 Cyprus  Family Holidays
Cyprus  Family HolidaysLying  close to the Middle East and always strategically important, it was  taken by many great powers including Greece. Rome and Egypt. The long  reign of the French Lusignan dynasty brought prosperity and Roman  Catholicism. In 1570 the Turks took the island.
It  became a UK Crown Colony after World War II Independence came in 1960,  but intercommunal strife increased and in 1974 an unsuccessful Greek  coup prompted a Turkish invasion. The island was divided. It is now  possible to cross the border, but violence and negotiation alternate and  rules can change overnight.
However, north or south, the islanders are  warmly welcoming and Cyprus has many attractions. The southeast with  its raucous resorts also has archaeological sites and sunsets from  Aphrodite’s ‘birthplace’ at the Rock of Remios. Pafos, though surrounded  by development, remains a charming town. To the northwest is the remote  Akanas Peninsula, with further isolated regions along the coastal  hinterland, the magnificent Troodos region has forested mountains, lost  villages, painted churches, unique wildlife and winegrowing.
In  the North, small resorts cluster around the beautiful harbour town of  Kyrenia. Famagusta is full of ruined Gothic churches inside its golden  stone walls; outside lies a haunted, wired-off modern town, The rocky  coast and bristling Kyrenia range hold unspoilt beaches and villages,  classical sites, monasteries and Crusader castles.
Lefkosia  (Nicosia) is the world’s only divided capital, Inside the massive  Venetian fortifications, both sides – the cosmopolitan south and the  north with its dusty lanes – are fascinating. Both have streets which  end in a wall fluttering with defiant flags.
 
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