Mount Kedros (Greek: Όρος Κέντρος, also Κέδρος), is a mountain on the island of Crete in Greece.
Its landscape abounds with canyons and rock cliffs and is almost barren, with dry scrubs and phrygana being the major forms of vegetation.
Kedros grows endemic or rare flowers such as tulips, anemones, corn marigolds, turban buttercups, tassel hyacinths, orchids, etc., and provides ideal conditions for the nesting of falcons as well as larger birds of prey such as griffon vultures, golden eagles and Bonelli's eagles.
[3] Owing to the significance of its flora and fauna, Mount Kedros is a node of the Natura 2000 network of protected areas.
In reprisal, the German occupation forces destroyed the Kedros villages and murdered several of their inhabitants.