Psari
Psari is located at an altitude of 660 meters and is a village with significant religious historical interest. The village is the birthplace of Saint Nicholas of Fish, who, at the age of 12, left Psari and went to Silivri in Eastern Thrace, near Constantinople, where he worked and became a saint after his beheading. In his honor, a church bearing his name was built, which serves as the village's cathedral.
The name of Psari is attributed to the fishbone shape of the nearby peak that rises above the village.
To the south of the village are the ruins of the Monastery of the Holy Theodores, one of the oldest and wealthiest monasteries in the area. Also, the small chapel of Saint Theodoros, built like an eagle's nest on the rocks above the Stymphalian plain, served as a center for local resistance against the invasion of Ibrahim Pasha in 1826.
To the north of the village, about 3 km away, the foundations of an ancient temple were found, along with an embedded icon of Saint Paraskevi, where a church of exceptional architectural design was built in 1905.