National Hellenic Museum

National Hellenic Museum

The National Hellenic Museum is America's only national institution that interprets the American experience through the history of Greek immigrants, and the contributions of Greek Americans to the American mosaic, while celebrating their rich Greek history and culture and the profound impact of their Hellenic heritage upon the world.

The Greeks laid the foundation for western civilization. Centuries later, thousands of Greek families immigrated to the United States and brought with them a rich culture and strong values. Now, everyone can explore and celebrate the timeless traditions and epic history of Greek culture at the all-new National Hellenic Museum.

The National Hellenic Museum is the first and only major museum in the country dedicated to the Greek journey, from ancient times to the modern Greek American experience.

Gala 2023

Gala 2023

Open House Chicago 2023

Open House Chicago 2023

Пікірлер

  • @alexishidlebaugh9152
    @alexishidlebaugh915214 күн бұрын

    Shout out to SFU! Interesting stuff, great interview :D

  • @Gingermarie745
    @Gingermarie74519 күн бұрын

    Hi, May I share the most important news you will ever hear in your life? God the Father sent His holy Son Jesus Christ(Y'shua Ha' Mashiach) from heaven to earth, to be born of a virgin. He grew up and died on the cross for our sins. He was put into a tomb for 3 days, and then Abba Father raised Jesus to life and He appeared to people and went back to Heaven. We must all sincerely receive Jesus to be a true child of God. It says in John 1:12 "But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name." Will you genuinely believe on Christ Jesus and truly receive Him today, before it is too late?

  • @samgaravellos2901
    @samgaravellos290123 күн бұрын

    its good to hear from you nick,even though we have never met ,I have a lot of respect for you and your work. I like yourself suffered a similar fate due to those criminals that completed what the German occupiers could not,I RESPECTFULLY disagree with your take of today`s Greece,because those criminals might have lost the battle but won the war,the KKE despite their official #s they are a big influence in Greek society ....

  • @tulazaz
    @tulazaz2 ай бұрын

    My mother’s mother, was Katrina Chronakis who was from Kynouria. She married my Grandfather, Yannis Andreou in the early 1900’s and they settled in Denver, CO. I might be related to Dr. Chronakis. 😊? My father, Petros Zazanis, was born in Naxos. Another family member by marriage to my mother’s sister, was Yannis Theadoropoulos from the Peloponnese.

  • @NoName-ch2wg
    @NoName-ch2wg2 ай бұрын

    😂

  • @fernandasantiago3
    @fernandasantiago32 ай бұрын

    Com a separação da linda Tatiana perdeu muito seu brilho, ainda bonito porém o tempo passa e vai embora. Príncipe tirando fotografias falido pras pretensões de um futuro playboy. Tatiana linda e ainda nova, desejo boa sorte e alguém que a mereça. Nikolaus falido não é bom partido.

  • @fernandasantiago3
    @fernandasantiago32 ай бұрын

    Príncipe liso

  • @Thislife78-p1w
    @Thislife78-p1w2 ай бұрын

    🤩

  • @Acs2046
    @Acs20464 ай бұрын

    I miss the Parthenon so much 😔

  • @user-ie1fu5hc4w
    @user-ie1fu5hc4w4 ай бұрын

    I love his accent 😊

  • @Raknus91
    @Raknus916 ай бұрын

    Interesante 🧐

  • @MDK3192
    @MDK31929 ай бұрын

    Miss Rodity's 👔

  • @OriginalSocalgranny
    @OriginalSocalgranny11 ай бұрын

    What a ridiculous presentation. Over 50% of the talk focuses on slides which are not captured in the video. Is it too much to ask in this age of technical marvels to be able to move the camera angle so people not in the room can see what the speaker is discussing? The National Hellenic Museum is based in Chicago, not some poor underprivileged or remote area. Why even bother to record something which wastes the time of anyone wishing to watch the presentation after the fact. Shame on you NHM for not coordinating better with your speaker to plan for proper recording equipment, equipment operators, and in general thinking of posterity.

  • @user-vj8qc3mt3h
    @user-vj8qc3mt3h Жыл бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @nikalexandrinos
    @nikalexandrinos Жыл бұрын

    ’ΘΕΟΣ Η ΜΑΝΑ ‘’ Ένα ποίημα μετά τη θέαση της ταινίας '' ΕΛΕΝΗ '' πάνω στα μουσικά βήματα του : ‘’ ΘΕΟΣ ΑΝ ΕΙΝΑΙ ‘’ haris alexiou- theos an einai) ΝΙΚΟΛΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΙΝΟΣ © Ποιητής και Συγγραφέας- Αφιερωμένο στη μνήμην ετούτης Μάνας που θυσιάστηκε για τα παιδιά της και στο Γιο Της που έκανε τα πάντα να αποκαταστήσει τη μνήμην της. Πιστεύω ετούτο ποίημα θα δώσει Πατριδόχαρά στο Νίκο Γκατζογιάννη (Nicholas Gage), ευχής έργο και παράκληση σε οποίον αγγλομαθή μπορεί να το γνωστοποιήσει με οποιονδήποτε τρόπο.

  • @nikalexandrinos
    @nikalexandrinos Жыл бұрын

    ’ΘΕΟΣ Η ΜΑΝΑ ‘’ Σάν πέφτει η νύχτα, εσύ κοντά μου , Θαρρείς κι εσένα ‘εγώ σου λείπω Σαν ακουμπάω τα βλέφαρα μου Μάμμη Ελένη σ’ αντικρίζω Θεός η Μάνα Σα φως νεφέλης απ’ τα ουράνια με άρμα αγγέλων σε κατεβάζουν Στο προσκεφάλι μου επάνω Εσέν’ αφήνουν και μου φωνάζουν Νικόλα ξύπνα, τις ώρες να χαρείς Κι απ’ της Μάμμης το ποτό, να πιεις Τους φονιάδες της μετά εσύ να συγχωρείς Σα-φως η Μάμμη, πόσο σε’ αγαπά να δεις Θεός κι η Μάμμη, πόσο σ’ αγαπά να δεις Νικόλα ξύπνα, τις ώρες να χαρείς Κι απ’ της Μάμμης το ποτό, να πιείς κι αδέλφια ήταν, εχθροί, αυτήν την εποχή Σα-φως η Μάμμη, πόσο σε’ αγαπά να δεις Θεός κι η Μάμμη , πόσο σ’ αγαπά να δεις Η Μάνα Ελένη, είμαι η δική σου Δύσκολα χρόνια ήταν 'εκείνα Όμως εσένα το αίμα ακόμα Καίει σαν ρέει ζητεί αλήθεια Νικόλα ξύπνα, τις ώρες να χαρείς Κι απ’ της Μάμμης το ποτό να πιείς Τους φονιάδες της εσύ μετά να συγχωρείς Σα-φως η Μάμμη, πόσο σε’ αγαπά να δεις Θεός κι η Μάμμη, πόσο σ’ αγαπά να δεις.- ΝΙΚΟΛΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΙΝΟΣ © [email protected] Θα Σας είμαι ευγνώμων αν κοινοποιήσετε στο ‘’ Nicholas Gage’’ το παραπάνω ποίημά που σας ‘’ξομολογούμαι ‘’ έγραψα ‘’ αν μέσω λυγμών’’ με το που είδα την ταινία ‘’ ΕΛΕΝΗ ‘’ Διαφορετικά κι αν σας εμπνέω εμπιστοσύνη στείλτε μου κάποιο προσωπικό του ‘’email’’ να επικοινωνήσω μαζί του.-

  • @samtheflutegirl1373
    @samtheflutegirl1373 Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting! Gave me lots of ideas for my research paper!

  • @theofiloskalidonis78
    @theofiloskalidonis78 Жыл бұрын

  • @a.k.3659
    @a.k.3659 Жыл бұрын

    Τον πίπωνες;

  • @user-mj1ns6dg7v
    @user-mj1ns6dg7v Жыл бұрын

    Από παρακολούθηση της πορείας του Νικολάου, ως έτυχε, η παρατήρηση των δεδομένων πράξεων και λόγων του , βεβαιώνουν το ικανό και αποδοτικό της προσωπικότητάς του.

  • @susannaferri1523
    @susannaferri1523 Жыл бұрын

    Bello

  • @user-ul9is6nn1v
    @user-ul9is6nn1v Жыл бұрын

    Άξιος! Πρίγκηπας και καλλιτέχνης!

  • @a.k.3659
    @a.k.3659 Жыл бұрын

    Ναι βλάuα, μια μίξη από SinBoy, Καπουτζίδη και Μέγα Αλέξανδρο...

  • @aek..1924
    @aek..1924 Жыл бұрын

    Ιντα έκαμε μωρέ πατριώτη και είναι άξιος κατεεις του λόγου σου.....δεν έχω τίποτα με τον ετσα ρώτησα...???

  • @user-ul9is6nn1v
    @user-ul9is6nn1v Жыл бұрын

    Άξιος!

  • @aek..1924
    @aek..1924 Жыл бұрын

    Τι έκαμε μωρέ πατριώτη και είναι άξιος??? Δεν έχω τίποτα με τον άνθρωπο.....

  • @a.k.3659
    @a.k.3659 Жыл бұрын

    @@aek..1924 Είναι καλός στις λαμογιές μέσω ΜΚΟ και έχει καλές σκιώδεις σχέσεις με τους έλληνες ολιγάρχες και εφοπλιστές. Θες κι άλλα;

  • @DimitrisDantsakis-fh5jx
    @DimitrisDantsakis-fh5jx11 ай бұрын

    @@aek..1924 ανέδειξε στην ταινία Ελένη τί έκανε Ο ΔΣΕ

  • @user-qx8uu7nh5y
    @user-qx8uu7nh5y Жыл бұрын

    Πολύ συγκινητική αλλά και τραγική η υπόθεση τής Ελένης! ΑΘΑΝΑΤΗ!

  • @kathleenmilligan5408
    @kathleenmilligan5408 Жыл бұрын

    Just one note: The Tsarina and St. Elizabeth were Alice’s aunts, not her cousins. Her mother was their oldest sister.

  • @mydogsbutler
    @mydogsbutler Жыл бұрын

    Calling thanos veremis "greek" is ridiuclous. this leftist humanity's flake goes around peddling the Fallmerayer narrative.

  • @khangbob
    @khangbob Жыл бұрын

    So the History of Marathon is from Boston

  • @NatlHellenicMuseum
    @NatlHellenicMuseum2 жыл бұрын

    Panelists (in program order): Peter Kilpatrick joined Illinois Tech as provost and senior vice president for academic affairs on August 1, 2018. He previously served as a professor and McCloskey Dean of Engineering at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of more than 100 refereed journal articles in the areas of colloid and interfacial science, emulsion science, and molecular self-assembly, particularly as they apply to energy and to bioseparations. According to Google Scholar, his work has been cited more than 7,000 times, largely in the areas of emulsions and interfacial and colloidal phenomena. He is also the holder of 12 patents and has been actively engaged in two startups. Kilpatrick received his A.B. in chemistry from Occidental College (summa cum laude) in 1978 and his Ph.D. in chemical engineering from the University of Minnesota in 1983. He served on the faculty of North Carolina State University in chemical engineering from 1983 to 2007, the final eight-plus years as the department head. He served as chairperson of the Global Engineering Deans Council from 2015-2017. Kevin Harrington is Professor Emeritus of Architectural History at the IIT. He has also been a visiting professor at the University of Illinois Chicago, the Brandenburg Technological University in Germany, the University of Texas Austin and the Escola da Cidade in São Paulo, Brazil. He majored in history at Colgate University and studied the History of Architecture & Urban Development at Cornell University. Between college and graduate school he served as an officer in the United States Air Force. His publications and research focus on Chicago's architectural and urban development in relation to modern architecture and the modern city, especially considering the ways Chicago is typical or unique. Aside from his activity in numerous organizations Kevin mentors PhD students at the CoA and is an active Mies Society Member and participant with his wife, Elaine. Michael Lykoudis has served as Professor of Architecture at Notre Dame since 1991. From 2004 to 2020 he served as the School’s first Dean following two years as Chair and eight years as Assistant and Associate Chair. He has devoted his career to the building, study and promotion of traditional architecture and urbanism as a way of addressing the critical issues of our time facing the built and natural environment. Over the past 30 years, Lykoudis was the principal organizer of the School’s traditional and urbanist curriculum and established several new initiatives. He brought about the renewal of the School’s graduate program with the objective of doubling its enrollment, increasing its offerings and developing its focus on classical architecture and urbanism. Lykoudis developed The Richard H. Driehaus Prize at the University of Notre Dame, the largest architectural prize in the world that is given annually. A graduate of Cornell University’s School of Architecture, Lykoudis earned his Master of Architecture degree from the University of Illinois with a concentration in business and real estate. He has lectured at universities around the country and abroad as well as to professional and civic organizations. He has directed his own practice since 1983 in Athens, Stamford, and South Bend. Carol Ross Barney, FAIA, HASLA has been in the vanguard of civic space design since founding Ross Barney Architects in 1981. With a career that spans nearly 50 years, Carol has made significant contributions to the built environment, the profession, and architectural education. From the early days in the United States Peace Corps planning National Parks in Costa Rica to recent collaborations with City Governments, Carol has relentlessly advocated that excellent design is a right, not a privilege. Her body of work, being almost exclusively in the public realm, represents this ethos and occupies a unique place within the panorama of contemporary architecture. Carol’s projects vary in type and scale, but always uphold a deep commitment to the quality of life. This commitment manifests into spaces that enrich the metropolitan experience; buildings that are environmental stewards, embodying and showcasing sustainability; and spaces that inspire young, curious minds to learn, invent, and break boundaries. At the forefront for equity in the architectural profession, Carol has long sought to move beyond her gender as a contributing factor or hindrance to success. But it’s not enough just to blaze the trail, Carol continually teaches, mentors, and empowers young architects to contribute their ideas and designs to progress the profession. Moderator: Reed Kroloff is dean of Illinois Institute of Technology College of Architecture and a nationally renowned leader in the fields of architecture, urbanism, and design. He has managed top design programs, edited the architectural profession’s leading publication, spoken at gatherings such as TED and the Aspen Design Conference, and advised architects and clients on some of the most significant projects of the last 20 years, leading the New York Times to describe him as “the man with the list at architecture’s party.” Kroloff is also a founding principal of jones|kroloff, a unique advisory practice that develops strategy for clients in the architecture and design industry, and also guides architect selection processes and competitions. Kroloff previously served as director of Cranbrook Academy of Art and Art Museum, and dean of Tulane University School of Architecture (which he led through Hurricane Katrina and its recovery). Kroloff is a recipient of the American Academy in Rome’s 2003 Rome Prize Fellowship.

  • @susanharrington5026
    @susanharrington50262 жыл бұрын

    a wonderful program ! Thank you.

  • @OmEgA766
    @OmEgA7662 жыл бұрын

    let me buy a gun bevermind I can't because I beet my wife

  • @Gologo7
    @Gologo72 жыл бұрын

    This guy is a D bag…

  • @marywagner9927
    @marywagner99272 жыл бұрын

    I was extremely happy to see Eleni tonight. I saw it in 1985 and have searched ever since for it. It made a huge impression on me and I wanted so much to see it again. What an excellent, sad, inspiring story!! Thank you Mr. Gage.

  • @user-vy3ht8qp9x
    @user-vy3ht8qp9x Жыл бұрын

    ΑΥΤΌ ΤΟ ΒΙΒΛΊΟ ΕΛΈΝΗ ΚΥΚΛΟΦΟΡΕΊ

  • @zackjay71
    @zackjay712 жыл бұрын

    This hypocrite trash.

  • @zackjay71
    @zackjay712 жыл бұрын

    Beta Soy. You are part of the problem. You ‘journalism’” is trash

  • @SuperTuffgirl
    @SuperTuffgirl2 жыл бұрын

    Neil Strindberg the man with alcohol abuse and domestic violence against his wife? Creepy creep

  • @jerometurner8759
    @jerometurner87592 жыл бұрын

    The reason so many of the Greek schools are disappearing is because major Greek migration to the US ended during our parents generation in the late 70s and early 80s. My dad and his generation were probably the last to come over in that time period. This means the number of Greek children available to fill up Greek school classes dried up. The 1990s were probably the end of the golden age of Greek schools. When I was in school during that time period, I didn't have a single pupil in Greek school whose family had been in America for decades. Not one. Maybe those types of families who possibly had more money sent their children to Socrates or another school which taught Greek full time instead of during night or weekend. Every single student in my and my siblings classes came from families who arrived in America during the 70s and early 80s. Once our generation completed our lessons, schools started to dry up and close. The pool of young Greek children had dried up. Today many people are having intermarriage so some don't send their children to Greek school, plus many Greek adults are not having children. Other than Athena Greek school, I believe the only other options for Greek school are those associated with the churches. What will the future bring? Maybe this is the first step of the Greek American community dying out. Maybe the future of the Greek American community will simply be English speaking followers of the Orthodox faith if the religion can still hold on to enough people to fill their parishes.

  • @jerometurner8759
    @jerometurner87592 жыл бұрын

    Good stuff!

  • @wolfieblack32
    @wolfieblack322 жыл бұрын

    It is a true example of scientific impartiality to have the courage to explain how the fake Greek nation was invented which is one of the ''Megali İdea''s of western historiography. I have deeply and heartly great respect for Mr Dr. Grammatikos

  • @michaelfitzgerald6341
    @michaelfitzgerald63413 жыл бұрын

    Wife beating sack of fecal matter.

  • @joefriday8607
    @joefriday86073 жыл бұрын

    Good work Dr Romano, what you are doing in Arcadia is remarkable.

  • @jelef001
    @jelef0013 жыл бұрын

    The person who asks about the Pontian Greeks makes such an interesting point! Loved this lively discussion.

  • @dogcatparty7371
    @dogcatparty73713 жыл бұрын

    June 2021 Best video about her life story here at National Hellenic Museum. Please, is you can support Takis the dog and puppy rescue man of Greece. He used to own a bar or disco before dedicating his life to the health of abandoned dogs and puppies in Greece. Also, please watch and discuss 'The Dimming, Full Length Climate Engineering Documentary' by successful engineer, Dane Wigington. He regrets having worked for Bechtel in San Francisco, California. He cares about saving endangered species, including humans. The last ten minutes of this film explain his life story and are beautiful in image and sound. G'Day

  • @susanmcdonald9088
    @susanmcdonald90883 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, very interesting. However, I can't say I heard Homer's song through a biography of the German- Jewish Parry, as presented in this lecture, a master of revising classical scholarship in showing, 16,000+ lines of poetry could in fact, be memorized. But you failed to mention in this resinging & retelling, in fact, the audience already KNEW the basic stories from hundreds of years earlier, they knew the endings! That's important, because Homer's genius was in telling the story's lessons & themes . . . The human condition, from a heroic warrior culture, to one of reflection & human value. Of seeing the enemy, quite differently. A unique position as with other things like philosophy & science & democracy, all these unique things that came out of ancient Greece. And nowhere else. I believe Parry was probably murdered. He & his wife were in LA to rescue his wealthy mother-in-law from grifters, perhaps they or a lover, or Orthodox believers, or being 1935, who knows. But we all know what wealth can impose . . . I read Parry began carrying a gun on his trips to YUGOSLAVIA, but why to LA to see family, very mysterious. Maybe the wife did it. The best lecture I've ever heard on Homer, the most inspiring I've ever heard, is from a retired physician, at a medical school of all places! Scranton University in California, a lecture give to medical school teachers of all people! Homer? kzread.info/dash/bejne/rGqaurSwdLjQdpc.html As their school finds value of the Humanities in the most intense field of science & medical training, one of the highest suicide rates these pressured students, this physician has heard Homer's song like no other! It's wonderful, perhaps you could interview him, Homer & healing arts, go figure, lol. kzread.info/dash/bejne/rGqaurSwdLjQdpc.html It has to be said that rediscovery of ancient Greek works into the West, from the Arabs in Spain and in the Eastern Roman Byzantium Empire, as these works of Plato, Aristotle, Euclid, and yes, Homer, dribbled into Italy & Europe, translated & copied as far away as monks in Irish monastaries, these ancient Greek works jump-started inquiry and science and in general, the European Renaissance, eventually the Enlightment and all that followed. It's been said that Western Civilization is like a Family, whose Father was Greek, whose Mother was Hebrew, and they packed up the family & moved to Rome. The 2 pillars of the West, the Bible & Homer. A question posed at this very interesting university, in Scranton. And with all the extremism & religious fundamentalism going on today, maybe Homer's song, not taught adequately taught anymore in K-12, but churches & synagogues & mosques, on every street corner so-to-speak, and wars on terror & geopolitical goings on, well, maybe it's time HOMER's stories make another come-back, big-time! And tell us, without enforced "belief" systems, take it as-is, never "cannonized" but a basis, what exactly human nature, human behavior, and the human condition requires, and is all about. (How about a book on Mrs. Einstein, Albert's first wife who he abandoned with two sons one mentally retarded, who also studied PHYSICS, and probably contributed if not downright produced the theories of relativity... She was a Gentile woman from Austria...)

  • @susanmcdonald9088
    @susanmcdonald90883 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting, thank you. I am, however, surprised that this notion of fasting, of discipline, of ritual & tradition, of historical use & change, of "getting close to God", did not include "ecstacy". Those altered states of mind, which fasting certainly promotes. Or of dance, like whirling Turkish dervishes, or of great cathedral architecture or the Hagia Sophia, meant to stun, or the beads & repeated mantras, meditations, even prayers! Altered States. In ancient Athens, during the Dionysian Festival of Theatre, the Athenians would form in a long procession stopping along the way to drink wine & dance in "ecstacy" getting out of themselves, then proceed to the theatre for 3 days of plays ... Their preparations for such performances. And review what something like Eripedes' BACCHAE had to tell them.... Or the Mystery Religions, where perhaps hallucigens were used, perhaps the real forbidden fruit, lol, but especially the one at Elysia, near Athens, near a cave where Hades had snatched Demeter's daughter, goddess of the wheat, agriculture, and rebirth in the spring... Why were so many people, Greeks, Romans, from all across the Mediterranean, why were they drawn to such a religion, year after year, centuries old, millinia by the time Christianity closed it forever. It's said that the Elysian Mystery Religion, was the first to mention resurrection. The influences are replete on Christianity. Mixing an imported Judean Monotheism with a very Dionysian experience. My Protestant church upbringing had communion every Sunday. A Central belief. As a time of intense self-reflection, foregiveness, prayer. But based on what Jesus said, do this every time Christians gather together. Simple. But it's in the history of science annals, that the Protestant Reformation, unintended consequences, allowed natural philosophers (scientists) to escape church authority, to claim for themselves, knowledge of the world, this world, in more "toleration.". And we all know where philosophy began, lol. The real "diaspora" may be what the Greeks did so uniquely, in every aspect of human endeavor, whether science, religion, politics, literature, epics & drama, democracy, all of it! And sprinkled with a lot of that uniquely Greek word PHILOTIMO. :)

  • @deedeehegel8711
    @deedeehegel87113 жыл бұрын

    Many thanks for the research you did and for your conversational way of sharing it with your listeners. I really enjoyed this presentation.

  • @CCG1946
    @CCG19463 жыл бұрын

    Excellent insightful discussion. Thank you

  • @earthredalert
    @earthredalert3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, endiaferon

  • @olindodragoti
    @olindodragoti3 жыл бұрын

    Who were the heroes of the Greek Revolution? THE ALBANIANS kzread.info/dash/bejne/h4Waza6QncS6o5M.html Next kzread.info/dash/bejne/oXeppbtwmpuYfMY.html ibb.co/d4pzG3W ibb.co/pwVKKLg ibb.co/T1T7CMk ibb.co/JqvZmDz ibb.co/pQ6T7R3 ibb.co/z7f4fXc ibb.co/bWC8nhJ ibb.co/fvNwT5c ibb.co/VwNQ0bq ibb.co/nDSKVNk ibb.co/5G3f9qD ibb.co/VqBYbHj fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Despotat_de_Mor%C3%A9e (Language of Despotate) ibb.co/QXkPnwg ibb.co/56q6MfL ibb.co/0ZnKZWg en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fustanella quod.lib.umich.edu/a/ars/13441566.0047.007/--lord-byron-1788-1824-in-albanian-dress-a-sartorial-response?rgn=main;view=fulltext commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Lord_Byron_in_Albanian_Dress_by_Phillips,_1813.jpg kzread.info/dash/bejne/nI16ubGOm8KvYc4.html ( Albanian fighters who sing in Albanian after minutes 1:30 ) i.pinimg.com/564x/97/7c/c9/977cc90d1bc5e94956ba9f5d8ce5fb9b.jpg eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=32834 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=36610 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=39795 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=39943 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=40741 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=40766 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=40768 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=40781 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=44408 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=48082 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=50021 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=51229 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=53932 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=53934 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=52601 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=52604 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=52610 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=57212 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=60953 eng.travelogues.gr/item.php?view=60954 www.pinterest.com/pin/433119689140426333/ www.pinterest.com/pin/185914290846037161/ www.pinterest.com/pin/101753272818511428/ i.pinimg.com/originals/c8/08/c8/c808c86f4e4a08ec56f8270685101f0c.jpg 2img.net/h/oi44.tinypic.com/1671iex.png 2img.net/h/oi39.tinypic.com/j0wbyp.png 2img.net/h/oi39.tinypic.com/2j1kh0p.png 2img.net/h/oi43.tinypic.com/2zi302u.jpg 2img.net/h/oi40.tinypic.com/rh0gt4.jpg 2img.net/h/oi39.tinypic.com/353ebl0.png i.pinimg.com/564x/d4/50/ae/d450ae94ce51e22edbe317eae57d3b76.jpg www.retronews.fr/conflits-et-relations-internationales/long-format/2019/02/01/yanitza-la-jeanne-darc-des-balkans i.pinimg.com/originals/ef/74/33/ef7433cb3f48d0d5c0ee1e144f980ab3.jpg www.artsy.net/artwork/alexandre-bida-arnautes-egypte-albanians-egypt theculturetrip.com/europe/greece/articles/a-brief-sartorial-history-of-the-greek-fustanella/ fineartamerica.com/featured/albanians-1865-amadeo-preziosi.html commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Albanian_Duel_by_Alexandre_Gabriel_Decamps_1828.jpg i.pinimg.com/564x/17/03/68/17036828c60ce0e674bfd714e6710051.jpg digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/510d47e3-757a-a3d9-e040-e00a18064a99 fineartamerica.com/featured/louis-dupre-albanian-motionage-designs.html (Luis Dupre) i1.wp.com/english.travelogues.gr/archive/fullsize/6a62d577b16536d109308292cd5ab057.jpg 3.bp.blogspot.com/-Qdnzldw8sO8/WCmslryiKBI/AAAAAAABFtg/j0jLHfUy6Do7IxRs5Tk-RXLZ1cuIFmz2ACLcB/s640/d56r.jpg commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Albanian_man_from_Ioannina,_coloured_aquatint_by_J_Cartwright.jpg i0.wp.com/english.travelogues.gr/archive/fullsize/2353ec46ed14fa1799af233d572d8f36.jpg useum.org/artwork/Les-danseurs-albanais-Alexandre-Gabriel-Decamps-1835 www.albanianhistory.net/1842_Robert/ www.bonhams.com/auctions/25707/lot/150/ www.pinterest.com/pin/89227636353943989/ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arb%C3%ABresh%C3%AB_people fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andr%C3%A9as_Miao%C3%BAlis 2img.net/h/oi41.tinypic.com/15zny3s.jpg en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ali_Pasha_of_Ioannina en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omer_Vrioni en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veli_Pasha en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_Ali_of_Egypt en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faik_Konica en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janina_Vilayet it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciamuria el.wikipedia.org/wiki/%CE%91%CE%BB%CE%AE_%CE%A6%CE%B1%CF%81%CE%BC%CE%AC%CE%BA%CE%B7%CF%82 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arvanites kzread.info/dash/bejne/hXuk19qshtiYnc4.html (Arvanitis) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnaut en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Souliotes upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a2/Ethnographic_map_of_Epirus%2C_based_on_P._Aravandinos%2C_1878.jpg upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6e/Pelopones_ethnic.JPG en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odysseas_Androutsos en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Zenevisi en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Losha en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaqub_Spata en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malakasioi en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Despotate_of_Arta en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Spata en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maurice_Spata en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercurio_Bua en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Bua Marko Bocari kzread.info/dash/bejne/f2qEtrqzk6bHgMo.html kzread.info/dash/bejne/n6tmurymhKWbh5M.html kzread.info/dash/bejne/rIZ1rLRpqMfSeto.html (Rare audio, old expressions of Arvanit Albanian) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albanian_Regiment_(France) Dhaskarina Pinoçi (Laskarina Bubulina) de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laskarina_Bouboulina it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giorgio_Basta it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arvaniti en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geographical_name_changes_in_Greece They all came from Syria and Asia Minor and stole from Arvanites (Albanians) the history, culture, clothing, but never: ΤHE LANGUAGE !!! ...............

  • @trackingspecialists2554
    @trackingspecialists25543 жыл бұрын

    Hi Nikki, was it you that sang (here is love)?

  • @williamvickerman2538
    @williamvickerman25383 жыл бұрын

    VERY WELL PRESENTED DR. AL! Your love of literature and history, your affable persona that radiated like the Greek sun way back when you were demonstrating fearless recklessness in daring to court our daughter are still the omnipresent attributes they were back in those mists of time. Voula and John's son has done them proud. Keep up the excellent work

  • @George_outdoors
    @George_outdoors3 жыл бұрын

    Interesting history to learn about New Smyrna and the early Greek settlers.

  • @susanmcdonald9088
    @susanmcdonald90883 жыл бұрын

    Interesting. But I wonder, when was coal discovered in southern Utah. Also, how did the earliest Greek immigrants co-exist with the Mormans? Were they involved with the companies that moved in their territories, how did the castlegate disaster happen? Any man-made indications? Did any Greeks convert to Mormonism? My ancestor was a kid, baby, unsure, younger than 8 years, 6 in other sources, of Alexander Fancher, an experienced cattle driver in the West... But I'm referring to the MOUNTAIN MEADOW MASSACRE. S. Utah. A large, wealthy, 1,000s herds, wagon train headed to California. 1857. Was this prior to Greeks arriving? Before coal? The final slaughter of men, women, & children, was September 11th. Their bodies left to be eaten & rot. 120+/-people murdered by Mormon militia. The largest massacre of American citizens in peacetime until the Oklahoma City bombing, then 9-11 of course. The Mormons used the Piute Indians to attack, & painted their faces red, but the final slaughter was achieved when morman militia offered "help", shot the men in the head, & used knives & swords on the women & young kids.