
Treis Elies
Τρεις Ελιές · Üçzeytin
About
Treis Elies — 'three olive trees' — has just twenty-five residents, a single road in, and a setting at 800 metres in the Marathasa valley that is the very picture of remote Troodos. The village dates to medieval times (it was part of the royal estates during the Frankish period) and was the birthplace of Chrysanthos, Archbishop of Cyprus under Ottoman rule. Two small wooden-roofed churches — Archangelos Michael and Agia Paraskevi, both seventeenth or eighteenth century — anchor the village. The real reason walkers come here is the Venetian-era stone bridges (Mylos and Agios Andronikos) just outside the village, which sit on the long-distance E4 European hiking trail. The pine-and-oak forest around is some of the loveliest in southern Cyprus, and a handful of restored stone agritourism houses let you stay overnight in the kind of silence the city forgets exists.
Location
Treis Elies · Troodos (Limassol) · 34.9319°N, 32.7933°E
Gallery











