Mikonos is world-famous.
It is no coincidence that this, the most cosmopolitan
of all Greek Islands, attracts so many visitors from
all over the globe, including large numbers of artists
and intellevtuals.
Here, the steep mountains to be encountered in most
of the Cyclades give way to low, rocky hills which combine
with superb beaches to make up the landscape of the
island.
The capital, Hora, with
its colourful harbour in which little fishingboats nestle
happily side by side with luxury yachts, presents quite
a different picture from the majority of Aegean island
tonws. While it is usual for island villages to be built
on naturally amphitheatrical sites, Mikonos is spread
out over a flat area and conveys an impression of solid
aesthetic cohesion.
Along the whitewashed streets
stand brilliant white box-shaped houses with stepped
walls for sitting on, wooden doors and windows and brightly-coloured
balconies. These are interspersed with small but impressive
churces, pretty little tavernas and shops selling souvenirs
and othe rgoods, and the overall sense is of being inside
a film set.
On the low Kastro hill
is the complex of churches know collectively as Our
Lady 'Paraportiani', a superb arrangement of whitewashed
masses created over the centuries and now recognised
as a national cultural monument.
Of particular historical
and aesthetic interest are the medieval houses in this
district of the town, which stand like a wall above
the sea protecting the west side of Hora.
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