Ancient Sparta & Mystras Town Day Tour from Athens or Nafplio





Description
We visit Ancient/ Modern Sparta & Medieval Town of Mystras as travelers, not as tourists. We get as excited as you to travel, to enjoy history, scenery. If you want to see most of Modern/Ancient Sparta & Mystras Byzantine town we suggest combine all sites in a full day tour. Schedule is flexible, but most importantly our drivers are seasoned travelers and are dedicated to helping you live the tour of your life, that is suited to your needs and lifestyle, allowing all passengers to enjoy the scenic drive. The tour starts with a convenient pickup and takes you via Corinth Canal to Peloponnese. We drive via Mount Parnon to Mount Taygetus. Visit Mystars Byzantine town. Highlights the Palace of Constantine Palaiologos. Next to Sparta, visit town, the impressive statue of Leonidas, the Acropolis, theater, King Leonidas Tomb and Museum. Optional visit: the unique Olive & Oil museum of Sparta and taste local products.
Tour Options
Itinerary
The marvelous man-made Corinth canal connecting the Aegean and Ionian seas, as well as the Peloponnese peninsula with the central part of Greece. More than 2500 workers digging 6.400m for twelve years (from 1881 to 1893). Stop for photography, walk across on a pedestrian bridge and admire the canal from 80 m high
Mystras is a spectacular, fortified Medieval Byzantine town in Laconia, Peloponnese, famously dubbed the "wonder of the Morea". Situated on the slopes of Mount Taygetos near ancient Sparta, it served as the brilliant capital of the Byzantine Despotate of the Morea during the 14th and 15th centuries. Today, it is an inscribed UNESCO World Heritage Site and stands as one of Greece's most profound historical treasures. Tickets 20€ for summer or 10€ for winter (Ticket Includes Museum and Palace)
The Palace of the Despots: A majestic palace complex dominating the upper city. Visitors can finally tour the fully restored, evocative interior halls of the Byzantine rulers. The Castle (Kastro): The fortress crowning the peak, originally erected in 1249 by Frankish Prince William II of Villehardouin. It offers commanding views over the Eurotas valley. Agia Sofia: The elegant 14th-century palace church located in the Upper City, featuring beautiful brickwork and structural architecture. Monastery of Pantanassa: The only still-inhabited building on the site, managed by a community of welcoming nuns. It features stunning, well-preserved Late Byzantine frescoes. Metropolis (Cathedral of Agios Dimitrios): The oldest church here, built in 1291. It houses a small museum and features the marble floor slab where Constantine XI Palaiologos—the last Byzantine emperor—was crowned
Sparta was unique in ancient Greece for its social system and constitution introduced by the almost mythical figure of Lycurgus. He configured the entire society in order to maximize military proficiency at all costs, focusing all social institutions on military training and physical development. Its inhabitants were classified as Spartiates (Spartan citizens with full rights), mothakes (non-Spartan free men raised as Spartans), perioikoi (free residents engaged in commerce), and helots (state-owned serfs, enslaved non-Spartan local population). Sparta Archaeological Museum is closed every Tuesday.
The Archaeological Museum of Sparta comprises the oldest provincial archaeological museum of the country. Its neoclassical building was constructed between 1874 and 1876 in the center of the city and it has been declared a listed building for its architectural and historical interest. Every Tuesday Museum is closed Ticket general 10€
The King Leonidas statue stands belligerently in front of a stadium. When the Persians attacked at Thermopylae and told the Spartans and their allies to lay down their weapons, Leonidas' response, immortalized beneath his feet, was 'Molon labe' ('Come and get them'). Excavations carried out during the previous century, north of the modern town of Sparta, brought to light an impressive construction. The edifice that dates back to the 5th century B.C. was made from large limestone. Archaeologist who carried out the excavations in 1892, initially thought it was a small temple. Although its use is not yet verified, it is believed to be the tomb of Leonidas. According to Pausanias, it was here that the remains of the legendary king of Sparta were transferred and buried after the battle in Thermopylae. The tomb of Leonidas is the only preserved monument of the Ancient Agora.
Thucydides wrote: Suppose the city of Sparta to be deserted, and nothing left but the temples and the ground-plan, distant ages would be very unwilling to believe that the power of the Lacedaemonians was at all equal to their fame. Their city is not built continuously, and has no splendid temples or other edifices it rather resembles a group of villages and would therefore make a poor show. We visit The Acropolis and the Ancient Theater of Sparta. Built of local white marble during the Roman period, the late first-century B.C theater was one of the Classical world’s largest. Said to be capable of holding an estimated 16,000 people, it featured a mobile stage and was considered a tourist destination in ancient times. Much of the auditorium was destroyed during the Byzantine period, and the remaining marble and limestone blocks have suffered from erosion.
OPTIONAL/ The Museum of the Olive and Greek Olive Oil, in Sparta (Peloponnese), transports you to the culture, history and technology of the olive and olive oil production in the Greek realm, from prehistoric times to the early 20th century. The olive and olive oil are presented here from different optical angles: the economy, nutrition and the olive's uses, religious worship, art and technology. The Museum of the Olive and Greek Olive Oil offers you the opportunity to see the very first testimonies about the presence of the olive tree and the production of olive oil in Greece: Rare fossilized olive leaves, 50,000-60,000 years old, from the island of Santorini, the oldest findings offering proof of the presence of the olive tree en Greece Linear B Tablets of the 14th century BC (exact replicas), with the first written testimonies about the olive and olive oil. Visit is optional and depends time. Every Tuesday Museum is closed. General Ticket 5€
Return to Athens
Highlights
What's included
Pickup Locations & Times
For Private Tours: Traveler pickup/drop off is offered from/to your hotel/apartment in/ from Athens center up to 7 km, at the arranged time of your tour departure or your tour return. We recommend that the tour starts at 8.00 am or earlier in winter time If for any reason this is not convenient, you can adjust the time according to your needs. 1)Traveler Pickup/ drop off is offered from/ to your hotel/ apartment in Athens. 2) Traveler pickup/ drop off is offered from/ to your hotel/ apartment/ port in Nafplio. In that option, the cost change accordingly to lower, as Sparta Acropolis & Mystras are closer to Nafplio. Please see corresponding price
Traveller Ratings
Important Information
- Specialized infant seats are available
- Suitable for all physical fitness levels
- You Have the options of 3 different Vehicles types: Sedan up to 3 adults or family of 4 (2 adults + 2 kids - up to 12 years old free) - Minivan ( from 1 to 7 persons - 2 kids/ up to 12 years old free ) - Minibus ( from 1 to 14 persons - 2 kids/ up to 12 years old free). Price varies by Group Size or Vehicle type.
- The driver is not an archaeologist guide to accompany you on your walk to sites or museum. If you require an archaeologist guide to tour the sites with you, you need to hire one additionally. Your tour driver provides informative documentary & historical details as you travel..
- This is a private & flexible tour available from Athens or Nafplion. However we only request to have in mind the agreement hours. But if you like to extend it, please make a fair arrangement with your tour driver/ leader. Additional charge per hour is 35€ (Sedan) - 50€ (Minivan) - 65€ (Minibus).
Reviews(59)
Thanks Nikoloas for guiding us through this incredible trip. Would highly recommend going to Mytras, the views are spectacular, make sure to bring good shoes as it can be slippy. The trip to Sparta was amazing to see , being at king Leonidas burial ground and Statue, also the old Sparta ruins was well worth a visit. The museum is quite small with no store, there was a great gift store across the road. This is a full day trip and would recommend comfortable shoes. Car was really spacious and comfortable, great AC on so we were nice and cool. Thanks again Nikoloas for your great guides and history lessons. Rob and Rach (Dublin Ireland)
The way was fantastic with lot of miracle places. Chritos is an excellent driver, he gave lot of new information , he shown lot of interessong places
We had an amazing experience visiting ancient Sparta and Corinth. Our tour guide was very knowledgeable and graciously answered all our questions. Along the way we stopped off for some Greek coffee which was fun and refreshing. He led us to everything we could want to see in Sparta. He picked us up and dropped us off right at our hotel. It was a great experience. This is the only way to do tours in Greece!
Great time visiting and guide was excellent! Got to see all the Spartan history which was really interesting. Our guide was also very very accommodating
Nice having personal tour guide to point out sites along the way. Many brochures to help as well as short videos along the way.
The tour covers the highlights of Sparta and Corinth. Greece is covered in ancient history so you'll get a bit of perspective and a bit of front door service. In a land of steep hills and summer heat both of those things are godsends. Christos was our driver. I highly suggest you ask for him directly. A fountain of knowledge, he knew the details on every single question that we asked and offered suggestions on many things that we didn't think of. Many drivers just drop you off but not Christos, whenever we arrived at a new site we felt prepared and could enjoy it more with a deeper understanding. If you're like me and read the textbooks but don't have the skill to tell one piece of marble from the next he was the bridge that helped us understand what we were looking at. I feel like I've seen Greece not just been there. At the end of my trip I asked for him again for my airport transfer and he even showed up early because he knew I was nervous about being late for my flight. The world needs more little bits of kindness like Christos. We feel fortunate to have met him.
Nickolas was fantastic! He was thorough in his knowledge as we asked a lot of questions. He was also super patient with us when we got lost on directions at times. Even though some of the museums were closed on Tuesday, he went out of his way to show us a local Olive oil shop in Athens as we were hoping to get some. Very much appreciate his attention to detail
This was an extra trip for us just to see Sparta, so we requested and met with a licensed guide in Sparta and really got a lot out of that experience. Our driver was Christos who did an excellent job of making sure the trip was everything it could be. He provided informative videos of both Sparta and Corinth on the way to each site, made sure we were comfortable with having cold water on hand and clean bathroom stops along the trip, set us up with a lunch site with an amazing view of Cointh. We asked to skip the olive oil tasting which led to an awesome suggestion by Christos to visit the Acrocorinth and he squeezed in a stop to see the Diolkos. Christos reached out to us to confirm time and location, came to greet us at the pick up, came prepared with videos and reading material, and cold water. Sparta and Corinth could each use a licensed guide to really maximize the history lesson, for two different reasons. For Sparta, it’s for what is being found, the various stages during its history, while not a whole lot has been excavated to see. For Corinth, it would be to get a better understanding of how all the ruins were timed in the history.. lots to see.
My family and I had a wonderful time. The website was easy to maneuver. Our guide Nikolas was knowledgeable, fun and patient. Our day was spent in Sparta and Ancient Corinth. Thank you for a wonderful experience.
Driver Christos was excellent, knew all the right places to stop and had educational info as we traveled. Took the time to answer any questions we had and just really made our trip worthwhile.



