The place is a place that has a distinctive character, a distinct identity and reproduces an "atmosphere". For one place, however, the word atmosphere is that which characterizes and differentiates simple indifferent space. Of course, space is space, but the exhilarating atmosphere is an attribute that gives identity that is, makes it unique, unique to him, who will understand and identify with it. The place has as many characters as people can give it, to recognize it. This particular feeling, the "pulse of the psychic strings" that the place will create in those who experience it, either as residents, as visitors, or even fantastically, mentally because they are simply thinking of it, is what will co-formulate with other factors the experiential identity of a place. That is to say, man constructs within himself, through an unconscious psychological process, the meaning of a place. However, this is not a one-line linear mental movement that starts from man and ends in space. On the contrary, knowing the history of a place "brings you" closer to it. The traces of time in a place are "gates of communication" with its past, knowing it, and in combination with the characteristics of each place, composes a character for him, the only "witness" capable of certifying the experiential the identity of a place is the one who experiences it through his experience. Knowledge of history helps to understand and interpret a place. Through a historical and geographical exploration I will try to analyze and understand the Gorica hill. Goritsa hill is located at the entrance of the Pagasitic Gulf and is a small hill 200 m above sea level. At its northern end, it is joined by a narrow neck to the main bulk of Pelion, which is essentially a small hill at its foothills (hence the name Goritsa hill, is a small mountain, as opposed to Pelion, the large mountain which called Gora). To the west of the hill of Goritsa lies the great plain of Volos and to the southeast of the hill lies the plain of Agria and Lechonia.