Luxe Beat Magazine NOVEMBER 2014 | Page 28

Northern Greece, “Greek To Me” And Thoroughly Enjoyable By Norman Hill Photos by Maralyn D. Hill History Ancient Greece, especially in the 5th and 4th centuries B.C., is considered the foundation of Western civilization. These Greeks were the first to “think about thinking.” Athens is recognized as the center of this thriving culture. Aristotle and Plato were philosophical giants who first developed complete systems of philosophy. A few other city states also participated in this oasis, but not all of them. Sparta, for instance, was a military dictatorship and, in some ways, From White Tower looking out on Thessaloniki Greece. The main threat, though, soon arose from the Ottoman Muslim Turks. They gradually took over Asia Minor, the Balkans, and Greece, culminating in their conquest of Constantinople in 1453. represents the blueprint for current totalitarian regimes. In the 4th century, Macedonian Greeks conquered the rest of the country and Alexander the Great began his eastern campaign to take over the rest of the known world. He swiftly extended his conquests to Asia Minor, to the original Babylon and then to Persia. By marriages to local princesses, his lieutenants established Hellenistic regimes throughout these areas that lasted for centuries. The Turks were not unduly brutal in forcing conversions to the Muslim religion. A small number of Greeks did, since it broug ht some improved treatments. Several Orthodox churches moved to very small headquarters, to keep profiles as low as possible. After 1492, the Turks allowed immigration of Jews, newly expelled from Spain. However, Alexander himself died mysteriously at age 33 in 323 B.C., in Babylon. In Greece itself, his reign did not last long. From the West, Rome conquered Greece in the 3rd and 2nd centuries B.C. They admired many Greek writers and philosophers (although apparently not Aristotle). Greek Gods were also copied with Roman names. In the 1820s, Greece, along with other Balkan nations, began a struggle for independence. Although the official date is 1821, the struggle to expel Turks was not completed until 1827 or so. But this newly independent nation only comprised about half of what we consider Greece today. Centuries later, when Rome was divided, Greece was a prominent part in history of the eastern or Byzantine Orthodox Empire. Nearby Constantinople was the capital for hundreds of years. In a later war with the Ottoman Empire, ending in 1912, Greece finally took back the northern half of Grecian territory, as well as the island of Crete. In 1922, an historic swap was completed between the two countries. Several hundred thousand citizens of each country, Muslims in Greece and Orthodox Greeks living in Asia Minor, changed Although the Crusades were primarily aimed at Palestine, invaders from Catholic Europe did spread some havoc in Orthodox 28 ALL PHOTOS BY LEAH WALKER. I thought I knew a lot of Greek history, but this trip, among other things, greatly expanded my knowledge base.