Sfakia
Stealing and banditry had been
considered a way of life in the mountains, even appearing in a Creation myth, which made God
Himself a Sfakiot.
(Sources: GNTO, Wikipedia and various
publications)
Sfakiá (Greek: Σφακιά) is a mountainous area in the southwestern part of
the island of Crete, in
the Hania prefecture. It is
considered one of the few places in Greece to never have been fully occupied by foreign powers. With a 2001 census population of
2,446 inhabitants living on a land area of 467.589 km², it is the largest and least densely populated municipality on the island of Crete.
(Gavdos is the least densely
populated in the periphery of Crete, but is located on a separate island, about 50 km south of the coast of
Sfakiá.)
The road from Hania to Sfakiá crosses the island from north to south, through the village of
Vrisses. From this village the route crosses the White Mountains (Lefká Óri) to Hóra Sfakíon (35°12′N
24°08′E / 35.2°N 24.133°E / 35.2; 24.133) by the Libyan Sea. Halfway
from Vrisses to Hóra Sfakíon is the fertile plateau of Askifou, surrounded by high mountain peaks. From here
to Hóra Sfakíon the road is particularly spectacular. The road hugs the western slope of the Imbros Gorge
with breathtaking views.
There are many beaches in Sfakiá which do not see the numbers of tourists of the northern coast.
More adventurous visitors can follow the European hiking footpath E4 which crosses Crete through Sfakiá's
mountains. The coastal villages are not connected by a coastal road, and can be reached by ferry
boats.
Not far east from Hóra Sfakíon is Frangokastello, literally "Frankish
castle". The Venetian fortress here was built in 1371 to deter pirates and unsuccessfully, to control Sfakiá.
It is largely ruined but is picturesquely set on a wide sandy beach with the towering White Mountains behind.
Daskalogiannis was captured here in 1771.
Accessible only by boat from Sfakiá is Loutro, a small seaside village with some archaeological
ruins, a few houses, small hotels and tavernas. Loutro is car-free, you have to park your car in Hóra Sfakíon
or Paleohóra. In the north of Sfakiá is the fertile plain of Askyfou. The Sfakía region is crossed by many
gorges, among which the famous Samaria Gorge, which run from north to south and all end in the sea. Many of
them can be walked, and several even by inexperienced walkers. The region still is inhabited by rare animals,
like vultures and eagles, and the kri-kri (or agrimi), the wild Cretan goat. Sfakiá
borders to the Libyan Sea, which is inhabited by a diminishing fish population, but occasionally shows
dolphins, and even whales.
The local speciality, "Sfakian
Pie", present a thin pancake filled with cream cheese and served drizzled with honey.
Sfakia is a municipality of the prefecture of Chania, and a province of Greece.
Hóra Sfakíon, or Chora Sfakion is famous as one of the centers of the resistance
against the occupying forces of both the Venetians and the Turks. The impenetrable White
Mountains to the north combined with the rocky beaches on the south helped the locals fight off all invaders.
Anopolis, a village near Hóra Sfakíon, is the birthplace of one of the most celebrated Cretan
revolutionaries, Daskalogiannis.
A famous legend and unexplained phenomenon describes a procession of
visions (Drosoulites) seen in the nearby village Frangokastello
as troops that died in the war of independence against the Turks.
Patrick Leigh Fermor wrote about the
tall proud Sfakians and their resistance to occupation. Many tales of revolts and uprisings in Crete start in the
mountains of western Crete - mountain guerillas, pallikari fighters and rebel assemblies.
After the Battle of
Crete during World War II,
the locals helped many New Zealand and Australian soldiers escape from
here on the night of May 31, 1941 suffering great reprisals. King George II of Greece had already escaped this way when
the Germans invaded. Near the village of
Komitades is the Church of Panagia Thymiani where the revolution of 1821 began. At the village of Loutro is
the ruined "chancellery" where the first revolutionary government of 1821 met.
Sfakiá is notorious for the harshness of the environment and the
warlike people. Sfakians themselves are still considered somewhat beyond the reach of the lawmakers and tax
collectors of Athens, with vendettas over stolen sheep and women's honour still fought late into the
20th century, with a whole village abandoned.
Stealing and banditry had been considered a way of life in the
mountains, even appearing in a Creation myth, which made
God Himself a Sfakiot, as recounted by Adam Hopkins:
...with an account of
all the gifts God had given to other parts of Crete - olives to Ierapetra, Ayios Vasilios and Selinou; wine to
Malevisi and Kissamou; cherries to Mylapotamos and Amari. But when God got to Sfakia only rocks were left. So the
Sfakiots appeared before Him armed to the teeth. "And us Lord, how are we going to live on these rocks?" and the
Almighty, looking at them with sympathy, replied in their own dialect (naturally): "Haven't you got a scrap of
brains in your head? Don't you see that the lowlanders are cultivating all these riches for
you?"
The Sfakians are also famous for their hospitality and generosity towards guests, resulting in a
shift from traditional labour towards tourism, with now many families running their own small hotel or restaurant
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