time4uvilla

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SURROUNDING AREA
 

 

        

 

 

 

  

Agios Sostis

Agios Sostis is a charming traditional Greek village located between Laganas and Keri and it is surrounded by beautiful countryside.

 

The village is named after a 16 th Century Church dedicated to Saint Sostis. The village of Agios Sostis is flat but has the attractive backdrop of mountains in the distance. The beach here is lovely, sandy with clear waters.

 

Opposite lies the small uninhabited island called Marathonisi, but fondly nicknamed turtle island as its shape resembles a turtle and it is also popular with the Loggerhead turtles to nest their eggs on the beautiful beaches surrounding the island. Visiting Marathonisi makes for a fun day out to enjoy the splendid beaches the small island has to offer and also the chance to glimpse the turtles, boat trips are available to the island or small boats can be hired. Watersports are not available so as to protect the turtles.

 

Nightlife is mainly to be found at the waterfront of Agios Sostis, with excellent Greek tavernas and bars with a great range of delicious cocktails providing all that anyone would need to round off a blissful summer day.

 

This small resort does have a handful of shops but nearby Lagana is easily accessible either by taxi or bus, for a wider range of shops and a busier nightlife. Agios Sostis is suited to the traveller in need of relaxing and unwinding in pretty rural surroundings and a great spot from which to discover the rest of Zante's beauty.

Pantokratoras

Pantokratoras is a neighbourhood in the city of Patras.  Patras (Demotic Greek: Πάτρα, Pátra, IPA[ˈpatra], Classical Greek: Πάτραι, Pátrai, Latin: Patrae) is Greece's third largest urban centre and the capital of the prefecture of Achaea, located in northern Peloponnese, 215 kilometers west of Athens. The city is built at the foothills of Mount Panachaikon, overlooking the Gulf of Patras.

 

The Patras metropolitan area is a conurbation of 222,460 inhabitants.[3] The core settlement has a history spanning four millennia. In the Roman period it had become a cosmopolitan centre of the eastern Mediterranean whilst, according to Christian tradition, it was also the place of Saint Andrew's martyrdom. Dubbed Greece's Gate to the West, Patras is a commercial hub, while its busy port is a nodal point for trade and communication with Italy and the rest of Western Europe.

 

The city has two public universities and one Technological Institute, hosting a large student population and rendering Patras a major scientific centre with a field of excellence in technological education. The Rio-Antirio bridge connects Patras' easternmost suburb of Rio to the town of Antirrio, connecting the Peloponnese peninsula with mainland Greece.

 

Every spring, the city hosts one of Europe's largest and most colourful carnivals; notable features of the Patras Carnival include its mammoth-sized satirical floats and extravagant balls and parades, enjoyed by hundreds of thousands of visitors in a pleasant Mediterranean climate, with relatively cool yet humid summers and rather mild winters.

 

Patras is also famous for supporting an indigenous cultural scene active mainly in the performing arts and modern urban literature; it was European Capital of Culture 2006.

 

(Information obtained from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pantokratoras,_Patras)