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Many
folk traditions, such as the Carnival and Kataklysmos
(Festival of the Flood) have overtones of ancient themes.
Carnival Festivities take place 50 days before Greek
Christian Orthodox Easter and it means the beginning
of Lent, a period of fasting before Easter. The centre
of Carnival festivities is Lemesos, but some festivities
take place in Larnaka and Pafos as well.
The
annual Kataklysmos (Festival of the Flood) is a festival
celebrated for five days fifty days after Easter in
all the coastal towns, but the biggest event takes place
in Larnaka. At the heart of the festival is a joyful
procession to the sea where people sprinkle each other
with water. Whether this is in memory of Noahs
survival of the flood, or the coming ashore of resurrected
St. Lazarus - or a celebration of the birth of Aphrodite
- is sometimes debated, but in any event Kataklysmos
is a spirited and uniquely Cypriot festival.
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On
June 28 and 29, St. Pauls Feast is feted in Pafos,
where the Apostle journeyed after leaving Jerusalem.
Every
September the Wine Festival takes place in Lemesos,
a tribute to the fruit of the vine as it grows and thrives
in Cyprus. With ten days of free-flowing locally produced
wines, Dionysus would surely approve.
Cyprus
also has rich musical and dance traditions quite distinctive
from those of Greece. Instruments that typically accompany
folk dances are the violin and laouto, a lute with four
double strings played with the quill of an eagle or
vulture. Many dances are performed face-to-face and
as a suite. Both men and women are very nimble-footed
and the dances often allude to village courtship rituals
- and are therefore most popular at wedding ceremonies.
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