Antonios Vasilakis

About
The Antonios Vasilakis site on Milos is a memorial dedicated to a figure connected to the island's local history and heritage. Located at coordinates placing it in the broader Milos landscape — the island best known for its volcanic geology, catacombs, and the discovery site of the Venus de Milo — this monument represents the quieter, community-rooted layer of Miliot memory that sits alongside the more heavily visited ancient sites.
Memorial sites of this kind on Greek islands often honor individuals who played a role in local civic life, wartime resistance, or community leadership. On Milos, which experienced significant hardship during the Ottoman period and both World Wars, such commemorations carry particular weight for residents. The Antonios Vasilakis memorial fits within this tradition of preserving local identity through physical markers in the landscape.
The research available on this site is limited, which is not unusual for smaller community monuments on the Cyclades. Visitors with a specific interest in Miliot history or local figures may find it worth seeking out, particularly if they are already exploring the surrounding area.
What to Expect
This is a memorial monument rather than a staffed museum or archaeological site, so you should not expect interpretive signage in multiple languages, ticketed entry, or a formal visitor experience. Monuments of this type on Greek islands are typically modest in scale — a carved stele, a bust on a plinth, or a stone marker with an inscription — set in a public space such as a village square, roadside alcove, or small plaza.
The coordinates place the site in the interior or coastal zone of Milos, an island compact enough that most points are reachable within 20–30 minutes by car from Adamas, the main port. The immediate surroundings will likely reflect the characteristic Miliot landscape: white cubic architecture, volcanic rock, and the open Aegean light that defines this part of the Cyclades.
Because no verified address, opening hours, or facility details are available for this site, visitors should treat it as an outdoor public monument accessible at any hour, rather than a venue with scheduled access. There is no confirmed ticketing, staffing, or entry requirement.
How to Get There
The coordinates (36.7441554, 24.4239401) place this site on Milos. Plug these directly into Google Maps or Maps.me before departing, as the site does not appear to have a registered address or a dedicated listing on major mapping platforms at the time of writing.
Adamas is the main arrival point on Milos, whether by ferry from Piraeus or other Cycladic islands. From Adamas, a rental car or scooter is the most practical way to reach locations across the island. Milos has a bus service connecting the main settlements — Adamas, Plaka, Pollonia, and several villages — but coverage of smaller or off-route sites can be limited, particularly outside the peak summer timetable.
Parking on Milos outside the main town centers is generally straightforward, with roadside space available near most village edges and rural landmarks. Taxis operate from Adamas and can be arranged through accommodation providers for more remote destinations.
Best Time to Visit
As an outdoor monument with no stated opening hours, the Antonios Vasilakis site is in principle accessible year-round at any time of day. For comfortable visiting, the same general guidance that applies to Milos as a whole holds here.
The shoulder seasons — late April through early June and September through mid-October — offer mild temperatures, lower crowds, and good light. Midsummer (July and August) on Milos is hot, with temperatures regularly above 30°C, and the island's growing popularity as a destination means the main sites and roads can be congested. The Meltemi wind is a fixture of the Aegean summer and can make exposed locations feel less comfortable in the afternoons.
For photography or quiet reflection at a memorial site, morning hours in spring or autumn are ideal. Winter access is possible — Milos is inhabited year-round, unlike some smaller Cycladic islands — but ferry schedules thin out and many businesses close between November and March.
Tips for Visiting
- Verify the location before you go. With no confirmed address or active map listing, use the raw coordinates (36.7441554, 24.4239401) in a navigation app. Save them offline if you plan to visit areas with unreliable mobile data.
- Combine with nearby sites. Milos is small and well-suited to loop itineraries. If this monument is in or near one of the island's villages, pair the visit with the Plaka kastro, the Catacombs of Milos, or the ancient theater at Klima.
- Ask locals. Miliot residents are the best source of context for community memorials. A brief conversation at a kafeneion in the nearest village may yield more information about who Antonios Vasilakis was and why the site matters locally.
- Bring water. There are no confirmed facilities at this site. In summer especially, carry water if you are exploring rural or village-edge locations on the island.
- Respect the memorial character. Sites honoring local individuals are meaningful to the communities that maintain them. Treat the space accordingly — keep noise low and avoid touching or climbing any inscribed stonework.
- Check for local events. Greek memorial sites are sometimes the focus of annual commemorations, name-day observances, or local feast days. If you happen to be on Milos around such an occasion, attending is a genuine way to engage with island culture.
- Don't rely on this as a major itinerary anchor. Given the limited verified information available, treat this as a secondary stop rather than a primary destination, unless you have a specific research or personal interest in the subject.
History and Context
Milos has a layered history that runs from the Neolithic period through Minoan influence, Classical Greek settlement, Roman occupation, Byzantine rule, Venetian lordship under the Sanudo and Crispi dynasties, four centuries of Ottoman control, and incorporation into the modern Greek state in 1830. Each of these periods left physical and cultural marks on the island.
In the 19th and 20th centuries, Milos — like many Cycladic islands — developed a tradition of commemorating local figures who contributed to civic life, education, the church, or national causes. The Greek War of Independence (1821–1829), the Balkan Wars, and both World Wars generated a generation of commemorated individuals whose names are preserved in village squares, school names, and memorial plaques across the islands.
The name Vasilakis is a common Miliot and broader Greek surname, and Antonios is a common given name associated with the feast of Saint Antonios (17 January). Without more detailed archival or local records, it is not possible to state with certainty which period or role this individual represents. What is clear is that the memorial was considered significant enough by the local community to establish and maintain as a named site.
For visitors with a deeper interest in Milos history, the Archaeological Museum in Plaka holds artifacts from across the island's chronological range, and the local community may have records relating to figures honored in public memorials.
Location
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