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[BACK
TO IOS]
Ios
The
coastline of this predominantly mountainous island with its
countless chapels, its olive trees, its vineyards and its limpid
air, is adorned with small, attractive coves. Those features combine
with the crystal clear sea, the superb sandy beaches and the good
range of amenities to make Ios a magnet for tourists. Locally called
Nios, this is an island whose history goes back to prehistoric
times. According to Herodotus, the "poet of poets", the "God-like"
Homer was buried at Plakotos, in the north of the island. Pausanias
tells us that there was an inscription at Delphi confirming the
poet's interment on Ios, which was the homeland of his mother,
Clymene. Above the pretty harbour of Ormos, where fishing-boats and
yachts bob at anchor, stands the capital of Ios or Hora.
The
town stands on the site of the ancient city of the same name and is
a typical Cycladic settlement, with whitewashed houses, narrow
alleys and chapels. Among the churches, those of St Catherine, St.
John the Baptist and Sts. Cosmas and Damien stand out. The whole
beautiful image is rounded off with the bulk of the medieval castle
and the row of windmills, which top the town. The sites of Ios
include a Hellenistic tower and the remains of an ancient aqueduct
at Agia Theodoti, traces of an ancient temple at Psathi, a ruinous
Venetian castle at the spot known as Paleokastro, and the
Hellenistic tower at Plakotos, which we have already mentioned.
The Archaeological and folkloric Museum in Hora and the Museum of
Modern Art (Drot-Gaiti) at Kolitsani are also worth a visit. Lovers
of the sea will be enraptured by the superb beaches of Ios, some of
them busy (such as Milopotas, and Hora), and others no less
attractive but much quieter (Agia Theodoti, Psathi, Kalamas, Plakes,
Tzamaria, Kolitsani and Manganari). The authentic Cycladic beauty of
Ios, in combination with the island's rapid development for tourism,
has had the effect of attracting ever-increasing numbers of
visitors.
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