Inspired and motivated by his large collections and the Peristera Ancient Wreck , Kostas Mavrikis built a private local museum in 2000. The museum was completed in 2010. The museum is located in the main port of Alonissos, Patitiri. The four-storey 900 m2 stone building houses more than 40,000 selected objects, which are divided into four sections: Folklore Naval Military Pirate There is also a multi-purpose event space. The " Pirates of the Aegaen " section of the museum is considered unique in the entire Aegean Sea region. Alonissos was a haven for pirates but also a place with a long maritime tradition. A dedicated room displays weapons, nautical objects, and various relics from 1600-1900, introducing the pirate era in the Northern Sporades to the visitor. Many of these exhibits are particularly rare. The museum's archives hold about 30,000 documents from the 17th to the 20th century that will be digitized, as well as 63,000 digitized photographs from all the islands ...
In 1982, Dimitrios Mavrikis, Kostas' father, discovered a shipwreck on the island of Peristera , consisting of a significant accumulation of mainly intact amphoras, which formed a low hill, 25 metres long and 12 metres wide. The discovery was considered highly important as it changed the prevailing view on the size of classical merchant ships and revealed the construction of vessels of a much larger capacity. The shipwreck was declared to the Greek Ephorate of Maritime Antiquities, which proved to be rather bureaucratic than an operative agency. As a result, the shipwreck's showcase never proceeded. Despite repeated publicity by Dimitrios and Kostas Mavrikis, the wreck was sidelined and left to its own devices. In 1997, a book by K. Mavrikis entitled "Áno Magníton Nísi" (Islands of the Magnetes) was published to remind the existence of the shipwreck. In 2006, Angelos Maglis, read the book and decided to promote the wreck through the EU project BlueMed . The Peristera...
Publisher: Oxford Maritime Research Paperback: 480 pages Publication date: 1 October 2010 Language: English Edited & Translated by Anthony Hirst REVIEW S ⭐⭐⭐⭐ ⭐ A welcome history of the remote islands of the Sporades The Sporades Islands off the coast of Greece are a line of islands stretching out into North Aegean. The two islands nearest the mainland, Skiathos and Skopelos, are generally well known to tourists and were the background to the popular film "Mama Mia". However the islands further out are not so well known (only one of them, Alonnisos, being served by ferry) and retain the feel and charm of an older era. This area is well known to flotilla and other yacht sailors for whom it provides a quieter cruising area than the Ionian, the busier counterpart on the Greek west coast. Beyond Alonnisos there is Peristera with its sheltered bays, uninhabited Pelagos with its two magnificent anchorages, one an inland lake, mountainous Gioura, remote Skantzoura, far ou...