Kevrekidis Digital Photography tag:travellerspoint.com,2007-11-26:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis 2009-10-14T15:15:09Z Kevrekidis img/travel-blog-feed.png Piraeus Station tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-10-14:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=60&entryid=179669 2009-10-14T15:15:09Z 2009-10-14T15:15:09Z The Terminal Station of Athens - Piraeus Electric Railways. The Athens - Piraeus Electric Railways (ISAP) is the oldest urban rapid transit system of Athens metropolitan area in Greece. The line from Piraeus to Thision was inaugurated in 1869 as a steam train connecting Athens and its port, Piraeus. In the early period (1869-1904) the railway used 22 steam tank locomotives. Steam traction on underground railways was far from satisfactory and electrification came in 1904. Toda ... Piraeus_St..idis_V8.jpg

The Terminal Station of Athens - Piraeus Electric Railways.

The Athens - Piraeus Electric Railways (ISAP) is the oldest urban rapid transit system of Athens metropolitan area in Greece. The line from Piraeus to Thision was inaugurated in 1869 as a steam train connecting Athens and its port, Piraeus. In the early period (1869-1904) the railway used 22 steam tank locomotives. Steam traction on underground railways was far from satisfactory and electrification came in 1904. Today the only line of ISAP connects the port of Piraeus with the northern suburb of Kifissia and is connected with the Athens Metro (Subway).

Piraeus station is found opposite of the central port of Athens (Piraeus port). It is housed in an imposing building that was built in 1929. After the recent renovation, the building recovered its old glamour. The stately eclectic building with the arched dome, replicates the relevant European stations of the period.

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© 2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Eternal Olive tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-09-27:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=59&entryid=177552 2009-09-27T21:19:51Z 2009-09-27T21:19:51Z Olea Europaea or Olive tree (from Greek word elaion). It was purely a matter of local pride that the Athenians claimed that the olive first grew in Athens. In an archaic Athenian foundation myth, Goddess Athena won the patronship of Athens from Poseidon with the gift of the olive. The olive was sacred to Athena and appeared on the Athenian coinage. An olive tree in west Athens, named "Plato's Olive Tree", was rumored to be a remnant of the ... Eternal_Ol..kidis_8.jpg

Olea Europaea or Olive tree (from Greek word elaion).

It was purely a matter of local pride that the Athenians claimed that the olive first grew in Athens. In an archaic Athenian foundation myth, Goddess Athena won the patronship of Athens from Poseidon with the gift of the olive. The olive was sacred to Athena and appeared on the Athenian coinage.
An olive tree in west Athens, named "Plato's Olive Tree", was rumored to be a remnant of the grove within which Plato's Academy was situated, which would date it to approximately 2,400 years ago.

In ancient Greece, athletes ritually rubbed olive oil all over their bodies. At the original Olympic Games, more than 2,500 years ago, an olive wreath was the sole tangible reward offered to champion athletes. In the case of the chariot races, the wreath went to the owner of the winning team of horses. Olive branches were chosen because of the tree's association with the Greek god, Zeus. A sacred olive tree was said to have grown near his spectacular temple in ancient Olympia.

Olive oil has been more than mere food to the peoples of the Mediterranean. It has been medicinal and magical, an endless source of fascination and wonder and the fountain of great wealth and power.

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© 2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Patmos Monastery tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-09-07:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=58&entryid=174769 2009-09-08T06:04:12Z 2009-09-08T06:01:14Z Patmos Island – Greece. The first thing you notice when you approach Patmos, is the monastery of Saint John the Divine (or the Evangelist). Its presence is overwhelming. It looks like a Byzantine castle and was built like a fortress. It was founded in 1088 by Saint Christodoulos following a grant by the Byzantine Emperor Alexios I Komnenos. The monastery’s walls are over 15 meters high, its length from north to south is 53 meters and from east to ... Patmos_M_K..idis_V8.jpg

Patmos Island – Greece.

The first thing you notice when you approach Patmos, is the monastery of Saint John the Divine (or the Evangelist). Its presence is overwhelming. It looks like a Byzantine castle and was built like a fortress. It was founded in 1088 by Saint Christodoulos following a grant by the Byzantine Emperor Alexios I Komnenos. The monastery’s walls are over 15 meters high, its length from north to south is 53 meters and from east to west 70 meters. It seems even larger when you stand at the entrance, noticing its thick walls and heavily reinforced door.
Above the entrance several meters high there is a small opening from which burning hot oil, water and even lead was poured over to attack pirates and other invaders trying to break the gate. This opening was called "the killer", and was considered the last resort for keeping the monastery safe. The monks used to sound the bells to warn the people of Patmos to take refuge behind the fortified walls, keeping Christianity safe as was intended by its founder, the blessed Christodoulos.

Patmos is mentioned in the Christian scriptural Book of Revelation. The book's introduction states that its author, John, was on Patmos when he was given and recorded a vision from Jesus Christ. Earliest Christian tradition identifies this writer as John the Apostle. As such, Patmos is a destination for Christian pilgrimage. Visitors can see the Cave of the Apocalypse where John is said to have received his Revelation.

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© 2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Karagiozis - Greek shadow theater tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-08-20:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=57&entryid=172513 2009-08-20T09:34:09Z 2009-08-20T09:34:09Z Traditional Greek shadow theater exhibition at Heraklion, Crete. Karagiozis ( Greek Καραγκιόζης ) is the main character of the tales narrated in the Greek shadow-puppet theater. Shadow theater, with a single puppeteer creating voices for a dialogue, narrating a story, and possibly even singing while manipulating puppets, appears to come ultimately from the Indonesian Wayang Kulit. Karagiozis is the Hellenized version of the Turkish shadow play “Karagoz and Hacivat”. It’s seems to ... Karagiozis_V8.jpg

Traditional Greek shadow theater exhibition at Heraklion, Crete.

Karagiozis ( Greek Καραγκιόζης ) is the main character of the tales narrated in the Greek shadow-puppet theater. Shadow theater, with a single puppeteer creating voices for a dialogue, narrating a story, and possibly even singing while manipulating puppets, appears to come ultimately from the Indonesian Wayang Kulit.
Karagiozis is the Hellenized version of the Turkish shadow play “Karagoz and Hacivat”. It’s seems to have come to mainland Greece, probably from Asia Minor (Anatolia) in the 19th century, during Ottoman rule.

Karagiozis is a poor hunchbacked Greek, his right hand is always depicted long, his clothes are ragged and patched, and his feet are always bare. He lives in a poor cottage with his wife Aglaia and his three boys, during the times of the Ottoman Empire. The scene is occupied by his cottage in the left, and the Sultan's Palace (Sarayi) on the far right. Because of his poverty, Karagiozis uses mischievous and crude ways to find money and feed his family. There are three types of Karagiozi plays, including comedies inspired by every day life, those influenced by fairy tales and traditional folklore and heroic themes inspired by the years of the oppressive Ottoman rule followed by the Greek War of independence in 1821.

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© 2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Knossos tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-06-25:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=56&entryid=165833 2009-06-25T09:15:39Z 2009-06-25T09:15:39Z Photo: West Bastion of Knossos Palace. Relief wall painting of the sacred Minoan Bull. The Minoan civilization was a Bronze Age civilization which arose on the island of Crete. It was the first European civilization and claims to be the “cradle of Western civilization”. The Minoan culture flourished from approximately 2700 to 1450 BC; afterwards, Mycenaean Greek culture became dominant. Knossos was the capital of Minoan Crete. It is located south of the modern port t ... Photo: West Bastion of Knossos Palace. Relief wall painting of the sacred Minoan Bull.

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The Minoan civilization was a Bronze Age civilization which arose on the island of Crete. It was the first European civilization and claims to be the “cradle of Western civilization”. The Minoan culture flourished from approximately 2700 to 1450 BC; afterwards, Mycenaean Greek culture became dominant. Knossos was the capital of Minoan Crete. It is located south of the modern port town of Heraklion (Iraklio). Knossos was inhabited for several thousand years, beginning with a Neolithic settlement sometime in the seventh millennium BC, and was abandoned after its destruction in 1375 BC which marked the end of Minoan civilization. The first palace was built around 1900 BC on the ruins of previous settlements. It was destroyed for the first time at 1700 BC, probably by a large earthquake or foreign invaders. It was immediately rebuilt to an even more elaborate complex and until its abandonment was damaged several times during earthquakes, invasions, and in 1450 BC by the colossal volcanic eruption of Thera (Santorini), and the invasion of Mycenaeans who used it as their capital as they ruled the island of Crete until 1375 BC. Arthur Evans, the British Archaeologist who excavated the site in 1900 AD restored large parts of the palace in a way that it is possible today to appreciate the glory and complexity of a structure that evolved over several millennia and grew to occupy about 20,000 square meters. Walking through its complex multi-storied buildings one can comprehend why the palace of Knossos was associated with the mythological Labyrinth. According to Greek mythology, the palace was designed by famed architect Daedalus (Dedalos) with such complexity that no one placed in it could ever find its exit. King Minos who commissioned the palace then kept the architect prisoner to ensure that he would not reveal the palace plan to anyone. Daedalus, who was a great inventor, built two sets of wings so he and his son Icarus (Ikaros) could fly off the island, and so they did. On their way out, Daedalus warned his son not to fly too close to the sun because the wax that held the wings together would melt. In a tragic turn of events, during their escape Icarus, young and impulsive as he was, flew higher and higher until the sun rays dismantled his wings and the young boy fell to his death in the Aegean Sea. The Labyrinth was the dwelling of the Minotaur in Greek mythology, and many associate the palace of Knossos with the legend of Theseus killing the Minotaur. Representation of the Bull at the palace of Knossos is a widespread symbol in the art and decoration of this archaeological site. The bull-leaping (taurokathapsia) was a ritual sport or performance in which human athletes literally vaulted over bulls as part of a ceremonial rite. A version of the sacred “bull games” is still extant in Iberian (Spain - Portugal) culture, the Bullfighting.

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©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Ephesus tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-06-20:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=55&entryid=165230 2009-06-21T05:20:45Z 2009-06-21T05:20:45Z Ephesus lies beside Selcuk and Kusadasi in Asia Minor (Anatolia), Turkey. It was an ancient Greek city in the region known as Ionia during the Classical period. Photo: An ancient Greek inscription and the Library of Celsus. The Library of Celsus dominates to the south of the Tetragonos Agora in Ephesus. It was built in the 2nd century AD to serve as a burial monument dedicated to Tiberius Julius Celsus Polemaeanus, the Roman senator and proconsul of Asia. The constru ... Ephesus lies beside Selcuk and Kusadasi in Asia Minor (Anatolia), Turkey.
It was an ancient Greek city in the region known as Ionia during the Classical period.

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Photo: An ancient Greek inscription and the Library of Celsus.

The Library of Celsus dominates to the south of the Tetragonos Agora in Ephesus. It was built in the 2nd century AD to serve as a burial monument dedicated to Tiberius Julius Celsus Polemaeanus, the Roman senator and proconsul of Asia. The construction was financed by his son, Tiberius (or Gaius) Julius Aquila. Its luxurious facade forms an impressive architectural complex. The style of the library, with its ornate, balanced, well-planned facade, reflects the Greek influence on Roman architecture. The building materials, brick, concrete, and mortared rubble, signify the new materials that came into use in the Roman Empire at this time. The interior of the niches was adorned with four statues representing female abstract concepts: Sofia (Wisdom), Arete (Virtue), Ennoia (Insight) and Episteme (Knowledge). They are personifications of the virtues of Celsus but also of the virtues the life of high Roman officials should have had. This type of facade with inset frames and niches for statues is similar to that found in ancient Greek theaters (the stage building behind the orchestra, or skene) and is thus characterized as "scenographic". The inside of the building, not fully restored, was a single rectangular room with a central apse framed by a large arch at the far wall. A statue of Celsus or of Athena (Greek goddess of wisdom) stood in the apse, and Celsus’ tomb lay directly below in a vaulted chamber. Along the other three sides were rectangular recesses that held cupboards and shelves for the 12,000 scrolls.

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History of Ephesus:
Traces of habitation in the area of Ephesus date from the Neolithic period and Copper Age. According to myth, Ephesus was founded by Androklos, the son of the Athenian King Kadros (Codrus), and a mixed population from Athens, Samos and Aetolia. When they went there they found a pre-existent settlement built by Lelegians and Carians or Lydians. The Greek colonists drove the natives out of the upper city but did not harm those living around the sanctuary. They identified the goddess of the natives with Artemis and founded the first fortified position. Around 550 BC, one of the Seven Wonders of the World, the Temple of Artemis (Greek: Artemision) was built. Androklos was able to join the twelve cities of Ionia together into the Ionian League (Dodecapolis). Later, Greek historians such as Herodotus however reassigned the city's mythological foundation to Ephos, queen of the Amazons. The Ephesians participated in the Ionian Revolt against Persian rule in the Battle of Ephesus (498 BC), an event which instigated the Greco - Persian wars. In 479 BC, the Ionians, together with Athens and Sparta, were able to oust the Persians from Anatolia. In 478 BC, the Ionian cities entered with Athens and Sparta the Delian League against the Persians. During the Peloponnesian War, Ephesus was first allied to Athens but sided in a later phase, called the Decelean War, or the Ionian War with Sparta. As a result, the rule over the kingdoms of Anatolia was ceded again to Persia. In 336 BC, when Parmenion campaigned to Asia Minor, Ephesus was convulsed by a pro - Macedonian democratic revolt that overthrew the pro - Persian oligarchy. When Alexander the Great defeated the Persian forces at the Battle of Granicus in 334 BC, the Greek cities of Asia Minor were liberated. Alexander was greeted warmly in Ephesus when he entered it in triumph. After Alexander died Ephesus came under his general Perdiccas and other successors such as Antigonus, Demetrius, and Ptolemy XII (Hellenistic period). Later, Ephesus became subject of the Roman Republic. Ephesus played an important role in the events in the province during Mithradatic War I (90-86 BC). The invasion of the king of Pontus Mithradates VI to the province of Asia fired unprecedented enthusiasm accompanied by the hatred against the Romans. The Ephesians played the leading part in anti-Roman demonstrations. Ephesus came back under Roman rule in 84 BC and was asked to pay high war indemnities. In 48 BC, Julius Caesar landed there and tried to reorganise the province. In 41 BC Marcus Antonius entered the city as a New Dionysus during a Bacchic ritual. He gathered the Greeks in the city and demanded that they pay him taxes for 2 years. Antonius returned with Cleopatra in 33 BC. When Augustus became emperor in 27 BC, he made Ephesus the capital of the Roman province of Asia. Ephesus was an important center for early Christianity. Apostle Paul stayed there for some time. According to the occult Christian literature, the Virgin Mary and Saint John the Evangelist stayed in Ephesus for a long time. Ephesus remained the most important city of the Byzantine Empire in Asia after Constantinople in the 5th and 6th centuries. The emperor Constantine I rebuilt much of the city and erected a new public bath. In 406 John Chrysostom, archbishop of Constantinople, ordered the destruction of the Temple of Artemis. The Seljuk Turks conquered the region in 1071-1100 and it was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1390. Efes is the Turkish name for Ephesus.

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Santorini volcano tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-06-16:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=54&entryid=164713 2009-06-16T19:46:31Z 2009-06-16T19:46:31Z The island group of Santorini (Thera) is the most well-known and active volcanic centre of the Hellenic (Greek) Volcanic Arc in the south Aegean Sea. It is a complex stratovolcano with a large caldera created by several large explosive eruptions. The different products of 2 million years of volcanic activity have accumulated around a small non-volcanic basement that once formed a small island similar to the other islands. Most of the volcanic layers are visible in the multi-colore ... Santorini_..rekidis.jpg

The island group of Santorini (Thera) is the most well-known and active volcanic centre of the Hellenic (Greek) Volcanic Arc in the south Aegean Sea. It is a complex stratovolcano with a large caldera created by several large explosive eruptions. The different products of 2 million years of volcanic activity have accumulated around a small non-volcanic basement that once formed a small island similar to the other islands. Most of the volcanic layers are visible in the multi-colored sequences of the impressive steep inner walls of the caldera, striking the visitor who reaches the island by boat.

The Minoan eruption of Thera, (Santorini or Thera eruption), was a major catastrophic volcanic eruption which is estimated to have occurred in the mid second millennium BCE. It was one of the largest volcanic events on Earth in recorded history. The eruption seems to have inspired certain Greek myths and may have caused turmoil in Egypt. It has also been suggested previously that the effects of this eruption led to a number of the Ten Plagues of Moses in the Holy Bible, chief among them being the so-called “rain of fire”. Additionally, it has been speculated that the destruction of the city at Akrotiri provided the basis for or otherwise inspired Plato's story of Atlantis.

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© 2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Tower of the Winds tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-06-09:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=53&entryid=163852 2009-06-09T21:02:19Z 2009-06-09T21:02:19Z The Tower of the Winds on the Roman Agora and Lycabettus Hill in the background. Athens – Greece. The Tower of the Winds (Aerides) or Horologion (timepiece) of Andronicos is an octagonal tower representing the eight directions of the wind. The structure is 12 m tall with a diameter of about 8 m and was topped in antiquity by a weathervane-like Triton that indicated the wind direction. It stands on a base of three steps and is built of white ... Tower_Kevrekidis_V8.jpg

The Tower of the Winds on the Roman Agora
and Lycabettus Hill in the background.
Athens – Greece.

The Tower of the Winds (Aerides) or Horologion (timepiece) of Andronicos is an octagonal tower representing the eight directions of the wind. The structure is 12 m tall with a diameter of about 8 m and was topped in antiquity by a weathervane-like Triton that indicated the wind direction. It stands on a base of three steps and is built of white Pentelic marble. It has a conical roof, a cylindrical annex on the south side, and two Corinthian porches. The frieze depicts the eight wind deities: Boreas (N), Kaikias (NE), Eurus (E), Apeliotes (SE), Notus (S), Livas (SW), Zephyrus (W), and Skiron (NW). There are eight sundials on the external walls and an elaborate waterclock (clepsydra) in the interior, driven by water coming down from the Acropolis. It was supposedly built by the Greek astronomer Andronicus of Cyrrhus (Kyrrhos of Syria or Macedonia) around 50 BC, but according to other sources might have been constructed in the 2nd century BC before the rest of the forum. The monument had been half-buried by the earth accumulated over the centuries. It was excavated between 1837 and 1845 by the Greek Archaeological Society.

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©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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When in Rome tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-04-30:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=52&entryid=159807 2009-04-30T09:59:28Z 2009-04-30T09:59:28Z When in Rome... Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART ©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis ... When__in_Rome_V8.jpg

When in Rome...

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©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Loggia dei Lanzi tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-04-07:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=51&entryid=157415 2009-04-07T15:54:30Z 2009-04-07T15:54:30Z Loggia dei Lanzi. Piazza della Signoria, Florence, Italy. A Roman copy of an original Greek work, statue of a man in armor supporting a heroically dying comrade. Probably depicting a scene from the Iliad (Trojan War), Menelaus and Patroclus or Ajax and Achilles. The Loggia dei Lanzi is on a corner of the famous and popular Piazza della Signoria. The name dates back to the reign of Grand Duke Cosimo I, when it was used to house his German mercenary pikemen. ... Loggia_dei..idis_V8.jpg

Loggia dei Lanzi.
Piazza della Signoria, Florence, Italy.

A Roman copy of an original Greek work, statue of a man in armor supporting a heroically dying comrade. Probably depicting a scene from the Iliad (Trojan War), Menelaus and Patroclus or Ajax and Achilles.

The Loggia dei Lanzi is on a corner of the famous and popular Piazza della Signoria. The name dates back to the reign of Grand Duke Cosimo I, when it was used to house his German mercenary pikemen. After the construction of the Uffizi at the rear of the Loggia, the roof was modified and became a terrace from which the Medici princes could watch ceremonies in the piazza. The Loggia consists of wide arches open to the street and forms a small art museum that a visitor can enjoy at any time and for free.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

* This image is dedicated to all the victims of the earthquake (6.3 magnitude) that hit L'Aquila in central Italy yesterday (April 6, 2009).

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Aegean Sea tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-03-29:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=50&entryid=156492 2009-03-29T10:50:57Z 2009-03-29T10:50:57Z Aegean Sea – Greece Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART ©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis ... Aegean_Sea..idis_V8.jpg

Aegean Sea – Greece

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©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Immigrant Workers tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-03-24:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=49&entryid=156036 2009-03-24T14:17:59Z 2009-03-24T14:17:59Z Immigration in Greece has emerged as one of the major social issues with serious political and economic repercussions. The largest group of immigrants residing in Greece comes from ex communist countries. There are more than 1 million immigrants in Greece (equivalent to 10% of the population) mostly from Albania, followed by Bulgaria, Georgia, Romania, Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Moldova, Pakistan, India, Egypt, Iraq, Kurdistan, Philippines and many African counties. Wages i ... Immigrant_Workers_V8.jpg

Immigration in Greece has emerged as one of the major social issues with serious political and economic repercussions. The largest group of immigrants residing in Greece comes from ex communist countries.

There are more than 1 million immigrants in Greece (equivalent to 10% of the population) mostly from Albania, followed by Bulgaria, Georgia, Romania, Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Moldova, Pakistan, India, Egypt, Iraq, Kurdistan, Philippines and many African counties.

Wages in Greece for work in the black market are 3 to 6 times higher than standard wages in their home countries. Yet, they have to live their lives in the insecurity and the constant fear of being deported. Since Greece has declared that is not an immigration country, there is hardly any state infrastructure to help immigrants integrate in the Greek society.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Eretria VI tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-03-01:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=48&entryid=153352 2009-03-01T15:56:27Z 2009-03-01T15:56:27Z Eretria is located on the western coast of the island of Euboea (Evia), facing the coast of Attica across the narrow Euboian Gulf. The earliest surviving mention of Eretria was by Homer in the Iliad, who listed Eretria as one of the Greek cities which sent ships to the Trojan War. The modern town of Eretria was established in 1824, after the Greek independence, and is now a popular beachside resort. [url=http://kevrekidis.deviantart.com/gallery/][b]Kevrekidis Photography a ... Eretria_06..idis_V8.jpg

Eretria is located on the western coast of the island of Euboea (Evia), facing the coast of Attica across the narrow Euboian Gulf.
The earliest surviving mention of Eretria was by Homer in the Iliad, who listed Eretria as one of the Greek cities which sent ships to the Trojan War.
The modern town of Eretria was established in 1824, after the Greek independence, and is now a popular beachside resort.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Ancient Corinth (Part II) tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-02-05:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=47&entryid=148654 2009-02-05T10:29:47Z 2009-02-05T10:29:47Z The site of ancient Corinth was first inhabited in the Neolithic period (5000-3000 BC), and flourished as a major Greek city from the 8th century BC until its destruction by the Romans in 146 BC. Its commanding position on the Isthmus of Corinth, the narrow strip of land that separates the Peloponnese from northern Greece, was the primary basis of its importance. In Greek mythology, it was in Corinth that Jason, the leader of the Argonauts, abandoned Medea. During ... Ancient_Co..idis_V8.jpg

The site of ancient Corinth was first inhabited in the Neolithic period (5000-3000 BC), and flourished as a major Greek city from the 8th century BC until its destruction by the Romans in 146 BC. Its commanding position on the Isthmus of Corinth, the narrow strip of land that separates the Peloponnese from northern Greece, was the primary basis of its importance. In Greek mythology, it was in Corinth that Jason, the leader of the Argonauts, abandoned Medea. During the Trojan War Corinthians participated under the leadership of Agamemnon. Being a leading naval power as well as a rich commercial city enabled ancient Corinth to establish colonies in Syracuse on the island of Sicily. Beginning in 582 BC, in the spring of every second year the Isthmian Games were celebrated in honor of the sea god Poseidon. The Corinthians developed the Corinthian order, the third order of the classical architecture after the Ionic and the Doric. The city was a major participant in the Persian Wars, offering forty war ships in the sea Battle of Salamis. After the end of the Peloponnesian War, Corinth and Thebes, which were former allies with Sparta in the Peloponnesian League, had grown dissatisfied with the hegemony of Sparta and started the Corinthian War against it. Corinth was conquered by Philip II of Macedon in 338 BC, but it was named the meeting place of Philip's new Hellenic confederacy. After Philip was assassinated, Alexander the Great immediately came to Corinth to meet with the confederacy, confirm his leadership, and forestall any thoughts of rebellion. At the Isthmian Games of 336 BC, the Greeks chose Alexander the Great to lead them in war against the Persians. Corinth was partially destroyed by the Romans in 146 BC, but in 44 BC it was rebuilt as a Roman city under Julius Caesar. The Apostle Paul visited Corinth in the 50s AD and later wrote two letters to the Christian community at Corinth (the books of Corinthians in the New Testament). Although Paul intended to pass through Corinth a second time before he visited Macedonia, circumstances were such that he first went from Troas to Macedonia before stopping at Corinth for a "second benefit". In 267 AD, the invasion of the Herulians initiated the decline of the city. During Alaric's invasion of Greece in 395–396, he destroyed Corinth and sold many of its citizens into slavery. Nevertheless, Corinth remained inhabited for many centuries through successive invasions, destructions and plagues.

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©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Amarynthos tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-02-01:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=45&entryid=147999 2009-02-01T08:51:00Z 2009-02-01T08:51:00Z Amarynthos (Vatheia) – Evia, Greece. Αμάρυνθος (Βάθεια) – Εύβοια. Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART ©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis ... Amarynthos..idis_V8.jpg

Amarynthos (Vatheia) – Evia, Greece.

Αμάρυνθος (Βάθεια) – Εύβοια.

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©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Epiphany tag:travellerspoint.com,2009-01-19:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=44&entryid=146326 2009-01-20T04:01:50Z 2009-01-20T04:00:44Z Epiphany (alteration of Greek epiphaneia appearance, manifestation, from epiphainein to manifest), or 'The Blessing of the Waters', is held every year on January 6 throughout all of Greece. In this ritual a priests toss a cross in the waters, followed by young men diving into the frigid sea to retrieve the symbol of the Christian faith. The brave swimmer who recovers the cross is thought to be blessed with good luck throughout the year. Epiphany is celebrated by both ... Epiphany_K..idis_V8.jpg

Epiphany (alteration of Greek epiphaneia appearance, manifestation, from epiphainein to manifest), or 'The Blessing of the Waters', is held every year on January 6 throughout all of Greece. In this ritual a priests toss a cross in the waters, followed by young men diving into the frigid sea to retrieve the symbol of the Christian faith. The brave swimmer who recovers the cross is thought to be blessed with good luck throughout the year.

Epiphany is celebrated by both the Eastern and Western Churches, but a major difference between them is over precisely which historical events the feast commemorates. For Western Christians the feast primarily commemorates the coming of the Magi, while in the East the feast celebrates the Baptism of Christ in river Jordan. However, in both cases the essence of the feast is the same: the manifestation of Christ to the world (whether as an infant or in the Jordan), and the Mystery of the Incarnation.

For the Orthodox Christians called the Feast of Theophany (Greek: Θεοφάνεια, "God shining forth" or "divine manifestation"), it is one of the Great Feasts of the liturgical year. This term has been used to refer to appearances of the gods in the ancient Greek and Near Eastern religions. Theophanies occur throughout Greek mythology, while the Iliad is our earliest source for descriptions in the Classical tradition.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2009 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Mediterranean Sunrise II tag:travellerspoint.com,2008-12-26:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=43&entryid=142943 2008-12-26T16:44:03Z 2008-12-26T16:44:03Z Greetings from Greece! Merry Christmas & a Happy New Year! Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART ©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis ... Mediterran..idis_V8.jpg

Greetings from Greece!
Merry Christmas & a Happy New Year!

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Athens Polytechnic Uprising tag:travellerspoint.com,2008-11-24:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=42&entryid=138835 2008-11-24T19:33:44Z 2008-11-24T19:31:47Z National Metsoveion Polytechnic School of Athens – Greece. Monument to the victims of the Athens Polytechnic Uprising, 17 November, 1973. In April 21, 1967, Greece had been under a military dictatorship (Junta), a regime which abolished civil rights, dissolved political parties and exiled, imprisoned and tortured politicians and citizens based on their political beliefs. The Polytechnion Uprising is an outstanding event in recent Greek history. On November, 1973 students at ... Politechni..idis-V3.jpg

National Metsoveion Polytechnic School of Athens – Greece.
Monument to the victims of the Athens Polytechnic Uprising, 17 November, 1973.

In April 21, 1967, Greece had been under a military dictatorship (Junta), a regime which abolished civil rights, dissolved political parties and exiled, imprisoned and tortured politicians and citizens based on their political beliefs.
The Polytechnion Uprising is an outstanding event in recent Greek history. On November, 1973 students at the Athens Polytechnic School (Polytechneion) went on strike, barricaded themselves in the school campus and started protesting against the military regime. Events began on November 14th and ended on November 17th, 1973 with the unprovoked intervention of army tanks and the attack by the army and police against those besieged inside the Polytechnic Campus and the demonstrating supporters outside in Patission Street. These few days saw the growth of an impressive popular uprising centered at the Polytechnic School. The people of Greece and the country's youth all rallied in support of the students, united around the ideals: Freedom, Democracy, Independence, Education and Social Progress. The toll of the Polytechnion uprising was tragic. Several demonstrators were killed; many more were arrested by the military police and were tortured for months in military prisons. The Junta fell a few months later and Polytechnion is being commemorated every year on November the 17th. The student uprising was a courageous and heroic act of resistance against the military dictatorship, and therefore a symbol of resistance to tyranny.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis

Εθνικό Μετσόβιο Πολυτεχνείο.
Το μνημείο του αγώνα των φοιτητών στο προαύλιο του Πολυτεχνείου.

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Sphinx tag:travellerspoint.com,2008-10-31:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=41&entryid=135429 2008-10-31T21:43:27Z 2008-10-31T21:43:27Z Archeological museum of Ancient Corinth - Greece. Marble sphinx from a funerary monument (6th century B.C.) In Greek mythology, the Sphinx had the face of a woman, the breast, feet and tail of a lion, and the wings of a bird. She was sent by the Gods to plague the town of Thebes as punishment for some ancient crime. There she preyed on the youths of the land, devouring all those who failed to solve her riddle. As she ... Sphinx_Kevrekidis_V2.jpg

Archeological museum of Ancient Corinth - Greece.
Marble sphinx from a funerary monument (6th century B.C.)

In Greek mythology, the Sphinx had the face of a woman, the breast, feet and tail of a lion, and the wings of a bird. She was sent by the Gods to plague the town of Thebes as punishment for some ancient crime. There she preyed on the youths of the land, devouring all those who failed to solve her riddle. As she declared that she would not depart unless anyone interpreted her riddle, Creon offered the kingship of Thebes to any man who could destroy her.

This was the riddle of the Sphinx: "What is that which has one voice and yet becomes four-footed and two-footed and three-footed?"

When many had already perished, Oedipus, having heard the proclamation, came to Thebes, and meeting the Sphinx, gave the right answer, declaring that the riddle referred to man; for as a little child he is four-footed, as an adult two-footed, and as an old man he uses a cane as a third limb.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Agia Napa - Cyprus tag:travellerspoint.com,2008-10-31:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=40&entryid=135427 2008-10-31T21:39:47Z 2008-10-31T21:39:47Z Agia Napa ( Ayia Napa - Αγία Νάπα ) – Cyprus. Not too long ago Agia Napa was a small sleepy fishing village with a small harbour at the south coast of the island of Cyprus. In recent years, it started to get an international reputation for being a clubbing paradise similar to Ibiza and Mykonos. Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART ©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis ... Agia_Napa_..idis_V2.jpg

Agia Napa ( Ayia Napa - Αγία Νάπα ) – Cyprus.

Not too long ago Agia Napa was a small sleepy fishing village with a small harbour at the south coast of the island of Cyprus. In recent years, it started to get an international reputation for being a clubbing paradise similar to Ibiza and Mykonos.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Sailing II tag:travellerspoint.com,2008-10-15:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=39&entryid=133297 2008-10-15T20:49:54Z 2008-10-15T20:49:54Z South Evian Gulf – Greece. Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART ©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis ... Sailing_II..idis_V2.jpg

South Evian Gulf – Greece.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Jason in Eretria tag:travellerspoint.com,2008-10-15:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=38&entryid=133296 2008-10-15T20:45:59Z 2008-10-15T20:45:59Z My son Jason, in Eretria. Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART ©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis ... Jason_Kevrekidis_V2.jpg

My son Jason, in Eretria.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Linea nautica tag:travellerspoint.com,2008-09-29:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=37&entryid=131023 2008-09-29T17:15:48Z 2008-09-29T17:15:48Z Eretria - Greece. Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART ©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis ... Linea_naut..idis_V2.jpg

Eretria - Greece.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis

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Olympic Games tag:travellerspoint.com,2008-08-16:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=36&entryid=124362 2008-08-16T09:19:53Z 2008-08-16T09:19:53Z The 2004 Summer Olympic Games, officially known as the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad, were celebrated in Athens, Greece, in August, 2004. 11,099 athletes competed, accompanied by 5,501 team officials from 201 countries. Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART ©2004 - 2008 Jordan Kevrekidis ... Olympic_Ga..rekidis.jpg

The 2004 Summer Olympic Games, officially known as the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad, were celebrated in Athens, Greece, in August, 2004.

11,099 athletes competed, accompanied by 5,501 team officials from 201 countries.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2004 - 2008 Jordan Kevrekidis

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High Bridge of Halkida tag:travellerspoint.com,2008-08-12:/blog/?domain=kevrekidis&thisblog_entryid=35&entryid=123829 2008-08-12T08:35:49Z 2008-08-12T08:35:49Z The suspension bridge of Halkida links the island of Evia to mainland Greece. With a length of 695 meters is one of the widest bridges in Greece. Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART ©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis ... Halkida_Hi..rekidis.jpg

The suspension bridge of Halkida links the island of Evia to mainland Greece.
With a length of 695 meters is one of the widest bridges in Greece.

Kevrekidis Photography at deviantART

©2008 Jordan Kevrekidis

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