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the Cyclades have exercised a powerful
charm since ancient times, even though access to them
then was not particularly easy. This was the birthplace
of one of the Mediterranean's most important civilasations,
one which took its name from the islands: the Cycladic
civilisation (3000 - 100 BC).Geologists attribute the
peculiar form which the Cyclades take today to a succession
of geological upheavals - earthquakes, volcanic eruptions,
movements of the earth's crust - which resulted in the
submergence of large chunks of land. Many believe that
one such stretch of land was the lost continent of Atlantis.
the diverse outlines of the islands as
they protrude from the blue waters of the Aegean, bathed
in the dazzling sunlight and embellished with little
white houses, resemble, in the words of the Noble Prize-winning
poet Odysseas Elytis, "stone horses with rampant
manes", Above all, the people who live here, with
their own individual approach to the world, bring to
life the narrow alleyways of the villages and the pathways
of the countryside, the countless tiny chapels, the
windmills, the dovecotes or the wind-beaten hillsides
and are yet, in spite of the characteristics which the
islands have in common - sparkling sea, sun, the landscape
and the austere line of the architecture - each retains
its own individual features, which visitors can discover
as they explore them one by one.
the cycladic islands enjoy a Mediterranean
climate, with an average temperature for the year of
18 - 19° C. the winters are mild and the summers
- by Greek standards - cool, thanks to the beneficial
effects of the seasonal winds known as the 'meltemia'
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