Thessaloniki

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Aegean Sea
Asia Minor Catastrophe
Balkan history
Balkan States
Balkan Wars
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Category=NHWR7
City of Ghosts
EAP
EEE
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Greek Army
Greek Citizenship
Greek Independence
Greek Nation
Greek Sovereignty
Greek State
Greek State Schools
Hagios Georgios
Hellenism
Jewish diaspora studies
Jewish Elements
Late Ottoman Period
Levantine Cities
Macedon
Macedonia
Macedonian Struggle
Mark Mazower
migration and identity in southeastern Europe
Modern Greek History
Mufti Office
multicultural societies
national identity formation
Nazi Occupation of Greece
Ottoman Empire legacy
religious identity
Salonica
Salonika
Thermaic Gulf
Thessalonians
Thessaloniki's historic monuments
Thessaloniki's incorporation
Thessaloniki's Jews
Thessaloniki’s Jews
Upper Town
urban modernisation
Violated
westernization
White Tower
Young Turk Revolution
Young Turks

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032172729
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Dec 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book shares the conclusions of a remarkable conference marking the centennial of Thessaloniki’s incorporation into the Greek state in 1912. Like its Roman and Byzantine predecessors, Ottoman Salonica was the metropolis of a huge, multi-ethnic Balkan hinterland, a center of modernization/westernization, and the de facto capital of Sephardic Judaism. The powerful attraction it exerted on competing local nationalisms, including the Young Turks, gave it a paradigmatic role in the transition from imperial to national rule in southeastern Europe.

Twenty-three articles cover the multicultural physiognomy of a ‘Levantine’ city. They describe the mechanisms for cultivating national consciousness (including education, journalism, the arts, archaeology, and urban planning), the relationship between national identity, religious identity, and an evolving socialist labor movement, anti-Semitism, and the practical issues of governing and assimilating diverse non-Greek populations after Greece’s military victory in 1912. Analysis of this transformation extends chronologically through the arrival of Greek refugees from Turkey and the Black Sea in 1923, the Holocaust, the Greek civil war, and the new waves of migration after 1990. These processes are analyzed on multiple levels, including civil administration, land use planning, and the treatment of Thessaloniki’s historic monuments.

This work underscores the importance of cities and their local histories in shaping the key national narratives that drove development in southeastern Europe. Those lessons are highly relevant today, as Europe reacts to renewed migratory pressures and the rise of new nationalist movements, and draws lessons, valid or otherwise, from the nation-building experiments of the previous century.

Dimitris Keridis is Professor of International Relations at the Panteion University in Athens, Greece, and has been a member of the Greek Parliament since 2019. He has written widely on foreign policy, particularly on the Balkans and on modern Greek history.

John Brady Kiesling is an archaeologist and former U.S. diplomat, whose work includes Greek Urban Warriors (2014), Diplomacy Lessons (2007), the ToposText application, and various edited works on Greek history.