Tag: greece
Old Athens & its faded history
Sitting in one of the many cafes in the shadow of the once holy (now only touristic) hill of the Acropolis, we enjoy a cup of hot coffee, Greek, or one of the European styled we have grown accustomed to in recent years. In the hustle of the modern city, in an environment with old-fashioned […]
Read more »First May in Greece and … what do the donkeys on the rooftops?
May Day is one of the few holidays that do not carry any religious meaning. Also, it is not a day connected just to labour rights. Since antiquity it is mainly a day related to the fruitfulness of the earth, the end of the winter and the coming of the summer. That is why it […]
Read more »“Ai Giorgis” (St George), the Victory-bearing knight of the spring
Ai Giorgis, the patron of farmers and breeders April 23 is a special day in Greece. It is the feast day of St. George and the second milestone day in the year, after the feast day of St. Demetrios. It is identified with the coming of spring, the sowing and transfer of the flocks to […]
Read more »The cursed trees
Are there trees that are victims of people’s superstition? Trees that folk tradition associates with curses? And trees that we are happy to accept their fruits but are not welcome in our garden? The incriminated fig tree One of the most “incriminated” trees is the fig tree. Many do not want it in their […]
Read more »Water as a cultural symbol
Why water is of such an importance in some cultures? Most cultures were born and grew up around the water. That is why people understood its power since very early: either when it was giving life, either when it took life back. One of these cultures is Greece. And as it is normal, water and […]
Read more »Flock bells: a source of noise or a communicational code?
Bells and the melody of the sheep The sound of the flock is a sound of history. The bells were hung on animals as a sound transmitter but not only. The bell is not a simple tool, but a communication code. Experienced breeders know the sounds so well they can understand when their herd grazes, […]
Read more »“Wear a “March” – The custom and the interpretation behind it.
“March” or “Martis” is a very old custom. It is believed to have its roots in Ancient Greece and more specifically in the Eleusinian Mysteries, where the mystics tied a thread, the Kroki (=thread), to their right hand and their left leg. Nowadays at the first day of March, parents put a bracelet made of […]
Read more »March and its three plagues
March and its first day carry magical power because it was believed that then “the resurrection of nature” takes place. Before the designation of January 1st, March 1st was the beginning of the year. That is why it was also described as the “great hour of the year“. At 1st March it was said that […]
Read more »Greek Carnival
February is the last winter month; everyone is already bored with cold and rain and snow and is looking forward to warmer days. However, everybody loves and welcomes February because he brings the first signs of spring. That is why in Greece people use to say: ” Ο Φλεβάρης κι αν φλεβίσει, καλοκαίρι θα μυρίσει”. Which […]
Read more »Greek Valentines & Carnival …
The inhabitants of Amorgos do not wait for Valentine’s Day to express their love. They always do it with Carnival, thanks to a very old tradition which is called the “Captain” (=Kapetanios). Amorgos: A Valentine comes always in Carnival! Every year, all the young people from 4 different villages gather in the chapel of St. […]
Read more »The “lame” February.
WhyFebruary has only 28 days instead of 30 or 31?
The folk version …
March and his two faces
“Keep wood for March,
so not to burn the fence-poles” is a known Greek proverb.
But what made March so unpredictable? …
Winter Stories: “Love & Punishment”.
Love and punishment !
From matrimonial love to barometric pressures ….
When the storm is over
After last Thursdays’ storm, many people in the Netherlands and elsewhere lost much.
The famous Greek writer Nikos Kazantzakis describes in “Report to El Greco” such an event and the life lesson he then got .
The unknown Acropolis of the Peloponnese
Ancient Oiniades
Once upon a time there was dominative king
who was living in a big city on a hill with his beautiful son …
Mythology
… The name of the king of the castle was Trikardos (=the one who has three hearts). His son, a very handsome young man, had the name Aniliagos (=the one who can’t face the sun), because he should never face the sunlight.
Read more »Lake Ziros, an undiscovered Paradise
According to a folk legend two sisters, one rich and one poor, were in dispute with each other because of the plump children of the poor one who were fed with the leftovers of the rich. Eventually a rupture occurred in the relation of two sisters and the poor left her house in order to start a new life far away on the mountains.
Read more »The Spinaloga of Pelion & a saint
When limited knowledge and prejudice create communities like the one of Spinaloga,
always some visionary people write their own story….
The blue lagoon of Greece
… This place has its own different clock.
Here the time is measured according to the fish of each season and their growth…
Winter stories Vol. 2
The short period of good weather during January and Februari is called in Greece “Days of the Alkyon”.
Why …?
Peace & War in a world full of contradictions
Is there a work of art to which 130 verses of one of the most famous poems in the world were dedicated?
Read more »Stories behind the language
It’s not a secret, of course, that the pomegranate is connected with symbolisms and many more traditions around the world, also in Greece.
Read more »Milia: the hidden village of Chania
A few kilometers out of Chania, on a slope of Kissamos, hidden among the mountains, lies a village pulled out of another era. On Milia there is no electricity and no cars. Not because they have not reached there, but by choice.
Read more »