Αψίδα

Stars, EUROPA Issue, Republic of Cyprus

Dublin Core

Title

Stars, EUROPA Issue, Republic of Cyprus

Description

The traditions concerning Dighenis are normally connected to what is known in Greek as the Akritan Cycle. When the Saracen ships were approaching a deserted shore of the island, Dighenis saw them from the top of the hill and threw a huge boulder at them. Many Saracen ships were destroyed and the disembarkation was abandoned. Since then this rock has been known as "Petra tou Romiou" , as the Saracens referred to Dighenis as "Roman". Roman's Rock can be seen on the 20mils stamp of the 1955 definitive set. In Cyprus the legends of Dighenis did not remain in the Akritan Cycle, but merged with the ancient glorifications of the Goddess Aphrodite, who in the person of a beautiful young Queen possessed all, the island, her palaces and a hundred houses. This queen asked Dighenis to fetch water to her palaces and houses; Dighenis brought the water by means of a stone built channel. But the queen rejected him and in her anger threw at him her spindle, which missed and turned into a granite column as it fell in the fields of lower Paphos where it can still be seen today.

Source

Cyprus Post, Republic of Cyprus
Κυπριακά Ταχυδρομεία, Κυπριακή Δημοκρατία

Publisher

Library of Cyprus University of Technology
Digital Heritage Research Lab of Cyprus University of Technology

Contributor

Designer: P. Huovinen

Rights

Απαγορεύεται η δημοσίευση ή αναπαραγωγή, ηλεκτρονική ή άλλη χωρίς τη γραπτή συγκατάθεση του δημιουργού.

Relation

www.cypruspost.gov.cy

Format

TIFF

Language

EL, EN

Type

Identifier

1972-EUROPA-150M

Coverage

35.160417, 33.346556

Provenance

Aspioti - Elka, Athens

Files

Citation

Cyprus Post, Republic of Cyprus and Κυπριακά Ταχυδρομεία, Κυπριακή Δημοκρατία, “Stars, EUROPA Issue, Republic of Cyprus,” Αψίδα, accessed November 23, 2024, https://apsida.cut.ac.cy/items/show/12786.