The church of the monastery is double-ailed & is devoted to St. Constantine and the Trasfiguration of Christ
Monastery of Arkadi
The historical gunpowder chamber of the monastery where in 1866 beleaguered Greeks, women and children and fighters, blew up themselves together with Turkish beleaguerers
Monastery of Arkadi
The monks' chamber of the Monastery
Monastery of Arkadi
The entrance of the refectory of the monastery
Monastery of Arkadi
The spectacular facade of the church is of rennaissance style
Monastery of Arkadi
The monastery's thick, high walls turned it into a rebels' centre during the Cretan revolutionary war
Monastery of Arkadi
The entrance and the interior courtyard of the monastery
Monastery of Arkadi
Monastery of Arkadi, in the Venetian era it had a high economic development
Monastery of Arkadi
Monastery of Arkadi, the 'lagoumi' (gun-powder chamber) which Giamboudakis blew up in 1866, during the Cretan Revolution
Monastery of Arkadi
The Katholikon of the Monastery of Arkadi
Monastery of Arkadi
Katholikon of the Arkadi Monastery
Monastery of Arkadi
Arkadi Monastery. East view of the Katholikon: The Bema apses
Opening hours:
01 Apr - 31 May: Mon-Sun, 09:00-19:00
01 Jun - 30 Sep: Mon-Sun, 09:00-20:00
01 Oct - 31 Oct: Mon-Sun, 09:00-19:00
01 Nov - 30 Nov: Mon-Sun, 09:00-17:00
01 Dec - 31 Mar: Mon-Sun, 09:00-16:00
The Monastery of Arkadi
is located at an altitude of almost 500 m., in the north-western foothills of Psiloritis mountain, approximately 23 km to the southeast of Rethymnon. Though the old historical tradition related the foundation of the monastery with the Byzantine emperor Arkadios (5th century AD), the scientific research has established that both the foundation and the name of the monastery should be ascribed to a certain monk named Arkadios. According to an inscription found in situ the main temple - the Katholikon - was built in 1587 substituting an earlier church. The current monument bears every mark of the Renaissance architecture, a consequence of the Venetian rule on the island. Apart from the Katholikon, which stands at the centre, the monastery complex includes the monk cells and ancillary buildings, clustered around a
central court yard.
This was an extremely wealthy monastery, an important center of copying Greek manuscripts and a workshop of church embroideries.
In 1866 broke out one of the major revolts in Cretan history against the Ottoman occupation. 943 Greeks, the majority of which were women and children, sought refuge in the monastery which was besieged by the Turks. On 8 November 1866, when after three days of battle surrender was unavoidable, Kostis Yamboudakes caused an explosion at the powder magazine of the monastery, and all mutineers and civilians who had been kept there were buried inside, along with the besiegers. Thus the monastery of Arkadi became an eternal symbol for freedom and the 8th of November henceforth the day of commemorating the Cretan resistance.
A valuable collection of ecclesiastical and historical relics are on exhibition today in the Monastery Museum. In their majority they are dated before the destruction of 1866. Among them are portable Post-Byzantine icons, manuscripts and ecclesiastical vestments, as well as weapons and the banner of the revolutionary period.