Heraklion,
the largest town on the island, has a variety of nightlife and
sightseeing to offer. In the prefecture of Heraklion are three
of the most important Minoan centers Knossos, Phaestos
and Malia.
With
full of tropical beaches, traditional villages, everyone with
a different history, a huge variety of gorgeous landscapes, remains
from ancient civilizations, you've got people here writing history
for the last five thousand years. N. Kazantzakis was inspired
and wrote his famous book " Zorba the Greek" in Crete.
The
town is linked by air to Athens and Thessaloniki. In the summer
months there are frequent flights to Santorini, Paros, Mykonos
& Cyprus. There are also charter flights which link it to
many European cities.
The town is linked by sea to the port of Piraeus, to several of
the Islands of the Cyclades and the Dodecanese, to Cyprus, Italy
and Israel.
Local and regional buses run between the town and a variety of
destionations both within the province and beyond.
History:
The town is built on the site of the small harbour which
was the seaport of Knossos. This small harbour much later became
an important fortified town under the Arabs, who held it for a
period of over one hundred years (824-961 AD). Thy build strong
walls to protect it and surrounded it with a deep moat (from which
it got its name "Chandax" from the Arabic word 'Khandak'
meaning moat.
Knossos
The archaeological site of Knossos is at a distance of 5 km
southeast of Heraclion, near the small village of the same name,
on a hill. A local bus (No2) runs very regularly between Heraclion
and Knossos and all the tourist agencies organise visits and
guided tours to the site.
The name Knossos is mentioned in the Minoan tablets in Linear
B. It is by that name that it is mentioned by Homer, who speaks
of Knossos as a big city.
Strabos
also considers Knossos and Gortyna the greatest and more powerful
cities on Crete. Its perimeter was said to have measured 30
stadia (stadium: a unit of length equal to 606.95 English feet)
and its population at the time of its peak was 100,000 inhabitants.
Phaestos
Second in importance only to Knossos from the archaeological point
of view is Phaestos.
It lies 62.5 km southwest of Iraklio. It is build on a hill (at
an altitude of 100m above sea level), south of the Lythaeon river,
and commands the fertile plain of Kato Messara, which is surrounded
by impressive mountains (Psiloritis, Asterousia). Phaestos owing
to its importance, is mentioned in the texts of ancient writers
(Diodorus, Strabo, Pausanias), but also by Homer. According to
mythology, the dynasty which ruled Phaestos, was that of Rhadamantus,
son of Zeus and brother of Minos.
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