Siatista – Περιφέρεια Δυτικής Μακεδονίας
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Siatista

Everything about the city


Explore a town that is noble, vibrant, and full of stories — one that will surprise you with a miscellany of facets.

Built on the slopes of Mount Siniatsiko, Siatista is the town where stone became art and tradition became a way of life. At 920 meters above sea level, with its two neighborhoods, Gerania and Chora, spreading opposite one another, it resembles a living museum of Macedonian elegance.

From the 17th up until the 19th century, Siatista experienced great prosperity thanks to its merchants, furriers, and winemakers. The imposing manor houses with the painted ceilings, the wineries producing the renowned sundried wine, the churches with the rare frescoes, as well as its museums; they all narrate a centuries-long history of creativity and prosperity.

Today, Siatista remains lively and outward-looking: its traditional cafés fill with voices, the New Year’s Boubousaria and the August 15th Horsemen keep tradition alive, and the modern Fiesta Voio brings music, celebration, and youthful energy to the town every summer. Whichever season you decide to visit, you are certain to have a wonderful time and to remember this place long after you leave.

Municipality of Voio

Manor homes carrying memory, bridges carrying history

Amid peaks, rivers, and stone bridges, Voio unfolds with the charm of an open-air museum of architecture and memory. A journey here reveals a truly unique place, where the art of stone became an entire identity and people continue to build, create, and celebrate in rhythm with the seasons.

The Municipality of Voio, with Siatista as its seat, lies at the western edge of Kozani, right at the natural borders with Kastoria and Grevena. Here, where mountain ranges meet the valley of the Pramoritsa River, the Mastorochoria (the “craftsmen’s villages”) keep alive a craft that once spread tall throughout the Balkan Peninsula, and the elegant Siatista is a reminder that tradition and progress can coexist. This is a place that will effortlessly win you over at first glance, through its authentic hospitality and the sense that time flows differently here.

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The nobility of Siatista

Perched at 920 meters, Siatista is the heart of Voio. Its two neighborhoods, Chora and Gerania, resemble living stage sets from another era, thanks to their 18th and 19th-century mansions with formal reception rooms (ondades), painted ceilings, and churches adorned with masterful frescoes. The town prospered through fur processing and trade, which took Siatistans as far as Vienna, Moscow, and Budapest. Remains of those prosperous times include the impressive merchants’ residences and a reputation for intellectual cultivation, visible through schools, libraries, and local benefactors who fostered a flourishing cultural spirit in the mountains. Siatista is also known for its sundried wine, a tradition that goes back centuries and continues to this day, in wineries that open their doors to travelers and wine lovers.

The stone-build craftsmen’s villages (Mastorochoria)

If Siatista is the soul of Voio, that makes Mastorochoria the hands of Voio. Pentalofos, Vythos, Dilofo, Agia Sotira, Rodochori, Krimini, Kipseli, and Morfi are villages built with the precision and sensitivity of the renowned master stonemasons who constructed bridges and churches across Greece and the Balkans. In Pentalofos, the tower houses and churches stand proudly like works of art, while in Vythos and Dilofo, cobblestone lanes climb the slopes with panoramic views of the mountains. Each village has its own color and rhythm, yet together they form an authentic tapestry of historical continuity.

Bridges, forests, and trails

Here, stone is not a mere building material; it is a way of life. From the bridges of Tsioukari and Morfi to those in Tsaknochori and Chrysavgi, every arch tells its own story. Trails follow riverbeds and ravines, leading to waterfalls, monasteries, and small green valleys. The slopes of Mount Voio and Mount Bourinos, the region’s two mountains, are a haven for hikers and nature aficionados. Across their trails, the view stretches as far as Lake Polyfytos and Grevena, while the peaks are suitable for mountain biking and paragliding, with flights soaring above the Macedonian landscape.

Monasteries and memories

From the medieval Bishopric of Sisani to the Monastery of Agia Triada in Vythos, the Dormition of the Theotokos in Mikrocastro, Agia Paraskevi in Namata, and the Transfiguration of the Savior in Dryovouno, the monasteries of Voio stand as silent witnesses to centuries of faith and resilience. Many of them are built in locations with breathtaking views, combining the stillness of prayer with the grandeur of the landscape. This image is complemented by Siatista’s museums: the Ecclesiastical Museum, the Paleontological Collection, and the Botanical Museum illuminate different aspects of the region’s cultural identity, reflecting its enduring relationship with both faith and knowledge.

The taste of the mountains

Voio’s table is set with simplicity, imagination, and respect towards seasonality and the gifts of the land. Sisani beans, stuffed cabbage rolls with fermented greens, carp with onions, pies with cracklings, mushrooms, and batzios—the signature cheese of Western Macedonia—offer a taste of local traditional cuisine. As the seasons change, the table is enriched with autumn’s produce. The renowned chestnuts of Pentalofos make their appearance, even celebrated with their very own festival, while Siatista’s famous sundried wine accompanies everyday moments of relaxation and companionship, recalling the region’s long tradition in viticulture and winemaking.

Festivals and longstanding traditions

From the Kladaries in December, when bonfires are lit in every neighborhood, to the Boubousaria in January, the villages of Voio move to the rhythms of fire, music, and community traditions. In summer, the Horsemen of the Virgin Mary fill Siatista with colors and horses, while the Chestnut and Bean Festivals in several villages highlight the region’s products and strong sense of community. Alongside these traditional celebrations, newer festivals fill the Municipality’s contemporary identity with a newfound energy: Fiesta Voio, Forestival, the Voio Folklore Festival, PELEKON, and the VoioRace connect art, nature, and participation, showing that Voio continues to inspire and create.

Pages of glory and culture, written among mountains and vineyards

The history of Siatista begins in the 15th century, when refugees from the lowlands of Macedonia climbed the slopes of Mount Siniatsiko to escape Ottoman raids. There, among the mountains, a town was born that would stand out for its intellect, resilience, and creativity. Its two neighborhoods, Chora and Gerania, gradually developed around churches and manor houses, preserving their Macedonian identity to this day.

From the 17th to the 19th century, Siatista experienced its great era of prosperity. Its merchants traveled to Vienna, Trieste, Venice, Bucharest, and Budapest, bringing back both wealth and fresh ideas from Europe. The renowned pragmateftades (merchant traders) contributed to the spread of Enlightenment ideals within the Greek world, while the town’s schools and libraries flourished. Prominent figures emerged, such as Theodoros Manousis, the first Professor of History at the University of Athens and its rector in 1845, and Ioannis Trampantzis, a major benefactor who founded the Trampantzeio Gymnasium. In the late 18th century, the Markides Pouliou brothers, Georgios and Pouplios, published the first Greek newspaper in Vienna, contributing to the dissemination of the revolutionary texts of Rigas Feraios. Rigas was executed in 1798 in Belgrade, along with his youngest companion, the 22-year-old Siatistan Theoharis Tourountzias.

During the 20th century, Siatista once again wrote history. In 1912, during the Battle of Siatista, local residents, together with Cretan volunteers under Michail Anastasakis and chieftain Leonidas Papamalekos, fought heroically for the town’s liberation. Three decades later, during World War II, the region’s people continued their resistance, participating in the battles of Vigla and Fardykampos (1943), marking some of the most significant moments of the Resistance in northern Greece. In the years that followed, new benefactors such as Anastasios Tsipos, the Papageorgiou brothers, and Konstantinos Papanikolaou carried on the legacy of their predecessors by founding schools, hospitals, and charitable institutions. Today, Siatista honors its multifaceted and rich past while confidently looking towards the future.

Churches

Museums

Discovering the roots and traditions of Voio

The customs of Voio are living memories of a community that maintains a deep connection with time, the seasons, and its roots. From the bonfires of December and the masquerades of the Twelve Days of Christmas to the equestrian celebrations of August 15th and the women’s dances of spring, each traditional festivity carries stories of faith, togetherness, and folk expression. Tradition and daily life come together in moments repeated year after year, passing down the distinctive identity of the place from one generation to the next.

Everything you shouldn’t miss in Voio

In Voio, every season brings its own reason to visit: brace yourself for nature festivals, music gatherings, sporting events, and food celebrations that bring life to village squares, mountain slopes, and historic settlements. The area’s events bring people together, highlight the region’s character, and offer experiences that leave a lasting impression. Here, there is always something worth experiencing.

Unique outdoor experiences in the Municipality of Voio

In the Municipality of Voio, you will encounter activities that combine adventure, tradition, and flavor. From flights above Siatista to hikes along the trails of Mount Bourinos, every experience here has its very own beauty. This is a place that invites you to discover it not only through its landscapes, but also through its people, tastes, and authentic experiences.

A journey through the flavors of Voio

The region’s gastronomy is a tribute to authenticity, as well as to the land and its people. From mountain villages to fertile valleys, local flavors are born from simple, pure ingredients prepared with utmost care and respect towards tradition. Recipes are passed down from generation to generation, keeping memory alive through the local cuisine.

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