Kri-kri, Chania, Greece
The Cretan goat- or Kri-kri- was domesticated during the Neolithic, having survived to modern times in the wilderness of Crete. The Kri-kri is not thought to be endogenous of Crete, most likely having been imported to the island during the Minoan period. It suffered badly from heavy hunting, particularly during World War II, and at the beginning of the 1960s, there were less than 200 specimens left. Its status was one of the reasons why the Samaria Gorge became a National Park in 1962. Since then their numbers have increased and there are now about 2,000 specimens. They can be found only in Crete, living in the Chania district, particularly in Samaria National Park.
According to myth, a Kri-kri fed Zeus when he was a small child, hiding from his father in Mount Ida.
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