INTERNATIONAL TOUR OPERATOR
Since 1985
Museums
Hania
- Archaeological Museum. Tel.: 0821/20334. Housed in the
Venetian church of San Francesco. Its exhibits from western Crete and other areas date
from the Neolithic to the Roman era, and include idols, statues, inscriptions, weapons,
pottery, sealstones, coins, jewelry, etc.
- Historical Archives of Crete. Tel.: 0821/22606 (open daily
8 - 13.00 except Saturdays and public holidays). A rich collection of folklore and
material related to the history of the island. The archives are among the largest in the
country, second only to General Archives of the Greek State.
- Naval Museum of Crete. Tel.: 0821/26437 (open daily except
Mondays, 10.00 - 14.00. From October to end May, open afternoons Tuesdays - Thursdays -
Saturdays, 16.00 - 18.00 and 17.00 - 19.00 during the other months. On the mole of the
Venetian harbor. Exhibits linked with the island's history.
Rethimno
- Archeological Museum. Tel.: 0831/29975. The museum
contains interesting archaeological finds from the region as well as a fine coin
collection (actually situated in the former prison, opposite the entrance to the
Fortezza).
Iraklio
- Archeological Museum. Tel.: 081/226092, 224630. One of the
most important museums in Greece. Here are assembled almost all the finds from the Minoan
era. Pottery, stone carvings, sealstones, statuettes, gold, metalwork, the marvelous
frescoes from the Royal and Little Palaces and villas of the wealthy,
- and finally, the unique painted limestone sarcophagus from
Agia Trias.
- Historical Museum. Tel.: 081/283219. Exhibits from the
Byzantine, Venetian and Turkish periods and historical documents of more recent Cretan
history. Also a rich collection of folk art consisting of local costumes, textiles, wood
carvings and embroidery as well as a representation of a typical Cretan house.
Agios Nikolaos
- Archaeological Museum. Tel.: 0841/24943. It contains finds
from excavations in eastern Crete.
Antiquities
District of Hania
- Aptera. One of the most important cities of ancient (7th
c. B.C.) western Crete, Aptera was built on a site 15 km. from Hania, south of Souda Bay,
near the village of Megala Horafia, which had a view of the whole plain of Hania.
- The city walls still standing today are reminiscent of the
Cyclopean walls of Tiryns and Mycenae. One can also see the remains of a small 1st c. B.C.
temple of Demeter, a Roman theater and the enormous vaulted cisterns of the Roman period -
according to one source they were used for grain storage - preserved in excellent
condition.
- Polyrrhenia (Polirinia). The ruined walls and acropolis of
Polyrrhenia lie 49 km west of Hania, near Selli or Paleokastro. At Kria Vrissi, near
Kissamos (Kastelli), are the remains of a Roman aqueduct. Polyrrhenia, an important
ancient western Cretan city, was founded with the help of the Achaias, who succeeded the
Minoans as overlords of the island.
- Phalassarna (Falassarna). This town, the port of
Polyrrhenia, lay to the west of it, in the base of the extreme northwest peninsula of the
district of Hania.
- The ruins - remains of Cyclopean walls, tombs, house
foundations, sculptures carved out of the rocks, most notably a throne - are found near
the village of Koutri.
District of Iraklio
- Amnissos. 7.5 km. east of Iraklio, the Minoan port of
Knossos. It was here that archaeologists found the Vila of the Frescoes of Amnissos, also
called the Vila of the Lilies.
- Archanes (Arhanes). 15 km. south of Iraklio. Excavations
in the village brought to light a well-preserved building that must have been a summer
palace. On the hill of Fourni (1 km. NW of Archanes) there are vaulted tombs dated to
between 2500 - 1250 B.C. At Anemospilia Archanes, in the foothills of the Holy Mountain of
Yiouchta was discovered a Minoan sanctuary sacred not only to Archanes but to Knossos as
well.
- Gortyn (Gortis). 46 km. south of Iraklio. A city that
flourished particularly during the Roman era, Gortyn was the capital of the Roman province
of Crete and Cyrenaica. It had its origins in the Minoan era, as testified by the ruins of
a 16th c. B.C. farmhouse, which has been excavated. The most distinctive monuments are the
Praetorium (2nd c. A.D.), residence of the Roman governor of the province: and the
Nymphaion (2nd c. A.D.), where the Nymphs were worshipped; the temple of Pythian Apollo;
the sanctuary of the Egyptian divinities; and the Odeon, where the famous inscription with
the laws of Gortyn was found. Plato spoke of these laws, which were written in a Doric
dialect and date from the 6th century B.C., with admiration.
- Knossos, 5 km. east of Iraklio. Inhabited since the
Neolithic era. The first palace of Knossos was built around 1900 B.C. Two hundred years
later it was destroyed by an earthquake and rebuilt, becoming grander and more luxurious.
The final catastrophe occurred about 1500 - 1450 B.C., according to one theory, with the
eruption of the Vulcan in Santorini. Despite this blow, people continued to live there for
another fifty years, until a fire swept through the city circa 1400 B.C. The Minoan
palaces were not only the residence of the ruling house, they were also administrative and
religious centers for the whole region. The ruins of the capital of the Minoan Kingdom
include the palace of Minos, the homes of the officials and priests who surrounded him
(Little Palace, Caravanserai, House of the Frescoes, etc.), the homes of ordinary people
and the cemetery. The palace was a labyrinthine complex built around a central court. This
multistoried construction covered an area of 22.000 sq.m. and, in addition to the royal
quarters, also contained places of worship, treasuries, workshops and storerooms.
- Malia , 34 km. east of Iraklio and 3 km. beyond the summer
resort of the same name. Excavations have brought to light a palace similar to the ones at
Knossos and Phaistos (also built around 1900 B.C. and abandoned about 1450 B.C.). At
Hrissolakos (Pit of Gold), archaeologists also unearthed the districts surrounding the
Minoan palace and cemetery. The palace covered an area of about 9.000 sq.m. Many of the
objects now on display in Iraklion's Archaeological Museum were found at Malia.
- Phaistos (Festos), 63 km. southwest of Iraklio and about
78 km. southeast of Rethimno, was the second most important palace-city of Minoan Crete.
The residence of the mythical Radamanthes, the palace was also the nucleus of a settlement
inhabited since the Neolithic age. The architectural layout is identical to that of
Knossos. Here too the rooms are arranged around a court. On the other hand, in contrast to
Knossos, the frescoes decorating the walls were relatively scanty, the unpainted floors
and walls being covered with a lining of pure white gypsum. The area of this palace was
9.000 sq.m.
- At Agia Trias, 2.5 - 3 km. west of Phaistos, were found
the ruins of a royal villa, which most probably was the summer palace of the Phaistos
rulers. Certain of the more important pieces on exhibit in the Iraklio Archaeological
Museum - the larnax, the Harvester Vase, and the impeccably painted frescoes - come from
this site.
- Tilissos, 14 km. southwest of Iraklio lie the ruins of one
of the oldest Minoan cities of central Crete, including three large buildings, residences
of the local lords.
- Vathipetro, 19 km. south of Iraklio is where the ruins of
a large Minoan mansion, a country estate belonging to a local nobleman, were discovered.
The ruins include a wine press, olive press, weaving rooms and a possible potter's kiln.
District of Lassithi
- Gournia, 19 km. southeast of Agios Nikolaos, 15 km. north
of Ierapetra, the best preserved of the Minoan settlements, and one of the most noteworthy
archaeological sites in Crete. It appears to date from 1550 - 1450 B.C. The ruins of the
town include small houses and a small palace on top of a hill; even the narrow streets and
connecting stairways have survived amidst the foundations of the houses.
- Dreros (Driros), 16 km. northwest of Agios Nikolaos. The
archaeological site of this ancient Greek city comprises two acropolises with an Archaic
agora between them. South of the agora is a temple from the Geometric period, the
Delphinion, dedicated to Apollo, as well as a large cistern dug between the late 3rd and
early 2nd century B.C.
- Kato Zakros, 117 km. southeast of Agios Nikolaos is the
site of a luxurious Minoan palace, the fourth in significance on the island, which
produced a number of important finds, now in the Iraklio Archaeological Museum. This
palace, which covered 7.000 to 8.000 sq.m. and contained royal apartments, storerooms and
various workshops, and the nearby city were destroyed around 1450 B.C. by a violent
earthquake, most probably the one that caused a whole section of the island of Santorini
to sink into the sea. Zakros was a major Minoan naval base, which established trading
connections with Egypt and Anatolia. It was from here that Minoan farming estates, two
sacred peaks, a cemetery and cave tombs have been discovered.
- Lato, 15 km. west of Agios Nikolaos, is spread out on the
slopes of two acropolises. Founded in the 7th century B.C., it was one of the most
powerful cities in Crete in its heyday. The ruins include the city walls, houses and shops
from different periods built on terraces.
- Palekastro, 90 km. east of Agios Nikolaos, 20 km. from
Sitia, at Roussolakos, has some remains of a port settlement.