Aegina
is a favorite among holidaymakers for its excellent beaches, clear
seas and fine climate. The terrain is flat and cycling is popular.
Other means of transport are buses, taxis and horsedrawn carriages.
There are beauty spots and beaches at Plakakia, Agia Marina, Faros
and Marathonas. Agistri
and Moni are two small wooded islands which offer opportunities
for excursions.
Aegina is the main port on the island that dominates the Saronic
Gulf and it's only an hour's ride from Piraeus. In Classical times
Aegina was called "the eyesore of gulf" since it is
very visible from the Akropolis and was an arch rival for some
time with Athens. At the island, the lone remaining column from
the archaic Temple of Apollo is a distinguishing landmark. The
site is now called Kolona, due to the remaining column. It is
a picturesque town centered on the harbor where fresh fruit and
seafood is brought in daily. Yoy can see the Temple of Apollo
site and to talk into a brief view of the closed Archaeological
Museum, which had some big renovations going on due to structural
damage. If you can get a postcard of the harbor at Aegina, you
can still see the ancient docks under the water. Also, all the
island's transportation is centered in Aegina so you'll have to
go through there often if your moving about the island.
On the way to the main temple, we pass by an unbelievably large
church. It is brand new and is supposedly the largest "church"
in all of Europe. It sounds too odd to be true, but it is at the
site of the monastery containing the body of Saint Nektarios (the
first saint to be canonized by the Orthodox church in modern times).
If your on the island, stop by and take a few photos.
Literally
at the center of the Saronic Gulf, between Athens, Corinth and
Epidaurus, the small island of Aegina possesses one of the most
unique natural locations in Greece. It has been inhabited since
the Neolithic era, and a lot of material concerning the life and
civilization of these first inhabitants are preserved until today.
During the so-called Greek Middle Age the island remained deserted,
but around 850 BC it was inhabited by Doric races coming from
Epidaurus.
In the seventh century BC, Aegina was already one of the largest
naval powers and we know that she was the first among the Greek
cities that developed minting. As it was allied with Sparta and
the other Peloponnesian cities, she has been for many years a
great opponent of Athens at the naval field until two defeats
and a capture of the city in 457 BC reduced her to a vassal to
Athens. During the period of its grandeur, the island, already
reputed for its workshops of bronze, brass and pottery, was embellished
with several Sanctuaries. The most famous is the sanctuary of
Aphaea, a local goddess, related to the Cretan goddess Britomartis,
who was later matched with Athena, On an imposing artificial balcony
overlooking the entire Saronic Gulf, 12 miles away from the city,
rose from the archaic period a sacred yard with a temple. Around
510 BC that temple was destroyed and was replaced by a new large
Doric temple, one of the masterpieces of Greek Archaic architecture,
it is a peripteral temple with six Doric pillars on each facade
and twelve on each long side, made of local poros stone covered
with marble plaster decorated with painted illustrations. At the
interior, the porch and the opisthodrome had two pillars whereas
the cella was divided into three naves with a double row of five
pillars; above them, there was a second row of smaller pillars
which supported the roof. The original multi-colority is lost.
However, a large part of the pillars and parts of the architraves,
the metopes and the walls of the cella were restored between 1956
and 1960. The holes between the pillars reveal the previous existence
of railings.
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