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Dodecanese Near Patmos Quiet beaches

Lipsi Island, Greece: Quiet Beaches in the Dodecanese

Lipsi island, Dodecanese, Greece
Lipsi, Dodecanese, Greece

Lipsi is a small, quiet island in the Dodecanese north of Patmos, the most developed of the three little islands there alongside Agathonissi and Arki. Lipsi covers around 16 square kilometres and has 650 inhabitants, one fishing village and a large collection of quiet beaches. The island is surprisingly fertile for its size, with enough groundwater for vines, olives, figs and tomatoes and a small, sustainable tourist trade.

Island group
Dodecanese
Area
16 km²
Population
650
Also known as
Lipsos

The island of Lipsi

Lipsi lies north of Patmos and draws most of its visitors as day-trippers from Patmos and Leros. Lipsi takes its name from the Odysseus myth, in which the goddess Calypso held Odysseus on the island for seven years on his way home from Troy to Ithaca, and the word derives from Leipsos, meaning “lack”. The island has never been an important one, because it is low and dry and has no easily defended places, so through most of its history it was simply a part of Patmos, though finds from the classical period show it has been inhabited since prehistoric times.

Large parts of Lipsi once belonged to the Monastery of Saint John the Baptist on Patmos, which is why small churches stand all over the island. Several churches date from the 16th and 17th centuries, and the church of Panaghia tou Charou, built around 1600 at the highest point of the island, holds a remarkable icon of the Virgin Mary cradling the crucified Jesus. The church is famous for the miracle of the lilies of 1943, when a withered bunch of lilies came back to life on 23 August, four months after it had been placed there. At Kouselio stand the remains of a 5th-century early Christian basilica with mosaic flooring, and at Katsadia there are walls and mosaics of old temples.

Lipsi sits on the main Dodecanese ferry routes, so it is relatively easy to reach, and Samos, Leros, Kalymnos and Kos are all close by for island-hopping. The east side of the island is flatter and easier to walk, while the west side is rougher, hillier and more of a challenge.

Lipsi village

Lipsi village is the island's only settlement, a fishing village with an old chora behind it, white houses and a harbour dominated by a large church with a blue dome. The village has two harbours: ferries and catamarans dock at the larger one, while excursion boats use the smaller harbour nearer the centre, about 500 metres away. A local bus runs from the village to Platis Gialos, Katsadia and Hohlakura beaches, and there are two taxis and a motorcycle to rent.

The central square holds a post office, and a bank stands at the harbour. A small museum on the main square opposite the church opens from 11am to 1pm with free admission and shows a collection of pebbles and bottles of holy water gathered from around the world. The large white Church of Saint John Theologos, with its blue dome and two bell-towers, keeps the archaeological collection of Lipsi in a ground-floor hall. From the small quay, excursion boats leave for the islets off the coast, usually around 10 o'clock in the morning.

Beaches of Lipsi

Lipsi is blessed with a large collection of beaches for such a small island, in every size and surface from sand to pebble and stone, and many of them stay quiet enough to have one to yourself. Platis Gialos is the largest and best sandy beach, set on the north coast about an hour's walk from Lipsi town, and Monodendri in the north-east is the island's official naturist beach. The main beaches around the island are listed below.

Where to stay on Lipsi

Lipsi offers simple studios and apartments, most of them in and around the harbour village. The named properties on the island are listed below.