Krepeni

The oldest is from the 8th to the 7th century BC (Early Iron Age) with dense burials in simple, usually rectangular pits, a few of which are box-shaped.

[3] Three hundred meters from the first were found a total of twenty tombs with unique findings of the archaic era (6th century BC) and the third of the early Hellenistic period of the fourth quarter of the 4th century or the beginning of the 3rd BC.

In the end of the 18th century the patriarch of the Mavrovitis family moved his people from Krepeni to Mavrochori in order to avoid a plague epidemic.

Stefan Verkovich, folklorist from Bosnia, noted in 1889 that there were 28 Bulgarian houses in Krepeni.

He notes that the land is fertile and the local people are engaged in farming and vineyards.