Pyrgos
Pyrgos sits 370 meters above sea level, making it Santorini's highest village and home to the medieval Franco Castelo fortress ruins.
About Pyrgos
Pyrgos sits 370 meters above sea level, making it Santorini's highest village and home to the medieval Franco Castelo fortress ruins. You'll climb through narrow cobblestone streets past whitewashed houses, blue-domed churches, and working windmills to reach the Kasteli summit. The 360-degree views stretch from the airport and eastern beaches to Oia's cliffs and the caldera, with vineyards carpeting the slopes below. Unlike touristy Oia, this feels like a real Greek village where locals still outnumber visitors.
The walk up takes about 15 minutes through maze-like alleys barely wide enough for a donkey. Traditional houses cascade down the hillside, many converted into small galleries and cafes run by families who've lived here for generations. At the top, you'll explore Byzantine church ruins and Venetian fortification walls while the wind whips around you. The silence is striking after Fira's chaos, broken only by church bells and the occasional motorbike navigating the narrow streets below.
Most visitors rush straight to the fortress and miss the village itself, which is a mistake. The best tavernas are halfway up the hill, not at the summit where prices jump 30% for the view. Selene Restaurant costs 80-120 EUR per person, while family-run spots like Metaxi Mas offer better food for 25-35 EUR. Skip the overpriced summit cafes completely and bring water, the climb is steeper than it looks and there's little shade.
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