Details: Access
Phaistos is located 62 km south of Iraklion and, administratively, is
part of the Municipality of Kamilari. It was the second biggest city of
the Minoan Crete and it is built on a hill, at an altitude of 100 m
from sea level, in the fertile valley of Messara. The valley is
surrounded by mountain ranges and in the south extends the Libyan Sea.
You can access Phaistos from Iraklion taking the road to Moires-
Timbaki, an asphalt road of fairly good condition with a panoramic view
to the Messara valley. The site can be accessed also from the
south.Regular public transportation is available from Iraklion and
Rethimnon.Ariving at Phaistos you will find a large parking area in a
few distance from the palace. You have to walk for a while through a
paved road until the entrance of the archaeological site where there is
a restaurant- bar and shops with post-cards, guide-books, maps etc. for
the visitors. History The exact location of Phaistos was first
determined in the middle of the 19th century by the British admiral
Spratt, while the archaeological investigation of the palace started in
1884 by the Italians F. Halbherr and A. Taramelli. After the
declaration of the independent Cretan State in 1898, excavations were
carried out by F. Halbherr and L. Pernier in 1900-1904 and later, in
1950-1971, by Doro Levi, under the auspices of the Italian
Archaeological School at Athens.Although many inscriptions were found
by the archaeologists, they are all in Linear A code which is still
undecipherd, and all we know about the site, even its name are based to
the ancient writers and findings from Knossos. According to mythology,
Phaistos was the seat of king Radamanthis, brother of king Minos. It
was also the city that gave birth to the great wise man and soothsayer
Epimenidis, one of the seven wise men of the ancient world.Excavations
by archaeologists have unearthed ruins of the Neolithic times (3.000
B.C.).During the Minoan times, Phaistos was a very important
city-state. Its dominion, at its peak, stretched from Lithinon to
Psychion and included the Paximadia islands. The city participated to
the Trojan war and later became one of the most important cities-states
of the Dorian period. Phaistos continued to flourish during Archaic,
Classical and Hellenistic times. It was destroyed by the Gortynians
during the 3rd century B.C. In spite of that, Phaistos continued to
exist during the Roman period. Phaistos had two ports, Matala and
Kommos.
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