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Malia is a coastal town located
34 km west of Iraklion, following the National
Road Iraklion - Agios Nikolaos, built at the bay
of the same name.
It is the seat of the municipality of Malia which
also includes the villages Mohos, Krassi and the
area of Stalis.
The region of Malia is very rich due to its fertile
land, its springs of water of excellent quality,
both gifts of the mount "SELENA" located
south of Malia, its archaeological site, and of
course its gorgeous sandy beach, which attracts
thousands of visitors every year.
The Yannis Manos Apts is located
in the best part of Malia, 200m away from the
exciting night life and 100m from the beach and
all the waters sports and 150m from the traditional
old town, where one can find excellent taverns
with Greek traditional food and local wine.
Access
From the city of Iraklion (the bus station is
located near the port) there is regular public
transportation available for visiting Malia. There
is also bus service from Agios Nikolaos.
Facilities
There is a wide range of tourist and other facilities
provided in Malia.
Malia is the suitable place for the visitor who
wants an intense night life.
Malia has one of the longest stretches of beach
in Crete which actually starts from the small
town of Stalis west of Malia and extends for more
than 4 km to the east.
This beach is fairly organized and provides all
the amenities that a tourist might want.
During the high season (July-September) the beach
can get fairly crowded. However there are many
smaller beaches in coves around Malia, for those
who prefer a more secluded place.. Opposite to
the beach there is a small islet, easily accessible
by swimming, with a small church on it.
The Palace of Malia
The arcaeological site of Malia is located 3 km
East of the village of Malia. The excavations
at Malia were begun in 1915 by J. Chatzidakis
and were continued by the French Archaeological
School. The Palace, houses in the town and the
cemetry at Chryssolakos have already been excavated.
The site was inhabited in the Neolithic and early
Minoan period (6000- 2000 BC), but very little
trace remains.
The Palace of Malia, which covered an area of
7,500 sq.m. , is the third- largest of the Minoan
Palaces and is considered the most "provincial"
from the architectural point of view.
According to tradition the third son of Zeus and
Europa, Sarpedon, ruled here.
The first Palace was built in
1900 BC and desroyed in 1700 BC when a new Palace
was built. Following the fate of the other palaces
in Crete it was also destroyed in 1450 BC . and
the present ruins are mainly those of the new
palace.
The Palace had two floors and its entrance is
from the western paved Court, trough a procession
passage.
It is a building with a central court, loggia,
thetre, sanctuaries, Royal quarters, workshops
and magazines.
North of the western court is the hypostyle crypt,
discovered recently, and protected from the weather
conditions by a modern roof. The large underground
room, whose ceiling was supported by columns,
is considered as a council chamber for the political
deliberations of the local lords, separete from
the dwelling quarters and the official buildings.
Its a forebear of the classical Greek Pritaneion,
which had a similar function.
At the south west part of the
central court is located a round table, with little
cavities around the edge and a bigger at the center,
standing on a base.
This table is believed to be a kind of kernos
of the classic Greece. In the cavities the minoans
put the seeds, offering to the god, so they wished
to have a fruitful crop.
This explanation seems more probableas this custom
still exists in Crete.
At the east side of the central
court, with a pillared portico, was the palace's
eastern entrance near which there ware the rooms
of the royal treasury. On the same side was arw
of Magazines, narrow cells leeding off a communal
corridor and occupied by pitoi (jars) standing
on bases, with an arrangement for gathering liquids
(channels and vases for oil and wine.)
About 500 m north of the palace
was the necropolis, a royal burial enclosure,
certainly belonging to the lords of Malia, suurounded
on all four sides by levelled areas and perhaps
by porticoes.
Here was found the famous Bee pendant which is
now on display at the Iraklion Museum.
This pendant is in the shape of two bees, or wasps,
storing away a drop of honey in a comb.
The ancient cemetry is located at a place named
Chryssolakkos a name that means the "pit
of gold" beacause of the precious objects
that the farmers used to find there.
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