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The islands are
Greece’s chief morphological trait and an integral part
of the country’s civilisation and tradition. The Greek
territory comprises 6,000 islands and islets scattered
in the Aegean and Ionian Sea, a truly unique phenomenon
on the European continent; of these islands only 227 are
inhabited.
The Greek Archipelago takes up
7,500 km of the country’s total 16,000-km coastline,
offering a highly diversified landscape: beaches
stretching along many kilometers, sheltered bays and
coves, golden stretches of sand with dunes, pebbly
beaches, coastal caves with steep rocks and black sand
typical of volcanic soil, coastal wetlands... Many Greek
beaches have been awarded the blue flag under the
programme
Blue Flags of Europe.
Apart from swimming, they lend themselves to scuba
diving, snorkeling, water skiing, sailing and
windsurfing. As they are the cradle of some of the most
ancient and prosperous European civilisations (the
Cycladic, Minoan civilisations, etc.), the islands boast
unique archaeological sites, an outstanding
architectural heritage and centuries-old, fascinating
local traditions of a multifaceted cultural past.
Moreover, 58.5% of the country’s lodging establishments
and 62.6% of hotel beds are found on the islands (data
for 2003). All the above, combined with the ideal
climate, the safety of Greek waters and the short
distances between ports and coasts, have rendered the
Greek islands extremely popular among Greek and foreign
visitors.
Most islands lie
in the Aegean Sea and are divided in seven groups (from
north to south):
- The
Northeastern Aegean Islands: Agios
Efstratios, Thasos, Ikaria, Lesvos, Limnos, Inousses,
Samos, Samothrace, Chios, Psara.
- The
Sporades: Alonissos, Skiathos, Skopelos,
Skyros
- Evia
- The
Argo-Saronic Islands: Angistri, Aegina,
Poros, Salamina, Spetses, Hydra and the coastal area
of Methana.
- The
Cyclades: A group of 56 islands, its most
important ones being Amorgos, Anafi, Andros,
Antiparos, Delos, Ios, Kea, Kimolos, Kythnos, Milos,
Mykonos, Naxos, Paros, Santorini, Serifos, Sikinos,
Sifnos, Syros, Tinos, Folegandros, as well as the
“Minor Cyclades” comprising Donousa, Irakleia,
Koufonisia and Schinoussa.
- The
Dodecanese: Astypalaia, Kalymnos, Karpathos,
Kasos, Kastelorizo, Kos, Lipsi, Leros, Nisyros,
Patmos, Rhodes, Symi, Tilos, Halki.
- Crete
The Ionian
Sea is home to one sole island group:
- The
Ionian Islands: Zakynthos, Ithaca, Corfu,
Cephallonia, Lefkada, Paxi, Antipaxi, Ereikoussa,
Mathraki, Meganissi, Othoni, Strofades.
These islands, together with Kythira, which is
however cut-off from the rest, opposite the southern
Peloponnese (Lakonia), as well as neighbouring
Antikythira, they constitute the Eptanissa.
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