Royal Engineers Pier
The Royal Engineers Pier, where the engineering divisions of the British army had landed.
The Royal Engineers Pier, where the engineering divisions of the British army had landed.
Supply store in Portianou square that survives to this day. It is a ground-floor building of the early 20th century, built with the local soft yellow stone and has a tiled roof.
There is a monument inside the East Moudros cemetery, made of local yellow stone with a four-sided shape dedicated to the 18 dead of the British flagship of the Eastern Mediterranean HMS Agamemnon.
Watchtower pyramid, which was used to observe which ships are entering the Moudros bay and they were directing them with navy signals (Navigational Trig Marker). It is a building, about 10 meters high with local stone that was created for the signalmen, i.e. those who direct the ships on their entrance and exit of the Moudros bay. At its base, it has a watchtower for covering the safeguarder when the weather conditions were bad. It is wrongly identified with a cenotaph of the White Russians.
This is the cafe in Portianou Square with the tree in front of it. It is the cafe depicted in many ANZAC photos, where the ANZAC used to rest from the summer of 1915 until the first days of January 1916. The current tree is not the one of 1915 but it has been replaced by a new one. The building is the same one, built with local soft yellow stone, and has also survived a fire. In its interior, there are many photographs of Portianou village from the time of the World War I.