
Himara Castle & Old Town
In town — 15–20 min walk uphill from the promenade

Near Mesopotam village, inland from Saranda (~16–18 km)
The Monastery of St. Nicholas at Mesopotam is one of southern Albania's great hidden churches — a striking twin-towered Byzantine building, dated in its present form to around the 11th century, that once anchored the largest monastic complex in the country. It carries genuine mysteries: carved relief blocks of an eagle, a lion, a dragon and a stranger creature that may pre-date Christianity, and Byzantine frescoes uncovered beneath later whitewash.
The church was built around 1050 on the site of an earlier Orthodox complex that may date to the 6th century, and was once the largest monastery in Albania. The carved stone blocks in the rear wall — an eagle, a lion, a dragon and an unidentified mythical creature — are stylistically argued by some to pre-date Christianity, reused in the Christian structure. Byzantine-era frescoes survive beneath the later whitewash.
The distinctive twin-towered Byzantine church, the carved animal reliefs in the rear wall (eagle, lion, dragon and a mythical creature), the Byzantine frescoes uncovered beneath whitewash, and the quiet rural setting near Mesopotam village.
About 16–18 km / 25 minutes by car inland from Saranda (≈30 minutes from Ksamil). Public transport is limited, so drive or take a guided tour. It pairs well with the Phoenice ruins and the town of Delvinë.
Daytime — combine it with Phoenice and Delvinë for a quiet Saranda-hinterland heritage half-day
Geschiedenis, praktische tips en routenotities in lange vorm — het artikel dat dieper gaat dan deze pagina.
It's the Monastery of St. Nicholas near Mesopotam village, a short drive from Saranda — a twin-towered Byzantine church built around the 11th century on a much older monastic site, once the largest monastery in Albania. It's known for carved animal reliefs and Byzantine frescoes.
The present church dates to around 1050 (11th century), but it stands on the site of an earlier Orthodox monastery that may go back to the 6th century. Some of the carved relief blocks in the rear wall are thought to pre-date Christianity, reused in the building.
It's about 16–18 km / 25 minutes by car inland from Saranda, near Mesopotam village. There's limited public transport, so drive or take a guided tour. It combines well with the Phoenice ruins and the town of Delvinë for a half-day of heritage in the Saranda hinterland.
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