Rethymnon harbour. Vieux port

Rethymnon

Map of the city
To see: The old town of Rethymnon, the port and the Venetian lighthouse. The Venetian fortress, fountains, mosques and minarets. Byzantine, Venetian and Ottoman remains. A whole history...

The Venetian fortress

All the streets in Rethymnon lead to the Square of the Four Martyrs, just in front of the Porta Guora.

Rethymnon, carte
Rethymnon, carte

Behind this gate is the old town, with its pedestrian streets, Venetian and Ottoman remains, and, more recently, restaurants, bars and shops for tourists.

If you're staying in the city, leave your bedroom shutters and windows open so you can wake up early and enjoy the fresh morning air and the beautiful colours of dawn. 

At this hour, the city awakes from its slumber, peaceful and welcoming. The only people in the Venetian port are the few fishermen mending their nets and the tavern owners sweeping their floors.

Rethymnon, the harbor
Rethymnon, the harbor

Take a walk around the harbour and then sit down at a café-bar to enjoy a good breakfast or a simple cup of coffee.

The old port has changed very little since the Venetians built it in 1300 in the hope of protecting their galleys. The lighthouse, the area of cobbled streets along the waterfront where people stroll, has remained the same.

Rethymnon, view on fortezza
Rethymnon, view on fortezza

And the many houses overlooking the port date back to the time of Venetian domination, between 1204 and 1645.

After the Venetian port, and while it is still early, visit the Venetian fortress, the famous Fortezza. It opens its doors at 8.30 am and until 10 am very few visitors come to break the silence.

Apart from the walls and bastions, which are very well preserved, there is not much to see in the fortress. However, it is worth walking along the wall and the embrasures, and taking a trip back in time to about 350 years ago, when the raging Turks attacked the fortress and the Venetians defended it.

Museums and culture

Just opposite the Fortezza gate, you'll see a large, imposing building.

Rethymnon, alley
Rethymnon, alley

It used to be a Turkish prison, but since 1989 it houses the Archaeological Museum of Rethymnon, probably the most beautiful and best organised in Crete. 

On the outside, the building has retained its original imposing appearance. Inside, however, it has been meticulously fitted out to showcase the archaeological treasures on display. Statuettes, jewellery, weapons, tools and pottery from the Neolithic period.

Museum of Rethymnon
Museum of Rethymnon

Ritual axes, seal stones, gold jewellery, stone coffins and statuettes of theMinoan period. Glass vases, pottery, statuettes, coins and statues from the ages of périods classical, hellenistic and roman.

If you haven't tired of this pleasant little museum, there's still the Historical and Folklore Museum. 

If you don't get tired of this pleasant little museum, there is still the Historical and Folklore Museum, which brings together with great care and sensitivity hundreds of objects of folk art, textiles, old photographs, musical instruments, traditional tools and other objects of everyday life, all displayed in a lively manner of Cretan folk art and crafts. 

All presented in a very lively way.

A walk around the town of Rethymnon

A few steps further on is Place Petichaki, at the heart of the town.

Rethymnon, Rimondi Fountain
Rethymnon, Rimondi Fountain

It is home to the famous Rimondi Fountain, a Venetian fountain of historical importance with three lion heads. Water still flows from their mouths, offering exhausted travellers a little respite from the heat of the day. 

Retymnon, Neratze mosque
Retymnon, Neratze mosque

Some of the city's best cafés are concentrated here, and from dawn until late at night they are always packed with young customers.

All around the square, the streets are full of shops, restaurants and cafés and, more than anywhere else in the city, they are bustling with activity.

To the east of Petichaki Square, at the end of Palaiologou Street, is the Venetian Loggia, an elegant late 16th-century building where Venetian lords used to gather to enjoy themselves or do their business.

To the south of Place Petichaki, at the end of Rue Vernardou, is the Nerantze Mosque. It was originally a Venetian church dedicated to Santa Maria.

Rethymnon, the harbor
Rethymnon, the harbor

But in 1657, it was converted into a mosque, with a roof and three magnificent domes, as well as the highest minaret in the city. 

South of Petichaki Square, at the end of Vernardou Street, is the Nerantze Mosque. Originally a Venetian church dedicated to Santa Maria, in 1657 it was converted into a mosque and given a roof and three magnificent domes, as well as the highest minaret in the city. In 1925 the building was named 'St Nicholas' Church' - although it was never used as such - and now houses the Rethymnon Conservatory. If you pass by and hear a few notes from a practicing musician, come in and sit down. You'll enjoy quality music in a place designed to create an unusual sensation.

Rethymnon, alley
Walking in the old town of Rethymnon

Whichever street you take in the old town, you will be walking through history. Dozens of Venetian and Turkish buildings and monuments and more than seven hundred Venetian facades are scattered in every alley and street corner.

Buildings that have stood the test of time and now house the restaurant where you will eat, the bar where you will spend the evening and the hotel where you will rest. (for the buses, see KTEL)

The beach

Working slowly over millions of years, Mother Nature has made this part of Crete one of the most beautiful sandy beaches on the island, extending over an area of 12 km.

Working feverishly for twenty years, the modern Homo Touristicus who inhabits the island has adorned this beach with countless hotels, restaurants, bars, discos, rooms for rent, car rental offices and other tourist businesses that he has planted along the coast. Some people call it "development".

See our page: « Rethymnon – Top 10 » and the map of Rethymnon area

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