Thursday, June 25, 2026

Greece | Thessaly | Kalambaka | Meteora

 Took the train from Thessaloniki south to the province of Thessaly and the town of Kalambaka, located just below the famous Meteora monasteries.
View from my hotel in Kalambaka (click on photos for enlargements)
View from the town square of Kalambaka
View from Kalambaka
View from Kalambaka
View from Kalambaka
View from Kalambaka
The 16th century Monastery of St. Stephen, in the middle of the photo, from Kalambaka. It is now a nunnery.
Monastery of St. Stephen
Kalambaka from the Monastery of St. Stephen
Four of the six now active Meteora monasteries can be seen in this photo.
Three of the monasteries
Two of the monasteries
Varlaam Monasteries, founded in 1541
Varlaam Monastey
Another view of Varlaam Monastery
Another view of Varlaam Monastery
Another view of Varlaam Monastery
Grand Meteora Monastery, founded in mid-fourteen century
Remains of Grand Meteora Monks
Remains of Grand Meteora Monks
Monastery of Rousanou, also known as the Monastery of St. Barbara, founded in the sixteenth century. Now a nunnery.
Monastery of St. Barbara

Monastery of St. Barbara

 On the pinnacle to the left is the Monastery of the Holy Trinity, founded in1475

Monastery of the Holy Trinity
If this monastery looks familiar, it is because a Famous Scene in the James Bond movie “For Your Eyes Only” was filmed here. Locals claim that Meteora’s reputation as internationally famous tourist attraction was spawned by its appearance in the 007 flick. Reportedly the current TV program “Game of Thrones” wanted to film here in Meteora but the monks, after witnessing the hubbub surrounding the Bond movie, refused to give permission. I have been told by locals, however, that some digitized images of Meteora were used as backgrounds in  “Game of Thrones” (I do not know for sure because I myself have not seen the show).

4 comments:

Unknown said...

Is there space available for me with the Grand Meteroa Monks?

Don Croner said...

First of all, you must be a Greek Orthodox monk. Secondly, each monastery has only a couple monks, as I understand it, acting more-or-less as caretakers. The constant stream of visitors in and out of the monasteries makes any kind of actual contemplative life very difficult.

Don Croner said...

I might add that two of the monasteries are nunneries; they appear to have a larger population of residents than the other monasteries. So if you are a woman you might have more luck.

xylokopos said...

Game of Thrones already destroyed Dubrovnik, by adding it to the list of European cities no longer worth visiting because they've been overrun by millions of tourists. The monks were smart to say no, they avoided a bloody circus setting up permanently on their doorstep - or under their suspended monasteries as is the case here.