History of the building

The traditional hotel Ghermaniko is housed in one of the oldest buildings in the area, which has been intensively active throughout the last century.

The two-storey property was built around 1910, at a time when Damouhari, with its natural harbor, unique to the whole area, served as the supply station for Eastern Pelion. Its thorough refurbishment in 2018 (interior and exterior) respected totally the building’s unique architecture giving it a fresh tone of crispness and youth…

Romy Schneider

In July 1974, the world-renowned German actress and famous for her beauty Romy Schneider visited Damouhari for holidays and was hosted in Ghermaniko traditional hotel. She is known as “Princess Sissy” for her starring role in the trilogy regarding the life of Empress Elizabeth of Bavaria, filmed in the mid-1950s.

Our Breakfast

Every morning, our guests can enjoy a delicious breakfast consisting of natural flavors and some of the area’s favorite traditional recipes with the freshest ingredients selected. Breakfast is considered the main holiday meal and the most important energy source for an active and vibrant day. Greek local breakfast delivers the first taste of the culinary culture of each place, adding value to the overall guest experience.

Prices & Offers

The following prices are our standard rates of GHERMANIKO Guesthouse in euros per room and per night. At those prices we would also like to offer you our cherished greek, handmade, traditional, pelion breakfast from local and pure ingredients of our mother earth!

Hotel Directory

Ghermaniko” is a small, authentic, traditional hotel just in front of the natural harbour of Damouchari on the East Pelion Coast in the Aegean Sea (Greece), next to the old building served as customs office in the past. The second bay the beach of Damouhari (Palia Damouchari) is at about 50 meters distance just following an easy paved path.

In July 1974, the world-renowned German actress and famous for her beauty Romy Schneider visited Damouhari for holidays and was hosted in Ghermaniko traditional hotel. She is known as “Princess Sissy” for her starring role in the trilogy regarding the life of Empress Elizabeth of Bavaria, filmed in the mid-1950s.

A wealthy life full of emotions

Romy (Rosemary) Schneider was born in Vienna, Austria in September 1938, grew up in a family of actors and died at the age of 43 in Paris (in May 1982). She began her career at the age of 15 in Germany playing in many classic films of the time and continued her career in France with a short passage from Hollywood.

In 1958 she met the famous French actor Alain Delon, to whom she got engaged, but they divorced five years later. Since then, Romy has been married twice, acquiring with her first marriage a son called David and with the second a daughter called Sarah.

The tragic death of her son in June 1981 at the age of 13 from an accident in their home garden shocked her deeply. Her shock resulted in her hospitalization in a psychiatric clinic in Paris and a year later, on the 30th of May 30, she committed suicide at home with an overdose of barbiturate pills and alcohol.

The pleasure trip to Damouchari

Romy Schneider arrives in Damouchari with a donkey from Aghios Ioannis, a nearby seaside village. She was accompanied by her beloved son, David, 7 years old at the time and 11 women who followed her. They were the staff who guarded, protected and cared for her and the child. They all stayed together in Ghermaniko for about one month. Somewhen in the meantime, a man was coming to see if they were missing or were in need of something. Every morning, after having breakfast in the old hotel’s yard, they enjoyed the sea and the sun at Palia Damouhari beach. It was all theirs because the tourists and locals had disappeared due to the military outburst of the Cyprus issue at that time.

Every night, Romy and the rest of the women gathered for dinner at the village’s only tavern. The “Princess Sissy” was gorgeous and striking and her behavior very simple and modest, as the locals that were there usually point out. She always wore, all day long, a turban in her head and used the bed sheets of the hostel to tie them to her body in various ways. They were made of cotton woven greek fabrics in a traditional way with beautiful summer light colors (white, blue, yellow) and patterns (striped or plaid).