Amaliada (Greek: Modern: Αμαλιάδα, Ancient: Αμαλιάς, Amalias) or Amaliada City is a city in the western Peloponnese, in Greece. It has 32,040 citizens (of which about 18,000 live in the city and the rest lives within Amalias). It is near the archealogical site of Ancient Elis, which was the city that held the ancient Olympic Games. It is situated on the valley of the Prefecture of Ilia and almost directly south of the Peneus river, 80 km from Patras, 7 km form Savalia, 5 km from Kourouta, 20 km from Pyrgos 291 km from Athens and 5 km from the Ionian sea. It is ranked the second largest city in Ilia. It is the westernmost city in the Peloponnese.
It is named after Queen Amalia in the 1830s by merging the two communes, one of them being Kallitsa into Amalias.
It features city square with beautiful pine trees and a fountain. Local streets are mainly in grid order almost running north to south and east to west. A laike is situated in Amaliada's east side along with a public stadium that mainly plays soccer. Amaliada has a hospital in its southeast and a monastery named Aghia Frangavilli to its southeast. Amaliada has one train station (located west of the city square) and two in the municipality.
A street in Amaliada's west side named Hiroshima is mainly dedicated in memory of victims of the Hiroshima Bombing before the end of WWII. Further west are Amaliada's closest beaches of Kourouta and Palouki.
The radio station for this community is the Radio Station of Amalias (RSA).
She was really impressed by Amalia's climbing ability, and talked to her in a really awesome way - not all condescending like it's so easy to do with a 2 year old, but at the same time simple enough so that Amalia could understand what she was saying, and make her own responses.
That every month older Amalia gets is less time that I spent with her when she was two, was less time that I spent with her when she was at this amazing stage.
Amalia got a pretty cool meal fairly quickly, which was nice of the caterers, then there were a couple of really great speeches, before the main course arrived.