Author: opoudjis

Benaki museum: Folk Constantine the Great

By: | Post date: July 3, 2023 | Comments: No Comments
Posted in categories: Culture, Greece

A take from Siphnos, early 19th century, on what Constantine the Great in the hippodrome of Constantinople must surely have looked like, complete with the True Cross and the serpents column originally from Delphi, and still to be seen there. Notice of course that no 19th century Greek could imagine Constantine the Great clean shaven, […]

Benaki museum: clothwork

By: | Post date: July 3, 2023 | Comments: No Comments
Posted in categories: Culture, Greece

The Benaki Museum has a few ancient bits and pieces, and a quite decent Byzantine collection, a large part of it, to my surprise, originating as family heirlooms of refugees from Turkey. But the real point of the museum is its folk art exhibit, upstairs. Rather early on, this tapestry, whose geometry I recognized even […]

Benaki Museum: icons

By: | Post date: July 3, 2023 | Comments: No Comments
Posted in categories: Culture, Greece

I did manage to sneak in to the Benaki Museum before the concert on my last night in Athens. (Free after 6 pm? Open to midnight? Sign me up!) The Benaki Museum, like many such museums, feels at times like a cliche simply because so many of the paintings it houses have attained meme status. […]

Digital nomads, scourge of downtowns

By: | Post date: July 2, 2023 | Comments: No Comments
Posted in categories: Culture, Greece

A sign I’ve come to recognise, that Here Be an AirBnB Rental. A key safe, this one in Athens. Ubiquitous in both Athens and Salonica, just as I’d been warned. As I’ve been told, it is noticeable that there are a lot fewer locals around in downtown Salonica than there used to be, as they […]

Karamanlis and their food

By: | Post date: July 2, 2023 | Comments: 2 Comments
Posted in categories: Culture, Greece

The Karamanlides/Karamanlar were a Turkish-speaking Greek Orthodox people living in Anatolia. The term was generalised to all Turkish-speaking Greek Orthodox. Since the Karamanlides were Greek Orthodox, and since alphabet went with creed in much of the world, the Karamanlides read Turkish in Greek script, which is accordingly called Karamanlidika. Karamanlidika is the name of ANYTHING […]

We interrupt to bring you this electoral advertorial…

By: | Post date: July 2, 2023 | Comments: No Comments
Posted in categories: Culture, Greece

In the wee hours of 23 June, just before the second round of Greek parliamentary elections, I was staying up to finish off a work task, and instead of Law and Order Criminal Intent, I’m watching the electoral speech of Zoe Konstantinopoulou: daughter of the president of SYRIZA’s predecessor party, former unsmiling SYRIZA speaker of […]

Tzisdarakis Mosque

By: | Post date: July 2, 2023 | Comments: No Comments
Posted in categories: Culture, Greece

The Tzisdarakis Mosque, towering over Monastiraki, the Athens flea market district. The mosque now houses the Greek folk art museum. It was built by Ottoman governor Dizdar Mustafa Ağa in 1759. The story goes that he ground down one of the columns of Olympian Zeus for limestone for it, and that the Ottoman authorities, as […]

Our Lady of the Chimney Officer

By: | Post date: July 2, 2023 | Comments: No Comments
Posted in categories: Culture, Greece

Smack in the middle of Ermou St Mall, the Church of Panagia Kapnikarea, Our Lady of the Chimney Officer. (A Chimney Officer, kapnikarios, was a building tax collector, who worked out which buildings to tax from which buildings had their chimneys working.) Thank you Byzantine Athens.com. This 11th century church is now used by the […]

Athens Cathedral

By: | Post date: July 2, 2023 | Comments: No Comments
Posted in categories: Culture, Greece

Athens Cathedral (“the metropolis”). Tucked in the corner, the cathedral’s Mini Me, the far older Church of Panagia Gorgoepikoos (Our Lady of Granting Requests Promptly), aka The Little Metropolis. Facing down the cathedral, the statue of archbishop Damaskinos. The inscription I caught sight of commemorates in Ancient Greek the fact that he was briefly vice […]

A soirée in Dafni

By: | Post date: July 2, 2023 | Comments: No Comments
Posted in categories: Culture, Greece

There are in fact plenty of nicer bits of Athens, all of them characterized by the fact that they are nowhere near the city center. My relatives and friends have taken me to several of them, including Kifisia and Palio Faliro and Glyfada. And so it was that I ended up at Souare bar in […]

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