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Salonica, city of ghosts : Christians,…
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Salonica, city of ghosts : Christians, Muslims and Jews, 1430-1950 (original 2004; edition 2005)

by Mark Mazower

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
5801140,577 (4.11)10
The perfect book to read on first visit to 'thessaloniki. Unfolds the many layers of this extraordinary "border town", and how the complexity got shaved away over the course of the 20th century by wars, fires and ethnic murder. Mazower's background as a historian of the whole european story makes him especially well qualified for this little corner. ( )
  vguy | Dec 16, 2015 |
English (10)  Dutch (1)  All languages (11)
Showing 10 of 10
Ένα βιβλίο που κάθε Θεσσαλονικιός πρέπει να διαβάσει, ώστε να καταλάβει την τεράστια πολιτιστική και ιστορική σημασία της πόλης. ( )
  teoman753 | May 9, 2022 |
The perfect book to read on first visit to 'thessaloniki. Unfolds the many layers of this extraordinary "border town", and how the complexity got shaved away over the course of the 20th century by wars, fires and ethnic murder. Mazower's background as a historian of the whole european story makes him especially well qualified for this little corner. ( )
  vguy | Dec 16, 2015 |
I learned a lot from this book, and I admire Mazower's ability to form such a complete account of Salonica.
  TrgLlyLibrarian | Feb 1, 2015 |
"what kept me going, to read it cover to cover, was not just the city and its history but also Mazower's way of approaching history."
read more: http://likeiamfeasting.blogspot.gr/2014/05/salonica-mark-mazower.html ( )
  mongoosenamedt | May 17, 2014 |
This is the kind of book that makes me want to throw my guide books to Rome, Istanbul, Israel, and Athens in the trash and begin a different kind of world travel. I raved about Salonica for months and recommended it to every general nonfiction reader I know. Several students at the college where I work as a librarian were blown away by this beautifully constructed account of Christians, Jews, and Muslims cohabitating in an incredible cosomopolis. Through what must have been exhausting primary research, the author beautifully reconstructs the lives of many, including the obscure and unknown. The illustrations added to my appreciation. (History books should be more heavily illustrated in general.) People who enjoy reading the works of W.G. Sebald, Roberto Bolano, Elaine Pagels, Joseph Campbell, and Rebecca Solnit should read this account of 500 + hundred years in the history of a Greek city. ( )
1 vote soccerposeur | Sep 13, 2011 |
Fascinating material but this book could have used better editing. There were many facts in here I wasn't interested in and many terms I would have liked to know more about were not adequately identified. This book would have benefited from a glossary. I also did not like the book's organization. I wanted to skim and read the parts that interested me and I had trouble identifying the sections I wanted to read. ( )
  atiara | May 12, 2010 |
Not quite a history book. A little more almost. Slips in chronology drove me mad while reading it. But the last chapter is a lesson anyone with an opinion about history as it is studied should read, and particularly about how we perceive history – what history is. The last chapter does not make much sense without reading the rest of the book. ( )
  M.Campanella | Oct 16, 2009 |
very well written, but tries too hard to avoid certain not secondary subjects ( )
  experimentalis | Jan 3, 2008 |
http://nhw.livejournal.com/702231.html

It is very good - an excellent story of the city through waves of depopulation and resettlement: the Greeks leave when the Ottomans take over in 1460, the Jews come in from Spain and Portugal in the 1490s, the city becomes one of the centres of the Ottoman empire and (I guess) the largest Jewish city in the world, and then is captured by the Greek kingdom in 1912, the Turks are kicked out in 1923, the Jews deported and almost all killed in 1943, and that's it.

Mazower has written two other very good books, one on the Balkans and one on Europe as a whole. Like the others, this one is great on the grand sweeping strategies and the public personalities of the city. I would have liked a bit more of the human side of things, which he also does well. Three individual stories which he did present well, and which will linger in my mind, were the looting and destruction of the Incantadas (a glorious ancient monument) by the French in the early nineteenth century, the tango craze of the 1920s, and the deportation of the Jews in 1943.

Mazower is of course reconstructing a history which has been wilfully forgotten by the Greek state, which prefers to stick to a narrative of continuous Hellenism for the whole of the last millennium. The real story is of course more complex, and in the last couple of pages Mazower argues for his history particularly eloquently:

"As small states integrate themselves in a wider world, and even the largest learn how much they need their neighbours' help to tackle the problems that face them all, the stringently-patrolled and narrow-minded conception of history which they once nurtured and which gave them a kind of justification starts to look less plausible and less necessary. Other futures may require other pasts."

I think he proves his point well. ( )
1 vote nwhyte | Aug 21, 2006 |
Read 2018. ( )
  sasameyuki | May 12, 2020 |
Showing 10 of 10

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