Frangokastello

Frangokastello (Greek: Φραγκοκάστελλο) is the location of a castle and scattered settlement on the south coast of Crete, Greece, about 12 km. east of Chora Sfakion and within the prefecture of Chania.

The castle was built by the Venetians in 1371-74 as a garrison to impose order on the rebellious Sfakia region, to deter pirates, and to protect Venetian nobles and their properties. The Venetians named it the Castle of St. Nikitas after the nearby church. The locals, however, who never saw it in a positive light, contemptuously dubbed it Frangokastello, meaning the Castle of the Franks (i.e. Catholic foreigners), Castelfranco or Franco Castello. The name eventually stuck and was adopted by the Venetians as well. According to local lore, when soldiers and builders arrived on the fertile plain to begin construction of the castle, the local Sfakians, led by six Patsos brothers from the nearby settlement of Patsianos, would destroy every night what the Venetians built during the day. Eventually, the Venetians were forced to bring in additional troops and the Patsos brothers were betrayed, arrested and hanged.

The castle has a simple rectangular shape, with a tower at each corner and the remains of a Venetian coat of arms above the main gate. The buildings within the walls, as well as the battlements, were constructed during the Ottoman Turkish occupation.

In 1770, the Cretan rebel Ioannis Vlachos, otherwise known as Daskalogiannis, was captured at Frangokastello by Turkish forces. He was later tortured and executed at Heraklion.

On 17 May 1828 a celebrated battle was fought at Frangokastello. Hundreds of Sfakiots and Epirotes led by Hatzimichalis Dalianis, a Greek patriot from Epirus attempting to spread the Greek War of Independence from the mainland to Crete, occupied the castle, but were besieged by the Turks and massacred. However, many of the Turks were then themselves killed by rebel ambushes launched from the local gorges. According to tradition, around the anniversary of the battle each May, shadows of the armed Cretan and Epirote soldiers who lost their lives there seem to march towards the fortress around dawn. These are called Drosoulites (Greek: Δροσουλίτες), or dew-men, and have been explained as a meteorological phenomenon.

Frangokastello has an extensive, sheltered and gently shelving sandy beach, which has provided the basis for a low key tourist industry in recent years. Tourist accommodation is scattered over the flat plain around the castle, but the area's relative remoteness has discouraged major development.

Footnotes

Coordinates:

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Miloš
25 October 2018
A must stop even if you're not going to swim on the beach, but the beach is very nice too and not at all crowded in September
Μαυρού
14 August 2013
Entrance 1.50€, children under 12 yrs free
Pawel Poland, CRACOW
1 October 2014
No crowd after 16.00
Eleftheria Sakali
30 July 2020
Ωραία παραλία κάτω από το καστρο,οργανωμένη, φθηνή 5€ το σετ τέλεια θάλασσα
Rita Alex
25 August 2013
Όμορφη και ήσυχη παραλία, καθαρή κ χωρίς κύμα θάλασσα. Με ένα ταβερνάκι κ θέα το κάστρο.
Daniel
3 October 2018
Wer für 2 € einmal auf die Mauer will?! ????
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Map
2.8km from Eparchiaki Odos Choras Sfakion - Rodakinou, Sfakia 730 11, Greece Get directions
Wed-Thu 11:00 AM–8:00 PM
Fri 11:00 AM–9:00 PM
Sat 11:00 AM–6:00 PM
Sun Noon–8:00 PM
Mon 1:00 PM–6:00 PM

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