Group of about 30 islands, southern Aegean Sea. They cover a land area of 976 sq mi (2,528 sq km) and constitute the Cyclades department of Greece, which has its capital at Ermoúpolis. Their name refers to the ancient tradition that they formed a circle around the sacred island of Delos. The chief islands are Andros, Tínos, Náxos, Amorgós, Melos, Páros, Syros, Kéa, Kíthnos, Serifos, Íos, and Thíra. They were the centre of a Bronze Age culture—the Cycladic, noted for its white marble idols—and later belonged to the Mycenaean culture in the 2nd millennium BC. Colonized by Ionians in the 10th–9th century BC, they later were successively held by Persians, Athenians, Ptolemaic Egyptians, and Macedonians. Ruled by Venice after the early 13th century AD, the islands fell to the Turks at different times during the 16th to 18th centuries. They became part of Greece in 1829. The economy is now based on tourism and on the export of wine, hides, pottery, and handicrafts.
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The Cyclades (Κυκλάδες, ) are a Greek island group in the Aegean Sea, south-east of the mainland of Greece; and an administrative prefecture of Greece. They are one of the island groups which constitute the Aegean archipelago. The name refers to the islands around (κυκλάς) the sacred island of Delos. The Cyclades is where the native Greek breed of cat (the Aegean cat) first came from.
The Cyclades comprise about 220 islands, the major ones being Amorgos, Anafi, Ándros, Antiparos, Delos, Eschati, Ios, Kéa, Kimolos, Kythnos, Mílos, Mykonos, Náxos, Páros, Folegandros, Serifos, Sifnos, Sikinos, Síros, Tínos, and Santorini. Most of the smaller islands are uninhabited.
Ermoupolis, on Síros, is the chief town and administrative center of the prefecture.
The islands are peaks of a submerged mountainous terrain, with the exception of two volcanic islands, Milos and Santorini (Thera). The climate is generally dry and mild, but with the exception of Naxos the soil is not very fertile: agricultural produce includes wine, fruit, wheat, olive oil, and tobacco. Cooler temperatures are in higher elevations and mainly do not receive wintry weather. In transportation, the Cyclades is the only prefecture in Greece that is not linked with a state-maintained highway or a highway number. All of the roads in the island complex are secondary or provincial.
The significant Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age Cycladic culture is best known for its schematic flat female idols carved out of the islands' pure white marble centuries before the great Middle Bronze Age ("Minoan") culture arose in Crete, to the south: these figures have been looted from burials to satisfy a thriving Cycladic antiquities market since the early 20th century.
A distinctive Neolithic culture amalgamating Anatolian and mainland Greek elements arose in the western Aegean before 4000 BCE, based on emmer wheat and wild-type barley, sheep and goats, pigs, and tuna that were apparently speared from small boats (Rutter). Excavated sites include Saliagos and Kephala (on Keos) with signs of copper-working, Each of the small Cycladic islands could support no more than a few thousand people, though Late Cycladic boat models show that fifty oarsmen could be assembled from the scattered communities (Rutter), and when the highly organized palace-culture of Crete arose, the islands faded into insignificance, with the exception of Delos, which retained its archaic reputation as a sanctuary through the period of Classical Greek civilization.
In recent decades the Cyclades islands have become popular with European and other tourists, and as a result there have been problems with erosion, pollution, and water shortages.
| Municipality | YPES code | Seat (if different) | Postal code | Area code |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amorgos | 3101 | 840 08 | 22850-2 | |
| Andros | 3103 | 845 00 | 22820-2 | |
| Ano Syros | 3105 | 841 00 | 22810-8 | |
| Drymalia | 3107 | Chalkeio Naxou | 843 02 | 22850 |
| Ermoupoli | 3109 | 841 00 | 22810-2 | |
| Exomvourgo | 3108 | Kampos | 842 00 | 22850-5 |
| Ios | 3112 | 840 01 | 22860-9 | |
| Kea | 3113 | Ioulis | 840 02 | 22880-2 |
| Korthio | 3115 | Ormos Korthiou | 845 02 | 22820-6 |
| Kythnos | 3117 | 840 06 | 22810-3 | |
| Milos | 3118 | 848 00 | 22870-2 | |
| Mykonos | 3119 | 846 00 | 22890-2 | |
| Naxos | 3120 | 843 00 | 22850-2 | |
| Paros | 3123 | 844 00 | 22840-2 | |
| Poseidonia | 3124 | 841 00 | 22810-4 | |
| Santorini | 3111 | 847 00 | 22860-2 | |
| Serifos | 3125 | 840 02 | 22810-5 | |
| Sifnos | 3127 | 840 03 | 22840-3 | |
| Tinos | 3129 | 842 00 | 22830-2 | |
| Ydrousa | 3130 | Gavrio | 845 01 | 22820-7 |
| Community | YPES code | Seat (if different) | Postal code | Area code |
| Anafi | 3102 | 840 09 | 22860-6 | |
| Antiparos | 3104 | 840 07 | 22840-6 | |
| Donousa | 3106 | 843 00 | 22850-5 | |
| Folegandros | 3131 | 840 11 | 22860 | |
| Irakleia | 3110 | 843 00 | 22870-7 | |
| Kimolos | 3114 | 840 04 | 22870-5 | |
| Koufonisi | 3116 | 843 00 | 22870-7 | |
| Oia | 3121 | 847 02 | 22860-7 | |
| Panormos | 3122 | 842 01 | 22830-3 | |
| Schoinoussa | 3128 | 843 00 | 22870-7 | |
| Sikinos | 3126 | 840 10 | 22860-5 |
See also: List of settlements in the Cyclades prefecture