Aidipsos

Aidipsos

Aidipsos, known in modern Greek as Edipsos, is a coastal village of enduring significance on the northwestern shore of the island of Evia. With a land area of approximately 115.461 square kilometres and an elevation of thirty metres above sea level, it occupies the western foothills of Mount Telethrio, some eighteen kilometres southwest of Istiaia and 125 kilometres northwest of Chalkida. Since the 2011 local government reform, Edipsos has been a municipal unit within the municipality of Istiaia-Aidipsos, following its earlier establishment in 1997 by the merger of the former municipality Loutra Aidipsou with the neighbouring communities of Agios and Gialtra. According to the national census of 2011, the municipal unit recorded 1,249 permanent residents, while the wider village environs—including the famed spa quarter of Loutra Edipsos—hosted a total of 6,141 inhabitants. This spatial and demographic profile underscores Edipsos’s dual identity as both a broadly defined administrative region and a compact village renowned for its mineral springs.

The story of Edipsos’s spa culture dates to deep antiquity, with thermal springs that have been in continuous human use for over 20,000 years. Eighty of Greece’s 752 recorded hot springs lie within the bounds of the municipal unit, a concentration unrivalled elsewhere in the country. These waters, rich in minerals and ranging in temperature from cool to scalding, have drawn visitors since classical times, when the town was known as Aedepsus. By the late Republic of Rome, Lucius Cornelius Sulla reputedly sought relief for his ailments here, and the thermal baths remained a celebrated destination through successive eras of Byzantine and Ottoman rule. In modern European history, names such as Sir Winston Churchill, Eleftherios Venizelos, Theodoros Deligiannis and Georgios Theotokis attest to the springs’ enduring appeal, while the more cosmopolitan figure of Aristotelis Onassis, accompanied by Maria Callas, lent the locale an air of glamour. Poets and playwrights such as Kostis Palamas and Marika Kotopouli also found inspiration in Edipsos’s soothing waters and verdant hillsides.

Archaeological remnants of ancient Aedepsus lie scattered amid the modern spa establishments of Loutra Edipsos. Visitors can discern vestiges of Roman bathing complexes and foundations of Hellenistic structures, quietly testifying to the settlement’s role as a therapeutic centre over more than two millennia. These ruins are preserved within a landscape where palm-fringed lanes and cobbled courtyards lead from one spa to the next. The current spa infrastructure ranges from traditional Ottoman-influenced hammams to contemporary wellness centres, each exploiting the same subterranean springs that sustained the town for generations. Treatments combining hydrotherapy with modern physiotherapy draw a steady clientele from across Greece and abroad, while the surrounding olive groves and cypress-dotted slopes of Mount Telethrio invite gentle hikes that conclude in panoramic views of the Aegean.

At the heart of the village proper stands the basilica-style Metropolitan Church of the Dormition of the Virgin Mary, completed in 1860 and inaugurated in 1872. Its whitewashed walls and tiled roofs stand in contrast to the verdant backdrop of low hills. Every August 15, the feast day of the Dormition is marked by a solemn procession of the icon, followed by communal festivities in the village square. Nearby, on a modest elevation behind the cemetery, the Church of St. Nicholas bears witness to Edipsos’s survival under Ottoman rule. Its deliberately low entrance doorway, fashioned before 1800, was designed to deter plunderers, whose raids in the medieval period posed a constant threat. A short ascent above the village leads to the Church of Prophet Elias, where visitors are rewarded with a sweeping vista of the northern Evian peninsula and the sheltered cove that embraces the spa town.

The religious landscape extends beyond these principal edifices. On the slopes of Mount Telethrio lies the Church of Agia Paraskevi, a more recent masonry that stands adjacent to the site of an older sanctuary. The devotion to Saint Paraskevi is manifest in the number of local women who bear her name and in the church’s role as a pilgrimage site on her feast day. Scattered around the municipal unit are numerous chapels dedicated to saints revered in the Greek Orthodox calendar: Zoodochos Pigi, Agios Athanasios, Agios Spyridon, Agios Konstantinos and the Holy Apostles, among others. Iconostases honouring Agia Marina, Vlasios, Fanourios, the Holy Trinity and John the Forerunner Apokefalistis further enrich the devotional geography. On the eves of these saints’ feast days, locals gather for candlelit services and the ancient rites of blessing, forging a continuity between today’s community and generations past.

Edipsos’s built heritage is not confined to ecclesiastical structures. Adjacent to the newer church of the Dormition stands the medieval “Tower of Edipsos,” commonly called Fragoulas. This square, Venetian-style fortification dates to the fourteenth century and is traditionally associated with Baroness Petronella Tokko, Lady of Edipsos and the nearby Lichades islands from 1383 until her departure in 1410. Her tenure ended amid escalating pirate incursions that plagued northern Evia, culminating in a devastating raid in 1414. Both the ancient baths and the village were laid waste, and captives were carried off to slave markets in North Africa and the Levant. Today the tower’s nearly intact walls and arched embrasures recall a time when Edipsos stood at the crossroads of Aegean maritime powers and vulnerable to the era’s lawlessness.

The village centre itself preserves a network of narrow streets lined with residences whose architecture reflects both vernacular traditions and the wealth generated by the spas. Stone courtyards, painted shutters and flower-filled balconies enliven the facades, while shaded arcades of plane and orange trees offer respite from summer heat. In spring, local customs such as the Burning of the Wreaths on St. John of the Thyme (Ai Giannis tou Riganas) recall agrarian rituals tied to the landscape’s aromatic herbs. Shrove Tuesday brings a jubilant celebration of dance in the square, where villagers clad in traditional costumes perform age-old steps to the rhythms of clarinet and lute.

Education and communal amenities reinforce Edipsos’s role as more than a seasonal resort. A primary school established at the dawn of the twentieth century perches on a hillside overlooking the village, serving generations of local children. Adjacent to the schoolyard stands the kindergarten, while the broader municipal unit maintains basic services including a post office and municipal offices housed in the former town hall. Despite the influx of visitors drawn by the spas, the year-round population retains a close-knit character, sustained by family-run guesthouses, tavernas specialising in fresh seafood and olive-oil–drizzled meze, and small shops selling local honey, thyme-scented soap and hand-woven textiles.

The beach of Agios Nikolaos lies to the west of Edipsos’s shoreline, its pebbly sands lapped by crystal-clear waters. A church dedicated to the same saint occupies a promontory above the shore and serves as the focal point for the Epiphany ceremony on January 6. On that day, the sanctification of the waters draws both worshippers and casual onlookers, as a priest casts a cross into the sea and young men dive in to retrieve it. The ritual connects Edipsos’s embrace of both sea and spring, of sacred and secular, in a maritime landscape that has shaped local identity for centuries.

Access to Edipsos from the Greek mainland remains remarkably straightforward. Frequent intercity buses depart Athens for the port of Arkitsa, where a car ferry operates hourly crossings to Loutra Edipsos. The ferry ticket, priced at approximately €3.30 per person, is purchased separately from the bus fare. The short sea voyage offers views of the Lichades islets and the northern spurs of Evia, providing an anticipatory glimpse of Mount Telethrio’s wooded slopes before disembarking within easy reach of the spas.

From its prehistoric thermal springs to the Venetian tower, from its consecrated chapels to the convivial rhythms of village life, Edipsos represents a rare convergence of natural endowment and human endeavour. The community’s size—modest by modern standards—belies the scope of its influence: a healing centre for Roman generals, a diplomatic haven for twentieth-century statesmen, an emblem of Greek spa culture that endures in the European imagination. Its cobbled lanes, shaded groves and azure sea form the backdrop to a living tradition of hospitality, in which every fountain and fountain house, every church and chapel, every stone façade and tiled roof, bears testimony to the continuity of place.

In retracing the layers of Edipsos’s story—geological, historical, architectural, spiritual and social—one encounters not a static relic but a dynamic community that remains firmly rooted in its past even as it embraces the present. The hot springs of Edipsos are more than a resource; they are a symbol of resilience, a source of renewal for body and mind. To visit Edipsos is to partake in a continuum of wellbeing that stretches back millennia and to discover a village where every element—from the church bells at dawn to the chattering of sparrows in the olive trees—plays a part in an ongoing narrative of healing, faith and conviviality.

Euro (€) (EUR)

Valuta

/

Grundlagt

+30 (Grækenland) + 22260 (lokal)

Opkaldskode

5,766

Befolkning

115.461 km2 (44.580 sq mi)

Areal

græsk

Officielt sprog

/

Højde

UTC+2 (EET) • Sommer (DST) UTC+3 (EEST)

Tidszone

Læs næste...
Grækenland-rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Grækenland

Grækenland, formelt omtalt som Den Hellenske Republik, er en nation af betydelig historisk betydning og naturlig pragt beliggende i Sydøsteuropa. Beliggende på den sydlige ende af Balkanhalvøen, ...
Læs mere →
Ios-Travel-Guide-Travel-S-Helper

Ios

Ios, en interessant græsk ø beliggende i Det Ægæiske Hav, er en betydelig del af Kykladernes øgruppe. Beliggende mellem øerne Naxos og ...
Læs mere →
Ithaca-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Ithaka

Ithaka, en betagende ø beliggende i Det Joniske Hav, med betydelig historisk betydning og naturlig charme. Denne aflange landmasse, beliggende syd for Lefkada og nordøst for Kefalonia, omfatter 117 kvadratkilometer og har en ...
Læs mere →
Kefalonia-Rejse-Guide-Rejse-S-Hjælper

Kefalonia

Kefalonia, eller Kefalonia, er den største af de Ioniske Øer i det vestlige Grækenland med en befolkning på over 36.000 indbyggere, der strækker sig over 773 kvadratkilometer. Denne betagende ...
Læs mere →
Kavala-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Kavala

Kavala, en by med omkring 70.000 indbyggere, fungerer som et symbol på historisk betydning og moderne dynamik på Grækenlands nordkyst. Beliggende i det østlige Makedonien og Thrakien, fungerer denne amfiteater-strukturerede by som hovedstad i ...
Læs mere →
Kos-Rejse-Guide-Rejse-S-Hjælper

Kos

Kos, en naturskøn græsk ø beliggende i Det Ægæiske Hav, med en befolkning på 37.089 fastboende ifølge folketællingen i 2021. Denne betagende ø er den tredjestørste i den Dodekanesiske øgruppe målt på areal, kun overgået ...
Læs mere →
Larissa-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Larissa

Larissa, hovedstaden og den mest folkerige by i Thessalien-regionen i Grækenland, er et eksempel på den dybe arv af græsk historie og kultur. Beliggende midt i nationen, er denne dynamiske ...
Læs mere →
Lefkada-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Lefkada

Lefkada, eller Lefkas, er en fortryllende ø beliggende i det blå hav i Det Ioniske Hav, ud for den vestlige kyst af det græske fastland. Pr. folketællingen i 2021 ...
Læs mere →
Leptokarya-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Leptokarya

Leptokarya, en naturskøn kystby i den regionale enhed Pieria i Centralmakedonien, Grækenland, med en permanent befolkning på 3.612 indbyggere pr. folketællingen i 2021. Denne maleriske ...
Læs mere →
Lesbos-Travel-Guide-Travel-S-Helper

Lesbos

Lesbos, eller Lesvos på græsk, er en fortryllende ø beliggende i det nordlige Ægæiske Hav. I 2021 havde denne tredjestørste græske ø og den ottendestørste i Middelhavet en befolkning på 83.755, et areal ...
Læs mere →
Mykonos-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Mykonos

Mykonos, en fortryllende græsk ø beliggende i Det Ægæiske Hav, er medlem af den ansete Kykladerne-øgruppe. Mykonos, der ligger mellem øerne Tinos, Syros, Paros og Naxos, omfatter et landområde på ...
Læs mere →
Patras-Rejse-Guide-Rejse-S-Hjælper

Patras

Patras, den tredjestørste by i Grækenland, er et dynamisk bycentrum i det nordlige Peloponnes og fungerer som den regionale hovedstad i det vestlige Grækenland. Patras, med en kommune med befolkning ...
Læs mere →
Rhodos-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Rhodos

Rhodos, den største af Grækenlands Dodekanesiske øer, er en fortryllende middelhavsperle beliggende i det sydlige Ægæiske Hav. Denne ø, med en befolkning på 125.113 i 2022, er ...
Læs mere →
Skiathos-Rejse-Guide-Rejse-S-Hjælper

Skiathos

Skiathos, en naturskøn græsk ø beliggende i det klare Ægæiske Hav, er en perle i Sporadernes øgruppe. Denne lille, men fortryllende ø har en befolkning ...
Læs mere →
Thessaloniki-Travel-Guide-Travel-S-Helper

Thessaloniki

Thessaloniki, Grækenlands næststørste by, er en dynamisk metropol beliggende i den nordvestlige del af Det Ægæiske Hav med en befolkning på over en million indbyggere. Denne historiske by, der ligger ved Thermaikosbugten og ...
Læs mere →
Thasos-Travel-Guide-Travel-S-Helper

Thasos

Thasos, eller Thassos på græsk (Θάσoς), er en fortryllende ø beliggende i det nordlige Ægæiske Hav med en befolkning på over 13.000 indbyggere. Thasos, den nordligste betydningsfulde græske ø og den 12. største ...
Læs mere →
Volos-Rejse-Guide-Rejse-S-Hjælper

Volos

Volos, en dynamisk havneby ved kysten i Thessalien, Grækenland, er strategisk placeret nær midtpunktet på det græske fastland, omkring 330 kilometer nord for Athen og 220 kilometer syd ...
Læs mere →
Zakynthos-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Zakynthos

Zakynthos, en ø i Det Joniske Hav, med en befolkning på omkring 40.759 indbyggere. Denne græske ø, kaldet Zante, er den tredjestørste af de Joniske Øer, ...
Læs mere →
Euboea-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Euboia

Evia er den næststørste ø i Grækenland og den sjettestørste i Middelhavet med en befolkning på omkring 200.000 indbyggere. Denne udstrakte landskabsform strækker sig langs ...
Læs mere →
Kreta-Rejse-Guide-Rejse-S-Hjælper

Kreta

Kreta, den største og mest befolkede græske ø, er en perle i Middelhavet, beliggende omkring 100 kilometer syd for Peloponnes og 300 ...
Læs mere →
Korfu-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Korfu

Korfu, en fortryllende græsk ø beliggende i det Joniske Havs klare hav, eksemplificerer den dybe arv af middelhavshistorie og -kultur. Dette strategisk ...
Læs mere →
Chalkidiki-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Khalkidiki

Chalkidiki, en fortryllende halvø i det nordlige Grækenland, er et rigdom af naturlig skønhed, historisk rigdom og kulturel betydning. Beliggende i det centrale Makedonien, stikker denne unikke landskabsform ud i det nordvestlige Ægæiske Hav, ...
Læs mere →
Athen-Rejseguide-Rejse-S-hjælper

Athen

Athen, Grækenlands hovedstad og største by, er et eksempel på den varige arv af vestlig kultur. Denne store metropol, der ligger på den sydøstlige kyst af det græske fastland, huser cirka 3,25 millioner indbyggere i sin storby ...
Læs mere →
Agkistro

Agkistro

Med 350 indbyggere pr. folketællingen i 2021 er Agkistro en dejlig landsby gemt væk i Serres regionale enhed i Grækenland. Dette lille, men vigtige samfund, der er en del af Sintiki kommune, dækker 70.937 ...
Læs mere →
Kaiafas

Kaiafas

Kaiafas, eller de termiske kilder i Kaiafas, ligger i kommunen Zacharo i det sydlige Grækenland og er et fremtrædende kursted. Dette geologiske vidunder ligger 347 kilometer sydvest for Athen og tilbyder ...
Læs mere →
Kamena Vourla

Kamena Vourla

Kamena Vourla, en naturskøn by beliggende på den sydlige bred af Malibugten i Grækenland, med en befolkning på 2.732 ifølge de seneste data. Dette ...
Læs mere →
Loutraki

Loutraki

Loutraki er en naturskøn kystby beliggende ved Korinthbugten i Grækenland med en befolkning på 11.654 i 2011. Denne maleriske landsby, der ligger 81 kilometer vest ...
Læs mere →
Methana

Methana

Methana, en spændende by og tidligere kommune i Grækenland, ligger på en vulkansk halvø forbundet med Peloponnes. Fra 2011 har denne lille, men bemærkelsesværdige lokalitet en ...
Læs mere →
Sidirokastro

Sidirokastro

Sidirokastro, der ligger i den regionale enhed Serres i Grækenland, er et eksempel på den dybe arv af græsk historie og kultur. Denne maleriske landsby, med en befolkning på 5.181 ifølge folketællingen i 2021, ...
Læs mere →
Mest populære historier