A 17th-century village with older rhythms
Megalochori took shape in the 17th century, and the inward-looking layout still makes sense once you know the pirate-era backdrop. This is a village that learned to protect what it valued, then kept layering in festivals, church life, and wine work instead of turning itself into one big viewpoint. That is why it still feels lived-in.
Bell towers, domes, and church landmarks
The skyline here is built from village religion as much as from tourism. Bell towers and domes rise above the lanes, and churches such as Panagia ton Eisodion and Agioi Anargyroi help explain why even a short walk in Megalochori feels vertical, ceremonial, and a little theatrical in the best way.
Wine canavas still shape the village
Wine is not a decorative extra here; it is part of how Megalochori grew. Gavalas Winery traces family production back to the late 18th century, while Venetsanos Winery, built in 1947 above Athinios, became Santorini's first industrial winery. Even if you do not book a tasting, those canavas and vineyard edges help explain why the village feels rooted instead of staged.
Symposion gives the village a second voice
If you want Megalochori to feel richer than lunch plus photos, Symposion is the smartest cultural extra. Inside restored old working spaces, it adds music, mythology, workshops, and performances to a village more often marketed only through wine, which makes it especially rewarding for repeat visitors and older children.