https://youtu.be/4_-ijVL7X3M?si=UKgojOfo65fXzITC
This is my new Google blog, the old one is now set to be read by me only. This blog will have a lot less about work & I hope can not offended anyone at National Express or any other evil coach company's.
Takeaway: Monemvasia is a 6th‑century Byzantine fortress town carved into a rock off the Peloponnese, founded in 583 AD as a refuge from Slavic invasions. Over the next 1,300+ years it became a major Byzantine trade centre, a Venetian and Ottoman stronghold, and today remains one of Europe’s oldest continuously inhabited castle towns.
Founded in 583 AD by Byzantine refugees fleeing Slavic invasions.
A massive earthquake had separated the rock from the mainland, creating a natural island fortress accessible only by a single causeway — the origin of the name Monemvasia (“single entrance”).
Quickly developed into a major Byzantine commercial and naval centre, controlling sea routes between the Aegean and Adriatic.
Famous for producing and exporting Malvasia (Malmsey) wine, which became known across medieval Europe.
By the 12th–13th centuries, Monemvasia was one of the most important cities in Byzantine Greece.
It withstood Arab and Norman invasions (notably in 1147).
Became a wealthy trade hub, minting its own currency and supporting a thriving aristocracy and clergy.
Monemvasia changed hands repeatedly, each era leaving visible architectural layers:
Franks / Crusaders after the Fourth Crusade (1204).
First Venetian period, strengthening fortifications and trade links.
Ottoman rule, during which the upper town became an administrative centre.
Second Venetian period, then Ottoman rule again until the early 19th century.
Throughout these centuries, the town earned the nickname “Gibraltar of the East” for its impregnability.
Monemvasia was liberated in 1821 during the Greek War of Independence.
Its strategic importance declined in the 19th century, and the medieval settlement was gradually abandoned.
By the mid‑20th century, only a handful of residents remained.
Restoration began in the 1970s, transforming Monemvasia into a living medieval town with preserved Byzantine, Venetian, and Ottoman architecture.
Today it is considered Europe’s oldest continuously inhabited castle town and is on Greece’s UNESCO tentative list.
The commercial heart: merchants’ houses, workshops, 27 surviving churches.
A labyrinth of cobbled streets, stone houses, and sea views.
Shows the clearest blend of Byzantine, Venetian, and Ottoman architecture.
Administrative and military centre during Byzantine and Ottoman periods.
Once home to nobles and officials; now mostly ruins including large cisterns and the 14th‑century church of Agia Sophia.
A rare, intact medieval townscape with 1,300+ years of continuous life.
A crossroads of Byzantine, Venetian, and Ottoman cultures.
Birthplace of poet Yannis Ritsos, who called it a “stone ship ready to sail.”
If you want, I can map a full timeline of Monemvasia’s history or break down the architecture of the upper and lower towns.
Takeaway: Monemvasia’s architecture is a layered palimpsest of Byzantine, Venetian, and Ottoman styles, shaped by its split geography: the Upper Town (acropolis, aristocratic, ceremonial) and the Lower Town (mercantile, densely built, fortified). Its buildings follow strict defensive logic, water‑scarcity engineering, and Mediterranean vernacular forms.
Below is a full, structured explanation.
Built on a naturally fortified plateau 180m above sea level.
Functioned as the administrative and military centre in the Byzantine and Ottoman periods.
Contained noble residences, garrison buildings, and large public cisterns for rainwater storage.
Accessed by a steep, fortified path (voltes).
Today mostly ruins, but includes the major surviving Byzantine monument:
Hagia Sophia (12th century): a domed‑octagon church perched on a cliff edge, comparable in type to Hosios Loukas and Daphni.
The commercial heart: merchants, sailors, workshops, and 27 churches.
Dense, winding street plan designed for shade, defence, and privacy.
Houses built in stone, often two or three storeys, with:
Vaulted ground floors for storage
External staircases
Wooden pitched roofs
Cisterns in almost every dwelling due to lack of natural water sources
Fortified walls largely Venetian, built on Byzantine foundations.
Characterised by domed churches, cross‑in‑square plans, and stone‑and‑brick masonry.
Key surviving examples:
Hagia Sophia (Upper Town) — 12th‑century domed octagon.
Church of Elkomenos Christos (Lower Town) — with a carved lintel c.1000 AD and a 14th‑century icon.
Byzantine street layout survives: narrow, irregular lanes adapted to the rock.
Venetians strengthened the fortifications, rebuilt walls, and added:
Bell towers
Loggias and balconies
Larger civic squares
Many surviving houses date from Venetian phases, with arched doorways and red‑tiled roofs.
Venetian influence is strongest in the Lower Town, where trade flourished.
Introduced:
A mosque (later converted)
Hamam (bathhouse)
Residences with courtyards and simpler faΓ§ades
Upper Town became an elite Ottoman quarter reserved for officials.
Local stone dominates: rough fieldstone for walls, ashlar for corners and churches.
Byzantine “cloisonnΓ©” brick‑and‑stone patterns appear in older churches.
Ground floors: barrel vaults for strength and coolness.
Upper floors: timber roofs with tiles.
No natural springs → cistern culture:
Every house had at least one cistern.
Three huge public cisterns survive in the Upper Town.
Rainwater channelled via stone gutters into waterproofed tanks.
Monemvasia’s architecture is inseparable from its geology:
The rock dictates the plan: steep, defensive, invisible from the mainland.
Buildings cling to terraces carved into the cliff.
Streets follow the contours, not a grid.
The Upper Town’s cliff‑edge churches create dramatic silhouettes over the sea.
One of the best‑preserved Byzantine cityscapes in Greece.
A rare example of a two‑level medieval city with distinct social and architectural functions.
Continuous layering of Byzantine → Venetian → Ottoman forms in a single, intact settlement.
Houses and churches preserve 1,000+ years of urban continuity.
Takeaway: Here is a building‑by‑building architectural guide to Monemvasia, grounded in the documented structures of the Lower Town and Upper Town, using the most authoritative site descriptions available. Each entry explains what the building is, what period it belongs to, and what architectural features to look for.
All factual claims are grounded in the search results. Citations appear at the end of each relevant section.
A structured walk through the major surviving buildings of the Lower and Upper Towns.
The Lower Town is the best‑preserved Byzantine–Venetian–Ottoman urban fabric, with narrow cobbled lanes, vaulted passages, and houses built tightly together due to limited space.
Type: Three‑aisled vaulted basilica with dome and narthex.
Period: Byzantine core; later Venetian and Ottoman alterations.
Features:
Stone bell tower beside the church.
Additions to the narthex, pronaos, and iconostasis.
Converted into a mosque during the first Ottoman period, then a Catholic monastery under the Venetians, then a mosque again.
Significance: Largest church in Monemvasia; contains important post‑Byzantine icons.
Type: Small fortified sea exit.
Period: Byzantine origins; used throughout all later periods.
Features:
Direct access to the sea for boats and emergency escape.
Located on the southern wall.
Significance: One of the four historic gates of the Lower Town.
Type: Fortified landward gate.
Period: Byzantine with later Venetian strengthening.
Features:
Located on the western wall.
Forms the dramatic entry sequence from the causeway.
Type: Two‑ or three‑storey stone houses.
Period: Mostly Byzantine and Venetian, with Ottoman modifications.
Features:
Vaulted ground floors used for storage.
Wooden pitched roofs.
External stone staircases leading to living quarters.
Cisterns in nearly every house due to lack of natural water sources.
Significance: A complete medieval domestic landscape still inhabited today.
Type: Vaulted street segments.
Period: Byzantine.
Features:
Created where houses were built over the street due to lack of space.
Provide shade and structural support.
The Upper Town was the administrative and military centre, home to nobles and later Ottoman officials. It is now mostly ruins but contains major monuments.
Type: Domed‑octagon church.
Period: Middle Byzantine (12th century).
Features:
Perched dramatically on the cliff edge.
Octagonal dome supported by squinches.
One of the most important Byzantine churches in Greece.
Significance: The architectural crown of Monemvasia’s Upper Town.
Type: Large multi‑storey stone houses.
Period: Byzantine aristocratic; later Ottoman elite.
Features:
Described in 1688 by Evliya Γelebi as “500 beautifully built houses rising one above the other with sea views.”
Terraced construction due to steep terrain.
Significance: Show the social hierarchy between Upper and Lower Town.
Type: Large rectangular, barrel‑vaulted cisterns.
Period: Byzantine.
Features:
Hydraulic mortar lining to make them waterproof.
Rainwater channelled from roofs and paved surfaces.
Significance: Essential infrastructure in a town with no natural water sources.
Type: Defensive walls and gates.
Period: Byzantine core; Venetian and Ottoman modifications.
Features:
Northern gateway linked directly to the acropolis fort.
Walls follow the natural cliff edges for maximum defence.
Type: Parish churches, monastery katholika, chapels.
Period: Middle and Late Byzantine.
Features:
27 churches recorded in the Lower Town.
Mixture of basilicas and cross‑in‑square plans.
| Building | Type | Period | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elkomenos Christos | Cathedral basilica | Byzantine → Venetian → Ottoman | Dome, bell tower, multiple conversions |
| Portello Gate | Sea gate | Byzantine | Direct sea access |
| Central Gate | Main land gate | Byzantine/Venetian | Western wall entrance |
| Lower‑Town Houses | Domestic | Byzantine/Venetian | Vaults, cisterns, pitched roofs |
| Agia Sophia | Domed‑octagon church | 12th c. Byzantine | Cliff‑edge, octagonal dome |
| Upper‑Town Houses | Noble residences | Byzantine/Ottoman | Terraced, sea‑view houses |
| Public Cisterns | Water system | Byzantine | Barrel‑vaulted, hydraulic mortar |
| Fortifications | Defensive walls | Byzantine/Venetian/Ottoman | Acropolis gateway, cliff‑aligned walls |
If you want, I can create a walking route that visits these buildings in the optimal order or a period‑by‑period architectural evolution guide.
Takeaway: Here is a complete, optimised architectural walking route through Monemvasia, moving from the Lower Town (dense, lived‑in, Byzantine–Venetian fabric) up to the Upper Town (acropolis, cisterns, Hagia Sophia). It follows the natural topography, avoids backtracking, and highlights the most important buildings in the order they appear.
This is written as if you’re actually walking it.
A single, continuous route from the causeway to the summit.
Start at the causeway. You enter through the Byzantine–Venetian land gate, a compressed stone passage that sets the defensive tone.
Look for: thick walls, angled entry, murder‑holes.
Purpose: slow attackers, control access.
This narrow spine runs east–west.
Houses are two‑storey stone structures with vaulted ground floors.
Note the external staircases, cistern mouths, and Venetian arches.
Monemvasia’s largest church.
Byzantine basilica core.
Venetian bell tower.
Ottoman conversion traces.
Inside: post‑Byzantine icons and a carved lintel.
Opposite the cathedral.
Venetian‑era open space.
Surrounded by merchant houses.
Great place to observe the roofscape and street geometry.
Walk downhill to the southern wall.
Tiny fortified opening directly onto the sea.
Used for unloading goods and emergency escape.
Shows how the town relied on maritime access.
As you wander east, you pass several small churches:
Cross‑in‑square plans
CloisonnΓ© masonry
Barrel‑vaulted chapels These show the Middle Byzantine character of the town.
Look for streets that suddenly become tunnels.
Created when houses were built over the street.
Provide shade and structural support.
Classic feature of space‑starved fortified towns.
The climb begins.
Steep, stone‑paved, zig‑zagging.
Fortified turns designed to break enemy charges.
Views open dramatically as you rise.
A narrow, fortified entry.
Marks the shift from mercantile Lower Town to aristocratic Upper Town.
The architecture becomes more monumental and sparse.
Immediately inside the Upper Town.
Massive barrel‑vaulted tanks.
Waterproofed with hydraulic mortar.
Essential in a town with no natural water sources.
Terraced houses with panoramic views.
Larger than Lower‑Town houses.
Ottoman‑era courtyards.
Evliya Γelebi described them as “rising one above the other like steps.”
The climax of the route.
12th‑century domed‑octagon church.
Perched on the cliff edge.
One of the most important Byzantine churches in Greece.
Interior: marble fragments, fresco traces, perfect proportions.
Walk to the northern edge.
Venetian and Ottoman fortifications.
Sheer drop to the sea.
Full view of the Lower Town’s red‑tiled roofs.
Central Gate
Main Street
Elkomenos Christos
Main Square
Portello Gate
Byzantine Churches Cluster
Vaulted Passages
Ascent Path
Upper‑Town Gate
Public Cisterns
Upper‑Town Houses
Agia Sophia
Acropolis Walls
If you want, I can create a print‑ready version of this route or a route focused only on Byzantine buildings.
Takeaway: Here is a clean, print‑ready architectural walking route for Monemvasia — no commentary, no extras, just a structured, page‑friendly guide you can print or save. It keeps the route logical, chronological, and easy to follow on foot.
A single continuous route from the causeway to the acropolis.
Main fortified entrance
Byzantine core with Venetian strengthening
Narrow medieval spine
Stone houses with vaulted ground floors and external stairs
Cathedral basilica
Byzantine structure with Venetian bell tower
Former mosque during Ottoman rule
Venetian civic space
Surrounded by merchant houses
Small sea gate on the southern wall
Medieval maritime access point
Multiple small churches
Cross‑in‑square and basilica plans
CloisonnΓ© masonry details
Streets built under houses
Medieval space‑saving and shading technique
Steep zig‑zag route
Fortified turns (voltes)
Entry to the acropolis
Transition from mercantile to aristocratic quarter
Large Byzantine water tanks
Barrel‑vaulted, hydraulic mortar lining
Terraced noble and Ottoman residences
Panoramic sea views
12th‑century domed‑octagon church
Cliff‑edge position overlooking the sea
Venetian and Ottoman fortifications
Full panorama of the Lower Town and coastline
If you want, I can also produce a one‑page version with no descriptions or a Byzantine‑only architectural route.
Takeaway: Here is a pure Byzantine‑only walking route through Monemvasia — a clean, structured path that visits only the Byzantine‑era buildings, street forms, and engineering works. No Venetian, no Ottoman, no later additions. This is the closest you can get to experiencing Medieval Monemvasia as it existed between the 6th and 12th centuries.
This route moves west → east through the Lower Town, then climbs to the Upper Town, ending at the 12th‑century jewel Agia Sophia.
Original Byzantine fortification line
Angled entry and thick walls
Sets the defensive logic of the town
Walk the narrow, irregular lanes immediately after the gate.
Organic, defensive layout
Houses built directly onto the rock
No Venetian widening or Ottoman straightening here
Look for:
Barrel‑vaulted ground floors
Stone‑and‑rubble masonry
Cistern mouths (Byzantine water culture)
Small, slit‑like windows for defence
These are the oldest surviving domestic structures in the Lower Town.
A group of Middle‑Byzantine parish churches east of the main square. Typical features:
Cross‑in‑square plans
CloisonnΓ© brick‑and‑stone patterns
Small domes
Carved marble fragments reused from earlier buildings
This is the densest concentration of Byzantine architecture in the Lower Town.
A purely Byzantine urban solution.
Houses built over streets
Creates tunnel‑like passages
Saves space inside the fortified walls
Provides shade and structural strength
Before climbing, look for domestic cisterns and drainage channels.
Every house had its own cistern
Byzantine hydraulic mortar
Rainwater collection from roofs and paved lanes
This system allowed the town to survive sieges.
The climb to the Upper Town follows the original Byzantine military path.
Zig‑zagging switchbacks
Fortified turns
Designed to break enemy charges
The original entrance to the acropolis.
Narrow, easily defensible
Marks transition to the aristocratic Byzantine quarter
Three monumental Byzantine cisterns.
Massive barrel vaults
Waterproofed with hydraulic mortar
Supplied the garrison and nobles
These are among the most impressive engineering works in the Peloponnese.
Terraced noble residences.
Larger than Lower‑Town houses
Built for administrators and military officers
Thick walls, small windows, sea‑facing orientation
The climax of the route.
12th‑century domed‑octagon church
Perched on the cliff edge
Marble fragments, fresco traces, perfect Middle‑Byzantine proportions
This is the most important Byzantine monument in Monemvasia.
Central Gate
Byzantine Street Plan
Early Byzantine Houses
Byzantine Churches Cluster
Vaulted Passages
Byzantine Water System
Ascent Path
Upper‑Town Gate
Upper‑Town Cisterns
Upper‑Town Byzantine Houses
Agia Sophia
If you want, I can also create a strictly 6th–10th century early‑Byzantine route or a Byzantine‑architecture glossary for Monemvasia.
[15/06, 15:57] Michael Turner π Voxi Network: -------
[15/06, 15:57] Michael Turner π Voxi Network: π£️π£️π£️π£️π£️π£️π£️
[15/06, 15:57] Michael Turner π Voxi Network: ππππππ
[15/06, 18:17] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 745110 platform 3 - 1P58 19:00 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (20:47) for 5P58 21:03 Norwich Thorpe to Crown Point |Depot 21:21 -
[15/06, 18:20] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 745004 platform 1 - 1P60 19:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (21:19) for 1P73 22:02 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 23:57 platform 7 -
[15/06, 18:21] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755326 755421 755422 platform 2 - 1P62 20:00 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (21:47) -
[15/06, 18:22] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 745008 platform 2 - 1P64 20:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (22:18) for 1Y75 23:05 Norwich Thorpe to Ipswich 23:49 platform 4 -
[15/06, 18:22] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 745006 platform 1 - 1P68 21:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (23:21) -
[15/06, 18:23] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 745 platform 1 - 1P70 22:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (00:20) -
[15/06, 18:23] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 745001 platform 1 - 1P72 23:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (0133), -
[15/06, 18:23] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: +++++++
[15/06, 18:24] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755330 platform 6 -2S37 2348 Sheringham to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (00:38) -
[15/06, 18:24] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755412 platform 5A 2S35 2303 Sheringham to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (00:12) -
[15/06, 18:24] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755414 platform 2B - 1K96 2214 Stansted Airport to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (00:11) -
[15/06, 18:25] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755428 platform 5B - 2C73 23:34 Great Yarmouth Vauxhall to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (00:08) -
[15/06, 18:25] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755336 platform 6 - 2J99 2300 Beccles to Norwich arrived at (2357) -
[15/06, 18:25] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755328 platform 4A - 1K94 2243 Ely to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (2342) -
[15/06, 18:26] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755338 platform 4B - 2J97 2247 Lowestoft Central to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (2331) -
[15/06, 18:26] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: -------
[15/06, 18:27] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755408 platform 5 -2P67 22:14 Great Yarmouth Vaxuhall to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (22:46) - 2P72 23:00 Norwich Thorpe to Great Yarmouth Vauxhall 23:30 platform 2 -
[15/06, 18:28] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755401 platform 6 - 2S33 2201 Sheringham to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (2257) -
[15/06, 18:29] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755330 platform 4- - 5S36 2200 Lowestoft Central to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (21:36) - 2S36 2247 Norwich Thorpe to Sheringham 2344 -
[15/06, 18:31] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755413 platform 3 - 2J95 2147 Lowestoft Central to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (2231) - 755409 platform 1 1K99 2240 Norwich Thorpe to Cambridge 2356 platform 5
[15/06, 18:32] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755406 platform 1 - 2242-2251 - 1J96 2046 Stansted Airport to Lowestoft Central 2333 platform 4 -
[15/06, 18:32] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755412 platform 6 - 2S31 2101 Sheringham to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (2151) - 2S34 2200 Norwich Thorpe to Sheringham 2259 -
[15/06, 18:33] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755336 platform 5 - 2P63 2114 Great Yarmouth Vaxuhall to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (2146) - 2D99 2154 Norwich Thorpe to Beccles 2255 platform 2 -
[15/06, 18:34] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: 755328 platform 1 - 2J93 2051 Lowestoft Central to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (2135) - 1K97 2140 Norwich Thorpe to Ely 2238 platform 2 -
[15/06, 18:34] Michael NoΓ«l Turner: ++ Monday ++ 2130 to 0430 Thorpe Station πππππππ