This walking tour invites you to explore Chania not as a modern city, but as a living myth and a place where time has layered itself like stone, and every corner holds an echo.
Begin at the Old Venetian Harbour, a natural stage where waves once carried Minoan ships and legends of divine origins. Here you meet Kydon, child of Hermes( or Apollo), founder of ancient Kydonia, the first name this city ever wore. From the water’s edge, you climb into the heart of that memory: Kastelli Hill, where Bronze Age homes once clustered around shrines, and where myth breathes beneath the pavements.
From the heights, you descend into the living maze of Chania’s Old Town. Venetian facades lean into Ottoman arches, minarets stand beside bell towers, and Splantzia Square becomes a symbol of centuries woven together rather than erased. In this city, nothing is ever wholly gone — not myth, not empire, not belief — only transformed. You walk through narrow lanes where history compresses into whispers; you stand before walls built for defence and endurance; you watch the harbour open towards the lighthouse like the last line of a poem.
The tour ends where land breaks into sea — the Venetian lighthouse — a boundary between the known and the unknown. Here the storey widens. Chania is no longer just a city but a myth unfolding, and by walking it, you become part of its telling.
No museum walls. No glass cases. Only stone, salt air, footsteps, and imagination — enough to bring gods back to life.