Hercules was a Peloponnesian hero, while according to mythology the gods might lived on Mount Olympus, but were as well staying and worshiped in temples in the Peloponnese: Zeus was born in the holy mountain of Arcadia, the Lykaion term, Hera was the patron saint of Argos, Neptune was worshiped in Isthmia, while he was also mentioned in Pylos, Athena was glorified as Alea in Tegea and as Panachais in Patras, and finally Apollo lived in Amykles, while he was worshiped, with the epithet Epicurean, at the Arcadian Bassae.
ANCIENT OLYMPIA (WORLD HERITAGE UNESCO)

MYCENAE AND TIRYNS (WORLD HERITAGE UNESCO)

EPIDAURUS (WORLD HERITAGE UNESCO)

TEMPLE OF APOLLO EPICURIUS (WORLD HERITAGE UNESCO)

ANCIENT MESSENE

Ancient Messene (34km from Kalamata) – built according to the ” Hippodameian ” planning system based on the virtues of the democratic constitution- is the best preserved Hellenistic city in the country and one of the greatest cities of antiquity in terms of size and form. The excavations at the western foothills of Mount Ithomi—the strongest natural and artificial fortress of Messinia – are ongoing, but have already revealed all the secular and sacred buildings described by Greek traveler Pausanias around 155 AD: The Arcadian Gate, the Theatre, the Arsinoe Fountain, the Agora(market) and the Temples of Zeus Soter and Poseidon, The Asklepieion, The sanctuary of Demeter and the Dioskouroi, the Cross Road and The Hierothysion, as well as the remains of the fortification walls. The Archaeological Museum of Ancient Messene houses findings of the excavations: sculptures, terracotta figurines, votive plaques, pottery samples, etc.
PALAMIDI – BOURTZI

MYSTRAS (WORLD HERITAGE UNESCO)

The story of the Castle Town of Mystras (6km from Sparta) begins in 1249, when William II of Villehardouin, Prince of Achaea, resolved to build a great castle on the top of the 620 m hill overlooking Sparta. Reconquered by the Byzantines – according to the legend the last Byzantine emperor Constantine XI Palaeologus was crowned in the cathedral dedicated to St Demetrios by the local bishop in 1449 -, then occupied by the Turks and the Venetians, the city was abandoned in 1832 with the foundation of the modern city of Sparta by King Otto, leaving only the breathtaking medieval ruins, standing in a beautiful landscape. The ruins of the “wonder of the Morea” offer the image of a city with a brilliant destiny that was deserted by men and threatened by the return of encroaching vegetation, which is splitting the walls and covering the slopes, thus destroying here and there fragile traces of history.
ANCIENT CORINTH

PALACE OF NESTOR

The Palace of Nestor, at the top of the hill of Epano Englianos (17 km north of Pylos), was built in 13 century BC; the site is the best-preserved Mycenaean Greek palace discovered. The palace is a complex of various buildings, consisted of a total of 105 ground floor apartments. It has four main buildings (SW building, central building, NE building, and wine store) and some smaller ones. The most important compartments are the big rectangular “throne room” with its circular hearth, the room with the clay bath tub and the ceramic stores with their numerous storage vessels. The walls of the palace were decorated with fine wall paintings. The thousands of clay tablets in Linear B’ script found in the “Archive” illuminate the multiple functions and transactions which took place there. These texts proof that Linear B’- the first script in the world with syllables, which was deciphered by architect Michael Ventris – is the earliest known Greek script.
CASTLE OF METHONI & CASTLE OF KORONI
