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Palamidi Castle: One of the most impressive castles in Greece

Monument

Opening hours View Hours
Nafplion, GR Get Directions

The best preserved castle from the Venetian rule is associated with three stories of betrayal.

Built in just a few years and completed in 1714, to serve the strategic needs of the Venetian conquerors, Palamidi – with its renowned 999 steps – stands proudly on a 216m tall hill to the east of Akronafplia. It was named after the Homeric hero Palamides, an inventive youth from Nafplio, who took part in the Trojan War but never returned home, as he was betrayed by Ulysses and murdered.

In 1715, during the Turkish-Venetian war, the castle was stormed by 100,000 men and fell into Turkish hands after yet another betrayal. This time it was Lasalle, one of the two engineers who had designed the fortress, and was intimately acquainted with all its weak points. Palamidi was based on a system of mutually supported bastions, so that if one of them was taken, the castle could rely on the others for defence. Without Lassalle’s help, the Turks would have never been able to breach the fortifications.

The third betrayal occurred after the liberation from the Turks, turning the fortress into a notorious prison. It is said that in 1834, Theodoros Kolokotronis, the hero of the Greek Revolution, was imprisoned in a dark dungeon, carved deep inside a rock, together with Dimitrios Plapoutas, when he was accused of high treason by the Regency regime (the Bavarians who governed Greece on behalf of the underage King Otto).

Recent studies, however, have demonstrated that he was probably imprisoned in the bastion of Miltiades, since each one of the castle’s eight bastions had its own name. According to folk legend, Kolokotronis’ horse broke the 1000th step of the fortress, subtracting one step from the western side of the castle, via Arvanitia beach, which is now accessible via 999 steps.

Directions

21100, Nafplion

Get directions

On foot

1 hour from the historic center of Nafplion (Syntagma Square)

By car

10 minutes from the historic center of Nafplion

Opening hours

Summer hours

April 1 – May 1
Daily: 08:00 – 19:00

May 2 – August 31
Daily: 08:00 – 20:00

September 1 – September 15
Daily: 08:00 – 19:30

September 16 – September 30
Daily: 08:00 – 19:00

October 1 – October 15
Daily: 08:00 – 18:30

October 16 – October 31
Daily: 08:00 – 18:00

Winter hours

November 1 – March 31

Daily: 08:30 – 15:30

Last admission: 20 minutes before closing time



The site remains closed on the following dates and public holidays:
January 1, March 25, May 1, Easter Sunday, December 25 & 26.

Tickets

Full: €20.00
Reduced: €10.00

Admission is free on March 6, April 18, May 18, the last weekend of September, on October 28, as well as on the first and third Sunday of each month between November 1 and March 31.

Amenities

Café / Restaurant
WC
Parking

Contact

Ephorate of Antiquities of Argolida
Τ: +30 27520 27502
E: efaarg@culture.gr

Hellenic Heritage
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