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La
Veranda of Mykonos
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Accommodation
units * Rooms * Studios * Café |
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Tel:+30/22890.23670
Fax:+30/22890.25133 |
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Athens-Winter tel & fax : +30/210.2286971 |
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Mykonos town
POB # 613 zip code 84 600 |
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Mykonos -
Cyclades Hellas |
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E-Mail
: laveranda@gmail.com
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Delos
The
island
of Delos (Greek:
ÄÞëïò, Dhilos), isolated in
the centre of the roughly
circular ring of islands
called the
Cyclades,
near
Mykonos,
had a position as a holy
sanctuary for a millennium
before Olympian
Greek
mythology
made it the birthplace of
Apollo
and
Artemis.
From its Sacred Harbour, the
horizon shows the two
conical mounds that have
identified landscapes sacred
to a goddess in other sites:
one, retaining its pre-Greek
name Mount Kynthos, is
crowned with a sanctuary of
Dionysus.
As a
cult centre Delos had an
importance that its natural
resources could never have
offered. As
Leto,
searching for a
birthing-place for Apollo,
addressed the island:
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Delos, if you would be
willing to be the abode
of my son Phoebus Apollo
and make him a rich
temple --; for no other
will touch you, as you
will find: and I think
you will never be rich
in oxen and sheep, nor
bear vintage nor yet
produce plants
abundantly. But if you
have the temple of
far-shooting Apollo, all
men will bring you
hecatombs
and gather here, and
incessant savour of rich
sacrifice will always
arise, and you will feed
those who dwell in you
from the hand of
strangers; for truly
your own soil is not
rich.
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—Homeric Hymn
to Delian Apollo
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Inhabited since the
3rd
millennium BC,
between
900 BC
and AD
100,
sacred Delos was a major
cult centre, where
Dionysus
is as much in evidence as
Leto, Apollo and Artemis.
The island was a natural
meeting-ground for the
Delian
League,
which was first founded in
478 BC,
and a separate quarter was
reserved for foreigners and
the sanctuaries of foreign
deities. During the 3rd
century BC,
Hellenistic
monarchs competed to honor
Delos with civic monuments,
both with
stoas
and with statues whose
countless pedestals still
line the Sacred Way. In
166 BC
Delos was given by the
Romans to the Athenian
city-state, but in modern
times it has become
uninhabited. It is currently
only used for archeology and
tourism— "you will feed
those who dwell in you from
the hand of strangers".
In
1990,
UNESCO
inscribed Delos on the
World
Heritage List,
citing it as the
"exceptionally extensive and
rich" archaeological site
which "conveys the image of
a great cosmopolitan
Mediterranean port".
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Landmarks on the island
-
The small Sacred Lake
in its circular bowl,
now dry, is a
topographical feature
that determined the
placement of later
features.
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The Minoan Fountain
was a rectangular public
well hewn in the rock,
with a central column;
it formalized the sacred
spring in its present
6th century BC form,
reconstructed in 166 BC,
according to an
inscription.
Tightly-laid courses of
masonry form the walls;
water can still be
reached by a flight of
steps that fill one
side.
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There are several market
squares. The Hellenistic
Agora of the
Competaliasts
by the Sacred Harbour
retains the postholes
for market awnings in
its stone paving. Two
powerful Italic merchant
guilds dedicated statues
and columns there.
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- The
Temple of the Delians is a classic
example of the Doric order; a
pen-and-wash reconstruction of the
temple is illustrated at
Doric order
- The
Terrace of the Lions dedicated to Apollo
by the people of
Naxos
shortly before 600 BC, had originally
nine to twelve squatting, snarling
marble guardian lions along the Sacred
Way; one is inserted over the main gate
to the
Venetian Arsenal.
The lions create a monumental avenue
comparable to Egyptian avenues of
sphinxes.
(There is a Greek sphinx in the Delos
Museum.)
- The
meeting hall of the Poseidoniasts of
Beirut
housed an association of merchant,
warehousemen, shipowners and innkeepers
during the early years of Roman
hegemony, late 2nd century BC. To their
protective triad of
Baal/[[Poseidon,
Astarte/Aphrodite
and
Echmoun/Asklepios,
they added
Roma.
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The platform of
the Stoibadeion dedicated to
Dionysus
bears a statue of the god of wine and the
life-force. On either side of the platform,
a pillar supports a colossal phallus, the
symbol of Dionysos. The southern pillar,
which is decorated with relief scenes from
the Dionysiac circle, was erected ca. 300 BC
to celebrate a winning theatrical
performance. The statue of Dionysus was
originally flanked by those of two actors
impersonating Paposilenoi (conserved in the
Delos Museum). The marble
amphitheatre
is a rebuilding of an older one, undertaken
shortly after 300 BC.
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- The
Doric
Temple of Isis was built at the
beginning of the Roman period to
venerate the familiar trinity of
Isis,
the Alexandrian
Serapis
and
Anubis.
- The
Temple of Hera, ca 500 BC, is a
rebuilding of an earlier Heraion on
the site.
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The "House of
Dionysus" is a luxurious 2nd century private
house named for the floor mosaic of Dionysus
riding a panther. The "House of the
Dolphins" is similarly named from its
atrium
mosaic, where erotes ride
dolphins;
its Phoenician owner commissioned a floor
mosaic of
Tanit
in his vestibule |
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Reference :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
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