"It calls for a writer more able at words to picture the sheer beauty of
the Mountain. To convey the altering feeling of morning, or high noon;
of afternoon, and deep midnight; of the golden scores of stars
puncturing the sky."
Athos, the Holy Mountain of Greece, is one of the most mysterious places
in the world. A rugged pyramid that rises up from the Aegean Sea, the
mountain is wreathed in myth, legend and ancient traditions that, to
this day, remain largely hidden from view. The heart of Athos started to
beat at the dawn of Christianity and its community lays claim to being
the oldest democracy in the world. An entirely autonomous region of the
Hellenic Republic, it is home to twenty Eastern Orthodox monasteries
that cling to its rocky flanks. No women are allowed to set foot upon
the peninsula and the monks who inhabit this isolated place still use
the Julian calendar, living on 'Byzantine Time', where each day starts
at sunset. While living in the mountain's shadow, in Ouranopolis, Sydney
Loch spent many years exploring Athos, and here he paints an
enthralling, unrivalled portrait of the Holy Mountain.