| History of Santorini | Museums - Excursions | Places to visit | Getting There - Useful Phone numbers | Participating hotels in Santorini |
Museums - Excursions
From the landing-place, Skala, we can climb up to Fira, the capital, on
foot or on donkey-back. There is a funicular railway for those who wish
to avoid the hundreds of steps. Fira is
very attractive, with winding narrow streets, arcades and a quarter where
the Catholic nobility once dwelt. There is
a most important Museum, with prehistoric finds (mostly pottery), a large
collection of vases dating from the 7th and 6th centuries BC (including
the pieces known as "Thera ware"), a few Archaic and Classical pieces,
and some Hellenistic and Roman sculptures and portraits. There is
a superb view out from Fira to the Kamenes, the two islets of black stone
created by the volcano. The islets can be visited by launch. Ancient
Thira is a site of great archaeological interest which was occupied by
Phoenicians, Dorians, Romans and Byzantines. Down the centre of the city
runs the Sacred Way. On the
surrounding rocks the names of the god Apollo and of men and boys are
inscribed in the ancient alphabet of Thira. The site at Akrotiri has yielded
the remains of a Minoan city destroyed around 1500 BC by an eruption of
the volcano on Thira. In effect,
this is a prehistoric version of Pompeii buried beneath volcanic ash,
with two and three-storeyed houses, with squares, shops, workshops and
so on. Among the finds from the houses were marvellous murals (on display
in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens), vases, and everyday utensils. On the
highest peak of Santorini is a monastery of the Prophet Elijah (Profitis
Ilias), where there is a picturesque religious feast on 20 July each year.
The old-world village of Ia, 1 1 km. to the north of Fira, is a place
of incomparable beauty. The unique
appeal of Ia lies in its little houses hewn out of the soft rock (some
of them whitewashed, others painted blue or ochre), its neo-classical
mansions with their courtyards, its narrow paved alleys. There is
a superb view out to sea. The striking landscape, the peculiarities of
the natural environment, the unusual architecture and the outstanding
monuments of Santorini attract very large numbers of visitors in the summer
- so many, in fact, that the excellent tourist amenities of the island
can only just cope with them. All rights reserved by Aegean Conferences. 1999-2003
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