Shurdhah Island


Shurdhah Island is an island in northern Albania. Shurdhah Island is located in the Vau i Dejës Reservoir, which is fed and drained by the river Drin. It is the largest island in the reservoir with an area of 7.5 hectares. From the most northern tip of the island to the most southern tip of it, it has an estimated length of. It is mainly covered by trees. It is accessible by tourist boat in summer from the Vau i Dejës dam or Rragam.

Etymology

The name of the original Illyrian settlement was Sarda. Later, the name was changed to Shurdha which means 'deaf' in Albanian. The name changed while Albania was an Atheist Communist state, when due to the strong religious connection of the island, it was forgotten.

History

Sarda was founded between the 6th and 7th centuries. The town was strategically located on the old road from the Adriatic Sea to Dardania and served as a resting point along the trade route. The settlement originally had a wall encircling the entire hill it was built on. Encircled on three sides by the Drin river, Sarda had 12 towers of various forms. Sarda seems to have been a modest settlement from its foundation to the 9th century when it saw rapid expansion. It gained its highest importance in the 12th century, when it was the seat of the joint bishop of Sapa and Sarda. In the 13th century Sarda had territorial disagreements with Scutari.
The island was the original settlement of the feudal Lekë Dukagjini patriarch, famous for the rules of the Kanun.
It was ravaged by the Ottomans in 1491.
In 1973, when the dam was completed, the city of Sarda became an island on the left bank of the river Drin.

Ecclesiastical history

Around 1100 a Diocese of Sarda was established on the island.
No residential incumbents available.
The see of Sardë shortly comprised also the Diocese of Dagnum, founded as suffragan of Archbishopric of Antivari during the second half of the fourteenth century, which was united with Sarda by Pope Martin V in 1428.
The bishopric of Sardë itself was suppressed no later than 1600, allegedly in 1491 when Pope Innocent VIII joined it to the Diocese of Sapë, and the united sees were suffragans in the ecclesiastical province of the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Antivari until the end of the eighteenth century.

Titular see

In 1933 the diocese was restored as Titular bishopric of Sarda. The title has been held by:
One can visit the ruins of the 11th-century medieval castle, which includes two rings of defensive walls and towers, the remains of a Byzantine church and other early medieval walls. The setting on the steep rocks rising from the lake is especially impressive.