Northern Greece

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For years, most visitors to Greece tended to overlook Thessaloniki, thinking of it as a poor second to Athens. That began to change in 1997, when Thessaloniki the capital of Macedonia, the second-largest city in Greece, and the emotional heart of Northern Greece was the European City of Culture. Since then, word has gotten out about Thessaloniki’s varied charms and more visitors are coming here. The city has had an explosion of renovations, restorations, and innovations. Long-neglected old warehouses in the waterfront Ladadika district have been smartened up and transformed into cafes, restaurants, and galleries. Museums of photography, cinema, and contemporary art have appeared, along with what may be Greece’s liveliest avant-garde music scene. Increasingly, Thessaloniki is a popular destination city for weekending Greeks and jet-setting Europeans many from Eastern Europe who’ve already “done” Prague and Barcelona. In short, visitors here can still visit the wonderful Byzantine churches for which Thessaloniki has always been famous, but also enjoy the rhythm of today’s Thessaloniki, with its varied cuisine, multiplicity of galleries and museums, and virtually all-night-every-night cafe life. When Athenians cough and complain about pollution and the evil nefos (smog) that blankets the capital city every summer, Thessalonians enjoy the cool breezes off the sea as they take evening promenades beside the Gulf of Thessaloniki.

The National Road from Athens to Thessaloniki makes it possible to drive between Greece’s two most important cities in 6 to 8 hours. If you’re not pressed for time, try to break your trip with an overnight stop between the two cities. Good roads link the archaeological sites of Vergina, Pella, and Dion once homes of the mighty warrior Philip II of Macedon and his famous son, Alexander the Great both to the National Road and to Thessaloniki. Even Mount Athos and its monasteries are linked to Thessaloniki by a good road although only men are allowed to visit the Holy Mountain.

In July of 2009, the Via Egnatia, which links Igoumenitsa, in northwest Greece, with the borders of Albania, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), Bulgaria, and Turkey was officially opened. In theory, the new highway cuts travel time between, for example, Ioannina and Thessaloniki from 5 to 21⁄2 hours. Like the National Highway, the Via Egnatia has very heavy truck traffic.

Sources:
Frommer’s
Greece
7th Edition
by John S. Bowman, Sherry Marker, &Peter Kerasiotis with cruise coverage by Heidi Sarna.

You can buy it from Amazon.co.uk with a more detail analysis, with recommended strolls in cities of Greece, a very well published guide helping you saving time on your vacation. This link is not an affiliate link; it’s a free suggestion nothing more.

Also for mount Athos Lonely planet is our source you can visit the home page here for more detail and instructions. All the material, maps and descriptions, is a property of the respective owners. Any complaints will be answered immediately and can be sent to Ingenious Solutions Ltd™

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