Mesta

Mesta is a beautiful village placed on the southwest part of Chios island, 35 kilometers away from Chios city, in small treeless valley far from the sea, on the wider expanse of Mastichoria (which in greek means "villages that produce mastic").

Its harbor is located four kilometers away from the village. The name Mesta derives from the Byzantine word which means 'hard' as the opposite to 'tender'.


This village was build like a castle and remains perfectly preserved since the Byzantine period and it has been designated as a listed monument. The unity of the houses' walls and structures in the periphery obviously functioned as a strong fortification wall. In its labyrinth, the visitor's mind can easily imagine how difficult it must have been for attackers from outside to find a way through the village. There are only three gates to the village and the streets are stone-paved, narrow and connected to the central tower square.

This fortress of a four-cornered structure was built for protection of inhabitants and cultivation of mastic bush against the frequent attacks by pirates and Turks. The gray houses had doors and windows facing only the interior part of the wall, the inside of the village, where you can find many corners used to hide and attack invaders when needed. The outer walls border balustrades with small towers in one corner and gates at another point. Like the Acropolis, defense tower is situated in the center of the village and used to be a refuge for inhabitants in case of attacks using a movable bridge.

Crosswise archways made at regular spacings support the structures as well as arches and vaults that retain the rooms. The function of the houses was focused on the defense, so the residents could move across the rooftops without being seen. The doors and windows of the houses of this side have been opened rather recently, since the entrances of those houses that formed the wall used to be only at the inside part of the castle during the Genoa and Turkish occupations; the loopholes were the only openings on the wall.

These loopholes have been turned into windows later on, and the two openings to the inner part of the village have been constructed more recently for the residents' facility. The surrounding wall of this side ends to the tower. Because  of the houses' shape, the structure of the village, the defense system and the natural treeless surroundings let this medieval village seem as if it was built on a fixed plan which may derive from the Genoese.

Other excellent, worth visiting monuments are the churches of Mesta. Like the church of the Older Taxiarchi (1794), St. Paraskevi, St. Vlasios (1739), St. John and the Great Taxiarchi.

There are two routes that the visitor can follow to get to Mesta:

Usually, the visitors arrive at the village through one way and return through the other. Mesta is mostly chosen as a place of sojourn because of its location in the south site of the island, from where there is easy access to all the historically and tourist significant spots: The city of Chios, Castrochoria (the villages that are built like castles), Nea Moni, Volissos, Anavatos, Aghia Markella and other sites of Chios are connected with Mesta through roads that are in a very good condition.

To get to Mesta, the visitors need to have their own cars that must be left outside the village. The ring-road of the castle comes from a road in the east part of the village and, following it, one will reach the start point. On the right side of the surrounding wall stand some modern houses, while the outer wall on its left makes a part of the castle.

 

A traditional presentation of the 14th century village is the openhearted and kind people of Mesta, who still live in the village. Traditional feasts are organized many times in the year. The village's most important tradition during the carnival festivities is, with no doubt, the standard feast on Shrove Monday, when presented is the traditional custom of "Agas" - the satirical reconstruction of trials that took place under the Turkish ocuppation.
Moreover there are feasts organized on the 15th of August and the 8th of November, which are religious holidays.

 

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