Things You Probably Missed About Greek Mythology

Greek mythology god Apollo
Apollo in the temple of Zeus. Credit: wikimedia commons / Egisto Sani cc by 2.0

Many are the stories from ancient Greek mythology that are widely known around the world, and many are the movies based on them.

Over the centuries, Greek Mythology has set the basis of how people view the ancient world. However, the telling of these ancient stories has often diverted from the facts, leading to a series of longstanding misconceptions concerning ancient Greek gods and goddesses as well as other mythical personages and creatures.

Hades wasn’t such a monster in Greek mythology

As the god of death and the underworld, Hades has a bit of darkness and evil connected to him due to the fact that he is often treated like the ancient Greek version of the Christian devil.

However, it wasn’t Hades himself who chose to rule the underworld. He and his brothers, Zeus and Poseidon, drew straws to decide who would rule which realm.

Let’s just say that Hades was unlucky and got stuck with the underworld while his brothers, Zeus and Poseidon, were granted power over the Gods and the sea, respectively.

We must keep in mind that despite his reputation, Hades was not the one responsible for the condemnation or redemption of souls. Those were the three demigod brothers, Minos, Aiakos, and Rhadamanthys, who decided on a soul’s fate.

Ares was not that powerful and Artemis was a killer

Ares may be the god of war, and his name may be a synonym for bloodshed, but he always obeyed his sister Athena’s orders in Greek mythology.

Athena, like her brother, also oversees war, and she is the goddess of defense and righteous battle, which makes Ares bow to her. As seen in The Iliad, Athena often intervenes on behalf of a fair battle and Ares always backs down.

Artemis is the daughter of Zeus and the twin sister of Apollo. Artemis is the huntress and the protector of animals. She’s also the goddess of childbirth and the destroyer of young women. Artemis once killed six daughters of Niobe for insulting her mother, Leto.

Theseus Was a Manipulator

Everyone knows the story of Theseus slaying the Minotaur in Crete and managing the impossible exit of the Labyrinth which cost many people’s lives in Greek mythology.

He did all that with the help of the Cretan princess Ariadne. He later took her with him when he left the island only to abandon her on the Greek island of Naxos.

According to Plutarch, when Theseus founded today’s capital of Greece, Athens, he decided that the best way to populate it was by raping the women—thus earning the eternal hatred of his new family.

Medusa was not the only monster in Greek mythology

Medusa is famous for her snake hair and her appearance that would turn anyone who looks into her eyes to stone.

What is often missed is that Medusa was the only mortal of the three Gorgon sisters. Stheno and Euryale were immortals, and they also had snakes for hair.

Echidna was a sister to Medusa and wife to Typhon, a hundred-headed dragon. The two of them gave birth to many famous and terrifying monsters, such as the Nemean lion, Cerberus, Hydra, and Ladon.

She was also mother of the Chimera, the Sphinx, Scylla, the Colchian dragon, and the eagle that ate Prometheus’ liver every day for an eternity as was his punishment.

Zeus, the serial predator

Zeus is the ruler of the Gods and has fathered many important figures in Greek mythology. Zeus used to transform into animals to fulfill his desires. He charmed both Demeter and her daughter Persephone, who later married his brother, in a serpent’s form.

He also took the forms of many other animals and took advantage of many women. He pursued Asteria and Aiginia as an eagle, Boetis as a goat, and Europa as a bull among other women.

Zeus also took advantage of some women by allowing them to believe he was their husband. A glaring example is the story of Alkmene, Hercules’s mother.

The Olympians were not the first immortals in Greek mythology

Before the Olympian gods, there were the even older Titans. First, there was Chaos, father to Gaia (earth) and Eros (love). Gaia gave birth to Uranos (sky), the Sea and the Mountains.

Later, she married Uranos and gave birth to the Titan Cronus. Cronus married his sister Rhea and bore the Original Olympian immortals—Poseidon, Demeter, Hera, Hestia, Hades, and Zeus.

The Olympian gods even went to war with the Titans for control of the world in Greek mythology.

Pandora had a daughter, and Aphrodite went to war

Pandora, the woman who opened the box of evils onto the world, was the wife of Epimetheus and mother to a mortal daughter, Pyrrha. Because of Pyrrha’s marriage to her cousin, Deukalion, the gods sent a massive flood to destroy the earth and the mortals.

However, Pyrrha and Deukalion managed to survive the flood, and, after seeking help from the Oracle at Delphi, they cast the bones of Pandora to the ground so that the world would be repopulated. Thus, Pandora is the mother of the human race.

Even though Aphrodite was the goddess of love and beauty, she was also romantically tied to Ares and bore him three children: Eros, Phobos, and Deimos.

This is why she’s often associated with war affairs. Statues and depictions of her wearing armor and armed with weapons have been found in several port cities.

Amazing Places in Greece That You Won’t Believe Are Real

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Melissani Cave, Kefalonia Island, Greece
Melissani Cave (Kefalonia, Greece). Credit: Sanshiro KUBOTA/CC BY 2.0

Greece, a land of gods and nymphs, has a number of exquisitely beautiful places that appear to have come out of a fairy tale, being formed back in another time and almost in another world. Here are some of Greece’s most haunting places that you won’t believe actually exist.

The most haunting places in Greece

Melissani Cave, Kefalonia

Melissani Cave, Kefalonia Island, Greece
Melissani Cave, Kefalonia Island, Greece. Credit: Rachid H/CC BY 2.0

A sky-blue lake that was once believed to be the living quarters of nymphs, it is hauntingly beautiful, and legend has it that the nymph Melissani drowned herself due to her unrequited love for the god Pan at the lake. This unique geological phenomenon is created by water’s erosion of calcareous rocks.

Vlychada Beach, Santorini

Vlychada Beach, Santorini
Vlychada Beach, Santorini. Credit: Klearchos Kapoutsis/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Windswept formations transport visitors to a lunar landscape on the volcanic island of Santorini. Sand dunes are created during the winter months, creating interesting formations and sand caves. Occasionally, bulldozers even have to be called in to dig out beach-goers. The abandoned tomato factory nearby and ashen volcanic sand add an eerie quality to the beach.

Gamila Dragon Lake, Mt. Tymfi

Gamila Dragon Lake
Gamila Dragon Lake, Mt. Tymfi. Credit: George Tsilepidis/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Greece’s alpine lakes were customarily believed to have been created by dragons throwing stones at each other. The spectacular lakes bear the name of the beasts that created them. Gamila, at 2,050 meters (6,725 feet), the highest point of Mt. Tymfi, lies between the Aoos River and Voidomatis along the North Pindus Range.

Blue Caves, Zakynthos

Zakynthos Blue Caves
Blue Caves, Zakynthos, Greece. Credit: Wikipedia/Ρένια Χατζηλευτέρη/CC-BY-SA-4.0

Located at the north coast of Zakynthos, Greece, the caves were created thanks to waves crashing into the limestone cliffs. The sun is apparent on the walls of the tunnels and caves that the waves have carved into the cliffs over the millennia.

Meteora, Thessaly

Monastery
Monastery of Agiou Nikolaou. Credit: Bgabel/CC BY-SA 3.0

The Holy Monastery of Rousanou is one of six monasteries built on natural sandstone rock pillars at Meteora on the northwestern edge of the Plain of Thessaly in Central Greece.

Established in the middle of the 16th century, it was damaged by Germans during WWII. It is lower in altitude than other monasteries in the region in elevation, but this makes it more accessible. Nuns have occupied the convent since 1988.

Saint Theodora, Vasta

Saint Theodora
Saint Theodora, Vasta. Credit: EntaXoyas/CC-BY-SA-3.0

The small village of Vasta has acquired fame due to its “miracle church” of Saint Theodora, who lived in the 11th century BC and helped defend her village by disguising herself as a man before she went to  fight.

She died a violent death in battle while calling out the oath: “Let my blood become church, my blood a river, my hair the forest.” Built at the site of her grave, a local river rerouted to pass directly under the church, causing seven trees to sprout from its roof. Some believe this was indeed a miracle, attributed to Saint Theodora’s last words.

Gut Bacteria May Impact Speed of Aging

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scientist
A recent study examined the link between gut health and aging. Credit: Ark. Agricultural Experiment Station / CC BY 2.0 / Wikimedia Commons

Recently published research by a group of scientists has revealed that gut bacteria may impact the rate of aging experienced by humans.

The intricate environment of the human gut hosts billions of microorganisms, forming a vital ecosystem that actively contributes to the preservation of an individual’s well-being.

New research featured in the journal Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience reveals that the array of microorganisms present in the gut might exert an impact beyond just physical well-being, extending to the rate of aging as well.

Study examines gut bacteria and its impact on the rate of aging

The research was conducted by a team at the Hungarian University of Sports Science. The findings might provide prospects for utilizing probiotics’ potential in enhancing health and extending longevity, as highlighted by Professor Zsolt Radak, the study’s principal investigator.

Operating from Budapest, Radak and his team delved into the interplay between the diversity of the gut microbiome, biological age (which reflects our overall health state rather than our chronological age), and the physical fitness of a cohort comprising 80 amateur rowers.

For the study’s purposes, each participant underwent a battery of fitness evaluations and submitted stool samples for the analysis of their gut bacteria. Furthermore, blood samples were collected to ascertain their biological age through the scrutiny of epigenetic markers.

Epigenetic markers function akin to switches within our DNA, capable of determining the activation or deactivation of specific genes. They wield a pivotal role in shaping the development, functionality, and responsiveness of our cells to environmental cues.

Factors encompassing lifestyle, diet, and exposure to the environment can influence the quality of our cells, thereby influencing our overall health and the aging process.

Epigenetic markers serve as tools for gauging this cellular decline, offering a glimpse into our “epigenetic clocks,” often referred to as our “biological age.”

Results

The discoveries propose a pivotal connection among gut microbes, inflammation, physical fitness, and the aging progression, countering the prevailing notion that a greater quantity of bacteria equates to enhanced health, according to Radak.

Nevertheless, the study refrained from establishing a definitive cause-and-effect relationship. It’s plausible that the seemingly healthier dietary preferences of athletes could be positively influencing the proliferation of beneficial gut bacteria.

That being said, Radak was keen to stress during an interview with Euronews that “these bacteria do not relate to chronological aging. Which I think is a pretty interesting observation because it means that these bacteria are actually involved in DNA methylation aging [epigenetic aging], [and are hence] not the result of [chronological] aging.”

The implication, therefore, is that inflammatory gut bacteria, when present in high quantities, is linked to faster aging.

The Greek Church with the Finest Byzantine-Era Frescoes

Byzantine Frescoes
Byzantine Frescoes at Panagia Kera. Credit: Travel Crete

The church of Panagia Kera on Crete contains the finest-preserved Byzantine frescoes on the Greek island, and it is one of the most culturally and historically significant churches.

Located near the village of Kritsa in the municipality of Agios Nikolaos, it contains frescoes that date back to the Paleologian Renaissance, due to their vivid, bright colors which have withstood the test of time.

Panagia Kera was constructed and painted in the 13th century

Although no founding date for the Church of Panagia Kera has been established, historical consensus agrees that the oldest parts of the church, the central nave, and its vaulted roof and dome were constructed and painted in the 13th century.

The triple-nave Byzantine church is dedicated to the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, to Saint Anthony and Saint Anna.

Panagia Kera
The church of Panagia Kera. Credit: Gerd A.T. Müller , CC BY-SA 3.0/Wikipedia

According to local tradition, the church contained an icon of the Virgin Mary, which was believed to possess miraculous powers.

During the period of Byzantine Iconoclasm, it was transported to Constantinople but was later returned. In 1498, during the Venetian occupation of Crete, a Greek trader stole the icon, which was later transported to the temple of Saint Alfonso, located on the Esquiline Hill in Rome.

Panagia Kera was later renovated by the Managgaris family in 1722, and, in 1732, the icon of the Virgin Mary was repainted in the church by an unknown artist.

Byzantine Frescoes
Byzantine Frescoes at Panagia Kera. Credit: Travel Crete

Byzantine frescoes on Crete with scenes from the New Testament

The frescoes on the dome and the central nave depict the following scenes from the New Testament: the Presentation, the Baptism, the Raising of Lazarus, and the Entry into Jerusalem.

The central aisle of the church is dedicated to the Virgin Mary and the Assumption. The frescoes on the western wall of the church depict the Crucifixion of Jesus and the Punishment of the Damned, with Michael the Archangel announcing the Second Coming.

Panagia Kera Byzantine Frescoes
Byzantine Frescoes at Panagia Kera. Credit: Travel Crete

The south aisle of Saint Anne is decorated with images of the life of the Virgin Mary, and the north aisle is dedicated to Saint Anthony, with frescoes of the Second Coming and Judgement Day.

Next to the north aisle is a depiction of Heaven, complete with the Patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, as well as the Virgin Mary.

The nearby village of Kritsa is one of the oldest and most picturesque villages on Crete, Greece, built amphitheatrically on a rock hill named Kastellos. It is surrounded by olive groves at an altitude of 375 meters. During the Middle Ages, it was thought to be the largest village in Crete.

Russian Spacecraft Crashes into Moon

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Luna-25
The Luna-25 mission ended with the unmanned Russian spacecraft crash-landing on the Moon. Credit: Gregory H. Revera / CC BY-SA 3.0 / Pline / CC BY-SA 4.0 / Wikimedia Commons

According to officials, the Russian unmanned Luna-25 spacecraft has experienced a crash landing on the Moon due to a loss of control during its mission. This event marked Russia’s return to lunar exploration after a hiatus of nearly five decades.

The intended objective of the spacecraft was to achieve the historic feat of landing on the Moon’s southern pole. However, the mission encountered complications as it transitioned into its final pre-landing orbit.

The primary goal of this mission was to investigate a region on the Moon that researchers believe might contain frozen water and valuable minerals.

Russian Luna-25 spacecraft crash lands on the Moon

Roscosmos, Russia’s state space corporation, announced on Sunday morning that communication with the Luna-25 had been lost shortly after 14:57pm (11:57 GMT) on Saturday.

Initial assessments revealed that the 800kg lander had “ceased to exist as a result of a collision with the surface of the Moon,” the statement read.

The agency also conveyed that a dedicated commission would be formed to investigate the causes behind the mission’s failure.

This setback deals a significant blow to Roscosmos. The regression of Russia’s civil space program has been ongoing for multiple years, attributed in part to the redirection of state funding toward military endeavors.

Roscosmos had openly acknowledged the inherent risks associated with the Luna-25 mission and the possibility of its failure. The spacecraft was launched from the Vostochny Cosmodrome in Russia’s far eastern Amur region on August 11, subsequently achieving a successful lunar orbit entry earlier this week.

Anticipation had grown for the craft to achieve a historic feat with a gentle lunar touchdown scheduled for Monday or Tuesday. No nation had previously accomplished a landing on the Moon’s southern pole, although both the United States and China had executed successful soft landings on its surface.

Luna-25 marked Russia’s return to lunar exploration since 1976, during the period of the Soviet Union, when the Luna-24 mission achieved a triumphant landing.

Russia’s space race with India

Russia was in a competitive race with India to reach the Moon’s southern pole. India’s Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft has plans to touch down in that region in the upcoming days, aiming to deploy a rover for the purpose of investigating rocks and craters. The mission aims to collect valuable data and images, which would be transmitted back to Earth.

Notably, certain sections of the Moon’s southern pole are constantly cast in shadow, presenting a potential opportunity for the discovery of water.

The Indian spacecraft is scheduled to touch down on the Moon on August 23. It remains to be seen whether the Indian mission will fare better than the Russian one.

Minoan Language Linear A Linked to Linear B in Groundbreaking Research

Minoan Language
Palace of Knossos, Crete. Credit: Pat Scrap/Pixabay

The Minoan language known as “Linear A” may finally be deciphered with the help of the internet which can be used to uncover previously-hidden links to the much-better understood Linear B language. Linear B developed later in the prehistoric period.

The puzzle of Linear A has tormented linguists for many decades, as they attempted to link it somehow to Linear B, which was translated successfully for the first time in the 1950s. Linear B was used on the Greek mainland and Crete 50-150 years later than Linear A.

Tablet with Linear A writing, Minoan Language
Tablet with Linear A writing. Archaeological Museum of Heraklion, Crete. Credit: Dr. Ester Salgarella, Cambridge University

Understanding the link between them and decoding the secrets of Linear A would allow experts to paint a much more complete picture of Minoan civilization going back as far as 1,800 BC.

Linear A, which was used by the Minoans during the Bronze Age, exists on at least 1,400 known inscriptions made on clay tablets. The language has baffled the world’s top archaeologists and linguistic experts for many years.

linear b tablet
A translation of a Linear B tablet by Dr. Ester Salgarella. Photo courtesy of Dr. Salgarella.

But thanks to the pioneering work of Dr. Ester Salgarella, a Junior Research Fellow in Classics at St John’s College, Cambridge, understanding the Minoans’ most ancient language, used during the period of their civilization’s highest flourishing, may be at hand.

Linear a
One of the hand-drawn tablets from the SigLA database featuring different Linear A signs. Dr. Salgarella created an interactive webpage featuring this tablet, in which the user can discover the meanings of the syllabaries. Credit: Dr. Ester Salgarella, Cambridge University

Her research breakthrough, which has been hailed as “an extraordinary piece of detective work,” could provide the key for linguists to unlock the secrets of the Minoan language—and learn more about its society and culture. The linguist spoke about her groundbreaking research in an exclusive interview with Greek Reporter.

Dr. Salgarella explains that, perhaps most astonishingly, the internet itself may be the key that unlocks the link between the languages.

linear a
Linear A symbols incised on a jug, found in Akrotiri, Santorini. Credit: Wikipedia

Thera eruption devastated Minoan civilization

The Minoans were a Bronze Age civilization based on Crete and other islands in the Aegean Sea. Named after the legendary King Minos, this lost civilization was one of Europe’s first urban societies.

Ruled from vast palaces, its people were accomplished artists and maritime traders, but their civilization fell into decline after a devastating volcanic eruption on the nearby island of Thera (modern-day Santorini).

Taking an interdisciplinary approach using evidence from linguistics, inscriptions, archaeology, and paleography (the study of the handwriting of ancient writing), Dr. Salgarella examined the two scripts.

To compare them more easily, she created an online resource of individual signs and inscriptions called “SigLA—The Signs of Linear A: A paleographic Database.” She explains: “At the moment there is a lot of confusion about Linear A. We don’t really know how many signs are to be taken as core signs; there’s even been a partial misclassification of signs in the past.”

linear a tablets akrotiri
Linear A incised on tablets found in Akrotiri, on the Greek island of Santorini. Credit: Wikipedia

“A foundation stone” to help unlock secrets of Minoan Linear A language

“This database tries to clear up the situation and give scholars a basis for advancement. We don’t have a Rosetta Stone to crack the code of Linear A, and more linguistic analysis is required, but this structural analysis is a foundation stone,” reveals Dr. Salgarella.

The discovery of the Rosetta Stone, which was inscribed with writing in both ancient Egyptian and Greek, allowed linguists to finally crack the code of Egyptian hieroglyphics in the 19th century.

The phonetic values of most Linear A syllabograms were already known from B, but the language expressed in Linear A has remained a mystery.

Linear a, Minoan Language
Linear A tablet, Chania Archaeological Museum. Credit: Wikipedia

Linear A script carried over into Linear B

Around 1,600 BC, Linear A was borrowed from the Minoans by the Mycenaean Greeks and Linear B is the Greek Mycenaean dialect, used in administration of not only the Mycenaean palaces of Crete but also in Thebes, Myceanae, Pylos, and Tiryns on the Greek mainland.

Parallels between signs in Linear A and B have indeed been identified before, but Dr. Salgarella has now shown that a great many graphic variants of signs in the Minoan script were carried into Linear B. “This combined paleographical and structural examination—using sign typology and associations—has led me to revise the current script classification and to argue that these two scripts are actually two sides of the same coin,” said Dr. Salgarella.

Seh added that “most scholars have assumed that because the two languages are different the scripts must be distinct, but the relationship is more subtle than this.”

No writing at all for fifty years after fall of Minoan civilization

Following the fall of the Minoan civilization, there is a gap of about 50 years with no archaeological evidence of either script on Crete. Dr. Salgarella, who has revealed her findings in her newly published book, Aegean Linear Script(s): Rethinking the Relationship between Linear A and Linear B, explains “There is sufficient evidence that Linear B is a derivative from Linear A, so the question is, how did this transmission process happen?”

“I wanted to find out how we can account for the similarities and, more importantly, the differences, and fill in these gaps,” Dr. Salgarella says.

To form words, the scripts use “syllabaries,” meaning one written sign or symbol is not a single sound but an entire syllable. “Other signs are more like Chinese ideograms, or picture words,” says Dr. Salgarella.

Examining the patterns

Structural analysis involved looking at how the signs function, the direction in which they read, and whether they represent syllables, words, or punctuation. Composite signs fall into what the researcher calls ‘configurational categories.’

“I could see that there is some kind of rationale on how to put them together,” said Salgarella. By examining the patterns, she was able to come to a better understanding of how to read the composite signs and make sense of some of the combinations. The linguist hopes her findings will be a stepping stone to further research by linguists, paleographers, and archaeologists, all working together.

The Minoans used Linear A primarily, but not exclusively, for administrative purposes. Small clay ‘labels’ found on Crete bear short Minoan inscriptions on one side and imprints of fibers or string on the other. These suggest the labels were used to secure information written on folded or rolled perishable material, such as papyrus.

Clay tablets “baked” for eternity by fires from natural disasters

Natural disasters caused fires, which destroyed any writing materials—but very fortuitously “baked” the inscriptions into the clay labels and tablets. It’s possible, said Dr. Salgarella, that in the two generations between the periods when Linear A ended and Linear B appeared, writing may not have been used widely, but her findings show parts of the earlier script did actually survive and were adapted by the Greeks into Linear B.

“The two scripts (not the two languages) can be seen as two sides of the same coin, and that is the reason why I chose the title ‘Aegean Linear Script(s)’ for my book,” the linguistic explains. “The issue here is that the script—like the letters that are part of our alphabet, for example—has to be kept distinct from the linguistic level (language) although these two levels are of course interrelated.

“What we see with Linear A, Linear B, and the two different languages notated (Minoan and Greek) is that the graphic system (script) was continued without considerable change (but of course there are differences), but the languages differ. Upon the transmission process of Linear A to Linear B there was therefore ‘linguistic shift’. However, the graphic system was not deeply affected,” she says.

Asked by Greek Reporter if there are exact translations of any Linear A writing at present, Salgarella demurred, but explained why finding many corollary symbols leads to hope that it will indeed be completely understood one day.

“I am afraid there is currently no exact translation of the sign-sequences (= words) attested on Linear A tablets (as well as other document types). This is primarily because we have not yet identified the linguistic family the Minoan language belongs to (unless it has to be taken as an ‘isolated’ language),” she replies.

However, there are two reasons we can still get a general idea of the content of some tablets by comparison with Linear B.

Logograms, place names are important clues in discovering secrets of Minoan Linear A language

“Some logograms (picture-signs standing for commodities, e.g. ‘grain’, ‘figs’, ‘wine’, ‘olives’, ‘oil’) are the same in both Linear A and Linear B, meaning that these were continued from the Linear A script (and administrative system) onto the Linear B script (and administrative system),” said the linguist.

“So, if we know the meaning of any such logogram in Linear B, we can assume it may have been the same in Linear A. Now, if on a Linear A tablet we can see the logogram for ‘wine,’ at least we can get a general idea of the content of the record: ‘wine’ (it could have been a delivery of the product, an allocation or even wine to be used in specific ceremonial or religious contexts),” added Salgarella.

Additionally, she explained that “Most words occurring on Linear A tablets are understood to be personal names and place names. We do have a number of such names on Linear A tablets that are also found on Linear B tablets. For instance, in both LA and LB we have the place-name ‘pa-i-to’ (‘Phaistos’).”

“As to personal names, we have the following correspondences (at times showing morphological adaptation to the Greek language): LA ‘di-de-ru’ corresponds to LB ‘di-de-ro’, LA ‘qa-qa-ru’ to LB ‘qa-qa-ro’, LA ‘ka-sa-ru’ to LB ‘ka-sa-ro’, LA ‘pa-ja-re’ to LB ‘pa-ja-ro’ just to name a few,” said Salgarella, providing examples.

Many “core signs” shared between Minoan Linear A language and B

“So, if at present we cannot really ‘translate’ Linear A (as this would require knowledge of the underlying language), we are still able to read the texts if we apply to the Linear A signs that have got the same shape in Linear B (so-called ‘homomorphic’ signs) the same phonetic values that have been reconstructed for Linear B,” Salgarella explained.

“This process is not unproblematic and there is an ongoing debate as to the legitimacy of doing so, Salgarella admits. “However, if we assume that the phonetic values of the signs that are shared between the two scripts may have had a similar or comparable sound value, then we are able to at least ‘read’ Linear A inscriptions in phonetic transcription with an approximation.”

Salgarella’s research and new database identifies many vital “core signs.” Greek Reporter asked the linguist how many of these exist and what they stand for.

“By ‘core’ signs I mean those simple signs (i.e. single graphic units, not combinations of signs) that are attested on all the Linear A evidence so far unearthed at different sites on Crete and the Aegean islands. This set of ‘core signs’ also shows the most similarities with the Linear B signs,” reveals Salgarella.

“In fact, most of these core signs are shared between Linear A and Linear B, and are,” according to Salgarella, “therefore referred to with the prefix ‘AB’ (e.g. AB 01, AB 08 etc.) in the research.”

“There are a total of some 80 core signs,” Salgarella states. “In addition to core signs, in Linear A we also find ‘site-specific’ signs, meaning that they are only attested on the Linear A evidence found at a given site only. As a trend, we can see that these site-specific Linear A signs were not transmitted onto Linear B.

Open-access online database makes scholarship available to all

“This is the reason why,” explains Salgarella, “it is productive to differentiate between these two sets of signs (core and site-specific) to examine in detail the characteristics of both Linear A as well as the Linear A to Linear B transmission process.”

Salgarella also points to the research conducted by Professor John Younger (now Emeritus), who has transcribed Linear A texts which can be viewed here.

Other Linear A texts from other sites can be viewed here.

The open-access SigLA database of inscriptions was created in collaboration with computer scientist Dr. Simon Castellan, from the University of Rennes in France. It features a list of 300 standard signs and 400 inscriptions which were manually copied. It is still under construction, but more than 3,000 individual signs found within the inscriptions are currently searchable.

“An extraordinary piece of detective work”

Salgarella explains that “Collecting the Linear A inscriptions in a unified database is of paramount importance to be able to answer sophisticated paleographical and linguistic questions about the Linear A script as well as the Minoan language it encodes, which will help us reconstruct the socio-historical context of the Minoan civilization.”

Professor Tim Whitmarsh, the A.G. Leventis Professor of Greek Culture and Fellow of St. John’s, had high praise for Salgarella’s work and said that “cracking Linear B was a huge post-war triumph for Classics, but Linear A has remained elusive.”

“Dr. Salgarella has demonstrated that Linear B is closely related to its mysterious and previously illegible predecessor. She has brought us one step closer to understanding it. It’s an extraordinary piece of detective work,” praises Whitmarsh.

Lighthouses Open to the Public Across Greece

Lighthouse Greece
Lighthouses across Greece are being made accessible to the public. Credit: Jebulon / Wikimedia Commons / CC0

On Sunday, 29 lighthouses across Greece will be made accessible to the general public. The one-day event presents a rare opportunity for visitors to learn more about the contribution of lighthouses to maritime safety and navigation.

The lighthouses are being opened to the public to celebrate World Lighthouse Day, which has been held every year since 2003 on the third Sunday in August. Some of the lighthouses that will be opened to the public are of notable historical significance. For example, the Lighthouse of Akrotiri on Santorini is one of the oldest in the country.

Owing to its vast coastline, myriad of islands, and proud nautical traditions, lighthouses have played an important role throughout the history of Greece.

29 lighthouses to open in Greece

The lighthouses will be open to visit from 10:00 to 14:00 and from 17:00 to 20:00 on Sunday. What sets these lighthouses apart is not only their sheer number but also the diverse personalities they possess. Each lighthouse has a unique architecture, design, and historical significance, serving as a testament to Greece’s maritime heritage. The full list is as follows:

  1. Aghios Nikolaos the island of Kea
  2. Akrotiri on Santorini
  3. Arkitsa in Fthiotida
  4. Moudari on the island of Kythira
  5. Vryssaki in Lavrio
  6. Gerogombos on the island of Kefalonia
  7. Gourouni on Skopelos
  8. Drepano in Chania
  9. Kassandra in Halkidiki
  10. Kastri on Othoni
  11. Shinari on Zakynthos
  12. Kranai in Gythio
  13. Megalo Emvolo in Thessaloniki
  14. Melagavi in Loutraki
  15. Plaka on Limnos
  16. Korakas on Paros
  17. Kokkinopoulos on Psara
  18. Alexandroupolis in Alexandroupoli
  19. Tenaro in the region of Lakonia
  20. Koprena in Arta
  21. Kaki Kefali in Halkida
  22. Monemvasia in the region of Lakonia
  23. Lakka on Paxi
  24. Vassilina on Evia
  25. Pappa on Ikaria
  26. Spathi on Serifos
  27. Doukato on Lefkada
  28. Katakolo, Ilia region
  29. Koghi on Salamina

Maritime tradition

Lighthouses form an important part of Greece’s rich maritime traditions. For a country of seafarers, it has always been important to ensure the safety of seaborne vessels – something lighthouses have been doing since antiquity.

Boasting a grand count of 1,600 lighthouses, Greece is among the countries with the most lighthouses in the world. With an average age of approximately two hundred years, each of these lighthouses possesses a distinct personality and a captivating historical narrative.

According to the Lighthouse Authority of the Hellenic Navy, the Greek network of lighthouses extends 18,400 km along the coast of Greece.

Today, the 1,297 torches maintained by the Lighthouse Authority are estimated to fully cover the lighting needs of an extremely large number of islands, islets, and rock islands (9,835) as well as 1,345 bays and coves, 161 straits and channels, and 520 ports.

Lost Ancient Greek Sky Map Discovered at Monastery

Hipparchus Ancient Greek map night sky
The Greek Orthodox St Catherine’s Monastery where Hipparchus’s map of the sky was discovered. Credit: Joonas Plaan, CC BY 2.0/Wikipedia

A map of the night sky created by the ancient Greek astronomer Hipparchus was recently discovered at St. Catherine Monastery on the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt.

Hidden beneath Christian texts, scholars have discovered what seems to be part of the long-lost star catalog of Hipparchus—believed to be the earliest known attempt to map the entire sky.

Scholars have been searching for Hipparchus’s catalog for centuries. James Evans, a historian of astronomy at the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Washington, describes the find as “rare” and “remarkable.”

Map of the sky manuscript in ancient Greek

The extract has been published online this week in the Journal for the History of Astronomy.

Evans says it proves that Hipparchus, often considered the greatest astronomer of ancient Greece, really did map the heavens centuries before other known attempts.

It also illuminates a crucial moment in the birth of science, when astronomers shifted from simply describing the patterns they saw in the sky to measuring and predicting them.

The manuscript came from the Greek Orthodox St Catherine’s Monastery, but most of its 146 leaves, or folios, are now owned by the Museum of the Bible in Washington D.C.

Ancient Greek Map Night Sky
Detail of the text by ancient Greek astronomer Hipparchus. Credit: Museum of the Bible, CC BY-SA 4.0

Nature reports that the folios revealed astronomical material and star coordinates. The catalog states the length and breadth in degrees of the constellation Corona Borealis, the northern crown, and gives coordinates for the stars at its extreme north, south, east, and west.

Several lines of evidence point to Hipparchus as the source, beginning with the idiosyncratic way in which some of the data are expressed, Nature says.

Most crucially, the precision of the ancient astronomer’s measurements enabled the team to date the observations.

The phenomenon of precession in which Earth slowly wobbles on its axis by around one degree every seventy-two years means that the position of the fixed stars slowly shifts in the sky.

The researchers were able to use this to check when the ancient astronomer must have made his observations. They found that the coordinates fit roughly 129 BC during the time when Hipparchus was working.

Ancient Greek Hipparchus founder of trigonometry

Hipparchus is considered the founder of trigonometry but is most famous for his incidental discovery of the precession of the equinoxes.

He was born in Nicaea, Bithynia, and probably died on the island of Rhodes, Greece. He is known to have been a working astronomer between 162 and 127 BC.

Hipparchus is considered the greatest ancient astronomical observer and, by some, the greatest overall astronomer of antiquity.

He was the first whose quantitative and accurate models for the motion of the Sun and Moon survive.

For this reason, he certainly made use of the observations and perhaps the mathematical techniques accumulated over centuries by the Babylonians and by Meton of Athens (fifth century BC), Timocharis, Aristyllus, Aristarchus of Samos, and Eratosthenes among others.

He developed trigonometry and constructed trigonometric tables, and he solved several problems of spherical trigonometry. With his solar and lunar theories and his trigonometry, he may have been the first to develop a reliable method to predict solar eclipses.

His other noteworthy achievements include the discovery and measurement of Earth’s precession, the compilation of the first comprehensive star catalog of the Western world, and possibly the invention of the astrolabe, also of the armillary sphere that he used during the creation of much of the star catalog.

The Unique Beauty of Meteora, Greece

Meteora Greece
The stunning beauty of Meteora has made it a sought-after destination in Greece, especially for photographers and those looking to experience the incredible spot for themselves. Credit: Stathis floros, CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikipedia

Meteora, Greece, is like no other place on Earth; indeed, in many ways, it looks as if it is on another planet, with its stalagmite-like rocks that reach into the sky amid a backdrop of craggy mountains dotted with red-roofed monasteries.

The unique geological formations that make this place unforgettable and which almost defy description are just some of the characteristics that attract people to Meteora.

Located near the town of Kalabaka at the northwestern edge of the Plain of Thessaly near the Pineios River and Pindus Mountains, Meteora is included on the UNESCO World Heritage List.

Mountain climbers who want to test their mettle against the sheer vertical walls of the rocks make the pilgrimage to Meteora alongside religious pilgrims who are amazed by the treasures of the monasteries that are perched on the cliffs.

The immense monoliths, which have been split by earthquakes and eroded by water and wind over millions of years, are an authentic masterpiece of nature.

Emerging about twenty-five million years ago as part of the elevated seabed which was thrust into the sky as the result of massive tectonic movements, the Meteora rocks have created a landscape that looks like something out of a fairy-tale albeit perhaps a scary one.

Now home to one of the largest and certainly the most precipitously built complexes of Eastern Orthodox monasteries, Meteora is second in importance only to Mount Athos in religious centers of Orthodox monasticism.

The six (of an original twenty-four) monasteries are built on the immense natural pillars and towering rock outcrops that dominate the local area. The rock formations have been a site of worship for the people of the area as far back as the Turkish advances that were made in the area.

Between the 13th and 14th century, twenty-four monasteries were constructed atop the rocks as a way to keep the monks safe from the encroaching armies of the Turks.

The word Meteora itself, meaning “lofty,” or “elevated,” is etymologically related to the word meteor, leading to an even more otherworldly feeling when one sees the name.

Next to the Pindos Mountain range, in the western Greek region of Thessaly, the enormous columns of rock rise almost majestically from the ground. But these unique rock formations are not easy to explain geologically. They are not volcanic plugs of hard igneous rock, as can be seen elsewhere; the rocks are composed of a mixture of sandstone and conglomerate.

The conglomerate was formed of deposits of stone, sand, and mud from streams flowing into a delta at the edge of a lake over millions of years, geologists believe. About sixty million years ago during the Paleogene period, a series of earth movements pushed the seabed upward, creating a high plateau and causing many vertical fault lines in the thick layer of sandstone.

The huge rock pillars were then formed by the weathering effects of water, wind, and extremes of temperature on the vertical faults. Geologists consider it unusual that this conglomerate formation and type of weathering are confined to a relatively localized area within the surrounding mountain formation.

What makes Meteora’s appearance special is the uniformity of the sedimentary rock constituents that were deposited over millions of years, leaving few signs of vertical layering and the localized abrupt vertical weathering, creating its staggeringly beautiful pillars.

Rousanou Monastery Meteora
The Rousanou Monastery at Meteora, established in 1388, presents an ethereal sight to visitors of this unique place in Greece. Credit: Alexandros Alexis/ CC BY-SA 4.0

Excavations and research have discovered petrified diatoms at Meteora, which have contributed to understanding the Palaeo-climate and climate changes. Radiocarbon dating shows evidence of human presence there dating back fifty thousand years.

Vegetation sprouts out of many of the vertical rock walls due to the water that runs down the cracks and crevices in the cliff. Over the past several hundred years, there were reports that Meteora was easily accessible by foot; now, this is not the case because one must pass through an impenetrable jungle to get to the top of some of the pillars.

As massive unpredictable rock pillars, rock falls pose a constant threat to pilgrims and tourists at Meteora, Greece. An earthquake of 7.0 on the Richter Scale shook Meteora in 1954, and certainly many others have occurred there throughout the eons, but miraculously, the pillars still stand today.

Back in 2005, such a massive rock fell that it closed the access road leading up to the area for several days.

Cave of Theopetra nearby was home to Neanderthals and modern humans

The nearby cave of Theopetra is located four kilometers (2.5 miles) from Kalambaka, one of the towns nearest Meteora. Its uniqueness from an archeological perspective is that this single site contains evidence from two hugely significant cultural transitions: the replacement of Neanderthals by modern humans, and later, the transition from hunting-gathering to farming after the end of the last Ice Age.

The cave was once open to the public, but it is currently closed indefinitely, for safety reasons.

The cave consists of an immense five hundred square meter (5,400 square foot) rectangular chamber at the foot of a limestone hill, which rises to the northeast above the village of Theopetra, with an entrance seventeen meters (56 feet) wide by three meters (9.8 feet) high.

It lies at the foot of the Chasia mountain range, which forms the natural boundary between Thessaly and Macedonia while the Lithaios River, a tributary of the Pineios River, flows in front of the cave. The small river, flowing literally on the doorsteps of the cave, meant that cave dwellers always had easy access to fresh, clean water without the need to cover long distances daily to find it.

Archeologists have found that caves in the vicinity of Meteora were inhabited continuously between fifty thousand and five thousand years ago. The oldest known example of a purposely-built structure, a stone wall that blocked two-thirds of the entrance to the Theopetra cave, was constructed twenty-three thousand years ago, most likely as a barrier against cold winds since the Earth was experiencing an ice age at the time.

A great number of important Paleolithic and Neolithic-era manmade artifacts have been found within the caves.

Incredibly, although the greater surrounding area was clearly inhabited for tens of thousands of years, Meteora is not mentioned in classical Greek myths or ancient Greek literature.

The first great ascetics come to Meteora, Greece

The first people documented to inhabit Meteora after the Neolithic Era were an ascetic group of Christian monks who wanted to lead lives of great ascetism. They began living on the ancient rock pinnacles in the ninth century AD, after the fashion of the Stylites, the early Christian ascetics who lived atop pillars as a way to better commune with God.

They lived in natural hollows and fissures in the rock towers, some as high as 1,800 feet (550 meters) above the plain. This great height, combined with the sheerness of the cliff walls, kept away all but the most determined visitors. Initially, the hermits led a life of solitude, meeting only on Sundays and special days to worship and pray in a chapel built at the foot of a rock known as Dhoupiani.

However, actual monasteries were not built until the fourteenth century, when the monks needed a more secure place to hide in the face of an increasing number of Turkish attacks on Greece.

Monastic state of the Skete of Stagoi established

By the late eleventh and early twelfth centuries, a rudimentary monastic state had formed called the Skete of Stagoi, which was centered around the still-extant church of Theotokos (Mother of God).

In 1344, Athanasios Koinovitis from the monastic center Mount Athos brought a group of followers to Meteora. From 1356 to 1372, he and his men built The Great Meteoron Monastery on the Broad Rock, which was perfect for the monks; they were safe from marauders of every kind and had complete control of the entry to the monastery.

The only means of reaching it was by climbing a long ladder, which was drawn up whenever the monks felt threatened.

At the end of the fourteenth century, the Byzantine Empire’s reign over northern Greece was being increasingly threatened by Turkish raiders who wanted control over the fertile plain of Thessaly.

In 1517, Theophanes built the monastery of Varlaam, which was reputed to house relics such as the finger of St. John and the shoulder blade of St. Andrew.

Access to the monasteries was originally (and deliberately) difficult, requiring either long ladders that were pieced together or large nets that were used to haul up both goods and people.

This required quite a leap of faith, however, because the ropes were replaced, so the story goes, only “when the Lord let them break.”

UNESCO: “Traditional way of life threatened with extinction”

UNESCO notes in its overview of the World Heritage site of Meteora that “the net in which intrepid pilgrims were hoisted up vertically alongside the 373 meters (1,224 feet) cliff where the Varlaam monastery dominates the valley symbolizes the fragility of a traditional way of life that is threatened with extinction.”

Until the seventeenth century, the primary means of conveying goods and people from these eyries was by means of these very baskets and ropes.

Of course, getting up to the summits is a great deal simpler these days after steps were carved into the rock starting in the 1920s. But climbing these, as anyone can imagine, is not for the faint of heart.

Of the original twenty-four religious buildings at Meteora, only four monasteries and two convents are still functioning, with each housing fewer than ten individuals.

In 1921, Queen Marie of Romania visited Meteora, becoming the first woman ever allowed to enter the Great Meteoron monastery.

The Monasteries of Greece’s Meteora

At their peak of development in the sixteenth century there were twenty-four monasteries at Meteora, with much of their architecture, of course, Athonite in origin. The six religious structures today are accompanied by the ruins of the others which have fallen into disrepair.

The Great Meteoron is oldest of all Meteora monasteries

The Holy Monastery of Great Meteoron is the oldest and largest of the monasteries of Meteora. The monastery is believed to have been built just before the mid-14th century by a monk from Mount Athos named Saint Athanasios Meteorites.

Dedicated to the Virgin Mary, the Mother of God, his monastery later added small cells so that monks could live there in peace and seclusion atop the rock. Also known as The Holy Monastery of the Transfiguration, it takes its name from the second church St. Meteorites built.

The successor of Saint Meteorites was a monk named Saint Joasaph who continued to build more cells, as well as a hospital for them, renovating the churches there as well. The Monastery thrived in the 16th century when it received many imperial and royal donations.

At that time, it had over three hundred monks living and worshiping within its cells. It is still a functioning monastery since there are three monks in residence there.

The largest of all Meteora monasteries, there are many buildings belonging to the complex there. The katholikon, dedicated to the Transfiguration of Jesus, was the first church for the monastery.

The hermitage of the first founder of the monastery is a small building carved into the rock itself. The kitchen, commonly referred to as the hestia, is a domed building near the refectory. There is also a hospital, with its famous roof made of brick and supported by four columns.

The three other old churches or chapels include: The Chapel of Saint John the Baptist, which lies next to the katholikon sanctuary; The Saints Constantine and Helen Chapel which is an aisle-less church with a large vault; and the chapel of Virgin Mary, which is in the cave.

The Monastery of Varlaam

The Monastery of Varlaam, the second largest monastery at Meteora, takes its name from a monk of the same name, who first scaled the rock on which it is perched in 1350.

Varlaam built three churches by laboriously hoisting materials up the face of the cliffs. After his death, however, the monastery was abandoned for two hundred years until two brothers who were monks, Theophanes and Nektarios Apsarades, came to the rock in the 16th century and began to rebuild the churches in October of 1517.

The two brothers from Ioannina spent twenty-two years hoisting materials to the top of the rock formation. However, the construction itself was reported to have taken only approximately twenty days.

Monks have been present there since the 16th century, but there has been a constant decline in their presence since the 17th century. Today, the monastery can be accessed through a series of ladders that scale the northern side of the rock. The museum there is open to these brave visitors; it contains a wide array of relics and ecclesiastical treasures for those who are courageous enough to make the journey.

As of 2015, there were seven monks remaining in Varlaam.

The Monastery of Rousanou

Rousanou, which is also perched on a lofty pillar, is believed to have been constructed, like many of the other monasteries, in the 14th century. The cathedral is believed to have been built in the 16th century and decorated in 1540. The name Rousanou is believed to come from the first group of monks who settled on the rock and were from Russia.

The monastery is located at an elevation of 484 meters (1,587 feet). From its position in the middle of Meteora, visitors can look out and see the other monasteries as well as the ruins of the Monastery of St. John the Baptist and the Pantokrator.

The Monastery of St. Nicholas Anapausas

The Monastery of St. Nicholas Anapausas is located atop a slender rock pillar measuring approximately eighty meters high. It is the first pillar pilgrims encounter when making their way to the holy Meteora. The Monastery, which was founded in the late 14th century, today is surrounded by the ruined monasteries of St. John Prodromos, the Pantocrator, and the chapel of Panagia Doupiani, which are all empty now.

The monastery once served as a resting place for pilgrims and quickly got its name of “Anapausas” referring to word anapafseos, or “resting.” Situated on the incredibly narrow top of a pillar, the floors are connected through an interior staircase. St. Nicholas is honored on the second floor, where the katholikon is located. On the third floor, there is the Holy Altar and the walls are decorated by 14th-century frescoes. The monastery was restored in the 16th century and again in the 1960s.

The Monastery of The Holy Trinity

The Monastery of the Holy Trinity is believed to have been built in the 14th and 15th century. Even prior to this, ascetics had established hermitages at the base of the rock on which it stands.

In the 14th century, John Uroš moved to the Meteora and endowed and built monasteries on top of this cliff as sanctuaries and safe havens during times of political upheaval. In 1438, Dometius was said to be the first monk to live at Holy Trinity.

The actual monastery is believed to have been constructed between 1475 and 1476.

The Monastery of St. Stephen

The Monastery of St. Stephen is located on a plateau atop another spectacular rock pillar of Meteora. The original monastery was believed to have been built in the 14th century. However, a new katholikon was built in 1798, making it the newest of all the structures at Meteora.

The monastery is made up of many buildings including the new katholikon, the “hestia” (kitchen), an old refectory that has since become a museum, and an assortment of workrooms devoted to different purposes, including painting, embroidery, and incense-making.

The church’s interior was decorated with frescoes after 1545. However, during the world wars, the monasteries were tragically heavily bombed and then ransacked in the belief that the monks were holding refugees there. As of 2015, the Monastery of St. Stephen is home to twenty-eight nuns after its conversion to a convent in 1961.

Corfu’s Nostalgic Ghost Village

Old Peritheia Corfu
Paris-based photographer Victor Lazareff captured Old Peritheia, Corfu’s ghost village, in a series of photographs, which reflect the village’s deep sense of time and nostalgia. Credit: Victor Lazareff/Studio Lazareff

Old Peritheia is the oldest village of Corfu, which is located in the heart of Mount Pantokrator. Ruined stone mansions and semi-ruined temples with forever muted bell towers compose the landscape of Old Peritheia, a village which time has forgotten.

With houses from the 14th century, Old Peritheia is Corfu’s most ancient village. Strategically built to be safe from pirate attacks, it’s near the top of the island’s highest peak, Mount Pantokrator.

The village is surrounded by dense forest with views of the Ionian Sea. For decades, this village was deserted until it was completely abandoned in the 1960s, when tourism hit the island. Since 2010, the village has begun coming alive once again, as it continues to be loved by locals and tourists.

Feelings of nostalgia, time, and memory

In today’s village, which lies in ruins, one can walk through and get the deep sense of traveling in time. The natural beauty, unique architecture, and eerie atmosphere of another era have remained unchanged. The ruins of the homes invite visitors to get a taste of another time period, with stately tapestries, fireplaces, and ceilings still at least partially intact.

Paris-based photographer Victor Lazareff captured Old Peritheia in a series of photographs, which reflect the village’s deep sense of time and nostalgia for a time long gone.

Visitors can walk though the skeletons of the mansions and take note of old coats of arms belonging to families still occupying spaces. One really feels as if in another era altogether. In between half-demolished mansion doors, one might also notice rare decorations and objects dominating, further reinforcing the feeling of abandonment.

Old Peritheia Corfu
The semi-destroyed skeletons of the stone mansions give you the feeling as if you have entered a time capsule. Credit: Victor Lazareff/Studio Lazareff

At the same time, as you enter the ruins, you notice the dates of the houses eloquently written on the walls—”1334″ or “1200,” informing visitors that this village was once a glorious center of civilization.

Viewing the semi-dilapidated stone mansions gives you a sense of watching a movie. The old, abandoned homes evoke sadness and nostalgia, and the fact that little is known about the families that lived inside these once beautiful mansions gives you the chance to draw your own conclusions of what life for them might have looked like.

Old Peritheia Corfu
The ruins give you a sense of nostalgia and sadness, as if you are watching a movie. Credit: Victor Lazareff/Studio Lazareff

The monasteries and old churches highlight the village’s strong religious character. Eight picturesque churches belonging to various families of the village are preserved. At the entrance of the village stands the remarkable bell tower of St. James of Persia. On the opposite side of the village is its oldest pre-Cristian church, St. Nicholas of Petra.

Old Peritheia Corfu
The monasteries and old churches highlight the village’s strong religious character. Credit: Victor Lazareff/Studio Lazareff

Visiting Old Peritheia can also be combined with adventurous hiking opportunities among the numerous beehive farms, abandoned churches, and ruins of the ancient village.

The Corfu Trail, which runs from the northern to the southern part of the island, passes through Old Peritheia.

A few traditional tavernas provide visitors with homemade Corfiot food and a chance to witness a very unique and quiet side of the island. Visitors can enjoy lunch and homemade wine by the old abandoned monasteries.

History of Corfu’s ancient village

Although little is known about the inhabitants and history of the village, it is said to be the oldest village on Corfu, as it was built in pre-Christian years, when the few inhabitants of the time were seeking a safe refuge from the natural disasters that pounded the island. Its population later substantially increased, as it became a safe haven from pirate attacks due to its strategic location. Essentially, you can view the ocean from there, but ships from the ocean cannot view the village.

Old Peritheia Corfu
In 1966, the Ministry of Culture declared the village a ‘historic monument.’ Credit: Victor Lazareff/Studio Lazareff

In addition, Old Peritheia was the first seat of the municipality of Kassiopi. During the years of 1866 to 1912, it was the seat of the northern part of the island. The 130 stone mansions of the village possess a unique Venetian architectural style.

Old Peritheia Corfu
Credit: Victor Lazareff/Studio Lazareff

In 1966, the Ministry of Culture declared the village a historic monument.

Threatened by wildfires

In July this year, Old Peritheia was threatened by the wildfires that blaze across much of Greece. The fire spread in the vicinity beneath Mount Pantokrator.

Efforts were made to stop the spread of the blaze with various aircraft including planes and helicopters capable of dropping water onto the fire. Sixty-two firefighters, three groups of hikers, and twenty-one fire trucks worked together to put out the flames.

At the time, the mayor of North Corfu Giorgos Mahimaris commented “The fire is burning around the perimeter of the Old Perithea. Air assets are doing an excellent job of containing the front. Things are under control. The situation is better than yesterday when many settlements were at risk. Tourists have started to return to their accommodations.”