Frankly there are more than 10 inventions and discoveries our ancestors are responsible for, but…
HISTORY
Anzac. Lemnos. 1915. is a one-hour documentary with a fresh angle on the well-documented Gallipoli…
Mitropanos sadly passed away on April 17, 2012 after suffering from a heart attack and pulmonary edema. He will always be remembered as one of Greece’s most recognisable voices and legend of the rebetika genre.
Archaeologists discovered a helmet dating back 2,500 years that belonged to the Greek-Illyrian era. The…
Stavros Spyros Niarchos, the shadowy Greek shipping magnate who spent much of his life battling…
Native Chicagoan Stephanie Cotirsilos returns to her hometown for a book talk and signing hosted by HAWC Great Lakes Region.
The Official Rehearsal of the lighting Ceremony of the Olympic Flame that took place in…
Born on the island of Zakynthos, Georgios Tertsetis (1800-April 15, 1874) was a fighter in…
The 2000 year old Anisa Plate shows that Greek was spoken in Anatolia at that time
On this day, April 12, 2018, flight lieutenant Giorgos Baltadoros lost his life. The fallen…
Archaeologists have uncovered a stunning new fresco depicting Helen of Troy in the ancient Roman…
Despina Achladioti known as the Lady of Ro (Κυρά της Ρω) was a passionate Greek…
Eight Spetses ships carried out a raid and captured three Turkish ones on Milos
About halfway up to the Monastery of Agios Ioannis on Patmos is the Cave of the…
The First Victory of the Greeks – The Liberation of Salona
Not to miss the exhibition “Stories that end well: The return of 3 antiquities” exploring the long process of repatriation of 3 Greek ancient artefacts from Atlanta’s Emory Uni to Greece.
The centuries-old texts were erased, and then written over, by monks at Saint Catherine’s Monastery in Egypt
Mayor of Hanover Belit Onay handed it over in a ceremony, joined by Greece’s Consul General Ioannis Vikelidis and others.
Although encouraged by the ancient Greeks, the Olympic marathon is a fully modern invention.