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Crete : Festivals and Events

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Top 10 Festivals and Events

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  • 1. Easter

    This is the most important celebration of the Greek year. It is predominantly a family affair, focusing on the home, where spit-roasted goat is the highlight of a day of eating and drinking. More formal, religious processions are led by fabulously attired priests or monks and are often followed by fireworks. At Agios Nikolaos, Easter culminates with the burning of an effigy of Judas Iscariot.

  • 2. Festival of the Virgin Mary, 14–15 Aug

    The Festival of the Virgin Mary (Apokimisis tis Panayias ) is second only to Easter and tends to be a much more public celebration. Church processions are followed by open-air eating and drinking in the churchyard or village square, in turn followed by music and dancing until the early hours.

  • 3. Arkadiou, 7–9 Nov

    A patriotic three-day gathering to commemorate the freedom fighters of the 1866 uprising and the defenders of Moni Arkadiou, who blew themselves up rather than surrender to the Turks.

  • 4. Sultanina, Siteia, 16–20 Aug

    Siteia’s sultana festival is a relaxed celebration of the grape harvest, with music, dancing, lashings of local wine and nightly performances in the old Venetian fortress, now restored as an open air theatre.

  • 5. Chestnut Festival, mid-Oct

    This festival of the chestnut harvest is most fervently celebrated in the village of Elos in southwest Crete. Music, dancing, eating and drinking all play their part.

  • 6. Festival of St Nicholas, Agios Nikolaos, 6 Dec

    Many processions and celebrations abound at Agios Nikolaos to celebrate the town’s patron saint, who is also venerated all over the island.

  • 7. Epiphany, 6 Jan

    In the Greek calendar, Epiphany ends the 12-day reign of mischievous spirits who run loose during Christmas. Ceremonial rites banish the spirits until the next year, and baptismal fonts, springs and wells are blessed by local priests or monks. In some places such as Chora Sfakion, young men dive for a crucifix tossed into the harbour by a priest.

  • 8. Independence Day/Feast of the Annunciation, 25 Mar

    A national festival commemorating the beginning of Greece’s final struggle for independence in 1821. It is combined with the celebration of the Feast of the Annunciation, and so religious processions are followed by military parades in major towns, along with music and dancing all the way.

  • 9. St George’s Day, 23 Apr

    At the Church of Asi Gonia Apokoronou near Rethymno, hundreds of Cretan shepherds bring their sheep to be blessed on St George’s Day each year, hoping to ensure healthy flocks and a prosperous year. In return, the shepherds distribute free sheep’s milk.

  • 10. Festival of Agios Titos, 25 Aug

    The biggest celebration to mark the day of Crete’s patron saint is at Irakleio, where icons and relics are carried through the streets with great pomp. The saint’s day is also celebrated at churches across the island.

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