For details of our accommodation on Samos, please click
the Areas/Resorts button above, choose your preferred area and click the
Accommodation button.
Separated from Western Turkey by the narrowest of straits, the island of Samos is like a
microcosm of all the things we treasure most about Greece. A mere fraction of
the size of Crete, Samos is small enough to be easily explored in its entirety
regardless of where you decide to base yourself, but large enough to present a
remarkable diversity of landscapes, an appealing collection of sleepy hamlets,
charming villages and bustling towns, and a fascinating array of historical
finds.
The island’s beaches range from gently shelving expanses of golden sand to small,
idyllic coves where white pebbles glisten as they are washed by the clear
turquoise waters of the Aegean Sea. A few of the coastal villages have grown into moderate-sized resorts offering a
good range of facilities, but many have remained untouched by any obvious signs
of commercialisation, and particularly in the west of the island you needn’t
venture far to find small bays where the only buildings are a solitary taverna
and perhaps a handful of summer houses.
Enchanting as the coast undoubtedly is, it is perhaps the natural grandeur of the interior
that most distinguishes Samos from the other islands in the East Aegean.In marked contrast to its rather barren
neighbours, Samos is wonderfully verdant, thanks to an abundance of natural
springs. The island is covered in vast expanses of pine forest, extensive olive groves, clusters of stately plane
trees, lovingly tended fields and orchards, and of course the vineyards which provide
one of the island’s most prolific exports (the sweet dessert wine is famous
well beyond Greece, but the dryer table wines are equally worthy of sampling
and rather more versatile in their application). The landscapes range from gently rolling hills and lush plains to
towering peaks sliced through by steep ravines - most impressive of all is
Mount Kerkis at the western end of the island, which soars to a height of 1,437
metres, making it the second tallest summit in the Aegean.
But it is not just the island’s natural beauty that should encourage you to
occasionally tear yourself away from the beaches, but also its cultural
treasures. Owing to its strategic position just a stone’s throw from the coast of Asia Minor, Samos was once the
most affluent island in the Aegean, and during its heyday produced a host of
well-known writers and philosophers, including Aesop, Epicurus and the island’s
most famous son, the mathematician Pythagoras. The island’s influence was eventually eclipsed by the rise of Athens
during classical times, and by the 15th century Samos had fallen upon harder
times, abandoned by its Genoese rulers to the mercy of pirates. Today, Samos certainly feels more like a
provincial outpost than a regional powerhouse, but a number of sites reveal
some of the legacy of the island’s glory days. Only a single column remains out of the 134 that once formed the Heraion
Sanctuary near the island’s main holiday resort, Pythagorion, but the mere
dimensions of this temple tell of the wealth, power and ambition of the
island’s rulers in ancient times. Equally impressive is the Efpalino Tunnel, an
aqueduct more than 1 km in length bored through a mountain to ensure a
siege-proof water supply for the island’s then capital, Chora. The bustling latter-day capital, Samos Town,
picturesquely set on a deep bay, is home to a small but fascinating
archaeological museum hosting one of the most important collections outside
Athens, including a number of imposing marble statues as well as smaller
artefacts, coins and day-to-day items, recovered from the Heraion. Those with a real thirst for archaeology can
even catch a boat from the harbour to Kusadasi to visit Turkey’s most famous
historic site, Ephesus, whilst the pilgrimage island of Patmos, where St John
received his Revelation of the Apocalypse, can easily be visited for the day by
boat or hydrofoil.
Then again, unless you are one of the growing number of aficionados who have
already visited Samos several times, you may well find that the island offers
too many attractions of its own to leave any time to venture beyond its shores.
|