Ancient Eleftherna in Crete aims to become top travel destination

The Eleftherna region in the prefecture of Rethymno, Crete aims to become the most important tourist destination on the island by capitalizing on the huge archaeological wealth discovered in the area, as well as its new museum, ANA reports.

Professor Nikos Stampolidis, whose name has become associated with the finds in ancient Eleftherna and the museum, focused on the need to connect culture with tourism.

After yet more new finds were discovered in ancient Eleftherna, it has become the “heart” of Crete and stands as the second major pillar of ancient Cretan civilization after Knossos and Faistos, Stampolidis said at an event organized by the Grecotel group and Nikos Daskalantonakis Foundation.

He stressed that it is the story of the dawn of Greek civilization, of the post-Minoan era and the counterweight of Knossos and the one-sidedness of Crete’s Minoan past.

After the recent ancient finds in the most significant archaeological site of Rethymno, Stampolidis’ discovery of two Christian basilicas in Eleftherna adds new information concerning the area’s cultural profile, which had previously been identified with the heroes of Homeric times. Stampolidis said that archaeologists are currently examining whether these two churches were built by Christians by destroying pagan monuments or whether they used abandoned monuments of the ancient world .”Did the Christians act as jihadists or simply peacefully write their own story?” asked the professor.

  The museum of Elefterna welcomes more than 600 visitors a day. The innovative feature of the museum lies in that all the exhibits will be periodically renewed with new and older finds from the excavations. In this way, the public’s interest will be constantly kept alive and linked with the revelations from the ongoing work at the archaeological site.

RELATED TOPICS: GreeceGreek tourism newsTourism in GreeceGreek islandsHotels in GreeceTravel to GreeceGreek destinationsGreek travel marketGreek tourism statisticsGreek tourism report

Photo Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC-BY-SA Copyright: Lourakis

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