4 Best Sights in Pythagorio, The Northern Aegean Islands

Archaeological Museum of Pythagoreion

This tiny but impressive collection shows off local finds, including headless statues, grave markers with epigrams to the dead, and human and animal figurines, in addition to some notably beautiful portrait busts of the Roman emperors Claudius, Caesar, and Augustus.

Pythagora Sq., in the municipal building, Pythagorio, Samos, 83103, Greece
22730-62811
Sights Details
Rate Includes: €4, Closed Tues.

Kastro

At the eastern corner of Pythagorio lie the crumbling ruins of the Kastro, probably built on top of the ruins of the Acropolis. Revolutionary hero Lykourgou Logotheti built this 19th-century edifice; his statue is next door, in the courtyard of the church built to honor the victory. He held back the Turks on Transfiguration Day, and a sign on the church announces in Greek: "Christ saved Samos 6 August 1824." On some nights the villagers light votive candles in the church cemetery, a moving sight with the ghostly silhouette of the fortress and the moonlit sea in the background. Nearby are some fragments of the wall that the ruler Polycrates built in the 6th century BC.

Panagia Spiliani Church

Enter this spacious cave and descend 95 steps to the tiny church of Panagia Spiliani (Virgin of the Grotto). Half-church, half-cavern, this most unique landmark is also called Kaliarmenissa ("for good travels"), as it houses an antique icon of the Virgin Mary that, according to legend, was stolen from Samos, carried to a far-off land, and fell from a boat and broke into pieces, all of which washed ashore on Samos. A pool in the grotto, once the sanctuary of a Roman cult, is considered to contain miracle-working water.

Recommended Fodor's Video

To Efpalinio Hydragogeio

Considered by Herodotus as the world's Eighth Wonder, this famed underground aqueduct was completed in 524 BC with archaic tools and without measuring instruments. The ruler Polycrates, not a man who liked to leave himself vulnerable, ordered the construction of the tunnel to ensure that Samos's water supply could never be cut off during an attack. Efpalinos of Megara, a hydraulics engineer, set perhaps 1,000 slaves into two teams, one digging on each side of Mt. Kastri. Fifteen years later, they met in the middle with just a tiny difference in the elevation between the two halves. The tunnel is about 3,340 feet long, and it remained in use as an aqueduct for almost 1,000 years. More than a mile of (long-gone) ceramic water pipe once filled the space, which was later used as a hiding place during pirate raids. Today the tunnel is exclusively a tourist attraction, and though some spaces are tight and slippery, you can walk part of the length—also a wonderful way to enjoy natural coolness on swelteringly hot days. Though the tunnel has been closed for necessary engineering work, a partial opening is set for 2018. At some point, with ongoing work, it will be possible to traverse the tunnel in its entirety. On a hillside above the tunnel entrance are the scant remains of a Greek and Roman theater, and a wooden platform over the shell is occasionally used for performances.

Pythagorio, Samos, 83103, Greece
22-7306–2811
Sights Details
Rate Includes: €4, Closed Mon.