Explore Cyprus with Our Interactive Map

Explore our top stories and discover ideas worth your time.

Traditional Weaving in Cyprus

Traditional Weaving in Cyprus

Basket weaving dates from ancient times in Cyprus when baskets served a range of specific practical purposes from carrying agricultural produce to storing food. The practice of weaving was highly developed during Byzantine times and has been passed down through generations to the present day. The Materials and Methods of Making Baskets Basket makers traditionally harvest materials from Cyprus's bountiful countryside. Water reeds, grasses, rushes, bamboo, terebinth branches, and stems from aquatic plants all serve as raw materials. The village of Akrotiri became particularly famous for its soft baskets woven from marsh reeds. Men and women in villages across the island would balance techniques and artistry to create beautiful baskets both for their own use and to earn a living. The weaver can make very interesting and complex designs and patterns, which takes a lot of practice and patience to learn. Weavers color the straw with different vegetable colorings to make the various colored strands to weave from. Each weaver has their own way of working, creating intricate designs differently from other people. The baskets are made from a special kind of straw, which can also be used to make bread baskets and caskets with lids. A typical basket can take up to three hours to complete. The process begins with harvesting the appropriate materials when they reach optimal flexibility…

Read more
Stone Houses of Cyprus Villages

Stone Houses of Cyprus Villages

Traditional stone houses represent the architectural heritage of Cyprus villages, built from local limestone and designed to withstand the Mediterranean climate for centuries. These structures feature thick walls exceeding half a meter, stone arches, flat or low-pitched clay tile roofs, and internal courtyards that served as the center of family life. The houses evolved from simple single-room dwellings called makrinari to more complex two-story structures with distinct functional spaces including the dikhoro living room and iliakos covered porch where social life unfolded. Construction utilized materials quarried nearby including limestone, sandstone, shell rock, granite, and volcanic diabase, creating buildings that naturally insulated inhabitants from summer heat and winter cold. Many traditional houses now receive UNESCO cultural heritage protection and government restoration grants. The revival of these stone structures through careful renovation has created unique accommodation options that allow visitors to experience authentic village life while supporting rural communities threatened by urban migration and modernization. The Ancient Roots of Stone Construction Cyprus's stone building tradition extends back 9,000 years to the Neolithic settlement of Choirokoitia, where circular houses constructed from mudbrick and stone with flat roofs housed early farming communities from 7000 to 5200 BC. These prehistoric dwellers created sophisticated layouts with fortification walls and controlled village access, demonstrating organized social structures that prioritized collective security and planned development. The round house…

Read more
Azarole in Cyprus

Azarole in Cyprus

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…

Read more