Ευγενία Δρακοπούλου, Εικόνες του αγώνα των Ελλήνων στην ιστορική ζωγραφική της Ευρώπης [Ιστορική Βιβλιοθήκη 1821, 07], Αθήνα: Ινστιτούτο Ιστορικών Ερευνών - EIE, 2021. Σελ. 140, εικ. 29. ISBN 978-960-7905-74-1. (original) (raw)

2021, Ενημερωτικό Δελτίο του Ελληνικού Τμήματος του ICOM, περ. Β', αρ. 18

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Δημογραφικά δεδομένα και πληθυσμιακές μετακινήσεις κατά την περίοδο της επανάστασης του 1821- Σεμιναριακή εργασία

2011

The population movements caused by the Greek Revolution between 1821-1830 left their mark on the new Greek state. The Greek Revolution can be seen as a breach with the past, in the sense of a partial transcendence of a sense of localism and a narrow view of the world in a limited geographical and cultural space. These movements contributed to the creation of the first urban centers which would be the future cities of the new Greek state, certainly smaller in relation to other counterparts in Europe and even the Ottoman area, but albeit larger than those of the Pre-revolutionary past. The Revolution, however, can also be interpreted as a continuation, as demographic changes took place late in the 19th century, continuing pre-revolutionary trends. Large population movements had taken place in the past, during Venetian and Ottoman rule, voluntarily or involuntarily, although perhaps not with such a significant impact. The new Greek state became a pole of attraction for Greeks from the Ottoman countries, and respectively many Greek citizens sought economic opportunities in Ottoman urban centers such as Izmir and Istanbul. The contacts between the two sides of the Aegean did not stop with the formation of the new Greek State in 1830, they continued until their final cessation a century later.

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