KALAVRYTA


'Kalavryta' (Greek: Καλάβρυτα) is a town, a province and a municipality in the eastcentral part of the prefecture of Achaea. It is the southern terminus of the Kalavryta - Diakopto Road and the eastern terminus of the Patras - Kalavryta Road. It is the largest municipality covering about 18% of the prefecture and is the leastly populated municipality in density. It also has the most number of communes in the prefecture. It is located approx. 40 km S of Aigio, 38 km S of GR-8/E65, about 190 km W of Athens, about 85 km NNW of Tripoli and about 130 km NE of Olympia.

Contents
Nearest places
Communes
Historical population
External links
See also

Nearest places



Rigoi NE

Communes



★ Ano Vlassia

★ Ano Loussi

Doumena

Drosato

Flampoura (Kalavryta)

★ Goumenissa

★ 'Kalavryta'

Kallifoni

Kandalos

★ Kato Vlassia

★ Kato Zachlorou

Kerpini

Kertezi

Korfes

Kouteli

Lagovouni

Lapanagoi

Leontio

Manesi

Mikros Pontias

Petsakoi

Plataniotissa

Priolithos

Profitis Ilias

Rogoi

Sigouni

Skepasto

Trechlo

Valta

Vilivina

Historical population


Year Communal population Change Municipal population Change
1981 2,015 - - -
1991 2,111 96/4.76% 8,306 -
2001 - - 8,609 303/3.65%

The village has a small school, a lyceum, a gymnasium, a church, a small post office, banks, a train station and a square (''plateia''). The climate is a little cooler that the lowlands and receives some snow during the winter months but on Chelmos/Aroania, summers are a little cooler than Kalavryta and winter is very common which is used for skiing. Much of the municipality contains forests and mountains except for the regions in the southeast and southwest. The remainder of the municipality contains farmlands.
Kalavryta was home to developments that occurred on the 21 March 1821, which ignited the Greek War of Independence. On 13 December 1943, in what is commemorated as the Holocaust or Massacre of Kalavryta, allegedly in retribution of the killing of 81 German soldiers captured by partisans during the Nazi occupation in World War II, German troops ordered all male residents of Kalavryta, aged 14 years and up, to gather in a field just outside the village. There, they machine-gunned down almost all 700 of them. Only about 13 survived. After that they burnt down the town before they left and the next day they burnt down the Monastery of Agia Lavra, birth place of the Greek War of Independence.
The famous Diakopto-Kalavryta Railway was built by Italian engineers between 1885 and 1895. It is the southern terminus. The railway runs through a gorge but for the southern part runs within the road linking Kalavryta and Trapeza. Its length is 22 km and the journey is 68 min long. Kalavryta also has a famous Cave Lakes which is filled with lakes inside that cave in the southeast. Kalavryta also has the Kalavryta Ski Centre which is located east of town, situated on the slopes of mount Aroania (Chelmos) at 2,341 m is the tallest in Achaia. The monastery is located on a hill situated 8 km SW via the road from Kalavryta. Its elevation is abound 940 m. Another monastery is Mega Spilaion which is located in the northeast.

External links



Mapquest - Kalavryta

The Plaka - Kalavryta

Museum of the Sacrificed People of Kalavryta

Diakofto-Kalavryta Railway

Kalalvryta Ski Center (in Greek)

Pictures of Kalavryta




'North:' Leontio (non-municipal commune)
Aigio, Diakopto and Akrata
'West:' Stavrodromi, Fares
'Kalalvryta' 'East:' Akrata
'South:' Aroania, Paos, Lefkasio

See also



Communities of Achaia

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