Step into the world of Agamemnon, ancient healing gods, and Greece's most romantic old town — all in one private, unhurried day from Athens.
No crowds. No rushed group pace. Just you, your private driver, and three of the most extraordinary sites in the ancient world.
Traveler pickup offered.
This is a private tour. Only your group will participate. The pick-up time is adjustable upon your request.
Your driver will pick you up and return you to the same place or to the point you prefer.
In case of a hotel, they will be waiting for you in the hotel lobby.
In case of an apartment, they will be waiting for you at the entrance of the building.
For port pick-up, they will be waiting for you at the gate, just as you disembark, holding a sign with your name on it.
Please note that airport pick-up and drop-off services are available at an additional charge.
Your private air-conditioned vehicle picks you up directly from your Athens hotel. Your English-speaking driver sets the scene for the day ahead — three ancient civilizations, two UNESCO World Heritage sites, and one of the most romantic towns in Greece.
Stand directly above the canal and look straight down into one of the narrowest ship passages in the world. Built between 1881–1893, it replaced the ancient overland route used by Greeks for nearly 3,000 years. The view alone is worth the stop — and an unmissable photo. A brief stop at one of the ancient world's most dramatic engineering achievements — a narrow channel sliced through 79 metres of solid limestone, connecting the Aegean and Ionian seas.
This is where Bronze Age Greece was at its most powerful — the kingdom that, according to Homer, launched a thousand ships to Troy. Walk through the same gates as Agamemnon's court, stand inside royal tombs carved into the hillside, and explore a museum full of golden treasures that survived 3,000 years underground.
he monumental main entrance to the citadel — and the oldest surviving large-scale sculpture in Europe. Two carved lionesses flank a central column above a lintel so massive it weighs over 20 tonnes. Standing here, you are entering the same gateway used by Mycenaean kings over 3,200 years ago. After three millennia, it still stands exactly as it was built. Cyclopean Walls Stretching 900 metres around the hilltop citadel, these fortification walls are built from limestone blocks so enormous — some weighing several tonnes — that ancient Greeks believed only the mythical Cyclopes could have moved them. The walls were constructed in three phases between 1350 and 1200 BC and still stand to several metres in height. Walking alongside them, the scale of Mycenaean engineering is impossible to exaggerate.
Located at the site entrance, this compact but outstanding museum brings the citadel to life with finds from over 150 years of excavations. Three halls take you through 2,800 years of Mycenaean history — from the Copper Age to the Hellenistic period. Highlights include Linear B clay tablets (the oldest surviving written records in Europe), painted fresco fragments from the palace, bronze weapons, gold jewellery, and ceramic sequences showing the full arc of Mycenaean culture. A welcome air-conditioned break in summer, and the perfect companion to what you've just seen outside.
A short walk from the main citadel stands the most spectacular Bronze Age tomb in existence. Carved into a hillside around 1250 BC, the beehive-shaped chamber rises 13 metres and spans 14 metres wide — it was the largest dome in the world for over a thousand years, until the Romans built the Pantheon. The entrance corridor alone is 36 metres long, lined with perfectly fitted stone blocks. Step inside and look up: the silence is ancient. Note: timed entry required — pre-book at hhticket.gr.
ucked into a valley of pine-covered hills, the UNESCO-listed Sanctuary of Asklepios was the ancient world's greatest healing centre — part hospital, part temple complex, part centre for the arts. Patients came from across the Greek and Roman world to be cured here. What survives today is extraordinary.
This is one of those places that genuinely lives up to its reputation. Built around 340–333 BC to seat 14,000 spectators, the theatre carved into the hillside is the most acoustically perfect structure ever built in the ancient world. Stand on the stage and whisper — it carries to the very last row without effort. Drop a coin and the sound travels upward like a bell. The geometry of the limestone seats filters background noise and amplifies voices in a way that modern engineers still study. The theatre is still in use today, hosting the Athens–Epidaurus Festival every summer.
ituated between the theatre and the sanctuary, this museum is one of the most rewarding on-site collections in Greece. Its centrepiece is a series of inscribed stone stelai — remarkable carved tablets that record the miraculous cures performed at the sanctuary, described in vivid, often startling detail. Also on display: architectural reconstructions of the sanctuary's temples, finely carved column capitals, sculptures, and artefacts from the Roman period when Epidaurus remained a major destination for the sick and the faithful. These finds document the transition — still visible in the inscriptions — from divine healing to the rational medicine of Hippocrates.
The Venetian fortress built in 1714 rises 216 metres above the harbour on a sheer rocky hill — one of the most dramatic sights in the Peloponnese. Visible from everywhere in Nafplio, it rewards those who make the climb (or drive up) with views across the entire Argolic Gulf.
Greece's most elegant old town — and its first modern capital after independence in 1823. Venetian mansions, cobblestone lanes, neoclassical facades, and a harbour watched over by the Palamidi Fortress. After a day of ancient history, Nafplio is the perfect place to decompress over a Greek coffee or a waterfront lunch at your own expense. Syntagma Square The heart of the old town, surrounded by Venetian-era buildings including the old Venetian arsenal and the first parliament building of modern Greece. Pull up a chair at one of the kafeneions and watch the square come alive around you. Palamidi Fortress The Venetian fortress built in 1714 rises 216 metres above the harbour on a sheer rocky hill — one of the most dramatic sights in the Peloponnese. Visible from everywhere in Nafplio, it rewards those who make the climb (or drive up) with views across the entire Argolic Gulf.
The small Venetian fortress sitting alone in the middle of the harbour — the image that has come to define Nafplio. Best admired from the waterfront promenade with a cold Mythos in hand.
Return to Athens Your driver collects you from the agreed point in Nafplio for a comfortable return drive to your Athens hotel, arriving by early evening with time to rest and reflect on a remarkable day.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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