Salonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims and Jews 1430-1950Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2007 M12 18 - 544 pages Salonica, located in northern Greece, was long a fascinating crossroads metropolis of different religions and ethnicities, where Egyptian merchants, Spanish Jews, Orthodox Greeks, Sufi dervishes, and Albanian brigands all rubbed shoulders. Tensions sometimes flared, but tolerance largely prevailed until the twentieth century when the Greek army marched in, Muslims were forced out, and the Nazis deported and killed the Jews. As the acclaimed historian Mark Mazower follows the city’s inhabitants through plague, invasion, famine, and the disastrous twentieth century, he resurrects a fascinating and vanished world. |
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Page xiii
... later in 1960 ( Reproduced from A. Karadimou- Yerolympou , I anoikodomisi tis Thessalonikis meta tin pyrkaia tou 1917 , by permission of University Studio Press and the author ) 1962 parades to mark half a century of Greek rule The ...
... later in 1960 ( Reproduced from A. Karadimou- Yerolympou , I anoikodomisi tis Thessalonikis meta tin pyrkaia tou 1917 , by permission of University Studio Press and the author ) 1962 parades to mark half a century of Greek rule The ...
Page 6
... Later I realized most had probably lived there since the 1920s, drawn from among the tens of thousands of refugees from Asia Minor who had settled in the city after the exchange of populations with Turkey. Their simple homes contrasted ...
... Later I realized most had probably lived there since the 1920s, drawn from among the tens of thousands of refugees from Asia Minor who had settled in the city after the exchange of populations with Turkey. Their simple homes contrasted ...
Page 6
... Later I realized most had probably lived there since the 1920s , drawn from among the tens of thousands of refugees from Asia Minor who had settled in the city after the exchange of populations with Turkey . Their simple homes ...
... Later I realized most had probably lived there since the 1920s , drawn from among the tens of thousands of refugees from Asia Minor who had settled in the city after the exchange of populations with Turkey . Their simple homes ...
Page 9
... later , in Athens , I came across several dusty unopened sacks of documents at the Central Board of Jewish Communities . When I examined them , I found a mass of disordered papers - catalogues , memoranda , applications and letters ...
... later , in Athens , I came across several dusty unopened sacks of documents at the Central Board of Jewish Communities . When I examined them , I found a mass of disordered papers - catalogues , memoranda , applications and letters ...
Page 24
... later name, Kyrill) and Methodius, themselves possibly of Slavic descent, who drew up a new alphabet, adapted from Greek, translated the Christian liturgy into Slavic and spread Christ's message across eastern Europe. The extent of ...
... later name, Kyrill) and Methodius, themselves possibly of Slavic descent, who drew up a new alphabet, adapted from Greek, translated the Christian liturgy into Slavic and spread Christ's message across eastern Europe. The extent of ...
Contents
17 | |
32 | |
46 | |
Messiahs Martyrs and Miracles | 64 |
Janissaries and Other Plagues | 94 |
Commerce and the Greeks | 114 |
Pashas Beys and Moneylenders | 133 |
Religion in the Age of Reform | 150 |
The Return of Saint Dimitrios | 275 |
The First World War | 286 |
The Great Fire | 298 |
The Muslim Exodus | 311 |
City of Refugees | 333 |
Workers and the State | 347 |
Dressing for the Tango | 359 |
Greeks and Jews | 375 |
Travellers and the European Imagination | 175 |
IO The Possibilities of a Past | 192 |
In the Frankish Style | 209 |
The Macedonia Question 18781908 | 238 |
The Young Turk Revolution | 255 |
Genocide | 392 |
Aftermath | 412 |
The Memory of the Dead | 429 |
Glossary | 469 |
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Abdul Albanian Anatolia army arrived Asia Minor Athens Balkan became British building Bulgarian Byzantine cafés cemetery centre century chief rabbi Christian church city's consul converted crowd Dimitrios eastern Edirne Egnatia Europe European faith fire forced French German Greece Greek hand houses hundred imperial inhabitants Islam Istanbul Italian Izmir janissaries Jewish Jewish community Jews journalist land later lived London loniki Ma'min Macedonia Marranos Mehmed merchants Mertzios Mevlevi minarets modern Molho mosque municipal Murad Muslim neighbourhood officers Orthodox Ottoman authorities Ottoman city Ottoman empire Paris Pasha peasants police political population Porte quarter refugees religion religious remained reported Russian Salonica Salonique streets sultan synagogue Thessa Thessaloniki thousand tion tis Thessalonikis took trade travellers troops Turkey Turkish turned Upper Town Vardar Venetian Venizelist Venizelos villages Vlachs walls women workers wrote YDIP Young Turks Yusuf Bey Zevi