Arcadia or Arkadía (Greek Αρκαδία; see also List of traditional Greek place names) is a region of Greece in the Peloponnesus. It takes its name from the mythological character Arcas.
The prefecture has a skiing resort on Mount Maenalus, the Mainalon, located about 20 km NW of Tripoli. The other mountains include the Parnon in the southeast, the Artemisio, the Saita, the Skiathio, the Lykaia and Tsiberou.
The Greece Interstate 7 (E65) freeway, which was extended after 1997 and in 2003, runs through Arcadia on a north-west to south-east axis and nearly forms in the southwest the end of the freeway. A thermoelectric power station which produces electricity for most of southern Greece, operates to the south of Megalopolis, along with a coal mine.
Arcadia has two tunnels. The Artemisio Tunnel opened first, followed by the tunnel east of Megalopolis; both serve traffic flowing between Messenia and Athens.
The chief cities and communities in the prefecture include Tripoli, Astros, Vytina, Dimitsana, Lagkadia, Leonidio, Leontari, Levidi, Megalopolis and Stemnitsa.
In agriculture, potato farms, mixed farming, olive groves, and pasture dominate the plains of Arcadia, especially in the area around Megalopolis and between Tripoli and Levidi.
Theodoros Kolokotronis (1770 - 1843), a general in the Greek War of Independence (1821 - 1832), lived in Arcadia.
One of the birth-places reported for Zeus is Mount Lycaeum in Arcadia. Lycaon, a cannibalistic Pelasgian king, was transformed into a werewolf by Zeus. Lycaon's daughter was Callisto. It was also said to have been the birthplace of Zeus' son, Hermes.
Arcadia remained a rustic, secluded area, and its inhabitants became proverbial as primitive herdsmen leading simple pastoral unsophisticated yet happy lives, to the point that Arcadia may refer to some imaginary idyllic paradise, immortalized by Virgil's Eclogues, and later by Jacopo Sannazaro in his pastoral masterpiece, Arcadia (1504); see also Arcadia (paradise).
The phrase Et in Arcadia ego goes back to a 1647 painting by Nicolas Poussin, also known as "The Arcadian shepherds", where it appears as an inscription on a tomb. This phrase is said to be an anagram which, when the letters are rearranged, spells out the message "I tego arcanum dei", which in English translates loosely to "I conceal the secrets of god". This is the meaning given in Baigent and Leigh's book "Holy Blood, Holy Grail", which is the main inspiration for Dan Brown's "The Da Vinci Code".
In the 20th century, Arcadia experienced extensive population loss through emigration, mostly to the Americas. Many Arcadian villages lost almost half their inhabitants, and fears arose that they would turn into ghost towns. Arcadia now has a smaller population than Corinthia. Demographers expected that its population would halve between 1951 and the early 21st century.
In the mid to late 20th century a power plant began operating.
| Municipality | YPES code | Seat (if different) | Postal code |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apollonas | 0501 | Tyros | 220 29 |
| Dimitsana | 0506 | Dimitsana | 220 07 |
| Falanthos | 0523 | Davia | 221 00 |
| Falaisia | 0522 | Leontari | 220 21 |
| Gortyna | 0505 | Karytaina | 220 22 |
| Iraia | 0507 | Paloumpa | 220 28 |
| Kleitor | 0507 | Mygdalia | 220 28 |
| Kontovazaina | 0509 | 220 15 | |
| Korythio | 0510 | Steno | 221 00 |
| Lagkadia | 0512 | 220 03 | |
| Leonidi | 0514 | 223 00 | |
| Levidi | 0513 | 220 02 | |
| Mantineia | 0515 | Nestani | 220 05 |
| Megalopoli | 0516 | 222 00 | |
| North Kynouria | 0503 | Astros | 220 01 |
| Skyritida | 0517 | Vlachokerasea | 220 16 |
| Tegea | 0518 | Stadio | 220 12 |
| Trikolones | 0519 | Stemnitsa | 220 24 |
| Tripoli | 0520 | 221 00 | |
| Tropaia | 0521 | 220 08 | |
| Valtetsi | 0502 | Asea | 220 27 |
| Vytina | 0504 | 220 10 | |
| Community | YPES code | Seat (if different) | Postal code |
| Kosmas | 0511 | 230 58 |
See also: List of settlements in the Arcadia prefecture
Arcadia | Prefectures of Greece
Arkadien | Arkadien | Arkaadia | Νομός Αρκαδίας | Arcadia | Arcadie | Arcadia | Arcadia | ארקאדיה | Arcadia | Arkadien | Arkadija | Arcadië | Arkadia (kraina historyczna) | Arcádia | Arcadia | Arkadia | Arkadien | Arkadia | 阿卡迪亚