Izzeddin Fortress
{{Short description|Ottoman fortress in Souda Bay, Crete}}
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File:Souda Bay from Aptera-64-graeme.jpg
The Izzeddin Fortress ({{langx|el|Φρούριο Ιτζεδδίν}}; Izzeddin means "Glory of the Faith") is an Ottoman fortress in Souda Bay, Crete, near the village of Kalami, best known for its role as a prison for political prisoners in 20th-century Greece.
The fortress was established by the then Ottoman governor of the island, Rauf Pasha, in 1872, and named after the son of Sultan Abdulaziz. Already under the Cretan State (1898–1913) it was used as a prison, and continued so when Crete passed under Greek rule, until 1950. It was particularly notorious as a site of imprisonment for political prisoners, especially during the dictatorship of Theodoros Pangalos (1925–26) and the Greek Civil War. Its occupants included Eleftherios Venizelos in 1903 and the deposed dictator Theodoros Pangalos in 1926–28. After 1950 it passed under the jurisdiction of the Hellenic Navy. Today it is a protected landmark and a site for cultural events.
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{{coord|35.469379|N|24.149735|E|display=title}}{{Castles in Greece}}
Category:Buildings and structures completed in 1748
Category:Ottoman fortifications in Greece
Category:Buildings and structures in Chania (regional unit)
Category:18th-century architecture in Greece
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