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Thessaloniki ˌ 8 ɛ s e l e ˈ n iː k i Greek 8essalonikh 8esaloˈnici also known as Thessalonica English ˌ 8 ɛ s e l e ˈ n aɪ k e ˌ 8 ɛ s e ˈ l ɒ n ɪ k e Saloniki Salonika or Salonica s e ˈ l ɒ n ɪ k e ˌ s ae l e ˈ n iː k e is the second largest city in Greece with slightly over one million inhabitants in its metropolitan area and the capital of the geographic region of Macedonia the administrative region of Central Macedonia and the Decentralized Administration of Macedonia and Thrace It is also known in Greek as h Symprwteyoysa i Symprotevousa literally the co capital a reference to its historical status as the Symbasileyoysa Symvasilevousa or co reigning city of the Byzantine Empire alongside Constantinople Thessaloniki 8essalonikhSalonikiCityClockwise from top Aristotle Square Church of Saint Demetrius Science Centre and Technology Museum Panoramic view of Thessaloniki s waterfront and the Thermaic Gulf White Tower of ThessalonikiFlagSealLogoNickname The Nymph of the Thermaic GulfLocation of the Municipality of Thessaloniki within Central Macedonia ThessalonikiShow map of GreeceThessalonikiShow map of BalkansThessalonikiShow map of EuropeCoordinates 40 38 25 N 22 56 8 E 40 64028 N 22 93556 E 40 64028 22 93556Country GreeceGeographic region MacedoniaAdministrative regionCentral MacedoniaRegional unitThessalonikiFounded315 BC 2339 years ago IncorporatedOct 1912 111 years ago Municipalities7Government TypeMayor council government Mayor PASOK Area Municipality19 307 km2 7 454 sq mi Urban111 703 km2 43 129 sq mi Metro1 285 61 km2 496 38 sq mi Highest elevation250 m 820 ft Lowest elevation0 m 0 ft Population 2021 Municipality319 045 Rank2nd urban 2nd metro in Greece Urban802 572 Metro1 006 112Demonym s Thessalonian ThessalonicanTime zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST 53xxx 54xxx 55xxx 56xxxArea code2310Vehicle registrationNA to NXPatron saintSaint Demetrius 26 October Gross regional domestic product PPP 2015 18 77 billion 20 83 billion Per capita 16 900Websitewww thessaloniki gr Thessaloniki is located on the Thermaic Gulf at the northwest corner of the Aegean Sea It is bounded on the west by the delta of the Axios The municipality of Thessaloniki the historical centre had a population of 319 045 in 2021 while the Thessaloniki metropolitan area had 1 006 112 inhabitants and the greater region had 1 092 919 It is Greece s second major economic industrial commercial and political centre and a major transportation hub for Greece and southeastern Europe notably through the Port of Thessaloniki The city is renowned for its festivals events and vibrant cultural life in general Events such as the Thessaloniki International Fair and the Thessaloniki International Film Festival are held annually Thessaloniki was the 2014 European Youth Capital The city s main university Aristotle University is the largest in Greece and the Balkans The city was founded in 315 BC by Cassander of Macedon who named it after his wife Thessalonike daughter of Philip II of Macedon and sister of Alexander the Great It was built 40 km southeast of Pella the capital of the Kingdom of Macedonia An important metropolis by the Roman period Thessaloniki was the second largest and wealthiest city of the Byzantine Empire It was conquered by the Ottomans in 1430 and remained an important seaport and multi ethnic metropolis during the nearly five centuries of Turkish rule From the 16th to the 20th century it was the only Jewish majority city in Europe It passed from the Ottoman Empire to the Kingdom of Greece on 8 November 1912 Thessaloniki exhibits Byzantine architecture including numerous Paleochristian and Byzantine monuments a World Heritage Site and several Roman Ottoman and Sephardic Jewish structures Thessaloniki is a popular tourist destination in Greece In 2013 National Geographic Magazine included Thessaloniki in its top tourist destinations worldwide while in 2014 Financial Times FDI magazine Foreign Direct Investments declared Thessaloniki as the best mid sized European city of the future for human capital and lifestyle Names and etymologyInscription reading To Queen Thessalonike Daughter of Philip Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki The original name of the city was 8essalonikh Thessalonike It was named after the princess Thessalonike of Macedon the half sister of Alexander the Great whose name means Thessalian victory from 8essalos Thessalos and Nikh victory Nike honoring the Macedonian victory at the Battle of Crocus Field 353 352 BC Minor variants are also found including 8ettalonikh Thettalonike 8essalonikeia Thessalonikeia 8essaloneikh Thessaloneike and 8essalonikewn Thessalonikeon The name Salonikh Saloniki is first attested in Greek in the Chronicle of the Morea 14th century and is common in folk songs but it must have originated earlier as al Idrisi called it Salunik already in the 12th century It is the basis for the city s name in other languages Solѹn Solunŭ in Old Church Slavonic סאלוניקו Saloniko in Judeo Spanish שאלוניקי prior to the 19th century סלוניקי Saloniki in Hebrew Selenik in Albanian language سلانیك Selanik in Ottoman Turkish and Selanik in modern Turkish Salonicco in Italian Solun or Solun in the local and neighboring South Slavic languages Saloniki Saloniki in Russian Saruna in Aromanian and Săruna in Megleno Romanian In English the city can be called Thessaloniki Salonika Thessalonica Salonica Thessalonika Saloniki Thessalonike or Thessalonice In printed texts the most common name and spelling until the early 20th century was Thessalonica matching the Latin name through most of rest of the 20th century it was Salonika By about 1985 the most common single name became Thessaloniki The forms with the Latin ending a taken together remain more common than those with the phonetic Greek ending i and much more common than the ancient transliteration e Thessaloniki was revived as the city s official name in 1912 when it joined the Kingdom of Greece during the Balkan Wars In local speech the city s name is typically pronounced with a dark and deep L characteristic of the accent of the modern Macedonian dialect of Greek The name is often abbreviated as 8es nikh HistoryFrom classical antiquity to the Roman Empire Ancient coin depicting Cassander son of Antipater and founder of the city of Thessaloniki The city was founded around 315 BC by the King Cassander of Macedon on or near the site of the ancient town of Therma and 26 other local villages He named it after his wife Thessalonike a half sister of Alexander the Great and princess of Macedonia as daughter of Philip II Under the kingdom of Macedonia the city retained its own autonomy and parliament and evolved to become the most important city in Macedonia Twenty years after the fall of the Kingdom of Macedonia in 168 BC in 148 BC Thessalonica was made the capital of the Roman province of Macedonia Thessalonica became a free city of the Roman Republic under Mark Antony in 41 BC It grew to be an important trade hub located on the Via Egnatia the road connecting Dyrrhachium with Byzantium which facilitated trade between Thessaloniki and great centres of commerce such as Rome and Byzantium Thessaloniki also lies at the southern end of the main north south route through the Balkans along the valleys of the Morava and Axios river valleys thereby linking the Balkans with the rest of Greece The city became the capital of one of the four Roman districts of Macedonia At the time of the Roman Empire about 50 AD Thessaloniki was also one of the early centres of Christianity while on his second missionary journey Paul the Apostle visited this city s chief synagogue on three Sabbaths and sowed the seeds for Thessaloniki s first Christian church Later Paul wrote letters to the new church at Thessaloniki with two letters to the church under his name appearing in the Biblical canon as First and Second Thessalonians Some scholars hold that the First Epistle to the Thessalonians is the first written book of the New Testament The fourth century AD Rotunda of Galerius one of several Roman monuments in the city and a UNESCO World Heritage Site In 306 AD Thessaloniki acquired a patron saint St Demetrius a Christian whom Galerius is said to have put to death Most scholars agree with Hippolyte Delehaye s theory that Demetrius was not a Thessaloniki native but his veneration was transferred to Thessaloniki when it replaced Sirmium as the main military base in the Balkans A basilical church dedicated to St Demetrius Hagios Demetrios was first built in the fifth century AD and is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site When the Roman Empire was divided into the tetrarchy Thessaloniki became the administrative capital of one of the four portions of the Empire under Galerius Maximianus Caesar where Galerius commissioned an imperial palace a new hippodrome a triumphal arch and a mausoleum among other structures In 379 when the Roman Prefecture of Illyricum was divided between the East and West Roman Empires Thessaloniki became the capital of the new Prefecture of Illyricum The following year the Edict of Thessalonica made Christianity the state religion of the Roman Empire In 390 troops under the Roman Emperor Theodosius I led a massacre against the inhabitants of Thessalonica who had risen in revolt against the detention of a favorite charioteer By the time of the Fall of Rome in 476 Thessaloniki was the second largest city of the Eastern Roman Empire Byzantine era and Middle Ages Section of the Walls of Thessaloniki From the first years of the Byzantine Empire Thessaloniki was considered the second city in the Empire after Constantinople both in terms of wealth and size with a population of 150 000 in the mid 12th century The city held this status until its transfer to Venetian control in 1423 In the 14th century the city s population exceeded 100 000 to 150 000 making it larger than London at the time During the sixth and seventh centuries the area around Thessaloniki was invaded by Avars and Slavs who unsuccessfully laid siege to the city several times as narrated in the Miracles of Saint Demetrius Traditional historiography stipulates that many Slavs settled in the hinterland of Thessaloniki however modern scholars consider this migration to have been on a much smaller scale than previously thought In the ninth century the Byzantine missionaries Cyril and Methodius both natives of the city created the first literary language of the Slavs the Old Church Slavonic most likely based on the Slavic dialect used in the hinterland of their hometown A naval attack led by Byzantine converts to Islam including Leo of Tripoli in 904 resulted in the sack of the city Church of the Acheiropoietos 5th century at the city s centre The economic expansion of the city continued through the 12th century as the rule of the Komnenoi emperors expanded Byzantine control to the north Thessaloniki passed out of Byzantine hands in 1204 when Constantinople was captured by the forces of the Fourth Crusade and incorporated the city and its surrounding territories in the Kingdom of Thessalonica which then became the largest vassal of the Latin Empire In 1224 the Kingdom of Thessalonica was overrun by the Despotate of Epirus a remnant of the former Byzantine Empire under Theodore Komnenos Doukas who crowned himself Emperor and the city became the capital of the short lived Empire of Thessalonica Following his defeat at Klokotnitsa however in 1230 the Empire of Thessalonica became a vassal state of the Second Bulgarian Empire until it was recovered again in 1246 this time by the Nicaean Empire In 1342 the city saw the rise of the Commune of the Zealots an anti aristocratic party formed of sailors and the poor which is nowadays described as social revolutionary The city was practically independent of the rest of the Empire as it had its own government a form of republic The zealot movement was overthrown in 1350 and the city was reunited with the rest of the Empire The capture of Gallipoli by the Ottomans in 1354 kicked off a rapid Turkish expansion in the southern Balkans conducted both by the Ottomans themselves and by semi independent Turkish ghazi warrior bands By 1369 the Ottomans were able to conquer Adrianople modern Edirne which became their new capital until 1453 Thessalonica ruled by Manuel II Palaiologos r 1391 1425 itself surrendered after a lengthy siege in 1383 1387 along with most of eastern and central Macedonia to the forces of Sultan Murad I Initially the surrendered cities were allowed complete autonomy in exchange for payment of the kharaj poll tax Following the death of Emperor John V Palaiologos in 1391 however Manuel II escaped Ottoman custody and went to Constantinople where he was crowned emperor succeeding his father This angered Sultan Bayezid I who laid waste to the remaining Byzantine territories and then turned on Chrysopolis which was captured by storm and largely destroyed Thessalonica too submitted again to Ottoman rule at this time possibly after brief resistance but was treated more leniently although the city was brought under full Ottoman control the Christian population and the Church retained most of their possessions and the city retained its institutions A mosaic of Saint George in Saint Demetrios Church Thessalonica remained in Ottoman hands until 1403 when Emperor Manuel II sided with Bayezid s eldest son Suleyman in the Ottoman succession struggle that broke out following the crushing defeat and capture of Bayezid at the Battle of Ankara against Tamerlane in 1402 In exchange for his support in the Treaty of Gallipoli the Byzantine emperor secured the return of Thessalonica part of its hinterland the Chalcidice peninsula and the coastal region between the rivers Strymon and Pineios Thessalonica and the surrounding region were given as an autonomous appanage to John VII Palaiologos After his death in 1408 he was succeeded by Manuel s third son the Despot Andronikos Palaiologos who was supervised by Demetrios Leontares until 1415 Thessalonica enjoyed a period of relative peace and prosperity after 1403 as the Turks were preoccupied with their own civil war but was attacked by the rival Ottoman pretenders in 1412 by Musa Celebi and 1416 during the uprising of Mustafa Celebi against Mehmed I Once the Ottoman civil war ended the Turkish pressure on the city began to increase again Just as during the 1383 1387 siege this led to a sharp division of opinion within the city between factions supporting resistance if necessary with Western help or submission to the Ottomans In 1423 Despot Andronikos Palaiologos ceded it to the Republic of Venice with the hope that it could be protected from the Ottomans who were besieging the city The Venetians held Thessaloniki until it was captured by the Ottoman Sultan Murad II on 29 March 1430 Ottoman period Hot chamber of the men s baths in the Bey Hamam 1444 When Sultan Murad II captured Thessaloniki and sacked it in 1430 contemporary reports estimated that about one fifth of the city s population was enslaved Ottoman artillery was used to secure the city s capture and bypass its double walls Upon the conquest of Thessaloniki some of its inhabitants escaped including intellectuals such as Theodorus Gaza Thessalonicensis and Andronicus Callistus However the change of sovereignty from the Byzantine Empire to the Ottoman one did not affect the city s prestige as a major imperial city and trading hub Thessaloniki and Smyrna although smaller in size than Constantinople were the Ottoman Empire s most important trading hubs Thessaloniki s importance was mostly in the field of shipping but also in manufacturing while most of the city s tradespeople were Jewish Demographics of Thessaloniki between 1500 and 1950 During the Ottoman period the city s population of Ottoman Muslims including those of Turkish origin as well as Albanian Muslim Bulgarian Muslim especially the Pomaks and Greek Muslim of convert origin and Muslim Roma like the Sepecides Romani grew substantially According to the 1478 census Selanik Ottoman Turkish سلانیك as the city came to be known in Ottoman Turkish had 6 094 Christian Orthodox households 4 320 Muslim ones and some Catholic No Jews were recorded in the census suggesting that the subsequent influx of Jewish population was not linked to the already existing Romaniots community Soon after the turn of the 15th to 16th century however nearly 20 000 Sephardic Jews immigrated to Greece from the Iberian Peninsula following their expulsion from Spain by the 1492 Alhambra Decree By c 1500 the number of households had grown to 7 986 Christian ones 8 575 Muslim ones and 3 770 Jewish By 1519 Sephardic Jewish households numbered 15 715 54 of the city s population Some historians consider the Ottoman regime s invitation to Jewish settlement was a strategy to prevent the Christian population from dominating the city The city became both the largest Jewish city in the world and the only Jewish majority city in the world in the 16th century As a result Thessaloniki attracted persecuted Jews from all over the world The White Tower of Thessaloniki built by the Ottomans in 1430 and rebuilt in 1535 has become a symbol of the city Thessaloniki was the capital of the Sanjak of Selanik within the wider Rumeli Eyalet Balkans until 1826 and subsequently the capital of Selanik Eyalet after 1867 the Selanik Vilayet This consisted of the sanjaks of Selanik Serres and Drama between 1826 and 1912 With the break out of the Greek War of Independence in the spring of 1821 the governor Yusuf Bey imprisoned in his headquarters more than 400 hostages On 18 May when Yusuf learned of the insurrection to the villages of Chalkidiki he ordered half of his hostages to be slaughtered before his eyes The mulla of Thessaloniki Hayriulah gives the following description of Yusuf s retaliations Every day and every night you hear nothing in the streets of Thessaloniki but shouting and moaning It seems that Yusuf Bey the Yeniceri Agasi the Subasi the hocas and the ulemas have all gone raving mad It would take until the end of the century for the city s Greek community to recover Thessaloniki was also a Janissary stronghold where novice Janissaries were trained In June 1826 regular Ottoman soldiers attacked and destroyed the Janissary base in Thessaloniki while also killing over 10 000 Janissaries an event known as The Auspicious Incident in Ottoman history In 1870 1917 driven by economic growth the city s population expanded by 70 reaching 135 000 in 1917 The last few decades of Ottoman control over the city were an era of revival particularly in terms of the city s infrastructure It was at that time that the Ottoman administration of the city acquired an official face with the creation of the Government House while a number of new public buildings were built in the eclectic style in order to project the European face both of Thessaloniki and the Ottoman Empire The city walls were torn down between 1869 and 1889 efforts for a planned expansion of the city are evident as early as 1879 the first tram service started in 1888 and the city streets were illuminated with electric lamp posts in 1908 In 1888 the Oriental Railway connected Thessaloniki to Central Europe via rail through Belgrade and to Monastir in 1893 while the Thessaloniki Istanbul Junction Railway connected it to Constantinople in 1896 Mustafa Kemal Ataturk founder of the modern republic of Turkey was born in Thessaloniki then known as Selanik in Ottoman Turkish in 1881 His birthplace on Islahhane Caddesi now 24 Apostolou Street is now the Ataturk Museum and forms part of the Turkish consulate complex 20th century and beyond The seafront of Thessaloniki as it was in 1917 In the early 20th century Thessaloniki was in the centre of radical activities by various groups the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization founded in 1897 and the Greek Macedonian Committee founded in 1903 In 1903 a Bulgarian anarchist group known as the Boatmen of Thessaloniki planted bombs in several buildings in Thessaloniki including the Ottoman Bank with some assistance from the IMRO The Greek consulate in Ottoman Thessaloniki now the Museum of the Macedonian Struggle served as the centre of operations for the Greek guerillas During this period and since the 16th century Thessaloniki s Jewish element was the most dominant it was the only city in Europe where the Jews were a majority of the total population The city was ethnically diverse and cosmopolitan In 1890 its population had risen to 118 000 47 of which were Jews followed by Turks 22 Greeks 14 Bulgarians 8 Roma 2 and others 7 By 1913 the ethnic composition of the city had changed so that the population stood at 157 889 with Jews at 39 followed again by Turks 29 Greeks 25 Bulgarians 4 Roma 2 and others at 1 Many varied religions were practiced and many languages spoken including Judeo Spanish a dialect of Spanish spoken by the city s Jews Constantine I of Greece with George I of Greece and the Greek army enter the city Thessaloniki was also the centre of activities of the Young Turks a political reform movement which goal was to replace the Ottoman Empire s absolute monarchy with a constitutional government The Young Turks started out as an underground movement until finally in 1908 they started the Young Turk Revolution from the city of Thessaloniki which lead to of them gaining control over the Ottoman Empire and put an end to the Ottoman sultans power Eleftherias Liberty Square where the Young Turks gathered at the outbreak of the revolution is named after the event Turkey s first president Mustafa Kemal Ataturk who was born and raised in Thessaloniki was a member of the Young Turks in his soldier days and also partook in the Young Turk Revolution Allied armies in Thessaloniki World War IThe 1st Battalion of the Army of National Defence marches on its way to the Macedonian front As the First Balkan War broke out Greece declared war on the Ottoman Empire and expanded its borders When Eleftherios Venizelos Prime Minister at the time was asked if the Greek army should move towards Thessaloniki or Monastir now Bitola Republic of North Macedonia Venizelos replied 8essalonikh me ka8e kostos Thessaloniki at all costs With the outnumbered Ottoman Army fighting a rearguard action against well prepared Greek forces at Yenidje Bulgarian troops advancing close by and the Ottoman naval base at Thessaloniki blockaded by the Greek Navy General Hasan Tahsin Pasha soon realised that it had become untenable to defend the city The sinking of the Ottoman ironclad Feth i Bulend in Thessaloniki harbour on 31 October O S 18 October 1912 although militarily negligible further damaged Ottoman morale As both Greece and Bulgaria wanted Thessaloniki the Ottoman garrison of the city entered negotiations with both armies On 8 November 1912 26 October Old Style the feast day of the city s patron saint Saint Demetrius the Greek Army accepted the surrender of the Ottoman garrison at Thessaloniki The Bulgarian army arrived one day after the surrender of the city to Greece and Hasan Tahsin Pasha commander of the city s defences told the Bulgarian officials that I have only one Thessaloniki which I have surrendered After the Second Balkan War Thessaloniki and the rest of the Greek portion of Macedonia were officially annexed to Greece by the Treaty of Bucharest in 1913 On 18 March 1913 George I of Greece was assassinated in the city by Alexandros Schinas In 1915 during World War I a large Allied expeditionary force established a base at Thessaloniki for operations against pro German Bulgaria This culminated in the establishment of the Macedonian Front also known as the Salonika front And a temporary hospital run by the Scottish Women s Hospitals for Foreign Service was set up in a disused factory In 1916 pro Venizelist Greek army officers and civilians with the support of the Allies launched an uprising creating a pro Alliedtemporary government by the name of the Provisional Government of National Defence that controlled the New Lands lands that were gained by Greece in the Balkan Wars most of Northern Greece including Greek Macedonia the North Aegean as well as the island of Crete the official government of the King in Athens the State of Athens controlled Old Greece which were traditionally monarchist The State of Thessaloniki was disestablished with the unification of the two opposing Greek governments under Venizelos following the abdication of King Constantine in 1917 On 30 December 1915 an Austrian air raid on Thessaloniki alarmed many town civilians and killed at least one person and in response the Allied troops based there arrested the German Austrian Bulgarian and Turkish vice consuls and their families and dependents and put them on a battleship and billeted troops in their consulate buildings in Thessaloniki Aerial photograph of the Great Fire of 1917 Most of the old centre of the city was destroyed by the Great Thessaloniki Fire of 1917 which was started accidentally by an unattended kitchen fire on 18 August 1917 The fire swept through the centre of the city leaving 72 000 people homeless according to the Pallis Report most of them were Jewish 50 000 Many businesses were destroyed as a result 70 of the population were unemployed Two churches and many synagogues and mosques were lost More than one quarter of the total population of approximately 271 157 became homeless Following the fire the government prohibited quick rebuilding so it could implement the new redesign of the city according to the European style urban plan prepared by a group of architects including the Briton Thomas Mawson and headed by French architect Ernest Hebrard Property values fell from 6 5 million Greek drachmas to 750 000 After the defeat of Greece in the Greco Turkish War and during the break up of the Ottoman Empire a population exchange took place between Greece and Turkey Over 160 000 ethnic Greeks deported from the former Ottoman Empire particularly Greeks from Asia Minor and East Thrace were resettled in the city changing its demographics Additionally many of the city s Muslims including Ottoman Greek Muslims were deported to Turkey ranging at about 20 000 people This made the Greek element dominant while the Jewish population was reduced to a minority for the first time since the 16th century This was part of an overall process of modern Hellenization which affected nearly all minorities within Greece turning the region into a hotspot of ethnic nationalism Registration of the male Jews of Thessaloniki in July 1942 Eleftherias Square 96 of deported Jews perished in Nazi concentration camps Part of Eleftherias Square and Stein mansion during the Axis occupation During World War II Thessaloniki was heavily bombarded by Fascist Italy with 232 people dead 871 wounded and over 800 buildings damaged or destroyed in November 1940 alone and the Italians having failed in their invasion of Greece it fell to the forces of Nazi Germany on 8 April 1941 and went under German occupation The Nazis soon forced the Jewish residents into a ghetto near the railroads and on 15 March 1943 began the deportation of the city s Jews to Auschwitz and Bergen Belsen concentration camps Most were immediately murdered in the gas chambers Of the 45 000 Jews deported to Auschwitz only 4 survived Indian troops sweep for mines in Salonika 1944 During a speech in Reichstag Hitler claimed that the intention of his Balkan campaign was to prevent the Allies from establishing a new Macedonian front as they had during WWI The importance of Thessaloniki to Nazi Germany can be demonstrated by the fact that initially Hitler had planned to incorporate it directly into Nazi Germany and not have it controlled by a puppet state such as the Hellenic State or an ally of Germany Thessaloniki had been promised to Yugoslavia as a reward for joining the Axis on 25 March 1941 As it was the first major city in Greece to fall to the occupying forces the first Greek resistance group formed in Thessaloniki under the name Eley8eria Eleftheria Freedom as well as the first anti Nazi newspaper in an occupied territory anywhere in Europe also by the name Eleftheria Thessaloniki was also home to a military camp converted concentration camp known in German as Konzentrationslager Pavlo Mela Pavlos Melas Concentration Camp where members of the resistance and other anti fascists were held either to be killed or sent to other concentration camps In September 1943 the Germans established the Dulag 410 transit camp for Italian Military Internees in the city On 30 October 1944 after battles with the retreating German army and the Security Battalions of Poulos forces of ELAS entered Thessaloniki as liberators headed by Markos Vafiadis who did not obey orders from ELAS leadership in Athens to not enter the city Pro EAM celebrations and demonstrations followed in the city In the 1946 monarchy referendum the majority of the locals voted in favor of a republic contrary to the rest of Greece After the war Thessaloniki was rebuilt with large scale development of new infrastructure and industry throughout the 1950s 1960s and 1970s Many of its architectural treasures still remain adding value to the city as a tourist destination while several early Christian and Byzantine monuments of Thessaloniki were added to the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1988 In 1997 Thessaloniki was celebrated as the European Capital of Culture sponsoring events across the city and the region Agency established to oversee the cultural activities of that year 1997 was still in existence by 2010 In 2004 the city hosted a number of the football events as part of the 2004 Summer Olympics Today Thessaloniki has become one of the most important trade and business hubs in Southeastern Europe with its port the Port of Thessaloniki being one of the largest in the Aegean and facilitating trade throughout the Balkan hinterland On 26 October 2012 the city celebrated its centennial since its incorporation into Greece The city also forms one of the largest student centers in Southeastern Europe is host to the largest student population in Greece and was the European Youth Capital in 2014 GeographyThessaloniki is located 502 kilometres 312 mi north of Athens Thessaloniki s urban area spreads over 30 kilometres 19 mi from Oraiokastro in the north to Thermi in the south in the direction of Chalkidiki Geology Thessaloniki lies on the northern fringe of the Thermaic Gulf on its eastern coast and is bound by Mount Chortiatis on its southeast Its proximity to imposing mountain ranges hills and fault lines especially towards its southeast have historically made the city prone to geological changes Since medieval times Thessaloniki has been hit by strong earthquakes notably in 1759 1902 1978 and 1995 On 19 20 June 1978 the city suffered a series of powerful earthquakes registering 5 5 and 6 5 on the Richter scale The tremors caused considerable damage to a number of buildings and ancient monuments but the city withstood the catastrophe without any major problems One apartment building in central Thessaloniki collapsed during the second earthquake killing many and raising the final death toll to 51 Panoramic view of the city from Kedrinos Lofos with Mount Olympus in the background Climate Thessaloniki s climate is transitional lying on the periphery of multiple climate zones According to the Koppen climate classification the city has a cold semi arid climate BSk with Mediterranean Csa and humid subtropical Cfa influences The Pindus mountain range greatly contributes to the generally dry climate of the area by substantially drying the westerly winds Winters are somewhat dry with occasional morning frost Snowfalls occur more or less every winter but the snow cover does not last for more than a few days During the coldest winters temperatures can drop to 10 C 14 F The record minimum temperature in Thessaloniki was 14 C 7 F On average Thessaloniki experiences frost sub zero temperature 32 days a year though that s less common near the city centre owing to the urban heat island effect which characterizes the city and is more pronounced during the winter months Foggy days occur sparsely roughly 17 days a year mainly in the autumn and winter months The coldest month of the year in downtown Thessaloniki is January with an average 24 hour temperature of 8 C 46 F The city is also quite windy in the winter months with January and February having an average wind speed of about 11 km h 7 mph Thessaloniki s summers are hot and moderately dry Maximum temperatures usually rise above 30 C 86 F but they rarely exceed 40 C 104 F while the average number of days the temperature is above 32 C 90 F is 32 Generally the sea breeze blowing from the Thermaic gulf helps moderate the city s temperatures The maximum recorded temperature in the city was 44 C 111 F Rain occasionally falls in the summer mainly during thunderstorms while heat waves occur sporadically though few of them are intense The hottest months of the year in downtown Thessaloniki are July and August with an average 24 hour temperature of around 27 5 C 82 F In 2021 Greece was taken to task by the European Commission for failing to curb consistently high air pollution levels in Thessaloniki Climate data for Aristotle University of Thessaloniki 32 m asl 1991 2020 normals extremes 1930 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 22 5 72 5 25 1 77 2 30 1 86 2 32 2 90 0 37 8 100 0 41 2 106 2 43 3 109 9 41 6 106 9 40 3 104 5 33 4 92 1 28 1 82 6 24 4 75 9 43 3 109 9 Mean daily maximum C F 10 6 51 1 12 4 54 3 15 6 60 1 19 7 67 5 25 2 77 4 30 0 86 0 32 3 90 1 32 3 90 1 27 8 82 0 22 1 71 8 16 6 61 9 11 8 53 2 21 4 70 5 Daily mean C F 7 0 44 6 8 4 47 1 11 2 52 2 14 9 58 8 20 0 68 0 24 7 76 5 27 0 80 6 27 1 80 8 22 7 72 9 17 7 63 9 12 8 55 0 8 3 46 9 16 8 62 3 Mean daily minimum C F 3 4 38 1 4 4 39 9 6 8 44 2 10 1 50 2 14 9 58 8 19 4 66 9 21 8 71 2 21 9 71 4 17 6 63 7 13 4 56 1 9 0 48 2 4 9 40 8 12 3 54 1 Record low C F 12 6 9 3 8 9 16 0 8 2 17 2 0 4 31 3 5 2 41 4 8 6 47 5 12 0 53 6 10 3 50 5 7 7 45 9 1 4 34 5 2 8 27 0 8 2 17 2 12 6 9 3 Average precipitation mm inches 34 1 1 34 33 6 1 32 39 5 1 56 37 5 1 48 51 0 2 01 31 6 1 24 27 0 1 06 25 1 0 99 37 4 1 47 43 7 1 72 40 9 1 61 48 2 1 90 449 6 17 7 Source Aristotle University of Thessaloniki World Meteorological Organization Climate data for Downtown Thessaloniki 2005 2024 averages and extremes Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 20 9 69 6 26 3 79 3 25 5 77 9 29 7 85 5 33 2 91 8 40 5 104 9 40 8 105 4 40 4 104 7 35 7 96 3 30 8 87 4 26 2 79 2 24 7 76 5 40 8 105 4 Mean daily maximum C F 11 0 51 8 12 7 54 9 15 4 59 7 19 3 66 7 24 3 75 7 28 9 84 0 31 5 88 7 31 4 88 5 26 9 80 4 21 4 70 5 17 0 62 6 12 5 54 5 21 0 69 8 Daily mean C F 8 2 46 8 9 7 49 5 12 2 54 0 15 9 60 6 20 8 69 4 25 2 77 4 27 8 82 0 27 9 82 2 23 6 74 5 18 5 65 3 14 3 57 7 9 9 49 8 17 8 64 1 Mean daily minimum C F 5 4 41 7 6 6 43 9 8 9 48 0 12 5 54 5 17 2 63 0 21 5 70 7 24 2 75 6 24 3 75 7 20 2 68 4 15 6 60 1 11 6 52 9 7 3 45 1 14 6 58 3 Record low C F 9 3 15 3 4 2 24 4 2 8 27 0 3 4 38 1 8 6 47 5 14 3 57 7 16 6 61 9 15 3 59 5 8 6 47 5 6 2 43 2 1 6 34 9 2 0 28 4 9 3 15 3 Average precipitation mm inches 31 7 1 25 28 2 1 11 40 5 1 59 30 4 1 20 41 4 1 63 46 3 1 82 22 7 0 89 22 1 0 87 36 0 1 42 38 9 1 53 29 5 1 16 38 2 1 50 405 9 15 97 Mean monthly sunshine hours 131 6 125 6 179 2 226 4 277 6 311 2 359 2 334 3 249 7 184 7 129 5 122 7 2 631 7Source Meteothes Historical Centre Station Mar 2005 Jan 2024 Climate data for Thessaloniki Airport 2 m asl 1991 2020 normals precipitation 1971 2000 extremes 1961 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 23 0 73 4 24 0 75 2 31 6 88 9 31 2 88 2 36 0 96 8 41 4 106 5 44 0 111 2 40 5 104 9 37 3 99 1 32 2 90 0 27 0 80 6 24 0 75 2 44 0 111 2 Mean daily maximum C F 9 4 48 9 11 1 52 0 14 7 58 5 19 3 66 7 24 8 76 6 29 9 85 8 32 2 90 0 32 1 89 8 27 2 81 0 21 4 70 5 15 6 60 1 10 7 51 3 20 7 69 3 Daily mean C F 5 8 42 4 7 1 44 8 10 1 50 2 14 1 57 4 19 3 66 7 24 2 75 6 26 6 79 9 26 5 79 7 22 0 71 6 16 9 62 4 11 8 53 2 7 2 45 0 16 0 60 7 Mean daily minimum C F 2 2 36 0 3 3 37 9 5 6 42 1 8 8 47 8 13 8 56 8 18 6 65 5 20 9 69 6 20 8 69 4 16 8 62 2 12 6 54 7 8 2 46 8 3 9 39 0 11 3 52 3 Record low C F 14 2 6 4 12 8 9 0 7 2 19 0 2 0 28 4 2 8 37 0 6 8 44 2 9 6 49 3 8 2 46 8 2 8 37 0 1 4 29 5 6 2 20 8 9 8 14 4 14 2 6 4 Average precipitation mm inches 32 5 1 28 38 8 1 53 37 6 1 48 38 4 1 51 40 3 1 59 27 5 1 08 22 3 0 88 22 4 0 88 25 2 0 99 43 8 1 72 60 2 2 37 46 5 1 83 435 5 17 14 Average precipitation days 11 5 10 7 12 1 11 1 11 0 7 9 6 7 5 1 7 0 9 3 11 8 12 7 116 9Average relative humidity 75 7 72 0 71 67 3 63 0 55 4 52 7 55 0 61 9 70 4 76 3 77 9 66 5Mean monthly sunshine hours 98 7 102 6 147 2 202 6 252 7 296 4 325 7 295 8 229 9 165 5 117 8 102 6 2 337 5Source Info Climat climate normals amp extremes HNMS precipitation amp humidity NOAA Sunshine hours amp extremes Climate data for Kalamaria 2009 2019Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearMean daily maximum C F 9 7 49 5 12 6 54 7 15 5 59 9 20 4 68 7 25 7 78 3 30 2 86 4 32 3 90 1 32 3 90 1 27 7 81 9 21 9 71 4 16 9 62 4 11 3 52 3 21 4 70 5 Daily mean C F 6 5 43 7 9 1 48 4 11 3 52 3 15 4 59 7 20 4 68 7 24 9 76 8 27 2 81 0 27 3 81 1 23 0 73 4 17 8 64 0 13 6 56 5 8 1 46 6 17 1 62 7 Mean daily minimum C F 3 8 38 8 6 2 43 2 8 0 46 4 11 3 52 3 16 1 61 0 20 5 68 9 22 8 73 0 22 9 73 2 19 1 66 4 14 6 58 3 11 0 51 8 5 3 41 5 13 5 56 2 Average precipitation mm inches 30 1 2 39 1 5 49 1 9 28 1 1 32 1 3 36 1 4 32 1 3 17 0 7 37 1 5 33 1 3 38 1 5 37 1 5 408 16 2 Source National Observatory of AthensGovernmentThessaloniki s urban and metropolitan areas as of 2011 update According to the Kallikratis reform as of 1 January 2011 the Thessaloniki Urban Area Greek Poleodomiko Sygkrothma 8essalonikhs which makes up the City of Thessaloniki is made up of six self governing municipalities Greek Dhmoi and one municipal unit Greek Dhmotikh enothta The municipalities that are included in the Thessaloniki Urban Area are those of Thessaloniki the city centre and largest in population size Kalamaria Neapoli Sykies Pavlos Melas Kordelio Evosmos Ampelokipoi Menemeni and the municipal units of Pylaia and Panorama part of the municipality of Pylaia Chortiatis Prior to the Kallikratis reform the Thessaloniki Urban Area was made up of twice as many municipalities considerably smaller in size which created bureaucratic problems Thessaloniki Municipality The municipality of Thessaloniki Greek Dhmos 8esalonikhs is the second most populous in Greece after Athens with a resident population of 317 778 in 2021 and an area of 19 307 square kilometres 7 454 square miles The municipality forms the core of the Thessaloniki Urban Area with its central district the city centre referred to as the Kentro meaning centre or downtown The city s first mayor Osman Sait Bey was appointed when the institution of mayor was inaugurated under the Ottoman Empire in 1912 The incumbent mayor is In 2011 the municipality of Thessaloniki had a budget of 464 33 million while the budget of 2012 stands at 409 00 million Other The Government House now the Ministry for Macedonia and Thrace designed by Vitaliano Poselli in 1891The Prefecture building Villa Allatini Thessaloniki is the second largest city in Greece It is an influential city for the northern parts of the country and is the capital of the region of Central Macedonia and the Thessaloniki regional unit The Ministry of Macedonia and Thrace is also based in Thessaloniki since the city is the de facto capital of the Greek region of Macedonia citation needed It is customary every year for the Prime Minister of Greece to announce his administration s policies on a number of issues such as the economy at the opening night of the Thessaloniki International Fair In 2010 during the first months of the 2010 Greek debt crisis the entire cabinet of Greece met in Thessaloniki to discuss the country s future In the Hellenic Parliament the Thessaloniki urban area constitutes a 17 seat constituency As of the June 2023 Greek legislative election the largest party in Thessaloniki is the New Democracy with 35 28 of the vote followed by Syriza 17 52 The table below summarizes the results of the latest elections June 2023 election results for Thessaloniki A Party Votes Shift MPs 17 ChangeNew Democracy 102 449 35 28 1 13 8 17 47 1Syriza 50 877 17 52 2 18 3 17 18 1Communist Party of Greece 23 732 8 17 0 73 1 17 6 0PASOK KINAL 23 638 8 14 0 20 1 16 6 0Greek Solution 23 143 7 97 0 38 1 16 6 1Victory 15 567 5 36 0 78 1 16 6 1Spartans 14 592 5 03 5 03 1 16 6 1Course of Freedom 12 893 4 44 0 08 1 16 6 1Other parties unrepresented 23 493 8 09 14 33 0CityscapePlan for central Thessaloniki by Ernest Hebrard Much of the plan can be seen in today s city centre Architecture Architecture in Thessaloniki is the direct result of the city s position at the centre of all historical developments in the Balkans Aside from its commercial importance Thessaloniki was also for many centuries the military and administrative hub of the region and beyond this the transportation link between Europe and the Levant Merchants traders and refugees from all over Europe settled in the city The need for commercial and public buildings in this new era of prosperity led to the construction of large edifices in the city centre During this time the city saw the building of banks large hotels theatres warehouses and factories Architects who designed some of the most notable buildings of the city in the late 19th and early 20th century include Vitaliano Poselli Pietro Arrigoni Xenophon Paionidis Leonardo Gennari Joseph Pleyber Ernst Ziller Max Rubens Filimon Paionidis and more using mainly the styles of Eclecticism Art Nouveau and Neobaroque The city layout changed after 1870 when the seaside fortifications gave way to extensive piers and many of the oldest walls of the city were demolished including those surrounding the White Tower which today stands as the main landmark of the city As parts of the early Byzantine walls were demolished this allowed the city to expand east and west along the coast The expansion of Eleftherias Square towards the sea completed the new commercial hub of the city and at the time was considered one of the most vibrant squares of the city As the city grew workers moved to the western districts because of their proximity to factories and industrial activities while the middle and upper classes gradually moved from the city centre to the eastern suburbs leaving mainly businesses In 1917 a devastating fire swept through the city and burned uncontrollably for 32 hours It destroyed the city s historic centre and a large part of its architectural heritage but paved the way for modern development featuring wider diagonal avenues and monumental squares Panoramic view of Aristotelous Square one of Thessaloniki s most recognizable areas which was designed by Ernest Hebrard City centre The old Hotel Astoria on Tsimiski Street typical beaux arts architecture of the post fire architecture boom After the Great Thessaloniki Fire of 1917 a team of architects and urban planners including Thomas Mawson and Ernest Hebrard a French architect chose the Byzantine era as the basis of their re building designs for Thessaloniki s city centre The new city plan included axes diagonal streets and monumental squares with a street grid that would channel traffic smoothly The plan of 1917 included provisions for future population expansions and a street and road network that would be and still is sufficient today It contained sites for public buildings and provided for the restoration of Byzantine churches and Ottoman mosques A street in Ladadika district Also called the historic centre it is divided into several districts including Dimokratias Square Democracy Sq known also as Vardaris Ladadika where many entertainment venues and tavernas are located Kapani where the city s central Modiano market is located Diagonios Navarinou Rotonda Agia Sofia and Hippodromio which are all located around Thessaloniki s most central point Aristotelous Square Various commercial stoas around Aristotelous are named from the city s past and historic personalities of the city like stoa Hirsch stoa Carasso Ermou Pelosov Colombou Levi Modiano Morpurgo Mordoch Simcha Kastoria Malakopi Olympios Emboron Rogoti Vyzantio Tatti Agiou Mina Karipi etc The western portion of the city centre is home to Thessaloniki s law courts its central international railway station and the port while its eastern side hosts the city s two universities the Thessaloniki International Exhibition Centre the city s main stadium its archaeological and Byzantine museums the new city hall and its central parks and gardens namely those of the XAN8 and Pedion tou Areos Ano Poli Ano Poli also called Old Town and literally the Upper Town is the heritage listed district north of Thessaloniki s city centre that was not engulfed by the great fire of 1917 and was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site by ministerial actions of Melina Merkouri during the 1980s It consists of Thessaloniki s most traditional part of the city still featuring small stone paved streets old squares and homes featuring old Greek and Ottoman architecture It is the favourite area of Thessaloniki s poets intellectuals and bohemians Panorama of the city from Ano Poli Ano Poli is also the highest point in Thessaloniki and as such is the location of the city s acropolis its Byzantine fort the Heptapyrgion a large portion of the city s remaining walls and with many of its additional Ottoman and Byzantine structures still standing With the capture of Thessaloniki by the Ottomans in 1430 after a lengthy siege of the city from 1422 to 1430 the Ottomans settled in Ano Poli This geographical choice was attributed to the higher level of Ano Poli which was convenient to control the rest of the population remotely and the microclimate of the area which favoured better living conditions in terms of hygiene compared to the areas of the centre Today the area provides access to the Seich Sou Forest National Park and features panoramic views of the whole city and the Thermaic Gulf On clear days Mount Olympus at about 100 km 62 mi away across the gulf can also be seen towering the horizon Other districts of Thessaloniki Municipality Xirokrini neighbourhoodVilla Mordoch arch Xenophon Paionidis on Vasilissis Olgas Avenue In the Municipality of Thessaloniki in addition to the historic centre and the Upper Town are included the following districts Xirokrini Dikastiria Courts Ichthioskala Palaios Stathmos Lachanokipoi Behtsinari Panagia Faneromeni Doxa Saranta Ekklisies Evangelistria Triandria Agia Triada Faliro Ippokrateio Charilaou Analipsi and Toumba In the area of the Old Railway Station Palaios Stathmos began the construction of the Holocaust Museum of Greece In this area are located the Railway Museum of Thessaloniki the Water Supply Museum and large entertainment venues of the city such as Milos Fix Vilka which are housed in converted old factories The Thessaloniki railway station is located on Monastiriou street Other extended and densely built up residential areas are Charilaou and Toumba which is divided into Ano Toumpa and Kato Toumpa Toumba was named after the homonymous hill of Toumba where extensive archaeological research takes place It was created by refugees after the 1922 Asia Minor disaster and the population exchange 1923 24 On Exochon avenue Rue des Campagnes today Vasilissis Olgas and Vasileos Georgiou Avenues was up until the 1920s home to the city s most affluent residents and formed the outermost suburbs of the city at the time with the area close to the Thermaic Gulf from the 19th century holiday villas which defined the area Thessaloniki urban area The cultural centre including MOMus Museum of Modern Art Costakis Collection and two theatres of the National Theatre of Northern Greece former Catholic Lazarist Monastery Moni Lazariston Other districts of the wider urban area of Thessaloniki are Ampelokipi Eleftherio Kordelio Menemeni Evosmos Ilioupoli Stavroupoli Nikopoli Neapoli Polichni Paeglos Meteora Agios Pavlos Kalamaria Pylaia and the Sykies Northwestern Thessaloniki is home to Moni Lazariston located in Stavroupoli which today forms one of the most important cultural centres for the city including MOMus Museum of Modern Art Costakis Collection and two theatres of the National Theatre of Northern Greece In northwestern Thessaloniki many cultural premises exist such as the open air Theater Manos Katrakis in Sykies the Museum of Refugee Hellenism in Neapolis the municipal theatre and the open air theatre in Neapoli and the New Cultural Centre of Menemeni Ellis Alexiou Street The Stavroupolis Botanical Garden on Perikleous Street includes 1 000 species of plants and is a 5 acre 2 0 ha oasis of greenery The Environmental Education Centre in Kordelio was designed in 1997 and is one of a few public buildings of bioclimatic design in Thessaloniki Northwest Thessaloniki forms the main entry point into the city of Thessaloniki with the avenues of Monastiriou Lagkada and 26is Octovriou passing through it as well as the extension of the A1 motorway feeding into Thessaloniki s city centre The area is home to the Macedonia InterCity Bus Terminal KTEL the Thessaloniki railway station the Zeitenlik Allied memorial military cemetery Monuments have also been erected in honour of the fighters of the Greek Resistance as in these areas the Resistance was very active the monument of Greek National Resistance in Sykies the monument of Greek National Resistance in Stavroupolis the Statue of the struggling Mother in Eptalofos Square and the monument of the young Greeks who were executed by the Nazis on 11 May 1944 in Xirokrini In Eptalofos on 15 May 1941 one month after the occupation of the country the first resistance organization in Greece Eleftheria was founded with its newspaper and the first illegal printing house in the city of Thessaloniki Today southeastern Thessaloniki has in some way become an extension of the city centre with the avenues of Megalou Alexandrou Georgiou Papandreou Antheon Vasileos Georgiou Vasilissis Olgas Delfon Konstantinou Karamanli Nea Egnatia and Papanastasiou passing through it enclosing an area traditionally called Ntepw Depo lit Depot from the name of the old tram station owned by a French company The municipality of Kalamaria is also located in southeastern Thessaloniki and was firstly inhabited mainly by Greek refugees from Asia Minor and East Thrace after 1922 There are built the Northern Greece Naval Command and the old royal palace called Palataki located on the most westerly point of Mikro Emvolo cape Paleochristian and Byzantine monuments UNESCO The church of Saint Demetrius patron saint of the city built in the fourth century is the largest basilica in Greece and one of the city s most prominent Paleochristian monuments Hagia Sophia ThessalonikiPanagia Chalkeon church in Thessaloniki 1028 AD one of the 15 UNESCO World Heritage Sites in the cityThe Byzantine Bath of the Upper Town Because of Thessaloniki s importance during the early Christian and Byzantine periods the city is host to several paleochristian monuments that have significantly contributed to the development of Byzantine art and architecture throughout the Byzantine Empire as well as Serbia The evolution of Imperial Byzantine architecture and the prosperity of Thessaloniki go hand in hand especially during the first years of the Empire when the city continued to flourish It was at that time that the Complex of Roman emperor Galerius was built as well as the first church of Hagios Demetrios By the eighth century the city had become an important administrative centre of the Byzantine Empire and handled much of the Empire s Balkan affairs During that time the city saw the creation of more notable Christian churches that are now part of Thessaloniki s UNESCO World Heritage Site such as the Church of Saint Catherine the Hagia Sophia of Thessaloniki the Church of the Acheiropoietos the Church of Panagia Chalkeon When the Ottoman Empire took control of Thessaloniki in 1430 most of the city s churches were converted into mosques but have survived to this day Travellers such as Paul Lucas and Abdulmejid I document the city s wealth in Christian monuments during the years of Ottoman control of the city The church of Hagios Demetrios burned down during the Great Thessaloniki Fire of 1917 as did many other city monuments but it was rebuilt During World War II the city was extensively bombed and as such many of Thessaloniki s paleochristian and Byzantine monuments were heavily damaged Some of the sites were not restored until the 1980s Thessaloniki has more monuments listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site than any other city in Greece a total of 15 monuments They have been listed since 1988 Urban sculpture The equestrian statue of Alexander the Great on the promenadeStatue of Aristotle on Aristotelous SquareChrysostomos of Smyrna statue Agias Sofias Square Thessaloniki There are around 150 statues or busts in the city Probably the most famous one is the equestrian statue of Alexander the Great on the promenade placed in 1973 and created by sculptor Evangelos Moustakas An equestrian statue of Constantine I by sculptor Georgios Dimitriades is located in Demokratias Square Other notable statues include that of Eleftherios Venizelos by sculptor Giannis Pappas Pavlos Melas by Natalia Mela the statue of Emmanouel Pappas by Memos Makris Chrysostomos of Smyrna by Athanasios Apartis Aristotle on Aristotelous Square and such as various creations by George Zongolopoulos Thessaloniki 2012 Programme Aerial view of the newest section of the promenade Nea Paralia which was opened to the public in January 2014 With the 100th anniversary of the 1912 incorporation of Thessaloniki into Greece the government announced a large scale redevelopment programme for the city of Thessaloniki which aims in addressing the current environmental and spatial problems that the city faces More specifically the programme will drastically change the physiognomy of the city by relocating the Thessaloniki International Exhibition Centre and grounds of the Thessaloniki International Fair outside the city centre and turning the current location into a large metropolitan park redeveloping the coastal front of the city relocating the city s numerous military camps and using the grounds and facilities to create large parklands and cultural centres and the complete redevelopment of the harbour and the Lachanokipoi and Dendropotamos districts behind and near the Port of Thessaloniki into a commercial business district with possible highrise developments The plan also envisions the creation of new wide avenues in the outskirts of the city and the creation of pedestrian only zones in the city centre Furthermore the program includes plans to expand the jurisdiction of Seich Sou Forest National Park and the improvement of accessibility to and from the Old Town The ministry has said that the project will take an estimated 15 years to be completed in 2025 Part of the plan has been implemented with extensive pedestrianisations within the city centre by the municipality of Thessaloniki and the revitalisation the eastern urban waterfront promenade Nea Paralia Nea Paralia lit new promenade with a modern and vibrant design Its first section opened in 2008 having been awarded as the best public project in Greece of the last five years by the Hellenic Institute of Architecture The municipality of Thessaloniki s budget for the reconstruction of important areas of the city and the completion of the waterfront opened in January 2014 was estimated at 28 2 million US 39 9 million for the year 2011 alone EconomyEconomy of ThessalonikiGDP of the Thessaloniki regional unit 2000 2011StatisticsGDP 19 851 billion PPP 2011 GDP rank2nd in GreeceGDP growth 7 8 2011 GDP per capita 17 200 PPP 2011 Labour force534 800 2010 Unemployment30 2 2014 The old building of Banque de Salonique now Stoa MalakopiA building of the Bank of Greece Thessaloniki rose to economic prominence as a major economic hub in the Balkans during the years of the Roman Empire The Pax Romana and the city s strategic position allowed for the facilitation of trade between Rome and Byzantium later Constantinople and now Istanbul through Thessaloniki by means of the Via Egnatia The Via Egnatia also functioned as an important line of communication between the Roman Empire and the nations of Asia particularly in relation to the Silk Road With the partition of the Roman Empire into East Byzantine and West Thessaloniki became the second largest city of the Eastern Roman Empire after New Rome Constantinople in terms of economic might Under the Empire Thessaloniki was the largest port in the Balkans As the city passed from Byzantium to the Republic of Venice in 1423 it was subsequently conquered by the Ottoman Empire Under Ottoman rule the city retained its position as the most important trading hub in the Balkans Manufacturing shipping and trade were the most important components of the city s economy during the Ottoman period and the majority of the city s trade at the time was controlled by ethnic Greeks Plus the Jewish community was also an important factor in the trade sector citation needed Historically important industries for the economy of Thessaloniki included tobacco in 1946 35 of all tobacco companies in Greece were headquartered in the city and 44 in 1979 and banking in Ottoman years Thessaloniki was a major centre for investment from western Europe with the Banque de Salonique having a capital of 20 million French francs in 1909 Services View of the port The service sector accounts for nearly two thirds of the total labour force of Thessaloniki Of those working in services 20 were employed in trade 13 in education and healthcare 7 1 in real estate 6 3 in transport communications and storage 6 1 in the finance industry and service providing organizations 5 7 in public administration and insurance services and 5 4 in hotels and restaurants The city s port the Port of Thessaloniki is one of the largest ports in the Aegean and as a free port it functions as a major gateway to the Balkan hinterland In 2010 more than 15 8 million tons of products went through the city s port making it the second largest port in Greece after Aghioi Theodoroi surpassing Piraeus At 273 282 TEUs it is also Greece s second largest container port after Piraeus As a result the city is a major transportation hub for the whole of south eastern Europe carrying among other things trade to and from the neighbouring countries citation needed In recent years Thessaloniki has begun to turn into a major port for cruising in the eastern Mediterranean The Greek ministry of tourism considers Thessaloniki to be Greece s second most important commercial port and companies such as Royal Caribbean International have expressed interest in adding the Port of Thessaloniki to their destinations A total of 30 cruise ships are expected to arrive at Thessaloniki in 2011 The GDP of Thessaloniki in comparison to that of Attica and the rest of the country 2012 Companies Recent history After WWII and the Greek Civil War heavy industrialization of the city s suburbs began in the mid 1950s During the 1980s a spate of factory shutdowns occurred mostly of automobile manufacturers such as Agricola AutoDiana EBIAM Motoemil Pantelemidis TITAN and C AR Since the 1990s companies took advantage of cheaper labour markets and more lax regulations in other countries and among the largest companies to shut down factories were Goodyear AVEZ pasta industry one of the first industrial factories in northern Greece built in 1926 Philkeram Johnson AGNO dairy and VIAMIL However Thessaloniki still remains a major business hub in the Balkans and Greece with a number of important Greek companies headquartered in the city such as the Hellenic Vehicle Industry ELVO Namco Astra Airlines Ellinair Pyramis and MLS Multimedia which introduced the first Greek built smartphone in 2012 Industry In early 1960s with the collaboration of Standard Oil and a large industrial zone was created containing refineries oil refinery and steel production owned by The zone attracted also a series of different factories during the next decades Titan Cement has also facilities outside the city on the road to Serres such as the AGET Heracles a member of the Lafarge group and Alumil SA Multinational companies such as Air Liquide Cyanamid Nestle Pfizer Coca Cola Hellenic Bottling Company and Vivartia have also industrial facilities in the suburbs of the city Foodstuff Foodstuff or drink companies headquartered in the city include the Macedonian Milk Industry Mevgal Allatini Barbastathis Hellenic Sugar Industry Haitoglou Bros Mythos Brewery Malamatina while the Goody s chain started from the city citation needed The American Farm School also has important contribution in food production Macroeconomic indicators In 2011 the regional unit of Thessaloniki had a Gross Domestic Product of 18 293 billion ranked second amongst the country s regional units comparable to Bahrain or Cyprus and a per capita of 15 900 ranked 16th In Purchasing Power Parity the same indicators are 19 851 billion 2nd and 17 200 15th respectively In terms of comparison with the European Union average Thessaloniki s GDP per capita indicator stands at 63 the EU average and 69 in PPP this is comparable to the German state of Brandenburg Overall Thessaloniki accounts for 8 9 of the total economy of Greece Between 1995 and 2008 Thessaloniki s GDP saw an average growth rate of 4 1 per annum ranging from 14 5 in 1996 to 11 1 in 2005 while in 2011 the economy contracted by 7 8 DemographicsHistorical ethnic statistics The tables below show the ethnic statistics of Thessaloniki during the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century Year Total Population Jewish Turkish Greek Bulgarians Roma Other1890 118 000 100 55 000 47 39 000 22 28 000 14 14 000 8 5 500 2 8 500 7 Around 1913 157 889 100 61 439 39 45 889 29 39 956 25 6 263 4 2 721 2 1 621 1 Population growth PopulationYearPop 100200 0001348150 000145340 000167936 000184270 000187090 000188285 0001890118 0001902126 0001913157 0001917230 0001951297 1641961377 0261981406 4132001954 02720111 030 33820211 091 424From 2001 on data on the city s metropolitan area References The municipality of Thessaloniki is the most populous in the Thessaloniki Urban Area Its population has increased in the latest census and the metropolitan area s population rose to over one million The city forms the base of the Thessaloniki metropolitan area with latest census in 2021 giving it a population of 1 091 424 Population of the Municipality and Metropolitan areas of Thessaloniki Year Municipality Metropolitan area rank2001 363 987 954 027 2nd2011 325 182 1 030 3382021 317 778 1 091 424 citation needed 2ndJews of Thessaloniki Paths of Jewish immigration to the cityThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Thessaloniki news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message The Jewish population in Greece is the oldest in mainland Europe see Romaniotes When Paul the Apostle came to Thessaloniki he taught in the area of what today is called Upper City Later during the Ottoman period with the coming of Sephardic Jews from Spain the community of Thessaloniki became mostly Sephardic Thessaloniki became the largest centre in Europe of the Sephardic Jews who nicknamed the city la madre de Israel Israel s mother and Jerusalem of the Balkans It also included the historically significant and ancient Greek speaking Romaniote community During the Ottoman era Thessaloniki s Sephardic community was half of the population according to the Ottoman Census of 1902 and almost 40 the city s population of 157 000 about 1913 Jewish merchants were prominent in commerce until the ethnic Greek population increased after Thessaloniki was incorporated into the Kingdom of Greece in 1913 By the 1680s about 300 families of Sephardic Jews followers of Sabbatai Zevi had converted to Islam becoming a sect known as the Donmeh convert and migrated to Salonika whose population was majority Jewish They established an active community that thrived for about 250 years Many of their descendants later became prominent in trade Many Jewish inhabitants of Thessaloniki spoke Judeo Spanish the Romance language of the Sephardic Jews Jewish family of Salonika in 1917 From the second half of the 19th century with the Ottoman reforms the Jewish community had a new revival Many French and especially Italian Jews from Livorno and other cities influential in introducing new methods of education and developing new schools and intellectual environment for the Jewish population were established in Thessaloniki Such modernists introduced also new techniques and ideas from the industrialised Western Europe and from the 1880s the city began to industrialize The Italian Jews Allatini brothers led Jewish entrepreneurship establishing milling and other food industries brickmaking and processing plants for tobacco Several traders supported the introduction of a large textile production industry superseding the weaving of cloth in a system of artisanal production Notable names of the era include among others the Italo Jewish Modiano family and the Allatini Benrubis founded also in 1880 one of the first retail companies in the Balkans After the Balkan Wars Thessaloniki was incorporated into the Kingdom of Greece in 1913 At first the community feared that the annexation would lead to difficulties and during the first years its political stance was in general anti Venizelist and pro royalist conservative The Great Thessaloniki Fire of 1917 during World War I burned much of the centre of the city and left 50 000 Jews homeless of the total of 72 000 residents who were burned out Having lost homes and their businesses many Jews emigrated to the United States Palestine and Paris They could not wait for the government to create a new urban plan for rebuilding which was eventually done After the Greco Turkish War in 1922 and the bilateral population exchange between Greece and Turkey many refugees came to Greece Nearly 100 000 ethnic Greeks resettled in Thessaloniki reducing the proportion of Jews in the total community After this Jews made up about 20 of the city s population During the interwar period Greece granted Jewish citizens the same civil rights as other Greek citizens In March 1926 Greece re emphasized that all citizens of Greece enjoyed equal rights and a considerable proportion of the city s Jews decided to stay During the Metaxas regime the stance towards Jews became even better Jews not welcomed sign during the Axis occupationMonastir Synagogue World War II brought a disaster for the Jewish Greeks since in 1941 the Germans occupied Greece and began actions against the Jewish population Greeks of the Resistance helped save some of the Jewish residents By the 1940s the great majority of the Jewish Greek community firmly identified as both Greek and Jewish According to Misha Glenny such Greek Jews had largely not encountered anti Semitism as in its North European form In 1943 the Nazis began brutal actions against the historic Jewish population in Thessaloniki forcing them into a ghetto near the railroad lines and beginning deportation to concentration and labor camps They deported and exterminated approximately 94 of Thessaloniki s Jews of all ages during the Holocaust The Thessaloniki Holocaust memorial in Eleftherias Freedom Square was built in 1997 in memory of all the Jewish people from Thessaloniki murdered in the Holocaust The site was chosen because it was the place where Jewish residents were rounded up before embarking to trains for concentration camps Today a community of around 1200 remains in the city Communities of descendants of Thessaloniki Jews both Sephardic and Romaniote live in other areas mainly the United States and Israel Israeli singer Yehuda Poliker recorded a song about the Jewish people of Thessaloniki called Wait for me Thessaloniki Year Total population Jewish population Jewish percentage Source1842 70 000 36 000 51 Jakob Philipp Fallmerayer1870 90 000 50 000 56 Greek schoolbook G K Moraitopoulos 1882 1882 84 85 000 48 000 56 Ottoman government census1902 126 000 62 000 49 Ottoman government census1913 157 889 61 439 39 Greek government census1917 271 157 52 000 19 1943 50 0002000 363 987 1 000 0 27 Others This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Thessaloniki news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Since the late 19th century many merchants from Western Europe mainly from France and Italy were established in the city They had an important role in the social and economic life of the city and introduced new industrial techniques Their main district was what is known today as the Frankish district near Ladadika where the Catholic church designed by Vitaliano Poselli is also situated A part of them left after the incorporation of the city into the Greek kingdom while others who were of Jewish faith were exterminated by the Nazis The Bulgarian community of the city increased during the late 19th century The community had a Men s High School a Girl s High School a trade union and a gymnastics society A large part of them were Catholics as a result of actions by the Lazarists society which had its base in the city Another group is the Armenian community which dates back to the Byzantine and Ottoman periods During the 20th century after the Armenian genocide and the defeat of the Greek army in the Greco Turkish War 1919 22 many fled to Greece including Thessaloniki There is also an Armenian cemetery and an Armenian church at the centre of the city CultureThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Thessaloniki news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Leisure and entertainment The building of the Society of Macedonian studies seat of the National Theatre of Northern Greece Thessaloniki is regarded not only as the cultural and entertainment capital of northern Greece but also the cultural capital of the country as a whole The city s main theaters run by the National Theatre of Northern Greece Greek Kratiko 8eatro Boreioy Ellados which was established in 1961 include the Theater of the Society of Macedonian Studies where the National Theater is based the Royal Theater Basiliko 8eatro the first base of the National Theater Moni Lazariston and the Earth Theater and Forest Theater both amphitheatrical open air theatres overlooking the city Thessaloniki Concert Hall The title of the European Capital of Culture in 1997 saw the birth of the city s first opera and today forms an independent section of the National Theatre of Northern Greece The opera is based at the Thessaloniki Concert Hall one of the largest concert halls in Greece Recently a second building was also constructed and designed by Japanese architect Arata Isozaki Thessaloniki is also the seat of two symphony orchestras the and the Symphony Orchestra of the Municipality of Thessaloniki Olympion Theater the site of the Thessaloniki International Film Festival and the Plateia Assos Odeon multiplex are the two major cinemas in downtown Thessaloniki The city also has a number of multiplex cinemas in major shopping malls in the suburbs most notably in Mediterranean Cosmos the largest retail and entertainment development in the Balkans Thessaloniki is renowned for its major shopping streets and lively laneways Tsimiski Street Mitropoleos and Proxenou Koromila avenue are the city s most famous shopping streets and are among Greece s most expensive and exclusive high streets The city is also home to one of Greece s most famous and prestigious hotels Makedonia Palace hotel the Hyatt Regency Casino and hotel the biggest casino in Greece and one of the biggest in Europe and Waterland the largest water park in southeastern Europe The city has long been known in Greece for its vibrant city culture including having the most cafes and bars per capita of any city in Europe and as having some of the best nightlife and entertainment in the country thanks to its large young population and multicultural feel Lonely Planet listed Thessaloniki among the world s ultimate party cities Parks and recreation Marina of AretsouPart of the coastline of the southeastern suburb of Peraia on the Thermaic Gulf with views towards Thessaloniki Although Thessaloniki is not renowned for its parks and greenery throughout its urban area where green spaces are few it has several large open spaces around its waterfront namely the central city gardens of Palios Zoologikos Kipos which is recently being redeveloped to also include rock climbing facilities a new skatepark and paintball range the park of Pedion tou Areos which also holds the city s annual floral expo and the parks of the Nea Paralia waterfront that span for 3 km 2 mi along the coast from the White Tower to the concert hall The Nea Paralia parks are used throughout the year for a variety of events while they open up to the Thessaloniki waterfront which is lined up with several cafes and bars and during summer is full of Thessalonians enjoying their long evening walks referred to as the volta and is embedded into the culture of the city Having undergone an extensive revitalization the city s waterfront today features a total of 12 thematic gardens parks Thessaloniki s proximity to places such as the national parks of Pieria and beaches of Chalkidiki often allow its residents to easily have access to some of the best outdoor recreation in Europe however the city is also right next to the Seich Sou forest national park just 3 5 km 2 mi away from Thessaloniki s city centre and offers residents and visitors alike quiet viewpoints towards the city mountain bike trails and landscaped hiking paths The city s zoo which is operated by the municipality of Thessaloniki is also located nearby the national park Other recreation spaces throughout the Thessaloniki metropolitan area include the Fragma Thermis a landscaped parkland near Thermi and the Delta wetlands west of the city centre while urban beaches that have continuously been awarded the blue flags are located along the 10 km 6 mi coastline of Thessaloniki s southeastern suburbs of Thermaikos about 20 km 12 mi away from the city centre Museums and galleries View of the Museum of Byzantine CultureThe Museum of Byzantine Culture Thessaloniki Because of the city s rich and diverse history Thessaloniki houses many museums dealing with many different eras in history Two of the city s most famous museums include the Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki and the Museum of Byzantine Culture Head of Isis Archaeological Museum Thessaloniki Early 3rd century BC 2021 The Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki was established in 1962 and houses some of the most important ancient Macedonian artifacts including an extensive collection of golden artwork from the royal palaces of Aigai and Pella It also houses exhibits from Macedon s prehistoric past dating from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age The Prehistoric Antiquities Museum of Thessaloniki has exhibits from those periods as well The Museum of Byzantine Culture is one of the city s most famous museums showcasing the city s glorious Byzantine past The museum was also awarded Council of Europe s museum prize in 2005 The museum of the White Tower of Thessaloniki houses a series of galleries relating to the city s past from the creation of the White Tower until recent years One of the most modern museums in the city is the and is one of the most high tech museums in Greece and southeastern Europe It features the largest planetarium in Greece a cosmotheatre with the country s largest flat screen an amphitheater a motion simulator with 3D projection and 6 axis movement and exhibition spaces Other industrial and technological museums in the city include the Railway Museum of Thessaloniki which houses an original Orient Express train the War Museum of Thessaloniki and others The city also has a number of educational and sports museums including the Thessaloniki History Centre and the Thessaloniki Olympic Museum The Ataturk Museum in Thessaloniki is the historic house where Mustafa Kemal Ataturk founder of modern day Turkey was born The house is now part of the Turkish consulate complex but admission to the museum is free The museum contains historic information about Mustafa Kemal Ataturk and his life especially while he was in Thessaloniki Other ethnological museums of the sort include the Historical Museum of the Balkan Wars the Jewish Museum of Thessaloniki and the Museum of the Macedonian Struggle containing information about the anti Ottoman rebellions of the late 19th and early 20th centuries Construction on the Holocaust Museum of Greece began in the city in 2018 The city also has a number of important art galleries Such include the Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art housing exhibitions from a number of well known Greek and foreign artists The Teloglion Foundation of Art is part of Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and includes an extensive collection of works by important artists of the 19th and 20th centuries including works by prominent Greeks and native Thessalonians The Thessaloniki Museum of Photography also houses a number of important exhibitions and is located within the old port of Thessaloniki Archaeological sites View of the Roman Forum Ancient Agora Thessaloniki is home to a number of prominent archaeological sites Apart from its recognized UNESCO World Heritage Sites Thessaloniki features a large two terraced Roman forum featuring two storey stoas dug up by accident in the 1960s The forum complex also boasts two Roman baths one of which has been excavated while the other is buried underneath the city The forum also features a small theater which was also used for gladiatorial games Although the initial complex was not built in Roman times it was largely refurbished in the second century It is believed that the forum and the theater continued to be used until at least the sixth century Another important archaeological site is the imperial palace complex which Roman emperor Galerius located at Navarinou Square commissioned when he made Thessaloniki the capital of his portion of the Roman Empire The large octagonal portion of the complex most of which survives to this day is believed to have been an imperial throne room Various mosaics from the palatial complex have also survived Some historians believe that the complex must have been in use as an imperial residence until the 11th century Not far from the palace itself is the Arch of Galerius known colloquially as the Kamara The arch was built to commemorate the emperor s campaigns against the Persians The original structure featured three arches however only two full arches and part of the third survive to this day Many of the arches marble parts survive as well although it is mostly the brick interior that can be seen today Other monuments of the city s past such as Las Incantadas a Caryatid portico from the ancient forum have been removed or destroyed over the years Las Incantadas in particular are on display at the Louvre Thanks to a private donation of 180 000 it was announced on 6 December 2011 that a replica of Las Incantadas would be commissioned and later put on display in Thessaloniki The construction of the Thessaloniki Metro inadvertently started the largest archaeological dig not only of the city but of Northern Greece the dig spans 20 km2 7 7 sq mi and has unearthed 300 000 individual artefacts from as early as the Roman Empire and as late as the Great Thessaloniki Fire of 1917 Ancient Thessaloniki s Decumanus Maximus was also found and 75 metres 246 ft of the marble paved and column lined road were unearthed along with shops other buildings and plumbing prompting one scholar to describe the discovery as the Byzantine Pompeii Some of the artefacts will be put on display inside the metro stations while Venizelou will feature the world s first open archaeological site located within a metro station Festivals Olympion Theatre seat of the International Film Festival Thessaloniki is home of a number of festivals and events The Thessaloniki International Fair is the most important event to be hosted in the city annually by means of economic development It was first established in 1926 and takes place every year at the 180 000 m2 1 900 000 sq ft Thessaloniki International Exhibition Centre The event attracts major political attention and it is customary for the Prime Minister of Greece to outline his administration s policies for the next year during event Over 250 000 visitors attended the exposition in 2010 The new is starting first time 29 10 1 November 2015 as an international contemporary art fair The Thessaloniki International Film Festival is established as one of the most important film festivals in Southern Europe with a number of notable film makers such as Francis Ford Coppola Faye Dunaway Catherine Deneuve Irene Papas and Fatih Akin taking part and was established in 1960 The Documentary Festival founded in 1999 has focused on documentaries that explore global social and cultural developments with many of the films presented being candidates for FIPRESCI and Audience Awards The Dimitria festival founded in 1966 and named after the city s patron saint of St Demetrius has focused on a wide range of events including music theatre dance local happenings and exhibitions The DMC DJ Championship has been hosted at the International Trade Fair of Thessaloniki has become a worldwide event for aspiring DJs and turntablists The International Festival of Photography has taken place every February to mid April Exhibitions for the event are sited in museums heritage landmarks galleries bookshops and cafes Thessaloniki also holds an annual International Book Fair Between 1962 1997 and 2005 2008 the city also hosted the Thessaloniki Song Festival Greece s most important music festival at Alexandreio Melathron In 2012 the city hosted its first pride parade Thessaloniki Pride which took place between 22 and 23 June It has been held every year ever since however in 2013 transgender people participating in the parade became victims of police brutality The issue was soon settled by the government The city s Greek Orthodox Church leadership has consistently rallied against the event but mayor Boutaris sided with Thessaloniki Pride saying also that Thessaloniki would seek to host EuroPride 2020 The event was given to Thessaloniki in September 2017 beating Bergen Brussels and Hamburg Since 1998 the city host Thessaloniki International G L A D Film Festival the first LGBT film festival in Greece Sports Kaftanzoglio National Stadium The main stadium of the city is the Kaftanzoglio Stadium also home ground of Iraklis F C while other main stadiums of the city include the football Toumba Stadium and Kleanthis Vikelidis Stadium home grounds of PAOK FC and Aris F C respectively all of whom are founding members of the Greek league Being the largest multi sport stadium in the city Kaftanzoglio Stadium regularly plays host to athletics events such as the European Athletics Association event Olympic Meeting Thessaloniki every year it has hosted the Greek national championships in 2009 and has been used for athletics at the Mediterranean Games and for the European Cup in athletics In 2004 the stadium served as an official Athens 2004 venue while in 2009 the city and the stadium hosted the 2009 IAAF World Athletics Final Thessaloniki s major indoor arenas include the state owned Alexandreio Melathron P A O K Sports Arena and the YMCA indoor hall Other sporting clubs in the city include Apollon FC based in Kalamaria Agrotikos Asteras F C based in Evosmos and YMCA Thessaloniki has a rich sporting history with its teams winning the first ever panhellenic football Aris FC basketball Iraklis BC and water polo AC Aris tournaments During recent years PAOK FC has emerged as the strongest football club of the city winning also the Greek championship without a defeat 2018 19 season The city played a major role in the development of basketball in Greece The local YMCA was the first to introduce the sport to the country while Iraklis B C won the first ever Greek championship From 1982 to 1993 Aris B C dominated the league regularly finishing in first place In that period Aris won a total of 9 championships 7 cups and one European Cup Winners Cup The city also hosted the 2003 FIBA Under 19 World Championship in which Greece came third In volleyball Iraklis has emerged since 2000 as one of the most successful teams in Greece and Europe see 2005 06 CEV Champions League In October 2007 Thessaloniki also played host to the first Southeastern European Games The city is also the finish point of the annual Alexander The Great Marathon which starts at Pella in recognition of its Ancient Macedonian heritage There are also aquatic and athletic complexes such as Ethniko and Poseidonio Main sports clubs in Thessaloniki Club Founded Venue Capacity NotesGS Iraklis 1908 originally as Macedonikos Gymnasticos Syllogos Kaftanzoglio National Stadium 27 770Ivanofeio Indoor Hall Panhellenic titles in football basketball rugby volleyball Volleyball Champions League finalists 3 times Maccabi Thessaloniki 1908 Historically representative of the Jewish community Today members of any religious faithAC Aris Thessaloniki 1914 Kleanthis Vikelidis Stadium 22 800Alexandreio Melathron Palais des Sports 5 500 Panhellenic titles in football basketball volleyball waterpolo Three European Cups in basketballYMCA Thessaloniki XAN8 1921 Presence in A1 basketball Major role in introduction of basketball in GreeceMegas Alexandros 1923 Presence in First Division of Football Panhellenic ChampionshipP A O K 1926 Toumba Stadium 28 703P A O K Sports Arena 10 000 Panhellenic titles in football basketball volleyball handball Two European Cups in basketball Most time winners in women s footballApollon Kalamarias Pontou 1926 Kalamaria Stadium 6 500M E N T 1926 Presence in A1 basketballV A O 1926 Presence in A1 basketball Panhellenic titles in handballMakedonikos F C 1928 Makedonikos Stadium 8 100 Presence in first division of men s footballAgrotikos Asteras F C 1932 Evosmos StadiumAias Evosmou 1967 DAK EvosmouMedia Thessaloniki is home to the ERT3 TV channel and both services of Hellenic Broadcasting Corporation ERT operating in the city and are broadcast all over Greece The municipality of Thessaloniki also operates three radio stations namely FM100 FM101 and FM100 6 citation needed and TV100 a television network which was also the first non state owned TV station in Greece and opened in 1988 citation needed Several private TV networks also broadcast out from Thessaloniki with Makedonia TV being the most popular The city s main newspapers and some of the most circulated in Greece include Makedonia which was also the first newspaper published in Thessaloniki in 1911 and Aggelioforos A large number of radio stations also broadcast from Thessaloniki as the city is known for its music contributions TV broadcasting ERT3 Panhellenic broadcasting Makedonia TV Panhellenic 4E TV Panhellenic TV 100 Regional Regional Regional Press Makedonia national publication national sports national sports national sports weekly national sports weekly national weekly national financial Parallaxi daily online Notable Thessalonians This article contains a list that has not been properly sorted See MOS LISTSORT for more information Please improve this article if you can June 2023 This list contains entries that may be out of scope and need to be evaluated for removal Please help to clean it up by removing items that do not meet the inclusion criteria agreed upon on the talk page June 2023 Mosaic of Saint Demetrius of Thessaloniki in the Church of Saint Demetrius in Thessaloniki Throughout its history Thessaloniki has been home to a number of well known figures and people Saints and other religious figures Demetrius of Thessaloniki Cyril and Methodius creators of the first Slavic alphabet Saint Mitre Saint Demetrius not to be confused with the previous Gregorios Palamas Matthew Blastares Eustathius of Thessalonica and Patriarch Philotheus I of Constantinople Paisios of Mount AthosOther Byzantine era notable people Jurist Constantine Armenopoulos Historians John Kaminiates Demetrius Triclinius Thomas Magistros The anti Palamian theologians Prochoros and Demetrios Kydones Scholars Theodorus Gaza Thessalonicensis and Matthaios KamariotisMusicians and movie personalities Zoe Laskari Costas Hajihristos Stella Haskil Giannis Dalianidis Maria Plyta Harry Klynn Antonis Remos Paschalis Terzis Nikos Papazoglou Nikolas Asimos Giorgos Hatzinasios Alberto Eskenazi Stavros Kouyioumtzis Giannis Kalatzis Natassa Theodoridou Katia Zygouli Kostas Voutsas Takis Kanellopoulos Titos Vandis Manolis Chiotis Dionysis Savvopoulos Marinella Yvonne Sanson The classical composer Emilios RiadisPoliticians born in the city Ioannis Skandalidis Alexandros Zannas Evangelos Venizelos Christos Sartzetakis the fourth President of Greece Yiannis BoutarisSports personalities from the city Nikos Galis Georgios Roubanis Giannis Ioannidis Faidon Matthaiou Alketas Panagoulias Panagiotis Fasoulas Eleni Daniilidou Traianos Dellas Giorgos Koudas Kleanthis Vikelidis Christos Kostis Dimitris Salpingidis Nikos ZisisWriters from Thessaloniki Grigorios Zalykis Manolis Anagnostakis Kleitos Kyrou Albertos Nar Elias Petropoulos Kostis Moskof Rena Molho Dinos ChristianopoulosOther notable people born in Thessaloniki Fashion designer Sero Serovpe Ambrahamian 1949 1983 Philanthropist and benefactor Ioannis Papafis Architect Lysandros KaftanzoglouInternational personalities Bulgarians Atanas Dalchev Jews Moshe Levy Maurice Abravanel Isaak Benrubi Isaac and Daniel Carasso Raphael Salem Baruch Uziel Shlomo Halevi Alkabetz Salamo Arouch Avraam Benaroya Slav Macedonians Dimo Todorovski Italians Luisa Poselli Giacomo Poselli Vittorio Citterich French people Louis Dumont Spanish people Juana Mordo Turks Mustafa Kemal Ataturk Nazim Hikmet Afet Inan Cahit Arf Mehmet Cavit Bey Sabiha Sertel Abdul Kerim Pasha Hasan Tahsin Uzer Hasan Tahsin Armenians Jean TatlianCuisine Frappe coffeeBougatsa typical Thessalonian treat Because Thessaloniki remained under Ottoman rule for about 100 years longer than southern Greece it has retained a lot of its Eastern character including its culinary tastes Spices in particular play an important role in the cuisine of Thessaloniki something which is not true to the same degree about Greece s southern regions Thessaloniki s Ladadika borough is a particularly busy area in regards to Thessalonian cuisine with most tavernas serving traditional meze and other such culinary delights Bougatsa a breakfast pastry which can be either sweet or savory is very popular throughout the city and has spread around other parts of Greece and the Balkans as well Another popular snack is koulouri Notable sweets of the city are Trigona Roxakia Kourkoubinia and Armenonville A stereotypical Thessalonian coffee drink is Frappe coffee Frappe was invented in the Thessaloniki International Fair in 1957 and has since spread throughout Greece and Cyprus to become a hallmark of the Greek coffee culture Kapani or Agora Viali is the oldest central market in Thessaloniki with shops selling fish meat vegetables fruits drinks olives sweets nuts spices and Modiano Market is located nearby Tourism Hotel Luxemvourgo on Komninon Street 1924 arch Eli Modiano View of the Makedonia Palace on the promenade A tourism boom took place in the 2010s during the years of mayor Boutaris especially from the neighboring countries Austria Israel and Turkey In 2010 overnight stays of foreign tourists in the city were around 250 000 In 2018 overnight stays of foreign tourists were estimated to reach 3 000 000 people Thessaloniki is known as the city that never sleeps and a party capital due to its thriving nightlife young atmosphere and famous 24 hour culture Music The city is viewed as a romantic one in Greece and as such Thessaloniki is commonly featured in Greek songs There are a number of famous songs that go by the name Thessaloniki rebetiko laiko etc or include the name in their title During the 1930s and 1940s the city became a centre of the Rebetiko music partly because of the Metaxas censorship which was stricter in Athens Vassilis Tsitsanis wrote some of his best songs according to whom in Thessaloniki The city is the birthplace of significant composers in the Greek music scene such as Manolis Chiotis Stavros Kouyioumtzis and Dionysis Savvopoulos It is also notable for its rock music scene and its many rock groups some became famous such as Xylina Spathia Trypes or the pop rock group Onirama Between 1962 1997 and 2005 2008 the city also hosted the Thessaloniki Song Festival In the Eurovision Song Contest 2013 Greece was represented by Koza Mostra and Agathonas Iakovidis both from Thessaloniki In popular culture In May 1936 a massive strike by tobacco workers led to general anarchy in the city and Ioannis Metaxas future dictator then PM ordered its repression The events and the deaths of the protesters inspired Yiannis Ritsos to write the Epitafios On 22 May 1963 Grigoris Lambrakis pacifist and MP was assassinated by two far right extremists driving a three wheeled vehicle The event led to political crisis Costa Gavras directed Z 1969 based on it two years after the military junta had seized power in Greece Notable films set or shot in Thessaloniki among others include Mademoiselle Docteur Salonique nid d espions 1937 by Georg Wilhelm Pabst The Barefooted Battalion 1954 by Greg Tallas Gregory Thalassinos O Atsidas 1961 by Giannis Dalianidis Parenthesis 1968 by Takis Kanellopoulos Triumph of the Spirit 1989 by Robert M Young Eternity and a Day by Theo Angelopoulos 1998 and Ouzeri Tsitsanis 2015 by Manousos Manousakis EducationThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Thessaloniki news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Aerial view of the campus of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki to the right the largest university in Greece and the Balkans Thessaloniki is a major centre of education for Greece Three of the country s largest universities are located in central Thessaloniki Aristotle University of Thessaloniki the University of Macedonia and the International Hellenic University Aristotle University was founded in 1926 and is currently the largest university in Greece by number of students which number at more than 80 000 in 2010 and is a member of the Utrecht Network For the academic year 2009 2010 Aristotle University was ranked as one of the 150 best universities in the world for arts and humanities and among the 250 best universities in the world overall by the Times QS World University Rankings making it one of the top 2 of best universities worldwide Leiden ranks Aristotle University as one of the top 100 European universities at number 97 and the best university in Greece Since 2010 Thessaloniki is also home to the Open University of Thessaloniki which is funded by Aristotle University the University of Macedonia and the municipality of Thessaloniki Additionally a TEI Technological Educational Institute namely the Alexander Technological Educational Institute of Thessaloniki is located in the western suburb of Sindos home also to the industrial zone of the city Numerous public and private vocational institutes Greek IEK provide professional training to young students while a large number of private colleges offer American and UK academic curriculum via cooperation with foreign universities In addition to Greek students the city hence attracts many foreign students either via the Erasmus programme for public universities or for a complete degree in public universities or in the city s private colleges As of 2006 update the city s total student population was estimated around 200 000 TransportTram The old tram lines on Agiou Mina Street Tram was the main oldest and most popular public urban mean of Thessalonians in the past It was in operation from 1893 to 1957 when it was disestablished by the government of Konstantinos Karamanlis The Belgian Compagnie de Tramways et d Eclairage Electrique de Salonique operated it from 1912 until 1940 when the company was purchased by the Hellenic State The operating base and tram station was in the district of Depot Before the economic crisis of 2009 there were various proposals for new tram lines Bus An OASTH bus Thessaloniki Urban Transport Organization OASTH operates buses as the only form of public transport in Thessaloniki It was founded in 1957 and operates a fleet of 604 vehicles on 75 routes throughout the Thessaloniki metropolitan area International and regional bus links are provided by KTEL at its Macedonia InterCity Bus Terminal located to the west of the city centre Metro Map of the Thessaloniki Metro under construction Lines 1 and 2 and its planned extensions The creation of a metro system for Thessaloniki goes back as far as 1918 when Thomas Hayton Mawson and Ernest Hebrard proposed the creation of a Thessaloniki Metropolitan Railway In 1968 a circular metro line was proposed and in 1987 the first serious proposal was presented and construction briefly started in 1988 before stalling and finally being abandoned due to lack of funding Both the 1918 and 1988 proposals ran almost the identical route to the current Line 1 Construction on Thessaloniki s current metro began in 2006 and is classified as a megaproject it has a budget of 1 57 billion 1 77 billion Line 1 and Line 2 are currently under construction and will enter service in phases between 2023 and 2024 Line 1 is 9 5 kilometres 5 9 mi long and stops at 13 stations while Line 2 is 4 8 kilometres 3 0 mi long and stops at a further five stations while also calling at 11 of the Line 1 stations Important archaeological discoveries have been made during construction and some of the system s stations will house archaeological exhibitions One stop Venizelou will house the only open archaeological site within a metro station anywhere in the world Line 2 is to be expanded further with a loop extension to the western suburbs of the city towards Evosmos and Stavroupoli and one overground extension towards the Airport The western extension is more high priority than the airport one as the airport will be served by a 10 minute shuttle bus to the terminus of Line 2 Mikra Once it opens in 2024 it is expected that 320 000 people will use the metro every day or 116 million people every year Commuter suburban rail Proastiakos Suburban Railway services Commuter rail services have recently been established between Thessaloniki and the city of Larissa the service is known in Greek as the Proastiakos meaning Suburban Railway The service is operated using Siemens Desiro EMU trains on a modernised electrified double track and stops at 11 refurbished stations covering the journey in 1 hour and 33 minutes Furthermore an additional line has also been established although with the use of regional trains between Thessaloniki and the city of Edessa Thessaloniki Airport Makedonia Thessaloniki International Airport International and domestic air traffic to and from the city is served by Thessaloniki Airport Makedonia The short length of the airport s two runways means that it does not currently support intercontinental flights although a major extension lengthening one of its runways into the Thermaic Gulf is under construction despite considerable opposition from local environmental groups Following the completion of the runway works the airport will be able to serve intercontinental flights and cater for larger aircraft in the future After long delays the new runway of the airport was completed in spring 2019 Construction of a second terminal began in September 2018 and finished in February 2021 three months ahead of schedule Railways New railway station Because of the Greek economic crisis all international train links from the city were suspended in February 2011 Until then the city was a major railway hub for the Balkans with direct connections to Sofia Skopje Belgrade Moscow Vienna Budapest Bucharest and Istanbul alongside Athens and other destinations in Greece Daily through trains to Sofia and Belgrade were restarted in May 2014 but stopped again for COVID 19 Thessaloniki remains one of Greece s most important railway hubs and has the biggest marshalling yard in the country Regional train services within Greece operated by TrainOSE the Hellenic Railways Organization s train operating company link the city with other parts of the country from its central railway passenger station called the New railway station located at the western end of Thessaloniki s city centre Port The Port of Thessaloniki connects the city with seasonal ferries to the Sporades and other north Aegean islands with its passenger terminal being one of the largest in the Aegean Sea basin having handled around 162 731 passengers in 2007 Meanwhile ongoing actions have been going on for more connections and the port is recently being upgraded as Thessaloniki is also slowly turning into a major tourist port for cruising in the eastern Mediterranean Motorways Road map of Thessaloniki and its suburbs from OpenStreetMapPart of the ring road Peripheriaki Odos Thessaloniki lies on the crossroads of the A1 E75 A2 E90 and A25 motorways which connect the city with other parts of the country as well as the neighbouring countries of North Macedonia Bulgaria and Turkey The city itself is bypassed by the C shaped Thessaloniki Inner Ring Road Esoteriki Peripheriaki Odos Greek Eswterikh Periferiakh Odos which all of the above motorways connect onto it The western end of the route begins at the junction with the A1 A2 motorways in Lachanagora District Clockwise it heads northeast around the city passing through the northwestern suburbs the forest of Seich Sou and through to the southeast suburb borough of Kalamaria The ring road ends at a large junction with the A24 motorway which then continues south to Chalkidiki passing through Thessaloniki s outer southeast suburbs The speed limit on this motorway is 90 kilometres per hour 56 mph it currently has three traffic lanes for each direction and forms the city s most vital road link handling more than 120 000 vehicles daily instead of the 30 000 vehicles that it was originally designed to handle in 1975 An outer ring road known as Eksoteriki Peripheriaki Odos Greek E3wterikh Periferiakh Odos outer ring road carries all traffic that completely bypasses the city It is Part of Motorway 2 Future plans Taxi in Thessaloniki Despite the large effort that was made in 2004 to improve the motorway features of the Thessaloniki ring road the motorway is still insufficient to tackle Thessaloniki s increasing traffic and metropolitan population To tackle this problem the government has introduced large scale redevelopment plans throughout 2011 with tenders expected to be announced within early 2012 that include the total restructuring of the A16 in the western side of the city with new junctions and new emergency lanes throughout the whole length of the motorway In the eastern side an even larger scale project has been announced for the construction of a new elevated motorway section above the existing which would allow faster travel for drivers heading through to the airport and Chalkidiki that do not wish to exit into the city and will decongest the existing motorway for city commuters The plans also include adding one more lane in each direction on the existing A16 ring road and on the A24 passing through Thessaloniki s southeast suburbs from its junction with the A16 in Kalamaria up to the airport exit EO67 which will make it an 8 lane highway Additional long term plans include the extension of the planned outer ring road known as Eksoteriki Peripheriaki Odos Greek E3wterikh Periferiakh Odos outer ring road to circle around the entire Thessaloniki metropolitan area crossing over the Thermaic Gulf from the east to join with the A1 E75 motorway Preliminary plans have been announced which include a 4 5 km 3 mi bridge over the gulf as part of the southern bypass of the city to cater for the large number of travellers from Macedonia and the rest of Greece heading to the airport and to the increasingly popular tourist region of Chalkidiki Motorways A1 E75 W Republic of North Macedonia Larissa Athens A2 E90 W Kozani Ioannina Igoumenitsa N Kavala Xanthi Alexandroupolis Turkey A25 EO12 E79 N Serres Bulgaria A24 EO67 S Airport Chalkidiki National Roads EO2 E86 W Edessa Giannitsa EO12 E79 N Serres Drama EO16 SW Polygyros Ouranopolis EO65 N Kilkis Doirani Thessaloniki is also planned to be the southern terminus of the trans European Via Carpathia motorway International relationsCommemorative stele in Melbourne Consulates citation needed Albania Austria Australia Belgium Brazil Bulgaria Georgia Canada Croatia China Cyprus Denmark Finland France Germany Hungary Israel Ireland Italy Jordan Lithuania Netherlands Norway Portugal Serbia Spain Switzerland Sweden United States United Kingdom Ukraine Romania Russia Turkey Twin towns sister cities Thessaloniki is twinned with Hartford United States 1962 Alexandria Egypt 1993 Bologna Italy 1984 Leipzig Germany 1984 Limassol Cyprus 1984 Melbourne Australia 1984 Plovdiv Bulgaria 1984 Bratislava Slovakia 1986 Cologne Germany 1988 Constanţa Romania 1988 San Francisco United States 1990 Nice France 1992 Tel Aviv Israel 1994 Kolkata India 2005 Korce Albania 2005 Busan South Korea 2010 Durres Albania 2012 Other cooperation Thessaloniki also cooperates with Toronto Canada 1986 Budapest Hungary 1993 Brooklyn New York United States 1993 Boston United States 1996 Shenyang China 2000 Gyumri Armenia 2000 Philadelphia United States 2002 Saint Petersburg Russia 2002 Dnipro Ukraine 2003 Venice Italy 2003 Dongguan China 2008 Nagoya Japan 2019 See alsoThessaloniki metropolitan area Battle of Thessalonica fourteen events at various times Macedonians Greeks Mount Chortiatis above the city Lake Koroneia 14 km from the city List of ancient Greek cities Delta of Axios National Park west of the cityReferencesNotes Soloman Esther Galiniki Styliana 2018 13 Las Incantadas of Salonika searching for enchantment in a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library, article, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games, mobile, phone, android, ios, apple, mobile phone, samsung, iphone, xiomi, xiaomi, redmi, honor, oppo, nokia, sonya, mi, pc, web, computer
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