Pontikonisi
Islet near Corfu, Greece
39°35′11″N 19°55′04″E / 39.58639°N 19.91778°E / 39.58639; 19.91778Greece
Pontikonisi (Greek: Ποντικονήσι, "Mouse Island") is a Greek islet near the island of Corfu. Its prominent feature is a Byzantine chapel of Pantokrator, dating from the 11th or 12th century.[1]
In Homer's The Odyssey, Poseidon turns the Phaiákian Cutter that brought Odysseus to Ithaka into stone. This segment of the Epic is believed to have been based on this Island off the coast of Corfu.[according to whom?]
The island of Pontikonisi might have served as an inspiration for Arnold Böcklin's painting Isle of the Dead.[2]
See also
- Pondikonisi, an island off the coast of Crete
- List of islands of Greece
Media related to Pontikonisi (Corfu) at Wikimedia Commons
References
- ^ "Pontikonisi Island and the Church of Pantokrator". Real Corfu. Archived from the original on 2017-10-21. Retrieved 2015-06-19.
- ^ Harrison, Max (2005), Rachmaninoff, Continuum International Publishing Group, pg 159.
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Ionian Islands
- Cephalonia
- Ithaca
- Corfu
- Lefkada
- Paxos
- Zakynthos
- Kythira
and islets
- Antikythera
- Antipaxi
- Arkoudi
- Atokos
- Elafonisos
- Kalamos
- Kastos
- Kravia
- Kythros
- Lazareto (Ithaca)
- Lazaretto (Corfu)
- Meganisi
- Navtilos
- Pontikonisi
- Proti
- Sphacteria
- Skorpios
- Sparti (Lefkada)
- Strofades
- Vido
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