Nymfaio (Greek: Νυμφαίο, before 1926: Νέβεσκα – Neveska;[2]Aromanian: Nevesca) is a village and a former community in Florina regional unit, Western Macedonia, Greece. After the 2011 local government reform it became a member of the municipality Amyntaio.[3] The municipal unit has an area of 28.209 km2.[4] As of 2021 the village had a population of 63 residents.[1] The village is protected by the Hellenic Ministry of Culture in order to preserve its architectural integrity.
Name
First mentioned in an Ottoman defter in 1481, the village, then known as Neveska, had only six households.[5] The name of the town in Aromanian (Vlach) is Nevesca from the ancient Greek (Doric) νυφεοσσ´[citation needed], meaning snowy, snowclad.
Geography
Nymfaio is a mountain village, situated at 1350 m elevation[4] in the densely forested Verno mountains. It is 3 km north of Sklithro, 5 km west of Aetos, 16 km west of Amyntaio and 17 km southeast of Florina.
History
Nymfaio, or Neveska as it was called then, was settled around 1385 by Vlach travellers, who fled into the mountains after heavy battles with the Ottomans. The fighters of Neveska capitulated conditionally: they remained armed and autonomous, directly ruled by Valide sultan (the mother of the Sultan), and paid reduced taxes. Until the early 17th century, their main source of income was raiding the estates in the plains. Around 1630, the village became a centre of silversmithing, known all over Macedonia for the next three centuries.
The Environmental Centre ARCTUROS is active in the area, and manages an environmental protection center for brown bears and wolves one-and-a-half kilometres from the village. The center is home to 13 bears and several wolves that were believed too weak to survive in the wild. The information centre is open to the public for several months of the year. There are currently 6 functioning hotels in Nymfaio, as well as an Orthodox Church. Next to the church is an old cemetery dating to the 18th and 19th centuries.
^Kravari, Vassiliki (1989). Villes et villages de Macédoine occidentale. Réalités byzantines (in French). Vol. 2. Paris: Editions P. Lethielleux. p. 304. ISBN2-283-60452-4.