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Margarítai

Margarítai (Greece)

Practical information on Margarítai

  • Family
  • Relaxation
  • Encounters with locals
  • Countryside
  • Handicraft
  • Off the beaten track
4 / 5 - 2 reviews
How to get there
A 20km car journey from Rethymnon
When to go
All year round
Minimum stay
A few hours

Reviews of Margarítai

Latéfa Faïz Seasoned Traveller
114 written opinions

A lovely community famous for its traditional pottery.

My suggestion:
It is better to go to Margarites in the afternoon during your visit to Crete.
My review

Margarites is a lovely little village inland from Rethymnon. You can't get lost on the way to Margarites: there is only one road into the village. Margarites is the pottery capital. There are rows of shops and workshops everywhere from the big square to the main street.

If the quality of the ceramics varies from shop to shop, I found the potters very welcoming and pleasant: they never tire of explaining their productions techniques in the finest detail. Some potters in Margarites like reproducing Minoan models, whilst others prefer working on less sophisticated pieces. But they all work uniquely with black clay: a locally produced clay with a lovely texture which turns red when baked. To refine the clay, the potters smooth the surface with a pebble.

In Margarites, pottery is a serious business: some perfectionist craftsmen still work with a hand operated potter's wheel, using no electricity and baking their ceramics in a wood oven, just like their ancestors!

Cretan dessert
Latéfa Faïz Seasoned Traveller
114 written opinions

A lovely community famous for its traditional pottery.

My suggestion:
It is better to go to Margarites in the afternoon during your visit to Crete.
My review

Margarites is a lovely little village inland from Rethymnon. You can't get lost on the way to Margarites: there is only one road into the village. Margarites is the pottery capital. There are rows of shops and workshops everywhere from the big square to the main street.

If the quality of the ceramics varies from shop to shop, I found the potters very welcoming and pleasant: they never tire of explaining their productions techniques in the finest detail. Some potters in Margarites like reproducing Minoan models, whilst others prefer working on less sophisticated pieces. But they all work uniquely with black clay: a locally produced clay with a lovely texture which turns red when baked. To refine the clay, the potters smooth the surface with a pebble.

In Margarites, pottery is a serious business: some perfectionist craftsmen still work with a hand operated potter's wheel, using no electricity and baking their ceramics in a wood oven, just like their ancestors!

Cretan dessert