Glykorrizi (Greek: Γλυκορρίζι, before 1927: Μουρτάτο - Mourtato[2]) is a small village situated in the Peloponnese, southern Greece.
The population of the community has been estimated at 60 people but during the summer this number may more than double.
The area in which the village is found has been continuously populated for at least the past 400 years, according to both Venetian and Byzantine records, but had never numbered more than a handful of families.
The village experienced a steady increase in inhabitants prior to and after the Greek War of Independence.
The community currently has two small cafes, or kafeneia as they are known in Greek, a church dedicated to the Virgin Mary and a smaller chapel of St. John which served as a krifo scholio ("secret school") during Ottoman rule.