Gulf of Patras

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Pumpie (talk | contribs) at 21:08, 4 March 2005. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The Gulf of Patras (Greek: Πατραϊκός Κόλπος Patraikos Kolpos) is a gulf that stretches from the eastern part of the Ionian Sea between Oxeia island and Cape Araxos in the south in the west up to the Strait of Rio-Antirrio at the capes Rio and Antirrio to the east next to the Rio-Antitrio Bridge. The gulf area is approx. 350 to 400 km². The length is approximately 40 to 50 km and the width ranges from 10 to 20 km. The famous Port of Patras lies to the southeast and is the only major port on the gulf. The length of the port was 2 km long, it is nearly 5 km long of the southern part is yet to be opened and is not completed. Messolonghi also has a port. Th egulf does not have many ports but has beaches in the south, the east and parts of the north. The old ports of Rio-Antirio lie east of the gulf. The port serves ferry routes to Ancona and Brindisi in Italy along with Kefallonia. The shipping routes that are linking Athens and from the Aegean and the Black Sea and the eastern Meditteranean with the western Mediterranean especially the Adriatic and the western ports. Fishing is also common because the gulf are rich in fishes

The Battle of Lepanto which occurred in 1499, 1500 and in 1571 was fought in this gulf.

There have been sunken ships including the Vivi that hit a mine and sunk 30 m below sea level on September 11, 1940.

Cities and towns

Tributaries