Listed 13 sub titles with search on: Information about the place for wider area of: "AGIOS NIKOLAOS Town LASSITHI" .
AGIOS NIKOLAOS (Town) LASSITHI
Agios Nikolaos, the capital of the prefecture of Lassithi, is a picturesque
and popular resort town on the bay of Mirabelo with a harbour area pulsating with
activity and restaurants and cafes providing a cosmopolitan atmosphere, though
the town itself has maintained its traditional style.
Agios Nikolaos is easily reached in an hour (65km) from Iraklion, 1 1/2 hours
from Sitia (70km), and 45 minutes from Ierapetra (36km).
There is no airport, although Iraklion airport is less then one hour away. There
are boats to Piraeus (Athens) and to Rhodes during the summer. The islands of
the Cyclades are accessible from Agios Nikolaos, as are Kasos, Karpathos, and
Kos of the Dodecanese.
The municipality of Agios Nikolaos organizes "Lato" during the tourist season.
This festival consists of a number of music and dance groups including ethnic
and foreign, folkloric, and modern. There are also theatrical performances and
water sports competitions. In addition, every two years, during Naval Week in
July, special events are organized.
All types of tourist facilities may be found in Agios Nikolaos. Since it is a
very popular resort, there may be some difficulty finding accommodation. The National
Tourist Office (EOT) is very helpful and is found on the main street, on the west
side of the bridge at the harbour.
Tours may be arranged in Agios Nikolaos to Spinalonga Islet, to Lassithi Plateau,
the town of Kritsa and its Byzantine churches. The best beaches are on the east
side of the town, in the small protected bays, and may be reached by local bus
service. Ask for details at the Tourist Office.
Agios Nikolaos is the most touristically developed town in Crete. The area has
a great deal to offer to everyone.
This text is cited Feb 2003 from the Crete TOURnet URL below, which contains image.
KRITSA (Small town) AGIOS NIKOLAOS
The village of Kritsa is 8km southwest of Agios Nikolaos. The area
near the village of Kritsa has many attractions to offer. It combines a traditional
village setting with several Byzantine churches which rank among the best in the
island.
Kritsa is one of the most frequently visited villages in Crete due to its fame
as a movie set for several films and the availability of fine quality weavings,
but is still pleasant to visit. Behind Kritsa is a road that leads to the Dikte
Mountains and offers very interesting views of the landscape. The road reaches
the Katharo Plain at 1,100 metres height, and there is a path reaching the Lassithi
Plateau. In the spring there are many rare flowers here.
This extract is cited Feb 2003 from the Crete TOURnet URL below, which contains images.
KROUSTAS (Village) AGIOS NIKOLAOS
The village of Kroustas is 11km southwest of Agios Nikolaos on the
Agios Nikolaos - Kritsa - Kroustas road. It is a more typical village than Kritsa
and contains the beautiful Byzantine church of Agios Ioannis Theologos.
LATO ETERA (Ancient city) AGIOS NIKOLAOS
The ancient city of Lato is 3km from the village of Kritsa. The Dorians
built the city in the seventh century B.C. The walls and buildings visible today,
however, date mainly from the fourth and fifth centuries B.C. Towers and two acropolis
fortified Lato. It was one of the strongest cities on Crete. Lato was destroyed
about 200 B.C. During the Roman times its port, Lato Etera at the side of Agios
Nikolaos, became an important city.
The main gate is to the west of the site where a stepped road leads to the agora,
or market. On the right were workshops and shops. On the left, the road leads
to a ground entrance leading to the main part of the city. The centre of the town
is at the top of the hill and from here the view down to Lato's ancient port,
Agios Nikolaos, is magnificent. The agora is a pentagonal building at the top
of the road between two hills. It was not only used for trade but for political
and cultural activities as well. Southwest of the agora are the remains of a large
temple and seats of a theatre. Near the temple is an altar where a fire burned
continuously as a sign of the continuity of the city with its past. The prytaneum
(administrative building) and the nobles' dining hall is behind the theatre area.
Lato is one of the best excavated Greek cities in the island. Although the variety
and extent of the ruins at Lato are impressive, the site is visited infrequently.
This text is cited Feb 2003 from the Crete TOURnet URL below, which contains images.
LATO KAMARA (Ancient city) AGIOS NIKOLAOS
Kamara: Eth. Kamaraios. A city of Crete, situated to the E. of Olus (Ptol. iii.
17. § 5), at a distance of 15 stadia according to the Maritime Itinerary. Xenion,
a Cretan historian quoted by Steph. B. says that it was once called Lato.
AGIOS NIKOLAOS (Town) LASSITHI
LATO ETERA (Ancient city) AGIOS NIKOLAOS
About 11 km south of Ayios Nikolaos is Kritsa, a hillside village, and 5 km further south lies Lato, a town founded in the Greek Archaic period. This Doric seventh century B.C. village was built on a series of four terraces, all that remains is an agora, in which is located a small rectangular temple, probably dedicated to the vegetation goddess, Lato, who gave her name to the city. The prytaneion on the north side of the agora is Hellenistic. Lato has a spectacular view of the Gulf of Mirabello.
ELINIKA (Settlement) AGIOS NIKOLAOS
A village on the W side of the Gulf of Mirabello, N coast of Crete;
in a coastal valley S of Elounda and N of Ag. Nikolaos, just S of the ridge which
formed the ancient frontier between the territories of Olous and Lato (q.v.).
Near the village lies a double Sanctuary of Ares and Aphrodite, excavated
in 1937-38. The temple consists of two rooms of equal size, adjoining but not
intercommunicating, dedicated to Ares and Aphrodite. They are built of rough blocks
of local limestone; the walls are plastered, and form a rough square (12 x 12
m). Both rooms contain a bench-altar at the rear, and on the E side open on to
a common vestibule (described as a pastas in the inscription found on the site
which describes the work on the building). Below the level of the vestibule the
plan and remains of a low altar can be made out, similar to that at Dreros; this
belonged to an earlier temple of the Geometric period, clearly the Old Aphrodision
mentioned as lying close to the frontier in inscriptions relating to the frontier
dispute between Lato and Olous. When the dispute was finally settled Latian possession
of the site was confirmed (ca. 113 B.C.); inscriptions found at the site have
added much new information about the dispute. The temple was built after the settlement,
replacing the separate temples of Aphrodite and Ares.
D. J. Blackman, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Nov 2002 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
LATO ETERA (Ancient city) AGIOS NIKOLAOS
The city is situated on the Gulf of Mirabello in E Crete. It was bounded
to the N by the Oxa mountain chain, marking the frontier with Olonte, to the W
by the foothills of the Lasithi mountains and to the S by the territories of Arkades,
Malla, and Hierapytna. Lato had a port, Lato pros Kamara (mod. Haghios Nikolaos)
and a number of inland plains suitable for agriculture, the largest of which however
is no more than a few km square.
The name appears on several Mycenaean tablets at Knossos. But up to
the present time only a few objects and sherds of Late Minoan III have been found
on the site, and then always at the surface. The earliest structures to be excavated
date from the 7th c.
Excavations in 1899-1900 yielded an abundance of terracottas showing
oriental influence: female figures, sphinxes, Daidalian heads. Digging carried
out in 1968 near the great temple revealed a pottery dating from the same period.
Objects found in these digs are now divided between the Heraklion,
Mallia, and Haghios Nikalaos museums.
Lato's ruins are situated ca. 8 km from the sea. Scattered over the
whole site can be seen the remains of several terrace walls and walls of houses.
The latter are designed on an interesting plan: built lengthwise, they sometimes
have a courtyard with a cistern, a large room with a hearth and one or more secondary
rooms. Although not all the houses have been explored, the masonry of the walls
shows that they date from different, and in some cases quite early, periods. The
plan of the city was governed by the nature of the site, which is hilly. The presence
of large numbers of cisterns can be explained by the shortage of water.
During excavations carried out in 1899 and 1900, then again from 1967
to 1971, the city agora was uncovered on the W pass as well as some civic and
religious buildings nearby and a section containing fortified houses between the
agora and the W city gate.
1. Agora and prytanaion: Along the E side of the agora is a terrace
wall, the earliest stage of which may go back to the 7th c. In the center of it
is a small ruined temple that may date from the archaic period. The square is
lined to the W by a portico and to the S by an exedra. On the N side is a flight
of steps leading to the prytanaion. Lato's principal civic building is made up
of two sections: a peristyle court to the E, and to the W the area where the cosmes
(council of city magistrates) took their meals together. The steps leading to
the prytanaion apparently served as a meeting place for an enlarged assembly.
Indeed, the manner in which they are laid out--three flights of steps 30-40 cm
high separated by two series of lower stairways--resembles the plan of theaters
in mainland Greece. E and W of the steps are two massive structures, rectangular
in plan, whose appearance is reminiscent of military rather than civic architecture.
They were designed to support the platform on which the prytanaion stood. Between
the steps and the W bastion is a gap of a few m, now occupied by a peasant's hut,
which in antiquity may have held two rooms of still indeterminate purpose.
Recent studies have shown that the main city buildings date at the
earliest from the second half of the 4th or 3d c. B.C. Only then, apparently,
was a vast building plan carried out in the city center.
2. Sanctuary and theater S of the agora: The city's principal religious
monument (10.1 x 6.5 m) stands on a terrace connected to the agora by a winding
road. Rectangular in plan, it consists of a pronaos and a cella. It is not known
to what deity the temple was consecrated.
The temple terrace is supported by a fine wall of polygonal masonry
with bosses ca. 40 m long. The 1968-69 excavations uncovered an interesting complex
at the foot of this terrace consisting of straight tiers of steps and a rectangular
carefully built exedra. The tiers and the exedra make up the cavea of a sort of
rustic theater, the stage being formed by a platform ca. 8 x 30 m. What kind of
ceremony, religious or civic, this complex was designed for we do not know.
3. Fortified houses: The first excavations revealed a street that
climbs gradually from the W fortified gate to the agora. To the S it is lined
with a series of stalls and workshops backed against a late rampart. Traces of
various kinds of crafts: pottery, iron-working, dyeing have been found here. To
the N, at the end of the rows of terraces spread out over the sides of the acropolis,
are some sturdy walls with one gate per terrace cut in them. The resultant passageways
open onto either a house or a pathway leading to the N quarter. Study of these
individual fortifications, set side by side yet separate from each other, shows
that the methods used in them are more and more complex. Certain houses, the latest
ones, are veritable towers with zigzag entrances. When the S rampart was put up
the complex lost its usefulness.
In the 2d c. B.C. the inhabitants of Lato seem to have abandoned the
high city and settled by the sea, at Lato pros Kamara. Numerous inscriptions dating
from this period found at Haghios Nikolaos show that the city enjoyed renewed
activity at this time.
P. Ducrey & O. Picard, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Nov 2002 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains 22 image(s), bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
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