Lakki, Leros

Lakki (Greek: Λακκί), population 1990, formerly Portolago (Πόρτο Λάγο), is a community on the Greek island of Leros, in the Dodecanese, at the head of Lakki Bay.

Lakki

The area was built up as the main base of the Italian Royal Navy in the Dodecanese starting in 1923. The town of Portolago was founded in the 1930s, under Italian rule, as a new model town, most of whose inhabitants were from the Italian military. After Leros was transferred to Greece in 1947, it was renamed Lakki.

History

Like the rest of the Dodecanese, Leros was ruled by Italy from 1912-1943. The Italian authorities founded the town of Portolago in the 1930s as a new model town, named after Mario Lago, the Governor of the Italian colony from 1922 to 1936. It is one of the best examples of Italian Rationalist and Fascist architecture, with buildings by Armando Bernabiti and Rodolfo Petracco.[1][2][3] Mussolini was said to have a mansion for himself near town.

The buildings include:[1][2]

  • Casa del Balilla (House of the Fascist Youth) (1933), Bernabiti
  • Covered market (1934–1936), Petracco
  • Elementary school and creche (1934–1936), Petracco
  • City Hall and Casa del Fascio (Fascist Party headquarters) (1935–1938), Bernabiti
  • Cinema/Theater (1936–1938), Bernabiti
  • Church of Saint Francis (now of Saint Nicholas) (1935–1939), Bernabiti

Portolago was built up as the main base of the Italian Royal Navy in the Dodecanese starting in 1923, as the harbor of Rhodes was too small. The bay is deep, and about 3.5 km long and over 1 km wide, making it a suitable location for a naval base, in fact one of the best in the eastern Mediterranean. Under Italian rule, Portolago Bay (as it was then called) was heavily fortified. There was a double boom across the narrow entrance, and several batteries of guns covering it.[4]

The naval base included multiple buildings and naval installations. There was no air strip, but there was a seaplane ramp. The island garrison included about 6500 men. It was the home port for two destroyers, two small torpedo boats, and four submarines.[4]

Notes

  1. Fascismo - Architettura - Arte / Arte fascista web site
  2. Alex Sakalis. The strange beauty of Greece's weirdest town. BBC Culture/BBC Designed, 31 January 2018
  3. Arch. Petracco Rodolfo. Fascismo - Architettura - Arte / Arte fascista web site
  4. Charles W. Koburger, Wine-dark, Blood Red Sea: Naval Warfare in the Aegean, 1941-1946, 1999, p. 29

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