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The Man of the Mani

4 Extra Debut. John Humphrys explores the significance of the Greek village of Kardamyli in the Mani to writer Patrick Leigh Fermor. From 2015.

John Humphrys travels to Greece, to the village of Kardamyli in the Mani, to explore the life and work of travel writer Patrick Leigh Fermor.

Fermor is arguably the most influential travel writer of the 20th Century. Aged 18, he took off, with notebook in hand, on a walk across Europe.

During the Second World War he fought in Greece and Crete, and is still remembered in the country today for his daring exploits with the resistance. His most celebrated action came in 1944 when he led a commando operation to abduct the German General Heinrich Kreipe.

In the early 1960s, he moved to Greece, to the Southern Peloponnese. He built a house in the village of Kardamyli in the Mani. It was here that he wrote much of his most celebrated work and where he remained until his death in June 2011.

John visits Fermor鈥檚 village to explore the influence that Greece had upon his life and work, and also to consider the impact that he had on the village and the people he lived alongside. He also visits Fermor鈥檚 former home, now in the care of the Benaki Museum in Athens, and discusses the plans for its future. He meets those in the village who met Leigh Fermor when he first arrived in the 1960s - a man in his 90s recalls how they 鈥渄anced on the tables into the night鈥 - and he hears tales of influential guests, great writers like Bruce Chatwin and John Betjeman, even a King and Queen.

Accompanied by Fermor鈥檚 book 鈥楳ani: Travels in the Southern Peloponnese鈥, John Humphrys also travels into the deep Mani, one of the remotest, wildest and most isolated regions in Greece.

Producer: Kevin Dawson

A Whistledown production for 大象传媒 Radio 4, first broadcast in June 2015.

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30 minutes

Last on

Wed 9 Nov 2022 02:30

Broadcasts

  • Mon 22 Jun 2015 16:00
  • Tue 8 Nov 2022 14:30
  • Wed 9 Nov 2022 02:30

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