172/173 AD

Pafsanias in Aigion Around 172/173 AD, the ancient traveler Pausanias, coming from Ilida, entered the country of the Achaeans, crossing the Larissa River, which was the Achaia-Ilida border. Starting from the area of ​​Dymi, the westernmost city of Achaia, it headed towards Patras following the coastal road. After Patras, he continued his journey to the…

800-1200 AD

Aigio renamed Vostizza In 805 the city was temporarily occupied by the Slavs and renamed Vostizza. After the fall of Constantinople by the Franks in 1205 AD. William Samplitus and Godfrey Villardwin decided to conquer the Peloponnese (Morea). They arrived in Patras and then occupied Vostizza. After conquering most of the Peloponnese, William was proclaimed…

1821 AD

The Assembly of Vostizza The (Secret) Assembly of Vostizza, according to historians, was the meeting held by the members of the Society of Friends, in Aigio, from 26 to 30 January 1821, in order to organize and determine the day of the inauguration of the upcoming Greek revolution in the Peloponnese. Nowadays the 26th of January…

1890 AD

Ernst Ziller in Aigion Ernst Ziller (1837–1923) was a German born university teacher and architect who later became a Greek national. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, he was a major designer of royal and municipal buildings in Athens, Patras, and other Greek cities. Two of the most beutiful churches he built are…

400 BC

Achaean League Aigion was one of the 12 Achaean cities of the northern Peloponnese that had organized a league (Achaiki Sympoliteia) by the 4th century BC to protect themselves against piratical raids from across the Corinthian Gulf, but this league fell apart after the death of Alexander the Great. The 10 surviving cities renewed their alliance in 280 BC, under…