[3] Before 2011 it held the same position in the administrative hierarchy, according to Law 2539 of 1997, the Kapodistrias Plan, except that Ithomi was an independent deme and Aristodimeio was a Local Division (Topiko Diamerisma) within it.
[4] Aristodimeio is named after Aristodemus, one of the three brothers among whom the Peloponnesus was divided during the event the ancient Greeks called the Return of the Heracleidae.
Until 1919 it was called Chasampasa[2] or Hasabasa, after Hassan Pasha, who ruled it during the Turkish occupation.
It owes its current name to the Ancient Messinian king Aristodemus, whose tomb is probably located there.
The house of the Macedonian hero Marinos Lymperopoulos (Captain Kromba), is located in Aristodimeio and has been designated a protected monument.