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  • HI, I'M RICK STEVES,

  • BACK WITH MORE OF THE BEST OF EUROPE.

  • THIS TIME, WE'RE IN GREECE, CLIMBING 999 STEPS

  • TO BRING YOU THE BEST OF THE PELOPONNESIAN PENINSULA.

  • THANKS FOR JOINING US.

  • PELOPONNESIA WAS THE HEARTLAND OF ANCIENT GREECE.

  • ITS WILD AND MOUNTAINOUS LANDSCAPE HAS HOSTED

  • THE INTERMINABLE RISE AND FALL OF CULTURES,

  • WHICH MAKES FOR FASCINATING SIGHTSEEING TODAY.

  • THE PENINSULA IS DOTTED WITH STRIKING RUINS,

  • FROM ANCIENT MYCENAEN DOMES

  • TO GOLDEN AGE TEMPLES

  • TO OPPOSING VENETIAN FORTRESSES.

  • AND WE'LL ALSO SEE STUNNING SEASIDE SCENERY,

  • A GREEK ORTHODOX SERVICE,

  • AND THE BREATHTAKING REMAINS OF A BYZANTINE CITADEL.

  • IN THE EXTREME SOUTH OF EUROPE IS GREECE,

  • AND IN THE SOUTH OF GREECE,

  • A SHORT DRIVE FROM ATHENS,

  • IS THE PELOPONNESE,

  • A PENINSULA BARELY HANGING FROM THE MAINLAND.

  • OUR TOUR INCLUDES MYCENAE, NAFPLION,

  • EPIDAVROS, OLYMPIA, KARDAMYLI,

  • THE RUGGED MANI PENINSULA, AND MONEMVASIA.

  • PELOPONNESIAN HISTORY IS GREECE'S HISTORY.

  • WARRING TRIBES, PAN-HELLENIC GAMES,

  • GOLDEN AGE GREEKS, ROMAN RULE,

  • CENTURIES OF BYZANTINE RULE.

  • THEN, WITH THE FALL OF CONSTANTINOPLE

  • TO THE OTTOMAN TURKS IN THE 15th CENTURY,

  • THE PELOPONNESIAN PENINSULA BECAME PART OF

  • THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE.

  • FINALLY, IN THE 19th CENTURY, AFTER 400 YEARS,

  • THE GREEKS THREW OUT THEIR TURKISH OVERLORDS

  • AND ESTABLISHED AN INDEPENDENT MODERN NATION.

  • GREECE, WITH A RELATIVELY SPARSE POPULATION

  • AND A FINE ROAD SYSTEM,

  • IS EASY TO COVER BY BUS OR CAR.

  • WE'VE RENTED A CAR IN ATHENS,

  • AND IN 90 MINUTES,

  • WE'RE CROSSING THE CORINTH CANAL.

  • THE CORINTH CANAL CUTS THE PELOPONNESIAN PENINSULA OFF

  • FROM THE REST OF GREECE.

  • 2,000 YEARS AGO,

  • THE ROMAN EMPEROR NERO BROKE GROUND FOR THIS CANAL.

  • BUT THE FOUR-MILE-LONG DITCH WASN'T ACTUALLY DUG

  • UNTIL ABOUT A CENTURY AGO BY MODERN GREEKS.

  • OUR FIRST STOP IS ANCIENT MYCENAE,

  • THE OLDEST SITE YOU'RE LIKELY TO SEE

  • IN THIS LAND DOTTED BY SO MANY RUINS.

  • THE MYCENAENS, WHO DOMINATED THE GREEK WORLD

  • BETWEEN 1600 AND 1200 BC,

  • WERE THE FIRST BRONZE AGE SOCIETY

  • TO EMERGE ON THE EUROPEAN MAINLAND.

  • AS THE TORCH OF CIVILIZATION MOVED WESTWARD,

  • THEY PICKED IT UP FROM THE MINOANS,

  • AN EVEN EARLIER CIVILIZATION THAT THRIVED

  • ON THE GREEK ISLAND OF CRETE.

  • WHILE THE MINOANS ENJOYED THE LUXURY OF PEACE

  • ON THEIR REMOTE ISLAND, THE MYCENAENS

  • WERE A MILITARISTIC SOCIETY SURROUNDED BY ENEMIES.

  • THEIR CAPITAL WAS HEAVILY FORTIFIED

  • AND STOOD ON AN EASY-TO-DEFEND HILL

  • FLANKED BY STEEP RAVINES WITH VIEWS

  • ALL THE WAY TO THE SEA.

  • MYCENAE FLOURISHED BECAUSE IT WAS

  • IDEALLY SITUATED FOR TRADE

  • BY BOTH SEA AND LAND.

  • IN ITS DAY, THE MIGHTY LION GATE

  • WOULD HAVE BEEN AWE-INSPIRING.

  • STANDING STRONG HERE FOR OVER 3,000 YEARS,

  • IT WAS THE SYMBOL OF MYCENAEN POWER.

  • THESE WERE THE EARLY GREEKS HOMER WROTE OF

  • IN THE ILIAD AND THE ODYSSEY.

  • KEEP IN MIND, THESE PEOPLE LIVED

  • 1,000 YEARS BEFORE THE RISE OF ATHENS.

  • THEY WERE AS ANCIENT AND MYSTERIOUS

  • TO SOCRATES AND PLATO

  • AS THOSE GOLDEN AGE GREEKS ARE TO US.

  • WHILE THE RUINS ARE STARK AND SCANT,

  • WITH A LITTLE IMAGINATION, YOU CAN ENVISION LIFE HERE.

  • FOR EXAMPLE, TO FETCH WATER, RESIDENTS WOULD DESCEND

  • INTO THIS CLEVERLY CONSTRUCTED

  • MINE-LIKE SHAFT AND CLIMB WAY,

  • WAY, WAY DOWN.

  • I'M 60 FEET BELOW THE SURFACE.

  • THIS IS THE CISTERN WHERE THE WATER WAS COLLECTED,

  • PIPED IN FROM A SPRING THAT WAS

  • 500 YARDS OUTSIDE THE WALLS.

  • EVEN BACK THEN, YOU COULDN'T HAVE

  • A GOOD FORTRESS WITHOUT WATER.

  • MYCENAE WAS AT THE PEAK OF ITS POWER

  • AROUND 1300 BC, AFTER WHICH

  • IT AND ITS EMPIRE SEEMED TO DISAPPEAR

  • VIRTUALLY OVERNIGHT.

  • A CIRCULAR WALL OF STONES DEFINED THE CEMETERY.

  • MYCENAE LAY UNAPPRECIATED UNTIL THE 19th CENTURY,

  • WHEN A TREASURE TROVE OF GOLD

  • WAS UNEARTHED IN THIS NECROPOLIS.

  • TODAY, THOSE TREASURES ARE THE STAR ATTRACTIONS

  • BACK IN ATHENS AT THE NATIONAL

  • ARCHAEOLOGICAL MUSEUM.

  • THIS DISCOVERY AFFIRMED THE ARCHAEOLOGISTS' THEORY

  • THAT MYCENAE WAS HOMER'S FABLED CITY RICH IN GOLD,

  • AND THE ELABORATE DETAIL MAKES

  • THE SOPHISTICATION OF THE MYCENAENS CLEAR.

  • THESE GOLDEN CUPS ARE EXQUISITE.

  • THE SO-CALLED MASK OF AGAMEMNON WAS A DEATH MASK

  • PLACED ON THE FACE OF A DEAD KING IN HIS COFFIN.

  • THE MYCENAENS TOOK GOOD CARE OF THEIR DEAD --

  • AT LEAST THEIR IMPORTANT DEAD.

  • THIS PASSAGEWAY LEADS TO AN UNDERGROUND ROYAL TOMB.

  • THE CORBELLED STONE WORK WAS AN ENGINEERING FEAT.

  • DESIGNED LIKE A STONE IGLOO, THIS THOLOS TOMB

  • WAS THE BIGGEST DOME OF ITS DAY.

  • THIS REMARKABLE STRUCTURE REMAINED

  • THE KING OF DOMES UNTIL THE ROMANS BUILT

  • THEIR PANTHEON ABOUT 1,400 YEARS LATER.

  • ONE WAY TO JUDGE A SOCIETY'S ARCHITECTURAL FINESSE

  • IS BY THE DISTANCE IT CAN SPAN WITH NO INTERNAL SUPPORTS.

  • BY TODAY'S STANDARDS, THIS STRUCTURE'S NOT MUCH,

  • BUT BACK THEN, IT WAS A WONDER.

  • NEARBY ON THE COAST,

  • THE CITY OF NAFPLION IS THE PERFECT BASE

  • FOR EXPLORING THE NORTHEAST CORNER

  • OF THE PELOPONNESIAN PENINSULA.

  • NAFPLION IS A STRIKING REMINDER

  • THAT THIS PART OF GREECE WAS, FOR CENTURIES,

  • AN OUTPOST OF VENICE.

  • THE ISLAND IN THE HARBOR WAS THE FIRST LINE OF LOCAL DEFENSE.

  • THE SECOND LINE WAS THE PALAMIDI FORTRESS

  • CAPPING THE HILLTOP HIGH ABOVE.

  • CLIMB 999 STEPS ABOVE NAFPLION AND YOU REACH

  • THIS EARLY-18th CENTURY FORTRESS.

  • YOUR REWARD, ALONG WITH A GREAT VIEW,

  • IS A CHANCE TO APPRECIATE THE FAR-REACHING POWER

  • OF THE VENETIAN EMPIRE IN ITS DAY.

  • THE PALAMIDI FORTRESS, REGARDED AS THE BEST EXAMPLE

  • OF VENETIAN MILITARY ARCHITECTURE,

  • SAW PLENTY OF ACTION.

  • IT FELL TO THE OTTOMANS IN 1715, PLAYED A ROLE

  • IN THE GREEK WAR OF INDEPENDENCE IN THE 1820s,

  • AND WAS OCCUPIED BY THE NAZIS DURING WORLD WAR II.

  • NAFPLION IS ONE OF GREECE'S PRETTIEST TOWNS.

  • ITS NARROW STREETS ARE LINED BY ELEGANT VENETIAN HOUSES

  • AND GRACEFUL NEOCLASSICAL MANSIONS.

  • LIKE THE BIG SQUARE IN ATHENS,

  • NAFPLION'S MAIN SQUARE IS CALLED SYNTAGMA

  • OR CONSTITUTION SQUARE.

  • A CONSTITUTION WAS THE DREAM OF MANY IN THE 1820s

  • AS THE GREEKS WERE CREATING THEIR NEWLY INDEPENDENT NATION.

  • AS THIS TOWN WAS ONE OF THE FIRST LIBERATED FROM

  • THE OTTOMAN TURKS IN 1822, NAFPLION BECAME

  • THE NEW COUNTRY'S FIRST CAPITAL CITY.

  • THIS SQUARE IS A DELIGHTFUL MIX OF ARCHITECTURE

  • REVEALING THE MANY LAYERS OF LOCAL HISTORY.

  • THE OLD VENETIAN ARSENAL STILL SPORTS

  • THE SYMBOL OF VENICE -- THE WINGED LION OF ST. MARK.

  • THE DOMED MOSQUES ARE A REMINDER

  • OF CENTURIES OF MUSLIM OTTOMAN RULE.

  • THIS MOSQUE WAS CONVERTED TO HOUSE

  • INDEPENDENT GREECE'S FIRST PARLIAMENT.

  • AT THE TOP OF THE TOWN, OUR HOTEL'S

  • STONY COURTYARD FITS RIGHT IN.

  • THE BREAKFAST ROOM COMES WITH FRIENDLY SERVICE

  • AND A COMMANDING VIEW.

  • AND THE BEDROOMS ARE A TASTEFUL MIX

  • OF STONE AND WOOD.

  • THE HARBOR FRONT PROMENADE FEATURES

  • INVITING BARS AND COUCH-FILLED CAFES

  • WHICH ATTRACT A RELAXED CROWD.

  • THE SOFAS ENCOURAGE LOCALS AND VISITORS ALIKE

  • TO STAY A WHILE, AND,

  • IF YOU STAY LONG ENOUGH, NEARBY TAVERNAS,

  • AS RUSTIC RESTAURANTS ARE CALLED HERE,

  • SERVE THE FISH DISH OF YOUR DREAMS.

  • AN HOUR'S DRIVE EAST

  • IS THE SANCTUARY AT EPIDAVROS

  • WITH THE BEST-PRESERVED THEATER IN THE ANCIENT WORLD

  • SURROUNDED BY THE SCANT REMAINS OF ITS CITY.

  • IN 400 BC, EPIDAVROS, WITH A SPRAWLING COMPLEX

  • OF HOSPITALS AND SICK WARDS,

  • WAS THE MOST FAMOUS HEALING CENTER

  • IN THE GREEK WORLD.

  • IT WAS A PLACE OF MIRACULOUS CURES

  • AND COMFORTABLE BENCHES WHERE THE SICK CAME

  • TO BE TREATED BY DOCTOR PRIESTS DOING THE WORK

  • OF ASCLEPIOS, THE GREEK GOD OF MEDICINE.

  • THE HIGHLIGHT OF EPIDAVROS IS ITS FINE THEATER,

  • WHICH PROVIDED ENTERTAINMENT FOR THOSE WHO MADE

  • THE PILGRIMAGE HERE FROM ALL OVER GREECE.

  • IT CONTINUED TO OPERATE UNTIL 426 AD,

  • WHEN EMPEROR THEODOSIUS II, WHO WAS A CHRISTIAN,

  • CLOSED IT DOWN ALONG WITH ALL OTHER PAGAN SANCTUARIES.

  • GIVEN ITS SIZE, OVER 12,000 SEATS,

  • AND OBVIOUS LACK OF MODERN AMPLIFICATION,

  • THE ACOUSTICS NEEDED TO BE PERFECT,

  • AND THEY STILL ARE.

  • FRIENDS, GREEKS, WAYFARERS.

  • IN THESE TIMES OF DISCORD,

  • FEAR IS RAMPANT IN OUR SOCIETY.

  • I CONTEND THAT THE FLIP SIDE OF FEAR

  • IS UNDERSTANDING, AND THOSE WHO TRAVEL

  • WILL REAP GREAT UNDERSTANDING BY MEETING PEOPLE

  • WHO FIND OTHER TRUTHS TO BE SELF-EVIDENT

  • AND GOD-GIVEN.

  • [ CHEERS AND APPLAUSE ]

  • THE RUGGED, SPARSELY POPULATED TERRAIN

  • OF THE PELOPONNESE EVOKES ANCIENT TIMES

  • WHEN GREEKS CONSIDERED THIS

  • A MYSTERIOUS AND FRIGHTENING LAND --

  • A MYTHIC WORLD OF TERRIFYING CREATURES.

  • NO WONDER IT WAS HERE THAT HERCULES WAS SENT

  • TO PERFORM MOST OF HIS DAUNTING LABORS.

  • ANCIENT ATHLETES WERE TESTED HERE, AS WELL.

  • THE SANCTUARY OF OLYMPIA

  • WAS THE BIRTHPLACE OF THE OLYMPIC GAMES.

  • DESPITE THE TOURIST CROWDS, IT REMAINS

  • AN EVOCATIVE PLACE NESTLED AMONG SHADY TREES.

  • WANDERING ITS EXTENSIVE RUINS, ITS CLEAR

  • OLYMPIA WAS MUCH MORE THAN A STADIUM.

  • YES, ZEUS.

  • LOCAL TOUR GUIDE NIKI VLACHOU HELPS EXPLAIN.

  • SO, IT'S CALLED THE SANCTUARY OF OLYMPIA.

  • YES, BUT IT WAS PRIMARILY A RELIGIOUS PLACE

  • DEDICATED TO ZEUS AND THE REST OF THE GODS

  • WITH TEMPLES ALL OVER, AND IT WAS ONLY

  • OPEN TO PEOPLE DURING THE GAMES...

  • OKAY.

  • FOR OVER 1,000 YEARS.

  • Steves: THE TEMPLE OF ZEUS WAS MAGNIFICENT

  • IN THE 5th CENTURY BC, AND REMINDS US THAT

  • THE GAMES WERE HELD IN HONOR OF THE SUPREME DEITY

  • OF THE GREEK PANTHEON, OR WORLD OF GODS.

  • INSIDE THIS TEMPLE WAS THAT AMAZING STATUE OF ZEUS

  • WHICH WAS CONSIDERED TO BE ONE OF

  • THE SEVEN WONDERS OF THE ANCIENT WORLD.

  • GOLD AND IVORY TOWERING IN THE TEMPLE

  • THAT MADE THE GREEKS LOSE THEIR MINDS

  • BY SEEING ZEUS ALIVE IN FRONT OF THEM.

  • THIS WAS ONE OF THEIR CHANCES TO MEET

  • THE GOD IN PERSON, AS THEY THOUGHT.

  • Steves: SIX CENTURIES AFTER CHRIST,

  • EARTHQUAKES SENT ITS COLUMNS TUMBLING.

  • TODAY, THEY LIE HERE,

  • AS IF TO ILLUSTRATE HOW GREEK COLUMNS

  • WERE STACKS OF FLUTED LIMESTONE DRUMS

  • HELD TOGETHER WITH SQUARE PEGS.

  • THE POPULARITY OF THE GAMES GREW RAPIDLY,

  • ATTRACTING ATHLETES FROM THROUGHOUT THE GREEK WORLD

  • TO COMPETE IN AN EVER-INCREASING NUMBER OF EVENTS.

  • THERE WAS JAVELIN, DISCUS, BOXING.

  • THERE WAS A SPRINT OF ONE STADIUM LENGTH,

  • THE TWO-STADIUM SPRINT, EVEN TWO-STADIUM SPRINT

  • NAKED WITH ALL YOUR ARMOR.

  • THE LAST OF THE ANCIENT GAMES WERE HELD IN 393 AD,

  • NOT TO BE STARTED AGAIN FOR 1,500 YEARS.

  • SO, WHY THE GAMES?

  • Vlachou: TO UNIFY THE GREEKS, TO STRENGTHEN THE GREEK CULTURE,

  • AND TO ALSO TEACH ALL THESE YOUNG BOYS

  • THE MILITARY SKILLS THEY NEEDED.

  • PLUS, THEY HAD ALL THESE CLASSROOMS HERE

  • TO TEACH THEM THE GREEK PHILOSOPHY.

  • SO THE OLYMPIC GAMES ACTUALLY MADE

  • THE GREEK CULTURE STRONGER.

  • THE IDEA WAS THAT IF THE GREEKS ARE TO FIGHT,

  • THEY BETTER FIGHT IN THE STADIUM

  • AND BE UNITED AGAINST THE REST OF THE WORLD.

  • IT'S BRILLIANT, AND THIS WORKED FOR 1,200 YEARS.

  • YES.

  • Steves: THE MOST VIVID REMNANT OF THE GAMES IS THIS --

  • THE ORIGINAL OLYMPIC STADIUM.

  • VISITORS JUST CAN'T RESIST THE CHANCE TO LINE UP

  • ON THE MARBLE STARTING BLOCKS AND IMAGINE ATHLETES

  • FROM AROUND THE GREEK WORLD DOING THE SAME THING

  • AT THOSE FIRST GAMES BACK IN 776 BC.

  • WHILE MOST VISITORS GET TO THE FOUR PELOPONNESIAN SITES

  • WE'VE SEEN SO FAR, A THREE-HOUR DRIVE

  • GETS US OFF THE BEATEN PATH AND TO THE SOUTH COAST.

  • THIS IS WHERE THE RUGGED CHARM OF THIS

  • REMOTE CORNER OF GREECE IS MOST APPARENT.

  • THE TOWN KARDAMYLI, GATEWAY TO THE MANI PENINSULA,

  • IS ONE THE OLDEST NAMES IN THE ANNALS OF GREEK HISTORY,

  • EVEN MENTIONED IN HOMER'S ILIAD.

  • THIS UNASSUMING LITTLE SEASIDE GETAWAY

  • IS A FINE SPOT TO RELAX AND SETTLE INTO

  • THE PACE OF GREEK COUNTRY LIFE.

  • THE REMAINS OF THE TINY FORTIFIED OLD TOWN

  • ARE A REMINDER THAT KARDAMYLI WAS DESERTED IN THE MIDDLE AGES

  • WHEN PIRATES FORCED THE INHABITANTS

  • TO RETREAT UP INTO THE HILLS.

  • MOST REMAINED THERE UNTIL THE 18th CENTURY

  • WHEN TOWER HOUSES LIKE THESE ALLOWED A SAFE RETURN.

  • YIANNIS DEMETRIOS RUNS A DELIGHTFUL LITTLE SHOP

  • THAT SHOWCASES THE ORGANIC RICHES

  • OF THIS CORNER OF GREECE.

  • YOU KNOW, THIS ROOM, TO ME,

  • IS JUST A CELEBRATION OF EVERYTHING YOU CAN FIND

  • IN THE HILLS HERE IN THE PELOPONNESE.

  • WELL, THAT'S HOW WE FEEL ABOUT IT, ACTUALLY,

  • AND THAT'S WHY WE'RE RUNNING THIS LITTLE STORE.

  • SO YOU FIND EVERYTHING HERE, ESSENTIALLY, UP IN THE HILLS.

  • UP IN THE HILLS NEXT DOOR.

  • WELL, SHOULD I SHOW YOU WHAT I PICKED NOW, RICK?

  • WELL, THIS IS IT.

  • THIS IS CHAMOMILE, OR CAMOMILE.

  • THIS IS A BEAUTIFUL CAMOMILE

  • AS YOU CAN SEE, WHITE AND YELLOW FLOWER.

  • IT IS THE FLOWER THAT WE ARE AFTER.

  • ALL THE GOOD STUFF IS IN THE FLOWER, RIGHT?

  • THE GOOD STUFF INSIDE THE FLOWER

  • THAT MAKE YOU REST, SLEEP EASILY AT NIGHT,

  • CALM DOWN YOUR STOMACH, IF YOU GOT A COLD,

  • SOOTHES DOWN YOUR SORE THROAT AND EVERYTHING.

  • DOCTORS RECOMMEND IT.

  • THIS IS LIKE A PHARMACY.

  • YOU'VE GOT IT.

  • LET ME SHOW YOU THE OLIVES NOW.

  • WE HAVE MANY DIFFERENT TYPES OF OLIVES,

  • BUT WHAT IT IS ABOUT OLIVES IS THE WAY WE MAKE THEM.

  • YOU DON'T GO OFF THE TREE,

  • OF COURSE, AND PICK THEM

  • LIKE YOU PICK ANY OTHER FRUIT AND YOU EAT IT.

  • THEY HAVE TO BE PICKED AND THEN GO THROUGH

  • A PROCESS OF BEING MARINATED, CLEANED UP, WASHED,

  • AND AFTER A CERTAIN TIME, THEY'LL BE READY.

  • THEY WILL BE READY TO EAT.

  • WHAT DO WE HAVE HERE?

  • THESE ARE THE KALAMATA OLIVES.

  • KALAMATA.

  • THERE'S THE TOWN, KALAMATA --

  • THAT'S THE NAME OF THE OLIVES.

  • YOU KNOW, THIS IS MADE VERY SIMPLY.

  • THIS IS MADE WITH SEA SALT,

  • WINE VINEGAR, AND OLIVE OIL.

  • AS SIMPLE AS THAT.

  • NOW, WHAT'S IN THIS ONE?

  • WELL, THIS IS KALAMATA AND GREEN ONES MIXED TOGETHER

  • AND MARINATED WITH MORE HERBS.

  • SEA SALT, WINE VINEGAR,

  • SIX HERBS, OLIVE OIL, AND GARLIC.

  • I HAVE TO TRY ONE.

  • OF COURSE. IT'S MY PLEASURE.

  • THIS IS THE HERB VERSION.

  • THESE ARE THE SAME KIND OF OLIVES

  • AS THESE AND THESE BUT WITH MORE HERBS.

  • WITH MORE HERBS.

  • THAT'S GOOD.

  • AND ALL OF THOSE HERBS WERE FOUND IN THE HILLS.

  • ON THE HILLSIDES.

  • BY YOU?

  • BY ME.

  • REALLY?

  • ABSOLUTELY.

  • YOU MUST FEEL VERY PERSONAL ABOUT THESE OLIVES.

  • I... I'M IN --

  • I'M ALMOST IN LOVE WITH IT.

  • I LOVE DOING IT.

  • Steves: THE CHARM OF KARDAMYLI IS ITS LOW-KEY ATMOSPHERE,

  • ESPECIALLY LUNCH OR DINNERTIME OVERLOOKING THE COAST.

  • WE'RE HERE BEFORE THE TOURIST SEASON HITS,

  • AND IT'S MOSTLY LOCALS ENJOYING THE SCENE.

  • IT'S SUNDAY AND TWO GOATS ARE ROASTING ON THE SPIT

  • AS WE SETTLE IN FOR A TASTE OF THE LOCAL CUISINE.

  • STARTING WITH OUZO, THE GREEK

  • ANISE-BASED APERITIF.

  • THEN A FRESH GREEK SALAD,

  • STUFFED PEPPERS, AND TZATZIKI,

  • THE YOGURT DIP THAT ACCOMPANIES MOST MEALS.

  • AND WHEN GOAT'S ON THE SPIT, WHY CHOOSE ANYTHING ELSE?

  • KARDAMYLI IS A GOOD SPRINGBOARD

  • FOR EXPLORING THE MANI PENINSULA.

  • THIS SOUTHEASTERN TIP OF THE EUROPEAN MAINLAND

  • FEELS AS WILD AS ITS HISTORY.

  • IN THE 17th AND 18th CENTURIES,

  • THIS GODFORSAKEN CORNER OF GREECE

  • WAS KNOWN TO TRAVELERS AS "THE LAND OF EVIL COUNSEL."

  • THAT'S BECAUSE OF ITS REPUTATION FOR ROBBERY AND PIRACY,

  • A MORE RELIABLE WAY TO SURVIVE HERE

  • THAN TRYING TO EKE OUT AN HONEST LIVING

  • BY FARMING THIS BARREN LAND.

  • THE TOWN OF VATHIA IS ONE OF THE REGION'S

  • CHARACTERISTIC TOWER SETTLEMENTS.

  • THE BEST-PRESERVED OF ALL THE MANI VILLAGES,

  • ITS DESERTED, FORTIFIED HOUSES

  • ARE A POIGNANT REMINDER THAT THESE HARSH CONDITIONS

  • FORCED THE POPULATION TO SEEK PROTECTION IN CLANS.

  • IN ITS DAY, THE POPULATION WAS SWOLLEN

  • BY AN INFLUX OF REFUGEES FLEEING WHATEVER CRISIS

  • WAS GRIPPING GREECE FURTHER TO THE NORTH.

  • LOOKING AROUND AT THE STARK LANDSCAPE

  • OF THE MANI PENINSULA,

  • WHICH BARELY SUPPORTS 5,000 PEOPLE TODAY,

  • IT'S HARD TO BELIEVE THAT 200 YEARS AGO,

  • IT SUSTAINED A POPULATION OF ALMOST 60,000.

  • JUST UP THE COAST, WEDGED IN A RAVINE,

  • THE VILLAGE OF KASTANIA IS MORE INVITING,

  • AND OFFERS A RARE OPPORTUNITY

  • TO EXPLORE A TRADITIONAL MANI VILLAGE.

  • WHILE IT FEELS PRETTY SLEEPY TODAY,

  • KASTANIA WAS ONCE A LOCAL POWERHOUSE.

  • DURING THE 19th CENTURY GREEK WAR OF INDEPENDENCE,

  • IT BOASTED NO LESS THAN 400 "GUNS,"

  • AS MANI PEOPLE CALLED THEIR MENFOLK.

  • THEY WERE GATHERED UNDER A WARLORD

  • WHOSE IMPOSING FAMILY TOWER

  • STILL STANDS OVER THE TOWN SQUARE.

  • ALONG WITH MANY GUNS, THE TOWN HAD MANY CHURCHES.

  • THE TINY CHURCH OF ST. PETER,

  • THOUGHT TO HAVE BEEN BUILT DURING THE 12th CENTURY,

  • IS A FINE EXAMPLE OF BYZANTINE

  • CHURCH ARCHITECTURE OF THE TIME.

  • THE INSIDE IS RICHLY ADORNED WITH FRESCOES

  • THAT HAVE TOLD BIBLE STORIES

  • TO THIS COMMUNITY FOR CENTURIES.

  • WHILE IT FEELS UNKEPT AND RAMSHACKLE

  • AND A DESTRUCTIVE MOLD HAS HASTENED

  • THE AGING OF ITS PRECIOUS ART,

  • THE SPIRITUAL WONDER OF THE PLACE REMAINS INTACT.

  • ITS AMAZING TO THINK THAT IN OUR AGE

  • THERE ARE STILL REMOTE CORNERS WHERE

  • CENTURIES-OLD ART IS TUCKED AWAY

  • WHERE VIRTUALLY NO TOURIST GOES...

  • AND WHERE THE CURIOUS TRAVELER CAN BE ALONE WITH

  • A FRAGILE YET SURVIVING BIT OF A BYGONE AGE.

  • NEGLECTED AS THIS CHAPEL SEEMS, WHEN A LOCAL DROPS BY

  • TO LIGHT A CANDLE AND SAY A PRAYER,

  • YOU REALIZE THIS IS STILL VERY MUCH

  • A LIVING PLACE OF WORSHIP.

  • [ BELLS RINGING ]

  • BACK DOWN ON THE TOWN SQUARE,

  • THE LOCAL PRIEST CALLS HIS FLOCK TO WORSHIP.

  • [ CHANTING ]

  • WHETHER 30 OR JUST THREE SHOW UP,

  • HE PERFORMS THE SERVICE WITH THE SAME ENTHUSIASM.

  • LIKE PEOPLE IN RUSSIA, SERBIA,

  • AND SOME OTHER BALKAN COUNTRIES,

  • MOST GREEK CHRISTIANS ARE EASTERN ORTHODOX.

  • ORTHODOX CHURCHES FOLLOW THE EARLIEST TRADITIONS

  • OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH

  • FROM A TIME BEFORE REFORMS CREATED

  • TODAY'S ROMAN CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT TRADITIONS.

  • THE ICONOSTASIS, THE ICON-COVERED SCREEN

  • IN THE MIDDLE OF THE ROOM, SEPARATES THE MATERIAL WORLD,

  • WHERE THE WORSHIPPERS STAND, FROM THE HEAVENLY ONE.

  • [ SPEAKING KOINE GREEK ]

  • ORTHODOX PRIESTS DO THE RELIGIOUS HEAVY LIFTING

  • BEHIND THIS SCREEN WHERE THE BIBLE'S KEPT.

  • ORTHODOX ICONS, STYLIZED PAINTINGS OF SAINTS,

  • ARE PACKED WITH INTRICATE SYMBOLISM.

  • CAST AGAINST A GOLD OR A SILVER BACKGROUND,

  • THEY'RE MEANT TO REMIND VIEWERS

  • OF THE SPIRITUAL NATURE OF JESUS AND THE SAINTS,

  • RATHER THAN THEIR PHYSICAL FORM.

  • TRADITIONAL ORTHODOX WORSHIPPERS

  • STAND THROUGH THE SERVICE AS A SIGN OF RESPECT.

  • ORTHODOX WORSHIP GENERALLY INVOLVES CHANTING,

  • AND THE CHURCH IS FILLED WITH THE EVOCATIVE AROMA

  • OF INCENSE.

  • THROUGH THESE THE ELEMENTS, THE MASS ATTEMPTS TO CREATE

  • AN ACTUAL RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE, TO HELP THE WORSHIPPER

  • TRANSCEND THE PHYSICAL WORLD AND ENTER INTO COMMUNION

  • WITH THE SPIRITUAL ONE.

  • A SHORT DRIVE EASTWARD THROUGH THE MOUNTAINS

  • TAKES US TO THE MAGNIFICENT

  • ISLAND FORTRESS OF MONEMVASIA.

  • OFTEN REFERRED TO AS "THE GIBRALTAR OF GREECE,"

  • THIS IS A VIRTUAL SHOWCASE OF BYZANTINE, OTTOMAN,

  • AND VENETIAN HISTORY, DATING BACK TO THE 13th CENTURY.

  • ITS HISTORIC CAUSEWAY IS STILL THE ONLY WAY

  • ON OR OFF THIS BURLY CHUNK OF LAND.

  • THE TOWN'S FORTIFIED GATE OPENS ONTO MONEMVASIA'S

  • NARROW COBBLED MAIN STREET,

  • WHICH MEANDERS UPHILL PAST AN ASSORTMENT

  • OF TOURIST SHOPS AND CAFES

  • WITH TERRACES OVERLOOKING THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA.

  • IN THE 14th CENTURY, THE FORTRESS OF MONEMVASIA

  • WAS ALSO A PROSPEROUS TRADING CENTER.

  • IN ITS DAY, IT WAS ONE OF THE GREAT

  • COMMERCIAL CENTERS OF THE BYZANTINE WORLD,

  • WITH A POPULATION OF ABOUT 40,000.

  • A KEY STRATEGIC HOLDING, IT WAS OCCUPIED

  • BACK-AND-FORTH BETWEEN THE VENETIANS

  • AND THE TURKS UNTIL MODERN TIMES.

  • MONEMVASIA THEN SLIPPED INTO A DECLINE

  • THAT LASTED UNTIL TOURISTS

  • REDISCOVERED THE PLACE IN THE 1970s.

  • MANY OF THE TOWN'S HOUSES HAVE BEEN RESTORED

  • AND ARE USED AS WEEKEND RETREATS BY WEALTHY ATHENIANS.

  • A STEEP ZIG-ZAG PATH LEADS UP AND UP

  • OUT OF THE LOWER TOWN.

  • PASSING THROUGH THE OLD TOWN GATE,

  • YOU ENTER THE FORTIFIED UPPER TOWN.

  • ITS RUINS SPRAWL ACROSS THE BROAD SUMMIT OF THE ROCK.

  • IN ITS DAY, MONEMVASIA WAS CONSIDERED

  • THE MIGHTIEST FORTRESS

  • IN BYZANTINE GREECE.

  • NOT SURPRISINGLY, IT WAS NEVER TAKEN IN BATTLE,

  • BUT IT WAS SUSCEPTIBLE TO SIEGE.

  • ITS GREATEST WEAKNESS WAS ITS RELIANCE

  • ON THE MAINLAND FOR FOOD AND WATER.

  • THE FORTRESS' ONLY SURVIVING BUILDING

  • IS THE 13th CENTURY BYZANTINE CHURCH OF ST. SOPHIA,

  • HANGING PRECARIOUSLY TO THE EDGE OF A SHEER CLIFF,

  • IT STRIKES ME AS A METAPHOR

  • FOR THE RESILIENCE OF TRADITIONAL CULTURE

  • IN OUR MODERN WORLD.

  • A MULTIFACETED HISTORY, WELCOMING PEOPLE,

  • DELICIOUS FOOD, AND DRAMATIC VISTAS.

  • THE PELOPONNESIAN PENINSULA HAS IT ALL.

  • THANKS FOR JOINING US.

  • I'M RICK STEVES. UNTIL NEXT TIME, KEEP ON TRAVELIN'

HI, I'M RICK STEVES,

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B2 中上級

ギリシャのペロポネソス (Greece's Peloponnese)

  • 492 18
    Grace Chen に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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