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Why the Olive Tree Represents Peace in Cyprus

Why the Olive Tree Represents Peace in Cyprus

The olive branch appears on the flag of Cyprus and coat of arms of Cyprus, both using olive branches as symbols of peace between the communities of the country. The two crossed green olive branches on the national flag signify the hope for peace and reconciliation between the Greek and Turkish communities residing on the island. These universal symbols of harmony are fundamental to the aspirations of the Republic of Cyprus, deliberately chosen when the island gained independence in 1960 to unite ethnic and cultural groups without favoring Greek Orthodox crosses or Turkish crescents. Athena's Gift to Athens The olive tree as a peace symbol traces its roots to Greek mythology. According to legend, Athena and Poseidon once argued and agreed to bestow gifts upon humans. Whose gift would be more useful, that side would win. Poseidon gifted people horses, undoubtedly magnificent and highly beneficial creatures for work and war. Athena, however, planted a spear in the ground, and it turned into a spreading olive tree. It not only bore fruit but also provided shade on a scorching hot day. People deemed Athena's gift much better than Poseidon's. Zeus declared Athena the winner, and the olive tree has been an important Greek mythological symbol ever since. The court of gods and goddesses ruled that Athena had the better right to…

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Archaeological Sites and Excavations in Cyprus

Archaeological Sites and Excavations in Cyprus

Beneath Cyprus's sunny beaches and pine-covered mountains lie layers of ancient civilizations waiting to be discovered. From 9,000-year-old Neolithic villages to Roman theaters still hosting performances, the island's archaeological sites tell the story of humanity's journey from Stone Age farmers to cosmopolitan Mediterranean traders - and remarkably, you can walk through most of them today. culture.gouv_fr A Living Museum Beneath Your Feet Cyprus is essentially one enormous archaeological site. Everywhere you turn - in downtown Larnaca, on clifftops overlooking the sea, hidden in mountain valleys - you'll find excavated ruins that reveal thousands of years of continuous human habitation. These aren't just piles of old stones; they're remarkably well-preserved windows into how people lived, worshipped, fought, and thrived across millennia. What makes Cyprus's archaeological landscape special is its completeness. You can trace the entire arc of Mediterranean civilization here: from Neolithic round-house villages to Bronze Age fortresses, from Phoenician temples to Greek theaters, from Roman bath complexes to early Christian basilicas. Each era built upon the last, creating stratified sites where one civilization's ruins literally rest atop another's foundations. From Stone Age Settlements to Classical Cities Cyprus's archaeological story begins over 11,000 years ago when the first humans arrived and found an island inhabited by pygmy hippos and dwarf elephants. By the 7th millennium BC, Neolithic farmers had established permanent…

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Mediterranean hawthorn (Azarole)

Mediterranean hawthorn (Azarole)

Wander almost any rocky hillside or sunlit maquis in Cyprus during a warm spring day, and you may spot a graceful small tree loaded with clusters of snowy-white flowers that seem to glow against the green. Later in the season those flowers give way to plump, golden-orange fruits that look like miniature apples or medlars hanging like little lanterns among the leaves. This is the azarole hawthorn, a quiet treasure of the island’s wild places that has sweetened Cypriot tables and stories for thousands of years. A Rose-Family Gem of the Mediterranean Crataegus azarolus, commonly known as the azarole, Mediterranean hawthorn or Mediterranean medlar, belongs to the vast Rosaceae family the same clan as apples, roses and cherries. In Cyprus it grows as a deciduous shrub or small tree, usually reaching 3–8 metres tall, perfectly at home in the mosaic of maquis and open woodland that covers so much of the island. Roots Deep in Ancient Soil and Texts The azarole has been part of Cyprus’s landscape since long before recorded history. When Dr F. Unger and Dr Th. Kotschy explored the island in 1862, they recorded it (often under the older name Crataegus aronia) as a common shrub whose tasty fruits were gathered and eaten by locals. Even earlier, the great ancient physician Dioscorides described a “second kind of…

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