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Best Bars and Nightclubs in Thessaloniki

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In this article I will be highlighting the best bars, as well as nighclubs in Thessaloniki.  Eightball Eightball is one of the most well known clubs. It plays music from a range of genres, including Rock, Disco, Pop and more. The disco parties help every Friday have become a key event for both locals and tourists. The venue has 2 floors wich hosts a range of different events and musical genres.  Kitchen Bar Located on Thessaloniki's harbour, this is one of the most popular bars in the area, providing an amazing view of Thermaikos Sea. Open all day until late at night, Kitchen Bar is a great option for a drink by the Sea.  Fragile - Stin Taratsa There is a large range of rooftop bars in Thessaloniki and many are secretely hidden within the city. Stin Taratsa (also known as Fragile) is one of them. Hidden within a seemingly abandoned building, this rooftop bar is always buzzing and is popular among many of the locals. The cocktails are fantastic, the bar is decorated beauti...

Nightlife in Thessaloniki

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 If there's one city in Greece that has become a synonym of  "nightlife", that definitely is Thessaloniki. Each neighborhood in the city is just as mesmerizing and has its own charm. You can find everything you could imagine, from traditional tavernas to stylish bars, there's something for everyone! Ladadika Ladadika is definitely one of the most popular neighborhoods in Thessaloniki. It's name came from the many olive oil shops of the area. In the 1980s, the area was pedestrianized and many buildings were renovated; warehouses were transformed into taverns, bistros, beer and wine bars and even clubs, making Ladadika one of the most upscale neighborhoods of Thessaloniki.  An extra tip: for even more beautiful wine bars and restaurants, take a walk around Emporio Square (above Tsimiski street). https://youtu.be/5GCcJ4TnsZg  3 minutes in Ladadika (video) Bit Bazaar Here's another little treasure you shouldn't miss! Bit Bazaar is a tiny area that used to be i...

The Archeological Museum of Thessaloniki

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Macedonia's major prehistoric and ancient Macedonian and Hellenistic finds are housed in this museum, bar Vergina's gold tomb finds, which are exhibited in Vergina. Highlights include the Derveni Crater (330–320 BC) a huge, ornate Hellenistic bronze-and-tin vase. Used for mixing wine and water, and later as a funerary urn, it’s marked by intricate relief carvings of Dionysos, along with mythical figures, animals and ivy vines. The Derveni Treasure contains Greece’s oldest surviving papyrus piece (320–250 BC). The lower-floor exhibit, Pre-Historic Thessaloniki, boasts prehistoric implements from the Petralona Cave north of Halkidiki, plus neolithic and Bronze Age daggers, pottery and tools. The Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki: living memories (video) https://youtu.be/pNKcE3vO2bw

Church of Agios Dimitrios

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General This enormous 5th-century structure honours Thessaloniki’s patron saint. A Roman soldier, Dimitrios was killed around AD 306 at this former Roman bath site by order of Emperor Galerius, infamous persecutor of Christians. The martyrdom site is now an underground crypt . Dimitrios’ relics occupy a silver reliquary inside. The Ottomans made Agios Dimitrios a mosque, and plastered over frescoes that were again revealed after the 1913 Greek reconquest. While the city's devastating fire of 1917 was very damaging, five 8th-century mosaics survive, spanning the altar. History The first church on the spot was constructed in the early 4th century AD, replacing a   Roman bath. A century later, a prefect named Leontios replaced the small   oratory   with a larger, three-aisled   basilica. Repeatedly gutted by fires, the church eventually was reconstructed as a five-aisled basilica in 629–634. This was the surviving form of the church much as it is today. The most i...

Rotunda of Galerius

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  In AD 306 Roman emperor Galerius built this stocky 30m-high brick structure as his future mausoleum. But instead of being laid to rest within the 6m-thick walls of the Rotunda, he was buried in today's Serbia after succumbing to an unpleasant disease that still puzzles historians today. Later, Constantine the Great made the Rotunda Thessaloniki's first church (Agios Georgios; observe dragon-slaying St George above the door). The Ottomans made it a mosque (note the restored minaret). The Rotunda was undergoing restoration on our visit. You may have to squint through some scaffolding to discern its lovely inner frescoes. Inside Rotunda (video)  https://youtu.be/GWOHdyIkXSM Source:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arch_of_Galerius_and_Rotunda

White Tower of Thessaloniki

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In general Thessaloniki's most famous landmark, the 34m-high White Tower has a harrowing history as a prison and torture chamber. In 1826 Ottoman sultan Mahmud II massacred rebellious janissaries (elite troops of forcibly Islamicised Christian boys) here. After the 1913 Greek reconquest, the ‘bloody tower’ was whitewashed to expunge this grisly past. Grab a free audio guide to help navigate the multimedia displays in the tower, then drink in views of the bay from the top. Physical Attributes The White Tower takes the form of a cylindrical drum 23 m (75 ft) in diameter with a height of 34 m (112 ft) above ground level, on top of which is a turret 12 m (39 ft) in diameter and 6 m (20 ft) high. Some of the   embrasures   in the outer wall of the tower are reached by a spiral ramp; others are accessed from a central room on each of the six floors. The turret houses a platform with a diameter of 10 m (33 ft), and the platfor...

Thessaloniki

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  Thessaloniki (Greek: Θεσσαλονίκη [θesaloˈnici]  is the second-largest city in Greece and the capital of Greek Macedonia, the administrative region of Central Macedonia and the Decentralized Administration of Macedonia and Thrace. Its nickname is η Συμπρωτεύουσα (Symprotévousa), literally "the co-capital", a reference to its historical status as the Συμβασιλεύουσα (Symvasilévousa) or "co-reigning" city of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire, alongside Constantinople. The municipality of Thessaloniki, the historical center, had a population of 385,406 in 2007, while the Thessaloniki Urban Area had a population of 800,764 and the Thessaloniki Metropolitan Area had 1,104,460 inhabitants in 2011. Thessaloniki is Greece's second major economic, industrial, commercial and political centre, and a major transportation hub for the rest of southeastern ...