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All about Crete - beaches, tours, restaurants, accommodation, car hire, history, pictures, maps... A complete guide for the island of Crete. Hotels beaches places. |
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The Old City
Large quantities of Minoan pottery, including a few of the huge Minoan storage jars option, dominate the front part of the museum. In the centre is a collection of Minoan clay tombs (lamakes), some wonderfully decorated, and one still containing two small skeletons. For archeologists, the most important items are the inscribed tablets excavated in Kastelli: this is the only place other than Knossos where examples of Linear A and Linear B script have been found together. Towards the back of the church, the collection is arranged chronologically,
progressing through a large group of Classical sculptures, a case full of Greco-Roman
glassware and some recently discovered third-century Roman mosaics reassembled
on the floor. These are really lovely, particularly those of Dionysos and Ariadne,
and of Poseidon and Amymone. Outside in the garden courtyard (often enlivened
by classical music drifting over the wall from a cafe outside) are other assorted
sculptures and architectural remnants, including a lovely one-legged, headless
lion. The market and points northeast A second minaret (recently restored) adorns the church of Ayios Nikolaos in Platia 1821, further over to the east. Built by the Venetians, this church was converted to a mosque under Sultan Ibrahim and reconverted after Crete's reversion to Greek authority, but has been so often refurbished that there's nothing much to see. The square itself, whose name recalls the date of one of the larger rebellions against Turkish authority, after which an Orthodox bishop was hanged here, is another pleasantly shaded space set with cafe chairs. Nearby are two more old churches: San Rocco, just a pace towards
the harbor, is small and old-fashioned, while Ayii Anaryiri, which retained
its Orthodox status throughout the Turkish occupation, has some very ancient
icons. Again the area as a whole - known as Splantzia - is full of unexpected
architectural delights: carved wooden balconies and houses arching across the
street at first-floor level Many of the streets between here and the inner harbor
have recently been redoubled and generally refurbished, and they're among the
most atmospheric and tranquil in the old town.
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