Explore Cyprus with Our Interactive Map

Explore our top stories and discover ideas worth your time.

Larnaca Museum

Larnaca Museum

The Larnaca District Archaeological Museum houses discoveries from one of Cyprus's most important ancient port cities. The museum was inaugurated in 1969 and underwent major renovation in 2022, emerging with two new wings organized thematically. The collection showcases finds from the ancient city kingdom of Kition and major Neolithic settlements including Choirokoitia and Tenta Kalavasos. Located just 100 meters from the Kition Bamboula archaeological site, the museum serves as an essential introduction to understanding Larnaca's 11,000 year history as a coastal trading center. The exhibits span from 8000 BC through the Roman period, demonstrating how Larnaca participated in Mediterranean wide trade networks while developing distinct local culture. Entry is free, making the museum accessible to all visitors regardless of budget. Bronze Age Kition Ruled Copper Trade Kition emerged as one of Cyprus's most powerful city kingdoms during the Bronze Age due to its control of copper resources and strategic harbor. The city exported copper throughout the Mediterranean, establishing commercial ties with Egypt, the Levant, Mycenaean Greece, and Anatolia. Archaeological evidence shows that Kition maintained extensive trade connections, importing luxury goods in exchange for Cyprus's prized copper. The museum displays pottery, tools, and weapons that demonstrate sophisticated Bronze Age metalworking techniques. A faience scepter bearing the cartouche of Pharaoh Horemheb proves direct contact with Egypt's New Kingdom. Mycenaean pottery including jugs,…

Read more
Washingtonia Palms In Cyprus

Washingtonia Palms In Cyprus

Wander along a bustling coastal promenade in Limassol or through a quiet park in Nicosia, and you might spot these towering fan-shaped trees swaying gently in the breeze. These are the Washingtonia palms of Cyprus – elegant imports from distant deserts that have become familiar landmarks across the island. But how did these American natives find a home in our Mediterranean paradise? A Palm for Dry Lands Washingtonia belongs to the vast palm family, Arecaceae, which includes over 2,500 species worldwide, from the date palms we know so well to the coconut trees of tropical shores. In simple terms, it's a type of fan palm, known for its wide, spreading leaves that look like giant hands fanning the air. Here in Cyprus, we mainly see two varieties: the sturdy Washingtonia filifera and its slimmer cousin, Washingtonia robusta, along with their natural hybrid blends. From Desert Oases to Island Avenues These palms hail from the hot, dry deserts of southwestern America and northwestern Mexico, where they've thrived for thousands of years around precious water sources. Named in 1879 after George Washington, the first U.S. president, they caught the eye of European botanists in the 19th century and were soon shipped across the seas as ornamental wonders. In Cyprus, they likely arrived during the British colonial era around the early 1900s, planted…

Read more
Cyprus Folk Dances And Weddings Festivals

Cyprus Folk Dances And Weddings Festivals

Cyprus folk dances represent living traditions that connect modern Cypriots to Byzantine heritage through choreographed movements, traditional costumes, and communal participation. These dances appear at weddings, religious festivals, harvest celebrations, and family gatherings, serving social functions beyond entertainment by reinforcing community bonds, facilitating courtship under supervision, and displaying cultural identity.  The basic repertoire includes syrtos and kartzilaumas, performed as paired confrontational dances or circle formations, alongside specialty performances like tatsia where dancers balance wine-filled glasses on sieves, and drepani, the sickle dance demonstrating agricultural skills.  Men and women traditionally danced separately, with social conventions restricting female dancing primarily to weddings while men performed at coffee shops, threshing floors, and festivals. The movements emphasize improvisation within communal constraints, with dancers competing to display skill while adhering to strict local standards that discourage excess or showiness that would violate collective norms. The Kartzilaumas Confrontational Tradition Kartzilaumas, the fundamental Cypriot dance from approximately 1910 through the 1970s, consists of six parts performed by confronted pairs of dancers, either two men or two women. The name derives from the Turkish word karşılama meaning greeting, reflecting the face-to-face positioning where dancers mirror and respond to each other's movements. The suite progresses through first, second, third, fourth, fifth or balos stages, with each part featuring slight variations in steps, tempo, and intensity. Between the third and…

Read more