyriazis reports the follwoing: “How it was established,
we do not know. It belonged to the Patriarchate of Jerusalem
and it operated until 1821, having at that time a Prior
and two Deacons apart from the staff of servants. Most
likely, the national Martyr Sofronios must have been
the last prior of the Monastery”.
A
spring of holy water is also extant close to today’s
country church of Saint Varvara. It is worth noting
that the country church of Saint Varvara with the holy
water spring next to it is located about one kilometer
north of the settlement, at a venue known as “Vrysin
tou Kalogirou” (the Monk’s Fountain). Prior Sofronios
was known as the “Kalogiros”.
It is not yet certain whether the
Monastery of Saint Varvara was the core of Argaka’s
settlement or if the inhabitants of some other settlement
-probably in the neighboring forest -transferred to
the settlement of Argaka during some phase of the 19th
or previous centuries.
Place-name: “Argaka”, as it is marked
in the official maps instead of “Arkaka” in the Cypriot
dialect. In the local dialect “arkatz’in” is the stream
and its feminine form implies a large stream.
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