Greece
Greece (, (
IPA: []), or , (
IPA: [])), officially the
Hellenic Republic (, (
IPA: []), is a country in
south-eastern Europe, situated on the southern end of the
Balkan peninsula. It is bordered by
Bulgaria, the
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and
Albania to the north and by
Turkey to the east. The
Aegean Sea lies to the east of mainland Greece while the
Ionian Sea lies to the west. Both, parts of the eastern
Mediterranean basin, feature a vast number of
islands.
Regarded as the cradle of
western civilization and being the birthplace of
democracy[Finley, M. I. Democracy Ancient and Modern. 2d ed., 1985. London: Hogarth.], Western
philosophy[History of Philosophy, Volume 1 by Frederick Copleston], the
Olympic games,
western literature,
political science and
drama[Brockett, Oscar G. History of the Theatre. 6th ed., 1991. Boston; London: Allyn and Bacon.] including both
tragedy and
comedy, Greece has a very long and remarkably rich history during which its culture has proven to be especially influential in
Europe,
Northern Africa and the
Middle East. Today, Greece is a highly
developed nation, member of the
European Union since 1981 and a member of the
Eurozone since 2001.
, see
also Names of the Greeks for a different angle.Prehistory and Antiquity
The shores of Greece's
Aegean Sea saw the emergence of the first civilizations in Europe, namely the
Minoan civilization and the
Mycenaen.
Plato has described how the Greeks live round the Aegean Archipelago "like frogs around a pond"; their name has always been associated with the sea. Around the Greek isles and shores sprouted city-states, or poleis- each with their own individual governments and social infra-structure. Under Athens and Sparta they formed a coalition to repel the 'eastern threat' of the Persians. This was subsequently followed with the flourishing of Athens and the dawn of the Classical Era. The internal struggle between Spartans and Athenians, the Peloponnesian war saw the end of that period, and shortly after all parts of Greece were united under the rule of
Alexander the Great and aimed once again to defeat the Persians. Alexander led the Greeks, along with his Macedonian natives, on a victorious campaign which united the Greek and Oriental worlds and started a new era of Greek history, the
Hellenistic.
Byzantine period
Militarily, Greece declined allowing the
Romans to conquer the land (168 BC onwards). Greece became a province of the
Roman Empire, but Greek culture continued to dominate the eastern Mediterranean. When the Roman Empire finally split in two, the
Eastern Roman Empire, known as the Byzantine Empire, centered around
Constantinople (known in ancient times as
Byzantium), remained Greek in nature, encompassing Greece itself.
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The most famous of the surviving Byzantine mosaics of the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople - Christ on the walls of the upper southern gallery. The mosaics were made in the 12th century. |
During the period of the
Byzantine Empire Greece experienced fluctuating fortunes, but it succeeded in Hellenising and institutionalizing most of its new invaders.
From the late 8th century, the Empire began to recover from the devastating impact of successive invasions, and the re-conquest of Greece began. Greeks from
Sicily and
Asia Minor were brought in as settlers. Slaves were either driven out or assimilated. By the middle of the 9th century, Greece was dominated by those of Hellenic heritage once more, and Greek cities began to recover due to improved safeguards against barbarous incursion and restored central governance. A number of contemporary Greek historians have chronicled those centuries.
The invasions of the
Turks after the battle of
Manzikert in 1071 and the ensuing civil wars largely passed the region by, and Greece continued its provincial existence unharmed. When the Byzantine Empire was rescued by the resolute leadership of the three Comnenus emperors
Alexius I,
John II and
Manuel I Comnenus, Greece prospered. Archaeological evidence tells us that many of the medieval towns, including
Athens,
Thessaloniki,
Thebes and
Corinth, experienced a period of rapid and sustained growth, starting in the eleventh century and continuing until the end of the twelfth century. The growth of the towns attracted the Venetians, and this interest in trade appears to have further increased economic prosperity in Greece.
The 11th and 12th centuries are said to be the Golden Age of
Byzantine art in Greece. During the Crusading epochs between 1204 and 1458, Greece was hit by a series of western European armies in the name of religion.
The end of an era arrived with the
Fall of Constantinople on
May 29 1453 to the
Ottoman Empire. The empire had been for centuries the center of Christendom from the ancient classical world of the Roman Empire to the dawn of the Renaissance. Throughout this medieval era it had remained a source of constancy. But during the 15th century, Greece was gradually conquered by the Ottomans.
Ottoman period
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Theodore Vryzakis, The sortie of Messologhi |
While the
Ottomans were completing the main conquest of the Greek Mainland, two Greek migrations occurred. The first saw the Greek intelligentsia migrate to
Western Europe — especially to Italy — and contribute to the advent of the
Renaissance. The second migration of Greeks left the plains of the Greek peninsula and resettled in the mountains, the islands and Greek regions outside Ottoman control. In the mountainous regions, the Ottomans were unable to create a permanent military and administrative presence. As a result some Greek mountain clans across the peninsula, as well as some islands, were able to maintain a status of independence. The
millet system contributed to the ethnic cohesion of Orthodox Greeks by segregating the various peoples within the Ottoman Empire based on religion. The
Orthodox Church, a religious institution with a keen sense of its national character, contributed to the Greeks from all geographical areas of the peninsula (i.e. mountains, plains, and islands) to preserve their ethnic, cultural and linguistic heritage during the years of the Ottoman rule (although at the time it was not strictly speaking a "Greek" church — the Greek Church was instituted after the liberation). Eventually, religion played an integral part in the formation of the Modern Greek and other post-Ottoman national identities.
Creation of the modern Greek state
The Ottomans ruled Greece until the early 19th century. On March 25, 1821 the Greeks
rebelled and declared their independence, which was finally recognized in 1829. Much of Europe saw the
Greek War of Independence, with its accounts of Turkish
atrocities, in a romantic light (see, for example, the 1824 painting
the Massacre of Chios by
Eugène Delacroix). Scores of non-Greeks volunteered to fight for the cause. In 1830, the Russian ex-minister of foreign affairs,
Ioannis Kapodistrias, a noble Greek from the
Ionian Islands, was chosen as President of the new Republic. However, the Great Powers soon dissolved that republic and installed a "Greek" monarchy. The first king,
Otto of Bavaria, was of the
Bavarian
House of Wittelsbach and the subsequent line from the German-Danish
House of Oldenburg. During the 19th and especially the early 20th centuries, in a series of wars with the Ottomans, Greece sought to enlarge its boundaries to include the ethnic Greek population of the Ottoman Empire (the Ionian Islands were 'donated' by Britain in 1863, and Thessaly was ceded by the Ottomans without a fight). As a result of the
Balkan Wars of 1912-13
Crete,
Chios,
Samos, most of
Epirus and southern
Macedonia were incorporated into Greece. Greek territory and population expanded until reaching its present configuration, in 1947.
The War of Independence also set in motion significant internal changes including the establishment of major new cities and centers of trade. The first was
Ermoupoli (also often spelled "
Hermoupolis", on the island of
Syros (often called "Syra" in the 19th century). Thousands of Greek islanders found themselves compelled to flee from their homes, and
Syros was the island on which a great many eventually settled. Their numbers increased greatly following the massacre of
Chios in 1822 and the devastation of
Psara in 1824. The new city of
Ermoupoli was soon established, more than half of its inhabitants originated from
Chios. In a very short time
Ermoupoli became the main city in Greece. Thousands of ships were built and launched at
Syros in the 19th century. The
Greek Steamship Company of
Ermoupoli was the first in Greece. The first telegraph station in Greece was established there in 1858, eventually followed by the
Eastern Telegraph Company in the 1870s with more than 100 employees making
Syros a major hub in their globe-spanning telegraph network.
The second major city to grow forth from the springboard of the War of Independence was
Athens itself and it became the capital. The third major centre to emerge was
Piraeus with its three natural harbors. By the 1880s it had grown enormously as a centre for shipbuilding and as a general hub of shipping. Soon one the largest construction initiative in Europe took place, the creation of the
Corinth Canal between 1881 and 1893.
World War I and its aftermath
In
World War I, Greece sided with the
entente powers against the
Ottoman Empire and the other
Central Powers. In the war's aftermath, the
Great Powers awarded a small part of
Asia Minor to Greece, centered around the city of
Smyrna (known as
Izmir today) which had a majority of Greek population. At that time, however, the Turkish nationalists, led by
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, denounced the Sultan's government in Istanbul and formed a new one in Ankara. During the
Greco-Turkish War (1919â€"1922) the Turks eventually defeated the Greek armies and regained control of Asia Minor. Soon afterwards, the
Treaty of Lausanne was signed, fixing the borders to this date. A population exchange was included in the agreement and immediately afterwards, around five hundred thousand Muslims then living in mainland Greek territory left for Turkey in
exchange for more than 1.22 million Greek residents of Asia Minor (excluding
Constantinople, Imvros and Tenedos).
In 1936, General
Ioannis Metaxas established an
authoritarian conservative dictatorship in Greece known as the
4th of August Regime. Greece under Metaxas is compared to Spain at the time, although it lacked the political violence associated with
Francisco Franco's regime.
Shortly before the outbreak of
World War II, a referendum was held resulting in a controvertial 'yes' to restore the monarchy, under King Constantine I.
World War II
On
28 October 1940, the
Italian dictator
Mussolini demanded that Greece allows Axis troops to enter the country and to surrender its arms. Though Greece was alone and most of Europe occupied by the
Axis, the Greek government gave a simple negative response (see
Okhi Day) — thereby immediately siding with the
Allies. Okhi means "no" in Greek, which is what thousands of anti-Axis Greek demonstrators shouted that day. The Italian troops poured over from Albania. The Greek counter-attack along the
Albanian front gave the Allies their first victory against
fascism (see
Greco-Italian War). Mussolini's armies were saved from defeat with the intervention of Italy's Axis ally,
Germany, since
Hitler and his generals needed to secure their strategic southern flank. German forces whose ranks included troops from
Bulgaria and
Italy successfully invaded and began occupying Greece on April–May 1941 (
Battle of Greece). Germany held onto the country until 1944 when German troops withdrew.
In May 1941, to reduce the threat of a counter-offensive by Allied forces in
Egypt, the Germans attempted to
seize Crete in a massive attack by
paratroopers. Allied forces, along with Cretan civilians offered fierce resistance. Crete fell, but it is pointed out by historians that the whole Greek campaign delayed German plans to initiate
German invasion against the
Soviet Union, thereby extending the campaign into the punishing Russian winter. In addition, the extremely heavy losses of
paratroop forces sustained by the Germans in Crete foiled a planned German campaign in the Middle East against British-held Iraq and its oil fields.
During the years of
Nazi occupation, hundreds of thousands of Greeks died in direct combat, concentration camps and starvation. During the freezing winter of 1941–1942 the occupying forces implemented a country-wide, systematic confiscation of all foodstuffs as punishment for delaying critical German war plans in Eastern Europe. Ultimately, the threat of a general rebellion was used by the Archbishop Damaskinos of Athens to convince the Germans to relent and abandon the confiscation of food in the spring of 1942. Greek partisan resistance to the occupation was fierce, often with bitter retaliation from the occupiers. Perhaps the most ignominious example of this is the massacre at
Kalavryta, where the entire male population (1258 men) of the city of Kalavrita was executed on a single day, 13th December 1943. The occupiers murdered the greater part of the
Jewish community despite efforts by the
Greek Orthodox Church and many Greeks to shelter their fellow Jewish Greek citizens. The Jewish community of
Thessaloniki suffered the heaviest toll by far. During the war the Greek economy languished. After liberation, Greece experienced an equally bitter
Greek Civil War between the communist-led Democratic Army and the
Hellenic Army that lasted until 1949, when the communists were defeated in the battle of Grammos-Vitsi.
Post-war development and turmoil
During the 1950s and 1960s, Greece experienced gradual and consistent economic growth, aided by significant grants and loans by the
United States through the
Marshall Plan. However, starting in 1965, a series of turbulent political events unfolded that led to severe political uncertainty. The crisis eventually got out of hand for both the elected government and King
Constantine II and ended dramatically in the early hours of
April 21,
1967. That morning, a coordinated effort by a number of Colonels and other military officials succeeded in a
coup d'etat and they soon managed to establish a fierce
military junta. General elections planned by the conservative government to be held on May 28 never took place. In the following years, a number of supporters of the left wing as well as a number of politicians and
communists were arrested and brutally tortured by the regime. Other politicians, however, evaded capture and found political refuge in such European countries as
France and
Sweden. Nevertheless, the then head of state, former
King Constantine officially acknowledged the new regime and it was duly recognized by the international community. Diplomatic relations continued unabated. In 1973, however, the junta abolished the
Greek monarchy. Later that same year, in October of 1973, the head of the junta, colonel
George Papadopoulos appointed politician
Spiros Markezinis as the Prime Minister. A few weeks later, on
November 14, law students that opposed the regime realized that the obvious parody of this "government" would not end unless they took some serious form of action. Therefore they decided to take control of the Athens Law School and in so doing they inspired the students of the
Athens Polytechnic School, who imitated them.
It should be noted that institutions of higher education in Greece are considered to provide political asylum. By
November 16, however, the streets around the Polytechnic School resembled a battlefield, leaving no choice for the junta than to respond with military tactics. In the early hours of November 17, a tank smashed the gate of the historical building of the Athens Polytechnic School causing bloodshed. Twenty students were killed. However, the now-famous
Athens Polytechnic Uprising marked the beginning of a series of events that would eventually result to the end of Papadopoulos' rule. One week later, on November 25 both Papadopoulos and Markezinis were overthrown by a countercoup headed by junta hardliner Brigadier
Ioannides. A new head,
Phaedon Gizikis, and a new Prime Minister,
Adamantios Androutsopoulos, were appointed by the regime. Ioannides, however, had even more in his mind. The following July, he backed a planned coup d'etat to overthrow the Cypriot President, Archbishop
Makarios. This gave a pretext for neighboring Turkey to intervene militarily, allegedly to protect the Turkish minority that resided on the island response to a Greek coup by EOKA-B.
Turkey invaded Cyprus on
July 20,
1974 and managed to occupy the northern part or a third of its territory. The colonels did not succeed in either predicting the Turkish action or in effectively mobilizing their armed forces in order to prevent it. This signaled the end for the regime that collapsed within a matter of days.
Main article: Greek military junta of 1967-1974
Newfound stability
In the evening of
July 23,
1974, ex Premier
Constantine Karamanlis was invited back from
Paris where he had found a political refuge. In the morning hours of the following day, the plane carrying him landed in
Athens amidst massive celebrations by cheering crowds that could not believe that the ordeal they had to endure for seven years was over. Karamanlis was immediately appointed as the interim prime minister under President
Gizikis. Karamanlis founded the
conservative party and he then won the elections. Democracy had finally been restored and a democratic republican constitution came into force in 1975. In addition, a referendum held that same year, confirmed the will of the overwhelming majority of the Greek people to abolish the monarchy — this time democratically. Therefore former King
Constantine II and his family remained in Britain and were not allowed free access to the country until 2004. Meanwhile, yet another prominent figure of the past, charismatic politician
Andreas Papandreou had also returned from the
United States and he had already founded the Panhellenic Socialist Party or
PASOK. Karamanlis won the 1977 parliamentary elections as well but he resigned in 1980, giving his way to
George Rallis. However, Papandreou won the elections held on
October 18,
1981 by landslide and he formed the first socialist government in the history of the nation. Papandreou dominated the Greek political course for almost 15 years, up until his death in
June 23,
1996.
Greece as a member of the European Union
The country became the tenth member of the
European Union on
January 1,
1981. Over the course of the last 25 years, and particularly during this past decade, Greece has experienced a remarkable economic growth. Widespread investments in industrial enterprises and heavy infrastructure as well as funds from the European Union and growing revenues from tourism, shipping and a fast growing service sector have raised the standard of living to unprecedented levels. The country adopted the
Euro in 2001.
Greco-Turkish relations
Relations between Greece and neighboring
Turkey improved after successive earthquakes hit both countries in the summer of 1999. The so called "earthquake diplomacy" generated an outpouring of sympathy and generous assistance provided by ordinary Greeks and Turks in each case. These acts were encouraged from the top and took many foreigners by surprise, preparing the public for a breakthrough in bilateral relations, which had been marred by decades of hostility over anti-Greek pogroms, territorial disputes and the situation in the divided island of
Cyprus. In January 1996, the countries reached the brink of war after a Turkish military invasion on the islets of
Imia/Kardak, situated in the southeastern
Aegean Sea. While Greece quoted the treaties and conventions that the islets belong to Greece, Turks claimed that the relevant articles were rather unclear. The crisis was diffused after the personal intervention of U.S President
Bill Clinton.
Ten years later, Greece has become one of the key supporters of Turkey's struggle to enter the
European Union. Yet, despite the confidence Greece and
Cyprus have shown, voting "Yes" for
Turkey in order to begin its entry negotiations with the
European Union in October 2005, certain key issues remain unresolved. Furthermore,
Turkey still denies access to Cypriot vessels to its territory, an obligation towards the EU with a 2006 deadline. Turkey defends that this restriction regarding Cypriot vessels was taken after the trade embargo decision against the northern, Turkish occupied, Cyprus. The issue remains as a deadlock that EU, Greece and Turkey must agree on a common ground giving equal trade rights to both nations in Cyprus. Other unfulfilled obligations include
Christian minority rights, acknowledgement of the
Orthodox Church of Constantinople and the role of the
Ecumenical Patriarch.
In May 2006, the death of a Greek fighter pilot following a mid-air collision with a Turkish fighter jet, strained Greco-Turkish relations once again. Although airspace violations and domestic tensions in Turkey - between secular and Islamist movements, military and pro-European interests - have raised concers for the current Greco-Turkish entente, both countries continue to maintain the recent climate of raprochement.
The 2004 Olympic Games
On
September 5,
1997, the International Olympic Committee awarded the
2004 Olympic Games to
Athens. Certain foreign media raised some concerns over Greece's ability to meet specific construction deadlines as well as its ability to handle a potential terrorist attack. By the end of the Games, a number of international media apologized in print for their harsh criticism of Greek preparations. In effect, the
2004 Olympic Games were widely hailed as a spectacular success [
1].
The 1975
constitution includes extensive specific guarantees of civil liberties. The President of the Republic, elected by an increased majority of the Parliament for a term of five years, is nominally the Head of State.
However, it is the
Prime Minister and
cabinet, as well as the Vouli (parliament) that play the central role in the political process, while the president performs limited governmental functions, in addition to ceremonial duties.
Greeks elect the 300 members of the country's
unicameral parliament (the ) by secret ballot for a maximum of four years, but elections can occur at more frequent intervals. Greece uses a complex reinforced
proportional representation electoral system, which discourages splinter parties and ensures that the party that leads in the national vote will win a majority of seats. A party must receive 3% minimum of the total national vote to gain representation. Typically, a 41%+ is sufficient to guarantee the rule by a single party.
Greek parliamentary politics hinge upon the principle of the "", the "declared confidence" of Parliament to the Prime Minister and his/her administration. This means that the President of the Republic is bound to appoint as Prime Minister a person who will be approved by a majority of the Parliament's members (i.e. 151 votes). With the current electoral system, it is the leader of the party gaining a plurality of the votes in the Parliamentary elections who gets appointed Prime Minister. An administration may, at any time, seek a "vote of confidence"; conversely, a number of Members of Parliament may ask that a "vote of reproach" be taken. Both are rare occurrences with usually predictable outcomes as voting outside the party line happens very seldom.
On
March 7,
2004,
Kostas Karamanlis, president of the
New Democracy party and nephew of the late
Constantine Karamanlis, was elected as the new
Prime Minister of Greece, thus marking his party's first electoral victory in nearly 11 years. Karamanlis took over Government from
Kostas Simitis, who had been in office since January 1996.
Peripheries
Greece consists of 13 administrative regions known as peripheries, which subdivide further into the 54
prefectures (, singular — ). For more detailed maps of the peripheries and/or prefectures, see the
Peripheries of Greece or
Prefectures of Greece articles.
Autonomous region
Beyond these one autonomous region exists:
Mount Athos ( — Holy Mountain) in
Macedonia, a monastic state under Greek sovereignty.
Prefectures
The 54
prefectures ( , singular ) subdivide into 147
provinces (, singular ), which contain 1,033
municipalities and communities: 900 urban municipalities (, singular ) and 133 rural communities (, singular ). Before 1999, Greece's local government structure featured 5,775 local authorities: 457 and 5,318 , subdivided into 12,817 localities (, singular ).
Greece consists of a mountainous and craggy mainland jutting out into the sea at the southern end of the
Balkans; though small, it has the 9th longest coastline in the world. The
Peloponnesus peninsula (separated from the mainland by the canal of the
Isthmus of Corinth); and
numerous islands (around 3,000), including
Crete,
Rhodes,
Kos,
Euboea, the
Dodecanese and the
Cycladic groups of the
Aegean Sea as well as the
Ionian Sea islands. Greece has the 7th or 8th longest coastline in the world with more than 15,000
kilometres (9,300
mi) of coastline; its land boundary is 1,160 kilometres (721 mi). Hardly anyone lives further than 50 km from the sea.Four fifths of Greece consist of mountains or hills, making the country one of the most mountainous in
Europe. Devastating annual forest fires - many of them initiated by land developpers - have transformed vast expanses of the land into a lunar landscape. Western Greece contains a number of lakes and wetlands and it is dominated by the
Pindus mountain range. Pindus has a maximum elevation of 2,636 metres (8,648
ft) and it is essentially a prolongation of the
Dinaric Alps.
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Greece as seen from orbit |
The range continues through the western Peloponnese, crosses the islands of
Kythera and Antikythera and find its way into southwestern Aegean, in the island of
Crete where it eventually ends. (the islands of the Aegean are peaks of underwater mountains that once consisted an extension of the mainland). Pindus is characterized by its high, steep peaks, often dissected by numerous canyons and a variety of other karstic landscapes. Most notably, the impressive
Meteora formation consisting of high, steep boulders provides a breathtaking experience for the hundreds of thousands of tourists who visit the area each year. Special lifts transfer visitors to the scenic monasteries that lye on top of those rocks. Meteora are situated in the
Trikala prefecture. The Vikos-Aoos Gorge is yet another spectacular formation. The Vicos-Aoos Gorge is a popular hotspot for those in fond of extreme sports.
The mythical
Mount Olympus is the tallest mountain in the country, located in the northern
Pieria prefecture, near
Thessaloniki. Mytikas in Olympus range has a height of 2,919 metres (9,570 ft) at its tallest peak. Once considered the throne of the Gods, it is today extremely popular among hikers and climbers who deem its height as a challenge. Moreover, northeastern Greece features yet another high altitude mountain range, the Rhodope range, spreading across the periphery of
East Macedonia and Thrace; this area is covered with vast, thick, ancient forests including the famous Dadia.
Expansive plains are primarily located in the prefectures of
Thessaly,
Central Macedonia and
Thrace. They constitute key economic regions as they are among the few arable places in the country.
Volos and
Larissa are the two largest cities of Thessaly.
Greece's
climate consists of three types that influence well defined regions of its territory. Those are the Mediterranean, the Alpine and the Temperate types. The first one features mild, wet winters and hot, dry summers. The Cyclades, the Dodecanese, Crete, Eastern Peloponessus and parts of the Sterea Ellada region are mostly affected by this particular type. Temperatures rarely reach extreme values although snowfalls do occur occasionally even in the Cyclades or Crete during the winter months. The Alpine type is dominant mainly in Western Greece (Epirus, Central Greece, Thessaly, Western Macedonia as well as in the western and central parts of Peloponessus, including the prefectures of
Achaea,
Arcadia and parts of
Laconia, where the
Pindus range passes by). Finally the Temperate type affects Central and Eastern Macedonia as well as Thrace, mainly affecting the cities of
Komotini,
Xanthi and the towns of northern
Evros; it features cold, damp winters and hot, dry summers.
Athens is located in a transitional area featuring both the Mediterranean and the Alpine types. The city's northern suburbs are dominated by the Alpine type while the downtown area and the southern suburbs enjoy a typical Mediterranean type.
Rare marine species such as the Pinniped Seals and the
Loggerhead Sea Turtle live in the seas surrounding mainland Greece, while its dense forests are home to the endangered
brown bear , the
lynx, the
Roe Deer and the Wild Goat.
Greece has one of the best-performing economies in the
euro zone [
2]. The country has a
capitalist economy with the public sector accounting for about 40% of the
GDP. The Greek
tourism industry remains thriving and its contribution in the GDP growth is considered important for foreign exchange earnings. Greece is a global leader in
shipping (ranking first in terms of ownership of vessels and third by tonnage and flag registration) [
3]. Exports of manufactured goods including telecommunications hardware and software, agricultural products and other foodstuff and fuels account for a significant part of Greek income.
The country is the largest investor in southeastern
Europe as far as the previous sectors are concerned. After the end of the
Greek Civil War in 1949 and for more than two decades Greece achieved the second highest economic growth rate in the world after
Japan, resulting in a dramatic improvement of living standards (the "
Greek economic miracle"). Since Greece became a full member of the
European Union, on
January 1,
1981, it has benefited from cohesion funds, along with
Portugal,
Spain and
Ireland. Those funds have proven particularly helpful to the nation's economic development since the 1980s. Starting in 1989, Greece joined the ranks of (22 at that time) "
developed countries".
The country enjoys a high standard of living, ranking 24th on the 2005
Human Development Index and 22nd on
The Economist's 2005 world-wide quality-of-life index[
4]. Average per capita income in 2005 was estimated at $22,800 [https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/gr.html] or 85% of the
EU average in PPS (Purchasing Power Standards). Greek Economy has seen uninterrupted strong growth since 1992 and above the
EU average continuously since 1994. Part of the Greek economy's impressive growth is attributed to the fact that the previous government tightened fiscal policy regulations in the run-up to the country's entry into the
Eurozone, set on
January 1,
2001 (
Greek euro coins). Also liberalization of domestic markets, a modernized banking system, as well as massive investment ahead of the
2004 Olympic Games, have fueled the economy even further. With the collapse of communism in the early 1990s, Greece has seen a huge influx of foreign labor force, mainly from neighboring
Albania, but also from
Pakistan and
Eastern Europe.
Today the country is dealing with various challenges, including the reduction of
unemployment which currently stands at 9.5%, the reform of the social security system, the partial privatization of the
public sector, the overhauling of the tax system and the further reduction of bureaucratic inefficiencies. Forecasts predict that 2006 will be yet another year of substantial economic growth, estimated to reach 3.7%, which is above the European Union's average. Preliminary estimates of the
International Monetary Fund for the year 2006 put the Greek GDP per capita in PPP at $23,518
[IMF World Economic Outlook, April 2006.].
Reduction of the
fiscal deficit to the Eurozone target of 3% of
GDP has also become a key issue. Shortly after its election, the new conservative
New Democracy government revealed to the
Eurostat agency that the previous figures supplied to it by the
PASOK government as the basis of the Greek entry into the Eurozone were
not correct (although even according to the "corrected" numbers, when calculated with the methodology still in force at the time of the Greek application for entry, the country had actually met the criteria for entry into the Eurozone). Under a negotiated agreement, the EU gave Greece a two year deadline (budgets of 2005 and 2006) in order to bring the deficit in line with the criteria of the
European stability pact. In 2005, the new government managed to reduce the fiscal deficit by almost two percentage points and the goal of reaching the 3% target by the end of 2006 is now deemed as certain by
Eurostat.
The
Bank of Greece, now a subsidiary of the
European Central Bank, functions as the nation's central bank. This bank is not the same as the "
National Bank of Greece", the country's largest commercial bank.
The 2006 Economic Agenda of the Greek government includes the privatization of several state owned companies as well as the creation of a new national airline that will replace
Olympic Airlines.
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A Greek hotel in Neoi Pori |
Greece has traditionally been one of the most popular tourist destinations on a global basis and each year, particularly in the summer months, the nation's numerous cosmopolitan islands get crammed by millions of international visitors. Famous natural beauties, golden beaches, idyllic sunsets, a legendary nightlife, ancient and historic sites and the world famous
Greek cuisine combined with a unique hospitality and an impressively developing tourism infrastructure make Greece an irresistible destination for many. The spectacular success of the
2004 Olympic Games boosted the country's international prestige even further and reaffirmed its status as one of the safest places to be. In 2004, Greece ranked 12th in terms of international tourist arrivals when more than 14.2 million visitors came to the country, many of which combining both vacations and attendance of Olympic athletic events. In 2005, however, those numbers increased by 14%, surpassing 16.1 million arrivals. In 2006, those figures are only expected to grow bigger. An interesting fact is that according to a survey conducted in
China in 2005, Greece was voted as the Chinese people's number one choice.
Overall, this year the Greek Ministry of Tourism plans to invest more than 38 million euros in the advertisement of the tourism industry, one of the most essential sectors of the Greek economy. That is 4 times more than the amount spent in 2002 by the previous government. In addition, the government intends to promote winter tourism in Greece, which could potentially increase international arrivals even further.
Apart from
Athens, other top ranking tourist destinations include the cosmopolitan islands of
Mykonos,
Santorini,
Rhodes,
Crete,
Corfu,
Paros,
Ios,
Kos,
Kefallonia,
Zakynthos and
Hydra as well as the northern
Halkidiki peninsula.
Greece is largely an ethnically homogeneous country with only small minorities. Most of the population is ethnically
Greek (98% according to
The World Factbook) with only small minorities, the main ethnic minorities being
Turks,
Pomaks,
Jews,
Armenians and various
Roma groups. There are also various linguistic and cultural minorities which largely self-identify as Greeks. Such groups include
Arvanites,
Aromanians (Vlachs) and
Slavophones (some of whom determine themselves as
Bulgarians or
Macedonian Slavs, although this is not recognized by the Greek government).
About 60-65% of immigrants to Greece have come from
Albania (following the fall of communism) although some 200,000 have been documented as ethnic
Greeks or . The other principal
nationalities are, according to residence permit data,
Bulgarians,
Armenians,
Romanians,
Ukrainians,
Pakistanis and
Georgians; overall, over 180 different nationalities have been recorded. The legal status of immigrants has been very tenuous since the 1990s (as throughout
the European Union), with high levels of illegality). Since 1997 three legalization programs were enacted by the Greek state (a fourth went through in 2005).
Several prominent Greek sportsmen migrated to Greece as ethnic Greeks from
Albania and
Georgia in the 1990s, including the legendary
weightlifters
Pyrros Dimas and
Kakhi Kakhiashvili.
Religion
|
A disused mosque or dzami located in the castle at the lakefront in Ioannina. |
The majority of Greek citizens (95-98%) belong to the
Greek Orthodox Church and most celebrate at least the main religious feasts, especially Pascha (Greek Orthodox Easter).
Muslims make up about 1.3% of the population, and live primarily in
Thrace. Greece also has some
Roman Catholics, mainly in the city of
Patras,
Corfu, and the
Cyclades islands of
Syros,
Paros,
Tinos, and
Naxos; some
Protestants and some
Jews, mainly in
Thessaloniki (which had a major Jewish population until the
Holocaust). Some groups in Greece have started an attempt to reconstruct
Hellenic polytheism, the ancient Greek
pagan religion. See also:
Greek Orthodox Church.
Prior to Ottoman rule, Greece was part of the
Byzantine Empire. The civil and religious capital of the Empire was moved to
Constantinople (modern day
Istanbul) by
Constantine I. Since Constantine's time the Orthodox Christian faith has flourished and spread throughout Eastern Europe. Even under
Turkish rule and repeated attempts of proselytization — firstly by the
Jesuits and then by the Protestants —
Orthodox Christianity survived and flourished.
The
Greek Constitution reflects this relationship by guaranteeing absolute freedom of religion while still defining the "prevailing religion" of Greece as the
Eastern Orthodox Church of Christ. Non-Greek Orthodox members of parliament are sworn in accordance to their own faith.
One small part of Greece,
Mount Athos, is recognised by the Greek constitution as an Autonomous Monastic Republic, although foreign relations remain the prerogative of the Greek state. Spiritually, Mount Athos is under the Patriarchate of Constantinople and is therefore in communion with all the monasteries on Mount Athos and with the Orthodox Church based in various countries.
The
Uniate Greek Byzantine Catholic Church, which is in union with
Rome, has a few parishes and chapels in those Greek towns and on those Greek islands, which had been for a longer period of time under
Venetian rule. Presently this particular Eastern rite Catholic community, which uses the
Byzantine Greek liturgy, also takes care of the Ukrainian minority in Greece.
Latin rite Catholics are a larger minority, to be found in the major towns.
Jews have been present in Greece for the last 2,300 years. The earliest reference to a Greek Jew is in an inscription, dated circa 300–250 BC found in Oropos, a small coastal town between
Athens and
Boeotia, and refers to him as "Moschos, son of Moschion the Jew" who was in all likelihood, a slave. The first Greek Jewish population became known as the
Romaniotes and their language became known as
Yevanic (from the
Hebrew word for Greece: /). From the 16th century onwards,
Salonica, a city in northern Greece, had one of the largest (mostly
Sephardic by then) Jewish communities in the world and a solid rabbinical tradition. On the island of
Crete, the Jews played an important part in the transport trade. During
World War II, when Greece was occupied by
Nazi Germany, 86% of the Greek Jews were sent to
concentration camps by the occupating Axis forces ; only a minority survived and most of them have emigrated to
Israel. Greece's Jewish community today is estimated at 4,500.
According to the most recent Eurostat "Eurobarometer" poll, in 2005
[ Eurobarometer, http://europa.eu.int/comm/public_opinion/archives/ebs/ebs_225_report_en.pdf], 81% of Greek citizens responded that "they believe there is a God", whereas 16% answered that "they believe there is some sort of spirit or life force" and only 3% that "they do not believe there is a God, spirit, nor life force". This would make Greece one of the most religious countries in the European Union of 25 members, after Malta and Cyprus.
Greece has a particularly rich culture and it has produced a vast number of contributions to philosophy, astronomy, science, and the arts.
*Richard Clogg,
A Concise History of Greece, Second Edition, Cambridge University Press 2002
*
List of cities in Greece*
Classics*
Greek products**
List of Greek companies*
Education in Greece*
List of Greek dances*
List of museums in Greece*
Greek National Holidays*
List of research institutes in Greece*
List of universities in Greece*
Agriculture in Greece*
History of Greece**
Ancient Greece**
Greek mythology**
Hellenistic civilization**
Byzantine Empire**
Byzantium**
Ottoman Empire**
Philhellenism*
Greek products*
Greek Language*
Communications in Greece**
List of Greek language television channels**
List of radio stations in Greece*
Greek newspapers*
Transportation in Greece**
List of Greek roads**
Rio-Antirio bridge**
Greek Steamship Company founded in
Ermoupoli (Hermoupolis), 1856
**
Corinth Canal*
Foreign relations of Greece*
Military of Greece*
Postage stamps and postal history of Greece*
Conscription in Greece*
Plateia Syntagmatos and
Vouli ton Ellinon*
Greeks*
Minorities in Greece*
List of Greeks*
Greek American*
Greek Canadians*
Greek Australian*
Greek Jews*
Human rights in Greece*
Hellenic National Intelligence Service*
National Statistical Service of Greece*
Soma Hellinon Proskopon*
Eurovision Song Contest 2006*
Chronology of Greece from the World History Database*
Encyclopaedia Britannica - Greece's country page*
Official Greek Tourist Organization site*
Official Greek Statistics Site*
History of Greece: Primary Documents*
President of the Hellenic Republic*
Prime Minister of Greece*
Hellenic Parliament*
The Greek Heritage*
Hellenic History*
Open Directory Project: Greece*
Greek Royal Family (Deposed)
*
Hellas Net: 360° Virtual tours from various areas of Greece*
Greece main cities list and satellite viewsroa-rup:Gãrtsiands-nl:Griekenlaandfiu-vro:Kriika