he village of Agia Varvara, which is 12 kilometers southeast of the city of the same name, 58 kilometers west of Limassol and Nicosia. A settlement built at an altitude of 90 meters on the coastal plain of Paphos and on a hill to the right of the Ezousa river bank, Agia Varvara Paphos with about 150 inhabitants, borders Agia Marinouda and Anarita and is an area with grain, medicinal plants, peanuts and a few vines. The rich and long history of Agia Varvara Paphos, although not confirmed, is evident from the rich offerings and pottery fragments that have been found scattered around the settlement. That is why it is not rare that archaeologists dig the surface of the ground to the north and east of the community. According to experts, the community was a city of the Cyproarchaic period (750-457 BC) and around it there were several smaller settlements.