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Folklore Festivals
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Since time immemorial the valleys, dales,
mountains and the beaches of Crete have echoed merry-making,
revelry and the pleasures for life. For Cretans each day of the
year may be an occasion for celebration and feasting -
It is a way of life.
Cretans were by no means intimidated by the
hardships of life or the limitations of war, they have
maintained a positive attitude to life, which has equipped them
with the strength required to endure and entertain the changes
in life. |
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Each village in Crete is an autonomous cultural
unit with its own songs, poets, artistes and patron saints. Each
region small or large is blessed with a particular crop, the
gathering of which is an occasion for one more festivity.
During the Spring and Summer a number of festivals take place
in Crete; In the village of Assi Gonia for example there is the
Milk & Cheese festival where visitors may indulge in as much
milk and cheese as they like, visitors are also expected to join
in with the dancing. At Skine there is the orange festival where
tons of oranges are freshly squeezed to orange juice and offered
to all guests. |
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There are festivals for all the crops i.e. wine, strawberry,
citrus, raki and the chestnut festival, there are also festivals
to celebrate patron saints which are held at famous monasteries,
peak chapels, villages and towns
National holidays and historical anniversaries provide two
more occasions for celebrations, the main one being The battle
of Crete which is a milestone for Cretan history and each year
celebrations last for twenty days. |
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Weddings and christenings are also occasions for eating,
drinking, and singing all night long, such occasions are typical
examples of the spirit of Dionysus - the mischief making God of
Greek Mythology.
The Summer festival of Heraklion lasts for at least three
months (July to September), other festivals organized on a local
basis last from February through to March.
An aura of fun crowns the island of Zeus, the God of
Hospitality and Love, this is the God who charmed Princess
Europa who gave her name to the continent of Europe. |
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