History
In c.1861, Kefallinia and the southern half of the Ionian Islands fully become a part of the Greek state (Kingdom of Greece), which later became a republic.
Almost every house was destroyed in the 1953 earthquake, with only the North surviving. Damage was estimated in tens of millions of dollars, however the real damage to the economy occurred when residents left the island.
Kefalonia became famous in the late 1990's with The book "Captain Corelli's Mandolin", by English author Louis de Berniere. The love story, that is the theme of the book occurs among a series of events during the Second World War, and is based on historic facts. A film adaptation was released in 2000.
The strong Lefkada earthquake of August 14, 2003 - 50 Years to the week after the 1953 quake - also shook the entire island. Little damage was reported on Kefalonia and Ithaca.
Three months after the Lefkada earthquake. Another mid-November earthquake measuring 5.3 on the Richter scale cause minor damages to business, residential property, and other buildings within the Argostoli periphery. Damages were in the $1,000,000 range (300,000,000 drachmas).
Communications
Stone roads and sidewalks were once common in Argostoli, and Lixouri, Gravel roads replaced stone roads in the late 20th century, with the first paved road created in the 1960s on two one-way main streets in Argostoli. Other roads linking to Sami, to Poros, and to Lixouri, were build in the 1970s and the 1980s. In the 1990's the road network from East of Argostoli to Michata and the monastery. There is a now paved road, opened in 2002 with gravel, just east of Argostoli. There are around 2.5 km of one-way streets on the island, the main street is J. Metaxas Street.
Statistics, and Area
Here are the largest cities, villages and towns in order:
- Argostoli (seat) 13,000
- Lixouri 9,000
- Fiskardo around 1,000
- Ássos around 900 to 1,000
- Sámi around 800
- Skála around 2,000
- Póros around 1,200
There are districts, which some people call them as counties, but they are not a county. Kefallinia, Paliki, and Ithaca.
See also: Prefectures of Greece, Greece