Showing posts with label Creta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Creta. Show all posts

3.08.2011

To all friends of Matala

In spring 2011 the writer Arn Strohmeyer (www.arnstrohmeyer.de) and the publisher Thomas Balistier (www.kreta-buch.de) will publish a book with photographs from the hippie-time in Matala. The book will be titled:


The Myth of Matala

A book with photographs from the hippie-time in the sixties and seventies
(german and english)

 
We want to arrange a meeting with former inhabitans of the caves and all friends of Matala on the 11./12. of june 2011 in Matala. We hope many Matala-veterans will come! Contact us!

MATALA

NORTHEN :LABDANUM AREA-SOUTH :MATALA.

11.05.2010

Labdanum : A history 10.000 year


Labdanum has fascinated people for many centuries. It is said to reach deep into our subconscious and bring back memories, pictures, feelings and moods. Labdanum originates from the rockrose bush, which emits a resinous dark brown mass from its leaves and twigs. To this day it is still gathered by driving goats into the thick forests overgrown with labdanum bushes. The goats eat their fill from the branches and the sticky resin gets stuck on their beards. When they return, their owners carefully comb the resin our of their beards. Also used is a rakelike instrument with long strips of leather attached to it, which they drag across the bushes to collect the resin. Labdanum strengthens the body and provides warmth and sensuality. It is very grounding. The fragrance of Labdanum is very complex. This waxy resin produces a balsamlike, woody, earthy, marshy, smoky, ambergrislike, leathery, flowery, honeylike, mintlike fragrance with hints of plum or oakmoss after a rain. The Japanese use Labdanum in their Neriko mixtures, which are used during tea ceremony. Egyptians used it in their Kyphi mixtures and the Hebrews burned it in their temples. Today the perfume industry uses labdanum to add a note of moss and leather to its products. Labdanum is an excellent medium for making fragrant incense pellets.

10.25.2010

Elections 2010 in Municipality of Milopotamos

1st COMBINATION
Independent Movement of Active Citizens of the Mylopotamos.
Candidate Mayor: Dimitris Kokkinos.
Ste:http://www.dimitriskokkinos.gr/




2nd COMBINATION
For New Mylopotamos.
Candidate Mayor: Yannis Papadakis.
Site:http://www.neosmylopotamos.gr/

The date for local elections 2010: 7/11/2011.

Municipality Milopotamos


10.18.2010

Rain again.

Cistus Creticus everywhere!!!!!

Farm of labdanum. Cistus Creticus everywhere!!!!
Rain again in Labdanum area !!!!
It is so good for Cistus Creticus now.
Cistus creticus takes power from rain in winter.

It is so good

9.29.2010

9.28.2010

Archaeologists on Crete find skeleton covered with gold foil in 2,700-year-old grave

ATHENS, Greece — Greek archaeologists have found an ancient skeleton covered with gold foil in a grave on the island of Crete, officials said Tuesday.

Excavator Nicholas Stampolidis said his team discovered more than 3,000 pieces of gold foil in the 7th-century B.C. twin grave near the ancient town of Eleutherna.

Cemeteries there have produced a wealth of outstanding artifacts in recent years.

The tiny gold ornaments, from 1 to 4 centimetres (0.4 to 1.5 inches) long, had been sewn onto a lavish robe or shroud that initially wrapped the body of a woman and has almost completely rotted away but for a few off-white threads.

"The whole length of the (grave) was covered with small pieces of gold foil — square, circular and lozenge-shaped," Stampolidis told The Associated Press. "We were literally digging up gold interspersed with earth, not earth with some gold in it."

The woman, who presumably had a high social or religious status, was buried with a second skeleton in a large jar sealed with a stone slab weighing more than half a ton. It was hidden behind a false wall, to confuse grave robbers.

Experts are trying to determine the other skeleton's sex.

The grave also contained a copper bowl; pottery; perfume bottles imported from Egypt or Syria and Palestine; hundreds of amber, rock crystal and faience beads; as well as a gold pendant in the form of a bee goddess that probably was part of a rock crystal and gold necklace.


"If you look at it one way up, it's shaped like a lily," said Stampolidis, a professor of archaeology at the University of Crete who has worked at Eleutherna for the 25 years. "Turned upside down, you see a female figure holding her breasts, whose lower body is shaped as a bee with wings. The workmanship is exquisite."

The ruins of Eleutherna stand on the northern foothills of Mount Ida — the mythical birthplace of Zeus, chief of the ancient Greek gods. Past excavations have discovered a citadel, homes and an important cemetery with lavish female burials.

The town flourished from the 9th century B.C. — the dark ages of Greek archaeology that followed the fall of Crete's great Minoan palatial culture — and endured until the Middle Ages.


 By Nicholas Paphitis (CP)

8.23.2010

CRETE PREVELI PALM FOREST TOTAL DESTRUCTION.



Yesterday, a fire destroyed one of the most beautiful places in Greece. Authorities showed great incompetence to save a small piece of land (just 200 meters in length) of such a tremendus beauty. Local goverment - controlled media almost said nothing about it and showed no images of the destruction. It's a greek shame! Please, spread this video. Help to protect the remaining Greek treasures from the incapable, irresponsible Greek system.

6.23.2010

Holidays in Crete - Cretan Beaches

Cretan Beaches Guside for beaches of Crete here


Beaches in Labdanum Area here


40 Panormo
41 Skepasti

Sises beaches
42 Bali Coves
43 Charakas
44 Kalo Horafi
45 Almirida
46 Pera Galini
47 Korakia

5.17.2010

N.Kazatzaki' grandmother


The N.Kazatsaki’ mother was the village Asyroti and her name was Maria Xristodoulaki.

Her mother name was Eleni Rasouli that is N.Kazatzaki’ grandmother.

N.Kazatzaki’ grandmother was from my village, Sises Rethimno.

5.13.2010

Nikos Kazantzakis



Nikos Kazantzakis From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nikos Kazantzakis (Greek: Νίκος Καζαντζάκης) (February 18, 1883, Kandiye, Crete, Ottoman Empire - October 26, 1957, Freiburg, Germany) was arguably the most important and most translated Greek writer and philosopher of the 20th century. Yet he did not become well known globally until the 1964 release of the Michael Cacoyannis film Zorba the Greek, based on Kazantzakis' novel whose English translation has the same title.

Biography

When Kazantzakis was born, Crete was still under the rule of the Ottoman Empire. His surname, Kazantzakis, derives from a Turkish word Kazancı as in Kazantzidis. Kazan means a cauldron in Turkish and -cı is an agent suffix similar to "-er" in English. Thus, Kazancı means someone who produces, repairs, and/or sells cauldrons.

From 1902 Kazantzakis studied law at the University of Athens, then went to Paris in 1907 to study philosophy. Here he fell under the influence of Henri Bergson.

Upon his return to Greece, he began translating works of philosophy. In 1914 he met Angelos Sikelianos. Together they travelled for two years in places where Greek Orthodox Christian culture flourished, largely influenced by the enthusiastic nationalism of Sikelianos.

Kazantzakis married Galatea Alexiou in 1911; they divorced in 1926. He married Eleni Samiou in 1945. Between 1922 and his death in 1957, he sojourned in Paris and Berlin (from 1922 to 1924), Italy, Russia (in 1925), Spain (in 1932), and then later in Cyprus, Aegina, Egypt, Mount Sinai, Czechoslovakia, Nice (he later bought a villa in nearby Antibes, in the Old Town section near the famed seawall), China, and Japan.

While in Berlin, where the political situation was explosive, Kazantzakis discovered communism and became an admirer of Lenin. He never became a consistent communist, but visited the Soviet Union and stayed with the Left Opposition politician and writer Victor Serge. He witnessed the rise of Joseph Stalin, and became disillusioned with Soviet-style communism. Around this time, his earlier nationalist beliefs were gradually replaced by a more universal ideology.

In 1945, he became the leader of a small party on the non-communist left, and entered the Greek government as Minister without Portfolio. He resigned this post the following year.
In 1946, The Society of Greek Writers recommended that Kazantzakis and Angelos Sikelianos be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. In 1957, he lost the Prize to Albert Camus by one vote. Camus later said that Kazantzakis deserved the honour "a hundred times more" than himself.
Late in 1957, even though suffering from leukemia, he set out on one last trip to China and Japan. Falling ill on his return flight, he was transferred to Freiburg, Germany, where he died. He is buried on the wall surrounding the city of Heraklion, because the Orthodox Church ruled out his being buried in a cemetery. His epitaph reads "I hope for nothing. I fear nothing. I am free." (Δεν ελπίζω τίποτα. Δε φοβάμαι τίποτα. Είμαι λέφτερος.)

5.06.2010

Holidays in Crete - labdanum area - El Crecco

El Greco (Domenikos Theotokopoulos).


El Greco was born in Crete in 1541. As a young man, he went to Venice to study with Titian, the greatest painter of the day. In the spring of 1577 El Greco arrived in Spain, first in Madrid and then Toledo, where he continued to live until his death in 1614. El Greco's Greek heritage and his Italian training combined with the fervent religious climate of Spain to produce a truly unconventional artist of incredible power and creativity.
El Greco never forgot his Greek roots, usually signing his paintings in Greek letters with his full name, Doménikos Theotokópoulos.
The Miracle of Christ Healing the Blind 1575
El Greco (Domenikos Theotokopoulos)

5.02.2010

Holidays in Crete : Bali Rethimno Creta



Bali is sort of a quiet cluster of small villages, beaches and highrising rocks set off the mainroad between Heraklion (45 km) and Rethimnon (28 km). The village is situated at the head of a little bay, on the site of ancient Astale. Bali is set around three small coves. The first has a very small pebble beach with several tavernas and a luxury hotel. The original (and cosy) village is in the second cove where you will find most of the shops, hotels and taverna's, another beach and a harbour with some modern boats and some kaiks. It's possible to rent a waterbike (wich cover about 30% of the space of the small beach there if no one wants to peddle) and explore the bay. Here you can book a daytrip by boat to Rethimnon, Santorini or the "pirate island" of Gramvousa in the northwest of Crete. The third cove, known as Paradise Beach, is the best for swimming.
More info in Here
Bali in Labdanum Area and it is near village Sises.

5.01.2010

May Day in Creta


May First is also International Workers Day, a holiday first popularized by the Soviet Union. While it has lost many of its communist associations, it still is vigorously celebrated in former Soviet-bloc countries and other places in Europe. You can expect worker's groups and unions to be active today; major strikes are sometimes scheduled for May Day.

Since May Day corresponds with the peak of the flower season, flower shows and festivals are common. The ancient Minoans are believed to have celebrated one of their two "New Year" celebrations about this time - the other was in October.

One very common commemoration is the making of a May wreath which is hung on doorways, balconies, in chapels, and many other places. Keep an eye out for them.

4.07.2010

Wellcomes Sring part II- 1 year with blog.


One year with my blog !!!!!
One year with chypre perfume and Cistus Creticus and Labdanum!!!!
Thank for ALL!!!!!!

Cretan dance "Pentozalis"

2.18.2010

Winter Images from labdanum area.


The leaves of Cistus Creticus are wide and do not produce labdanum.

The summertime, Cistus Creticus has different leaves.



Now.
The goats are clean.






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