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Monemvasia - Monemvassia

Tourist Information and Travel Guide

Monemvassia picture

ABOVE: The lower town of Monemvasia clings to a rock on the Pélagos Sea.

Monemvasia (sometimes spelled Monemvassia or Monemvas) is often called "the Gibraltar of Greece." The town, on the southeastern coast of the Peloponnese peninsula, is a massive walled fortress that once housed an estimated 50,000 Byzantine Greeks. Today, fewer than a hundred people live year-round on the Rock of Monemvasia; most of the town's 5,000 residents prefer the port, where cars, supermarkets, and other modern conveniences make up for the lack of historic atmosphere.

My favorite Greek guidebook, the Michelin Green Guide: Greece, gives Monemvasia two stars and assigns the maximum three-star rating to its "particularly spectacular site." That's reason enough to include Monemvassia in any tour of the Peloponnese--especially if you're headed to Sparta and the Byzantine ruins of Mistras, which are only an hour and a half away.

Next page: Capsule history of Monemvasia


In this article:
Introduction
History
The town today
Hotels, restaurants
Transportation
Tourist information links