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Travel Tips for Meteora:

Left: Varlaam Monastery, founded on this pinnacle in 1517 CE.
Below: A face decorates the side of a house in Kastraki, a village at the foot of Meteora.

The Greek War of Independence of 1821-1829 reclaimed Ottoman Turk holdings in the Peloponnese, Sterea Ellada, and the Cyclades and Sporades Islands, but intervention by Britain, France, and Russia would set up foreign kings to control Greece on and off for generations. With the decline of the Ottomans in the mid-1800's, the "Megali Idea (Great Idea)" of a new Greek Empire became popular for reclaiming former Byzantine Greek lands. The Balkan Wars of 1912-1913 expanded Greece to include southern Macedonia, part of Thrace, more of Epiros, the North-East Aegean Islands, and union with Crete. After siding with the Allies in World War I, Greece invaded Turkey as far as Ankara. However, the young General Mustafa Kemal (later called Ataturk) drove the Greeks out of Anatolia, finally evaporating any Greek desire for the "Great Idea". In a huge exchange causing great hardships on everyone involved, 1.5 million Christians left Turkey and 400,000 Muslims left Greece. Greece also suffered terribly under Nazi occupation in World War II, with many civilians dying of starvation and half the Jewish population sent to death camps. Greece's turbulent history culminated in a 1946-1949 Civil War between monarchists and democrats, where more Greeks were killed than in World War II. Despair motivated nearly a million Greeks to seek better life in Australia (Melbourne), Canada, the USA (New York and Chicago), and other countries. After a coup by Colonels 1967-74 and later socialist rule, Greece has shifted politically to the right as of 2001. The economy is finally showing signs of improvement, and the standard of living is rising rapidly. Low and stable interest rates have hugely expanded car ownership. Greece proudly hosted world visitors at the lightly attended 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, which were broadcasted worldwide on television.Greek Independence

Left: Monks at Roussanou Monastery have historically used the pulley
system
shown here to drawn supplies up from the valley below. Roussanou, built
atop a rock pinnacle in 1545, is now a convent.
Below right: Roussanou Monastery is now a convent.

Left: Grand Meteora Monastery, founded in the 1300's CE on this steep
pinnacle.
Below right: Entry to Grand Meteora Monastery.

Below: Saint
Nicholas Anapafsa is the English name for Agio Nikolaou Anapafsa Monastery (Greek name),
at Meteora:

Below: rustic house with grape vines in Kastraki:


Left: Lumpy rock formations rise above a hotel in Kastraki.
Below right: Pillars of rock tower above Kastraki.

Left: Kastraki: Old stone houses in Kastraki are dwarfed by a rock pinnacle.
Below: A moped is parked below turquioise shutters in Kastraki.

Left: A weathered door with turquoise frame, at Meteora.
Below right: a yellowish weathered door at Meteora.

Left: Varlaam Monastery perches atop a rock spire.
Below:
Varlaam Monastery clings to a precipice, above a weird landscape of stone towers.

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