Greece 12 - Peloponnese

(C. Jardin) #1

PeloPonnese


ArGOLIS


PeloPonnese


GET TING


T
HE
rE & AWAY


PeloPonnese


ANCIENT NEMEA


Leo (each of Hercules’ 12 labours is related
to a sign of the zodiac).
It’s worth visiting the site’s museum
before seeing the remains of the temple.
It has two models of the ancient site – the
first shows what it would have looked like
in 573 BC, the second in AD 500 – as well as
ancient paraphernalia from the Games and
treasures from the area’s Mycenaean tombs.
The jewel of the collection, quite literally, is
the Gold of Aidonia, an exquisite assortment
of gold rings, seals and beads from the site of
Aidonia, near Nemea. Don’t miss the video
that explains the extraordinarily advanced
race-starting mechanism (English subtitles).
At the temple site, the three original
columns of the 4th-century-BC Temple of
Zeus have been joined by six more, reassem-
bled by an American team; reconstruction
is in progress. Other ruins include a bath-
house, probably used by athletes to oil up
precompetition, and a hostelry.
The stadium is 500m back along the
road. There’s a fantastic view of it in all its
restored glory from the the path that skirts
it through the pine trees. Alternatively, en-

ter it the way the athletes would have done,
through the tunnel hidden behind the col-
umns by the site entrance. The athletes’
starting line is still in place, together with
the distance markers. Look out for ancient
‘graffiti’ in the tunnel. Resurrected in 1996,
the two-day Modern Nemean Games
(www.nemeangames.org) take place over
two days each Olympic year in June.

8 Getting There & Away
Buses to/from Corinth Isthmus (€4.50, one
hour, four to five Monday to Saturday, one Sun-
day) stop on request outside the site on the way
to modern Nemea, about 4km northwest.

ARGOLIS ΑΡΓΟΛΙΔΑ
The Argolis peninsula, which separates the
Saronic and Argolic Gulfs, is steeped in leg-
end and history. The town of Argos, from
which the region takes its name, is thought
to be the longest continually inhabited town
in Greece. Argolis was the seat of power of
the Mycenaean empire that ruled Greece
from 1600 to 1100 BC. Traces of this mighty

NEMEA’S WINE ROUTE

In the rolling hills southwest of Corinth, the Nemea region is one of Greece’s premier
wine-producing areas, famous for its full-bodied reds, many produced from the local
agioritiko grape. Look out also for wine made from roditis, a local variety of white grape.
Nemea has been known for its fine wines since Mycenaean times, when nearby Phlius
supplied the wine for the royal court at Mycenae. Half a dozen or so wineries provide
tastings for visitors (many free, some by appointment). The best spots for a tipple in-
clude the following:
Lafkiotis Winery (%27460 31000; http://www.lafkiotis.gr; Ancient Kleonai; h11am-4pm) The
Lafkiotis family has been specialising in wines made from local grape varieties since


  1. Besides the agiorgitiko, agionymo, Nemea and rodamos reds, you can also sample
    the fruity moschofilero white.
    Skouras (%27510 23688; http://www.skouraswines.com; hby appointment) George Skouras has
    two wineries, one near Argos and the other in the AOC region of Nemea, and has been
    producing wines from local and international grape varieties since 1986.
    Domaine Spiropoulos (%27960 61400; http://www.domainspiropoulos.com; Corinthos-Tripoli
    National rd; hby appointment) With two vineyards that have been in the family since
    1860 – one near Nemea and the other one on the Martinia plateau in the heart of the
    Peloponnese – Apostolos Spiropoulos is a pioneering figure in organic viticulture and
    produces moschofilero, agiorgitiko, merlot, cabernet sauvignon, cabernet franc, char-
    donnay, sauvignon blanc and syrah wines.
    Ktima Palivou (%27460 24190; http://www.palivos.gr; Ancient Nemea; hby appointment)
    Third-generation winemaker George Palivos specialises in agiorgitiko wines.
    Gaia Wines (%21080 55642; http://www.gaia-wines.gr; Koutsi; wine tastings €4-8; hby appoint-
    ment) North of Nemea in pretty hill country, Gaia Wines produces unfiltered wines,
    including appellation d’origine controlée (AOC) varieties. Its signature wine is the dry
    white thalassitis, made from the asyrtiko grape.

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