Christmas And New Year Traditions

The winter holiday season in Cyprus brings a long period of cultural celebration that blends religious observance, folklore, and strong family traditions. Spanning from late December into early January, this festive cycle is widely known as the Twelve Days of Christmas (Dodekaimera). It is a time when families gather, villages host events, and public spaces […]

Lampadistis Monastery Cyprus

Ayios Ioannis Lampadistis in Kalopanayiotis is a rare monastery complex where three connected chapels preserve nearly a thousand years of Cypriot worship and wall painting within one enclosed interior. A single timber roof, built for the Troodos climate, protected multiple fresco phases and allowed Byzantine, local devotional, and Western-influenced imagery to survive side by side. […]

Cinematic Sea Cliffs and Stone Fortresses

These fortifications originally served as watchtowers and defensive positions against Arab raids from the 7th to 10th centuries, with guards using fire signals to communicate between castles and warn coastal cities of approaching enemies. The strategic positioning allowed 360-degree views across both northern and southern coasts, with Kantara’s summit offering visibility extending to Turkey, Lebanon’s […]

Salamis Bathhouse Mosaics

The Salamis bathhouse mosaics show how Roman Cyprus combined leisure, engineering, and civic identity inside one of the island’s most ambitious public complexes. These floors were designed to shape movement and atmosphere, pairing mythic scenes with technical skill, imported materials, and heated rooms that made bathing a daily performance of status. This article explains how […]

Famagusta, Cyprus – History & Facts

Famagusta sits on the eastern coast of Cyprus, surrounded by two miles of massive stone walls built when Venice controlled the Mediterranean. The old town contains ruins of over 300 churches from an era when the city rivaled Constantinople in wealth. During the Middle Ages, this port served as the gateway between Europe and the […]

Panagia Asinou Church

Asinou Church (Panagia Phorviotissa), near Nikitari in the Troodos foothills, preserves one of the Mediterranean’s most complete sequences of Byzantine wall painting, built up in phases from the 12th to the 17th century. Its modest scale, secluded setting, and protective timber roof helped the frescoes survive when many urban churches were altered or lost. This […]

Aphrodite Legends in Cyprus

Cyprus holds a unique place in Greek mythology as the birthplace of Aphrodite, the goddess of love and beauty. According to ancient legend, she emerged from the sea foam near the southwestern coast of the island, arriving on the shores in a manner that captured the imagination of countless generations. This mythological connection transformed Cyprus […]

Ayios Herakleidios Mosaics

The mosaics at Ayios Herakleidios, in the inland territory of Tamassos, show an early Christian community expressing belief through geometry rather than mythic scenes or imperial display. Laid across successive basilica phases, the floors use repetition, careful placement, and durable materials to create a sense of order during periods of instability. This article explains how […]

Cypriot Festivals Traditions

Across Cyprus, tradition does not survive in museums alone. It lives in streets closed for parades, village squares filled with music, and festivals where children dance the same steps their grandparents once learned. From large urban celebrations in Limassol and Nicosia to small rural gatherings in the Troodos Mountains, festivals remain the island’s most effective […]

Ancient Wine Pressing Techniques Cyprus Wineries

Cyprus holds one of the longest unbroken wine traditions in the world, with archaeological evidence placing winemaking on the island at approximately 5,500 years ago. Pottery fragments discovered at Erimi village and analyzed in 2005 by Italian archaeologist Maria-Rosaria Belgiorno showed traces of tartaric acid, proving that these Chalcolithic period vessels dated between 3500 BC […]