Metaxata (Greek: Μεταξάτα) is a village in the southern part of the island of Kefalonia, Greece.
Metaxata was founded by the Byzantine Markantonios Metaxas who settled in an area then known as Frantzata (Φρατζάτα) after the fall of Constantinople in 1453.
[citation needed] The village is the home town of the revolutionists Andreas and Konstantinos Metaxas who had the power of Kefalonia and participated in the Greek War of Independence in the Peloponnese in the 1820s.
[citation needed] In 1823, Lord Byron lived in Metaxata for four months and wrote some poems about the area and its beauties.
[citation needed] Today in the central square, there is a statue in remembrance of Lord Byron and right next to it, the traveller can see the site of the house where the great poet lived.