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Top travel sites in Greece and Greek islands. Greece is endowed with fascinating landscapes, the cleanest seas in the world, it is rich in natural beauty and history, and an ideal destination for vacations close to nature, culture, thermal springs, for relaxation, adventure, but also for corporate travel.

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Top Travel Sites to Greece and Greek islands

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 KALYMNOS GREECE

 

Kalymnos is one of the most interesting Islands of Dodecanese.The Island is also called "Nisi ton Agalmaton" (Island of Statues), because it has many statues, which were made, by expenses of the sculpture Mihali Kokkinou and his daughter Irinis Kokkinou-Lalopoulou. Its coasts have beautiful beaches, some pebbled and some sandy. The cave of Nymphon and of Kefala, in the south, and the cave of Dascaleio, in the north, places of worship in ancient times, are today among the attractions of island. The most important product of the fertile valleys of the island is citrus fruit, which also are exported. In the waters of its sea, 700 m. from Kalymnos, there is the small barren island of Telendos, a quiet characteristic place of fishermen and of sponge divers.

The most beautiful beaches are on the west coast of the island and are Panormos, Kantouni, Linaria and Plati Gialo.Other beaches on the west coast are Mirties, Masouri, the gulf of Arginonta and Emborios.On the east coast of the island there are beaches in Ormo Akri and at the harbor of Bathi.
Kalymnos is a great place for a holiday. An island that is really Greek, but quickly feels like home. You'll want to come back! The holiday season starts in late April/early May, peaks around mid August and ends in October. Late October is the quietest time. You'll always find somewhere to stay - and even in August the resorts aren't uncomfortably crowded. The availability of flights is less certain. It's wise to book ahead. Package holidays are sold at reasonable prices in many European countries - especially the UK, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Holland, Germany, Belgium and France.
Sponge fishing has been carried out in Greece since time immemorial. The use of sponges was described by Aristotle and mentioned in both Homer"s Iliad and the Odyssey. For centuries now the Greek sponge trade has focused around the Dodecanese, with one indisputable epicenter - the island of Kalymnos. Finding sponges, diving to harvest them from the ocean bed and selling them throughout the world is a commerce in which Kalymnos has excelled. Little wonders that sponges have been called "the Kalymnian gold". But sponge diving represents much more even than this. It is a skill, a challenge, a saga of loss and gain, of appalling tragedy and fierce pride that remain to this day a poignant and inextricable part of the very soul of this rugged island. To know this story is to understand something of the essence of Kalymnos and its people.
According to mythology, Uranus and Gaia had many children: the Titans, the Giants, the Cyclopes, and the Hundred-handed. Aware of the fact that one of his sons would dethrone him, Uranus threw them to Tartara, the bottom of the earth. One of his sons was Kalydnos who fell on a piece of land, which later emerged, to the surface forming a complex of island called "The Islands of Kalydnos". Today, every island has its own name and they all surround the largest, called Kalymnos. The island, with its huge mountains, has two small plains, which, if viewed from above, resemble the legs of Kalydnos. According to myth, Kalydnos, once the god of Ades, became a sea god, yet no evidence of his worship was ever found. The first people who inhabited Kalymnos were Kares, Leleges and Pelasgians.

The Achaians came to the island after the end of the Trojan War, establishing the town of Argos in the area of Amfipetres. Later, Dorians from Peloponnese settled here, living harmoniously with the locals. After the Greek cities of Asia Minor submitted to the Turks, Kalymnos came under the rule of Artemisia, queen of Alikarnos a true friend of the Persians. The island was a member of the First Athenian Alliance supporting the Athenians in the Peloponnese war, only to come once more under the rule of the Persians and Artemisia B', as the Peace of Andalkides (387 BC) left the islands exposed. Ptolemeus, a General of Alexander the Great, liberated Kalymnos in 333 BC. During the Hellenistic Era, Kalymnos submitted to Kos, while, in 44 BC, the Romans who removed all the art treasures and imposed heavy, unbearable taxation, on the locals, conquered the island. In the Byzantine Era (330-1204 AD), the island suffered pirate raids and the rule of the Persians and the Saracenes while the universal earthquake in 535 AD altered the shape of Kalymnos.

In 1306, the Knights from Rhodes who imposed heavy taxation and work on the locals, without providing any protection from pirate raids, occupied the island. In 1495, the fierce Turk, Hamza, who occupied the island and raided and massacred the locals, while Kalymnos was destroyed by a new earthquake, attacked the island. Ten years later, Vayiezit B’attacked the island, but the coordinated effort made by both the locals and the Knights scared him away. The Turks occupied the island again in 1523 AD. Kalymnos, like all the Dodecanese islands, participated in the Greek Revolution in 1821, but in London Protocol (1830), did not include the island inside the boundaries of the Greek state. The Turkish Occupation lasted until 1912, when Kalymnos was occupied by Italian troops. In 1943 the island was given over to the Germans until 7 May 1948 when it was united with Greece. As early as the 12th century B.C., Homer wrote that the island sent two kings and thirty ships to the battle of Troy. After the Trojan War (according to Diodoros) four of Agamemnon's ships were wrecked near Kalymnos on their return journey. Their crews stayed on the island and built a settlement in Argos.

In 535 AD, KALYMNOS experienced a huge earthquake, with vibrations that lasted 14 days. As a result, the old capital of Kellaris was lost under the sea and Telendos became a separate island.
From the 14th century, Kalymnos suffered hundreds of years of occupation by the Turks, who made it part of the Ottoman Empire. Kalymnians always resisted, as far as possible, the influence of their foreign rulers and fought bravely in the Greek War of Independence, which started in 1821

Ottoman rule was again established in 1830, but throughout the 19th and early 20th century KALYMNOS struggled to maintain its own identity, providing education, health care and a literary and culture center. This was also the period when sponge diving thrived and created prosperity for the island. In ancient times, the Dorians colonized the island, the history of which had no important events and is tied with that of nearby Kos. In Classical times, it was an ally of Athens and later it passed under the domination of Rome. Later in its history, the Venetians in 1204, the Turks in 1522 and the Italians in 1912 conquered the island.