INTERNATIONAL TOUR OPERATOR Since 1985
MESSINIA
Kalamata has an archaeological and folklore museum, a fine arts museum and a library containing 60.000 volumes. Every summer cultural events like concerts and plays put on by the Kalamata theatre are held in the amphitheatre of the castle. In the evening, the town comes alive, especially along the waterfront which is lined with tavernas, seafood restaurants and rotisseries serving local dishes and drinks, fresh fish, roast suckling pig and chicken, sausages, cheese, olives, retsina and raki.
Round about the castle is a plain planted with olive trees and grapevines. The sea opens into an infinite expanse of azure. They say that the view of the sunset from the castle is one of the most splendid in the world. Everything here is imbued with history and a fascinating light. Everywhere you look see ancient, Byzantine and Frankish monuments. Peristera is a place a little beyond the village of Raches (5 km. from Kiparissia), where three beehive tombs have been excavated.
Filiatra is not far off. The whole district is dotted with churches, Byzantine and Frankish, of a venerable age. Gargaliani sits on a lush hillside. It's worth going up to the town to see the view below: a magical carpet of olive trees and vines that stretches to the sea with Marathoupoli and the islet of Proti, the site of a ruined Mycenaean Kalamata, the land of the Kalamatianos dance and the acropolis, in the background.
The main square ringed with pastry shops is sheltered by humongous, centuries-old plane trees. The Turko-Venetian fortress, known as Neokastro, dominates the west side of town. One of the most attractive in the Peloponnese, it is called that to distinguish it from the ancient fortress to the southwest, named Paliokastro or Palionavarino. The bay of Voidokilia extends from the base of the old castle. A tranquil, carefree sanctuary, the floor of the bay is covered with a thick layer of sand.
The road winds like a vast serpent slowly amidst lush fields to arrive at Koroni. Its medieval atmosphere is imprinted in its old mansions, its churches and its castle. Still, diaphanous water, sandy beaches and opposite the little island of Venetiko with its enchanting beach.
After the battle of Leuctra (371 BC), which marked the end of Spartan domination over the Peloponnese, the Theban general Epaminondas built the town of Messini, naming it after the first queen of the region, and the for- tress of Ithomi (369 BC). The new city became the capital of the liberated Messinians.
The heart of the walled city lies at the spot occupied by Mavromati today. Here the locals seem to be saluting their great forebears. Among its public buildings Ancient Messini had temples, a theatre, stadium and cemetery, not to mention houses. The discoveries excavated here up to now constitute a very important archaeological entity. There is a guard-.guide at the site, who has the key to the small museum in the village if you wish to inspect the finds from the area.
The fertile plain of Messinia starts at the lower boundary of the village. Olives, grapevines, gardens, fruit trees, figs, sweet-smelling plants, shrubs. Fences of blackberry bramble and prickly pear. Every so often you come across a local riding a donkey or on foot. You'll spot him again later in the village cafe chatting quietly with his cronies, sipping thick sweet coffee or fiery raki. In the market place cafes and tavernas have spread their tables under the shade of plane trees and vines. A path leads from Mavromati to the summit of Mount Voulkano. There, on top of the ruined temple of Zeus Ithomatos, a convent was erected during the Byzantine period. Dedicated to the Virgin, it contains frescoes (in good condition) of the Cretan School dated 1608. Tradition maintains that some hermits found the icon of the Virgin Voulkaniotissa in this spot, which led to the building of the convent.
Between Mount Voulkano and the lower hill of Agios Vassilis, a bit below the saddle of the two mountains, the large monastery of Voulkano, built in 1625. Descending from the summit you encounter the remains of the temple of Anthems Laphria or Limnatida, the Laconian Gate, and further off, the monastery, amidst the trees. The main treasure of the monastery is the old icon of the Virgin. Here every August 15th there is a big festival and the faithful form a procession with the icon up the mountain to take it to its first home, the convent on the summit. The village of Samari is not far from Mavromati.
Outside the village at the place called Kalogerorahi, there is the church of Samarina dedicated to the Zoodohos Pighi (Source of Life), a cruciform church with a dome (12th c.). It has an impressive belltower, with mosaic flooring and frescoes of the 12th, 13th and 17th centuries. A sign points the way to Androussa, a market town with a strong traditional flavour and ruins of a Frankish castle and an aqueduct built during the reign of Andronikos Palaiologos. Twelve kilometres from Androussa, near the villages of Petraiona and Manganiko in an area thick with plane tress, lies the famous Andromonastiro or Andreiomonastiro, a monastery thought to have been founded in the 14th century by the emperor Andronikos, from where it took its name. This, too, is a cruciform church inscribed with a dome. The frescoes (of the same period as those in the Samarina) are partly erased by smoke, time and neglect, but impressive nonetheless.
Mikri and Megali Mantinia, Avia, Ano and Kato Verga Akrogiali, Kitries are some of the villages. Sand and pebbles and little coves but also pine and fir woods and crystalline springs, solitary chapels and caves once the dwelling place of nymphs and lined with stalagmites. Hamlets hidden in the mountainsides and hamlets on the water's edge. Stone houses. Sitting rooms with fire- places. Flower-filled courtyards. Cobbled lanes. Byzantine churches and castles. Smudged frescoes and tall towers. Painted archangels and slits in the walls for shooting.
As you penetrate further into this astonishing land, you want to get to the heart of it, to have fun with it, to fight for its sake. You breathe the perfumed breeze that wafts down from Taigetos or you forget yourself swimming alone in a delightful cove. Then more towers and churches (Kardamili) and more wild gorges (Diros) and after a while Maniot towers yet again and charming fishing villages and another irresistible cove (Stoupa). On to shiny rocks and fabulous caves (Katafighi), more churches and belltowers (Thalames - Platsa) as you keep walking, a bit bewildered by so much to contemplate but proud, and happy to be alive in such surroundings.
What else can you say about this place, about this wealth!
By bus from Athens Information: KTEL Bus Terminal - Athens 100, Kifissou St., tel: 01/5129498