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Saranta Kolones (Forty Columns) Castle, Paphos.
According to wikipedia;
Saranta Kolones (Forty Columns) castle is a ruined medieval fortress inside the Paphos Archaeological Park and it is located just north of the harbour of Paphos.
It takes its name from the large number of granite columns that were found on the site and probably once formed part of the ancient agora.
Sadly no coloumns left on our visit many years later :0)
The Byzantine castle is believed to have been built at the end of the 7th century AD to protect the port and the city of Nea Pafos from Arab raids and later remodeled by the Lusignans. The Fortress had a three-metre thick wall with four huge corner towers and another four intermediary towers along the joining walls and moat surrounding the castle. Access was across a wooden bridge spanning the moat. The square courtyard measured 35 metres long by 35 metres wide, with a tower at each corner. The main entrance was through a fifth, horseshoe-shaped tower on the east side. Destroyed by an earthquake in 1222, the castle was subsequently abandoned.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission... © All rights reserved...
DSC_9101_051217_1021
Saranta Kolones (Forty Columns) Castle, Paphos.
According to wikipedia;
Saranta Kolones (Forty Columns) castle is a ruined medieval fortress inside the Paphos Archaeological Park and it is located just north of the harbour of Paphos.
It takes its name from the large number of granite columns that were found on the site and probably once formed part of the ancient agora.
Sadly no coloumns left on our visit many years later :0)
The Byzantine castle is believed to have been built at the end of the 7th century AD to protect the port and the city of Nea Pafos from Arab raids and later remodeled by the Lusignans. The Fortress had a three-metre thick wall with four huge corner towers and another four intermediary towers along the joining walls and moat surrounding the castle. Access was across a wooden bridge spanning the moat. The square courtyard measured 35 metres long by 35 metres wide, with a tower at each corner. The main entrance was through a fifth, horseshoe-shaped tower on the east side. Destroyed by an earthquake in 1222, the castle was subsequently abandoned.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission... © All rights reserved...
DSC_9101_051217_1021