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Featured

A History of Ancient Greek Musical Instruments

instruments topalidis 600

Music is like birds in flight, it is not constrained by borders. It is like the air we breathe, it is not owned by any nation. Ancient Greeks considered music to be an essential element of intellectual, artistic and social activity as well as of everyday life. They believed that it forms man's character and thus it is an ideal medium for bringing up the young (Hadziaslani 2012).

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The History of Kerasous (Giresun), Pontos

kerassunde bell tower church metamorphosis 1000

The Greek colony of Kerasous (modern Giresun), on the Black Sea coast in Pontos, north-eastern Anatolia, is 130 km west of Trabzon. It was established by Greeks from Sinope sometime after 630 BC, the approximate date when the Greek colony of Sinope was founded and well before 400 BC, when Xenophon and his Greek mercenaries visited the settlement.

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The Trabzon Cinema Hall

trabzon cinema

Trebizond had one fine theatre for moving pictures, built for the purpose by the Trebizond Cinematographic Co. 

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A History of Trabzon

Trabzon is a town with over 230,000 people (2009 census – it is currently believed to be over 300,000) on the northeast Turkish Black Sea coast at latitude 41°00′ north and longitude 39°45′ east (Figure 1).  It is the second largest Turkish urban centre (after Samsun) on the Black Sea.

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The Soumela Monastery

sumela trabzongov600

The former Greek Orthodox monastery of the Virgin Mary, Soumela is 48 km south of Trabzon via Machka in Turkey. The monastery is perched on the cliff face of Karadağ.

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The Church of Hypapante (Taşbaşı kilisesi)

hypapante church psomiadis school 550

One of the most prominent surviving churches in Ordu is the Church of Hypapante (Gr: Ναός της Υπαπαντής του Χρηστού, Tr: Taşbaşı kilisesi) which stands above the sea in the western area of the town. It stands on a high walled terrace and is in the form of a basilica five bays long and 3 bays wide, with three apses.  

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Tokat - Τοκάτη - Tokat

Tokat (Gr: Τοκάτη) is a town and province in the western region of Pontus. It was also referred to as Tokation (Gr: Τοκάτιον). During the Byzantine era it was known as Evdokiada (Gr: Eυδοκιάδα). During Ottoman times the name Tokat was the name of the district and sanjak which the town was situated in. It was sometimes called Dokia (Gr: Δόκεια).

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Santa - Σάντα - Dumanli

Santa (Gr: Σάντα, Tr: Dumanli) was a Greek town in Pontus in the province of Argyroupolis (Gümüşhane) situated 52km south east of Trabzon. Prior to 1923 it was made up of 7 settlements and was inhabited entirely by Greeks, approximately 6,000 in number.

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Kotyora - Κοτύωρα - Ordu

Kotyora (Ordu in Turkish) is a seaside town which dates back to Ancient times. There is a reference in Homer's Iliad in which it is referred to as Kitoros. In ancient times and before the Persians. the town enjoyed it's own independence, as it did during the reign of the Kingdom of Pontus. 

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Amisos - Σαμψούντα - Samsun

Amisos, otherwise known as Samsunta by Greeks, is today’s Samsun, a city situated on the shoreline of the historic region of Pontus, in today’s Turkey. The name Samsunta is derived from Amisos; Eis Amison (towards Amisos) -> s’Amison -> s’Amson -> Samsunta. 

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