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Travel Monday: A Photo Trip to Meteora, Greece (25 photos)

Today’s entry is the first of a semi-regular Travel Monday series, with virtual photo trips to interesting, unusual, difficult-to-reach, or simply beautiful parts of our planet. Today, we’re visiting the amazing clifftop monasteries of Meteora in central Greece. Monks and hermits have been finding refuge in this unique rock formation for more than a thousand years. Six Eastern Orthodox monasteries remain in place—some dating back to the 14th century—still home to a small number of monks and nuns. Meteora is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and welcomes thousands of tourists every year. Gathered below, a collection of images of Meteora, the ancient structures atop its massive rock pillars, and the village and countryside below.

The rising sun illuminates the Monastery of the Holy Trinity and parts of nearby village of Kalabaka below, at the Meteora rock formation in central Greece. The monastery was built between the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, and is one of the oldest of six remaining Eastern Orthodox monasteries built atop and along the cliffs of Meteora. (Inu / Shutterstock)
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2018/04/travel-monday-a-photo-trip-to-meteora-greece/557537/