Patras (www.athens2004.com) Updated: 2004-06-29 09:13
Patras, one of the busiest cities in Greece because of its cluster of
University faculties, is the capital of Achaia Prefecture. It is named for
Patreus, legendary chief of the Achaeans.
It is the largest city in the Peloponnese, and has the fourth largest
population in Greece (160,000), following Athens, Piraeus and Thessaloniki.
As the biggest port in Western Greece, it is an important communications hub,
connecting Greece with Italy, and the Peloponnese with the Ionian Islands.
The city extends from the sea front to the foot of mount Panachaiko.
Patras is divided into two urban districts: the Upper Town and the Lower
Town. The Lower Town is conspicuous for its symmetrical street-plan and its many
squares.
The Upper Town, which is the old part below the Venetian castle, has numerous
neoclassical buildings. The Lower Town also has a number of period buildings by
some famous architects. One of the most typical of these is the Municipal
Theatre by Ziller. There are also buildings by, among others, Kleanthis.
The cathedral and pilgrim church of Agios Andreas (St Andrew), patron saint
of Patras, is at the south-west entrance to the Lower Town. Beside it is an
older church replacing a Byzantine church razed by the Turks.
The pedestrianised street of Trion Navarchon leads to Psila Alonia, a large
and beautiful square with palm trees and a sundial.
The city has an Archeological Museum with important fidnings from
excavations; a Municipal Library; and a Press Museum.
Above the city tower the ruins of the Venetian Castle, now a public gardens
from which there is a fine panoramic view across the city and the Gulf of
Corinth to the coast of Midland Greece (Sterea Ellada) opposite.
Quiet coffee houses, outdoor restaurants of every description, busy local
traffic, visitors form abroad and people passing through – such is the
atmosphere of this beautiful city.
The world-famous Patras Carnival in early spring is a specimen of local
imagination, humor and cheerfulness. It attracts thousands of visitors every
year.
The Patras Carnival
The Patras Carnival is the biggest event of its kind in the country. It is
also in certain respects one of the biggest carnivals in the world and one of
the most important in Europe.
It has been held for more than 160 years and its origins date to the start of
the 19th century, when the first shrovetide ball is said to have been hheld at
the house of a merchant called Meretis. It was in the 1860s that a formal Patras
Carnival as such was held. Undoubtedly one of the reasons for this was the union
of the Ionian Islands with Greece, bringing in Italian and and Ionian
traditions, though the event has also absorbed influences from many places in
the Mediterranean and elsewhere. But Greek elements and local culture have
always predominated.
The Carnival has gone through many shapes and stages. The start of its career
in recent times has been taken to be the year 1966. This was when the Treasure
Hunt was introduced – still a very popular event attracting some 50,000 young
participants from Patras. The hunt, essentially a simple navigational game, has
become, thanks to the inhabitants’ inventiveness, the core carnival lasting ten
days or more, with its famous Parade.
The carnival events, starting on 17 January every year and lasting until Ash
Monday, are either programmed by the Municipal Committee of Carnival Events, or
planned by the citizens and supported by the spontaneity, the inspiration and
the creative ability of the inhabitants of Patras themselves. The carnival is
enriched yearly with new events with the last carnival Sunday Parade continuing
to be the dominant attraction. However, the Carnival events are not only the
Parade but also the continuous dancing of thousands participants who disguised
and organised in groups flood the city streets dancing in frenetic rhythms.
The ‘Bourboulia’ famous ball is organised by the Municipality at Patras
Municipal theatre APOLLON (an architectural creation of Ziller in 1872, a
mini-reproduction of the Milan Scala Opera House). At ‘Bourboulia’ women wearing
black dominoes and masks dominate and control men who participate in their
everyday clothes. Entrance for dominoes is free while men have to pay.
The carnival events end on the night of Carnival Sunday with the burning of
the Carnival Man. Ash Monday, with a kite-flying competition, concludes the
month and a half long fun, although in some places the dancing goes on.
Basic Facts and Figures
Population: 200.000
Telephone: area code 2610, country code 30
Weather: weather up-dates are available at
http://www.hnms.gr/emy/english/ath2004/index_html
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