- Jewish timeline
- General timeline
- 3000 Settlements & villages established as Indo-European tribes settle in area
Minoan culture on island of Crete is considered first advanced European civilization
1500 Mycenaeans establish mainland Greece’s first great culture
Greek mythology develops, including gods such as include Zeus, Apollo, Aphrodite
1184 A Trojan Horse: Greeks overrun Troy (in modern-day Turkey)
1100 Greece’s “Dark Ages”: Dorians invade from north, raze many settlements, enslave locals
800 The polis: Numerous city-states have developed including Athens and Sparta
Politically independent, they are culturally linked. Greek alphabet developed
Homer writes epic poems Iliad & the Odyssey, key influences on Greek education & language
775 The first Olympic Games. Sole event: the men’s (almost) 200m sprint
The Pythia, priestess-oracle of Delphi, the most powerful woman of the ancient world
Aristocratic, inherited rule replaced by “nouveau riche” trader-tyrants in many city-states
Colonization: 1500 Greek city-states established in Mediterranean, Black Sea, elsewhere
508 Athens establishes first democracy. All citizens can vote and speak at legislative assemblies
490 Battle of Marathon: Persian invasion of Greece failing and start of Greek military superiority
THE POWER AND THE GLORY OF ANCIENT GREECE
- 480 Athens, “the cradle of western civilization,” flourishes economically, politically, culturally
Architectural wonders include the Acropolis and Parthenon, a temple to Athena
Theater, philosophers Socrates & Plato, physician Hippocrates part of this Golden Age
431 Trade-rich, imperial Athens battles with military power Sparta
401 Athens crippled by decades-long war with Sparta & bubonic plague
- First evidence of Jewish presence
- 336 A new power from the north takes charge: Macedonia under Alexander the Great
He builds the largest empire the world has ever seen
Conquers the Persian Empire, Egypt, and most areas between Greece and India
- Alexander captures Jerusalem
Some evidence of Jewish communities on Greece’s Aegean coast
- Alexander dies at age 32. His empire splits between his generals and weakens
The Greek city-states decline but Hellenism, Greek culture outside Greece, flourishes
- 250 Many Hellenized Jews around world. Egyptian Jews translate Bible into Greek (Septuagint)
167 In Land of Israel, Maccabees revolt against Greeks. Hellenized Jews leave Israel for Greece
The Romaniote Jews establish themselves in Ioannina, Athens, and elsewhere
Speak Judeo-Greek & follow unique customs including reciting Jewish prayers in Greek
Today, the Romaniote are Europe’s oldest Jewish community
OLDER BROTHER RULED BY YOUNGER: GREECE UNDER THE ROMANS
- 86 Rome completes defeat of Greek city-states, Greece now a Roman province
Greeks will not be independent for next 2,000 years
However, Roman rulers heavily influenced by Greek culture
The Pax Romania: 300 years of peace in Greece begins under Romans
- 50 St. Paul brings Christianity to Greece
- Jewish (Romaniote) communities in Thessaloniki, Athens, Veria, Ioannina, and elsewhere
- 324 Greece part of Rome’s Eastern (Byzantine) Empire. Christian empire with Hellenistic culture
394 Christianity state religion. Worship of Greek and Roman gods prohibited, temples destroyed
- Jews pressed to accept Christianity but protected by law as Chosen People
Jews of Thebes (pop. 2,000) dominate silk industry. In Crete, Jews export agricultural goods
- 594 Classical Greek cultural influence dimming. Philosophy banned, Christian theology ascendant
- Over time, Jewish population drops with heavy assimilation into Greek life
Continuing Jewish religious & communal life heavily influenced by Greek-Jewish fusion
- 1054 The Great Schism: Separate Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches formed
The Greek Orthodox Church dominates the Eastern Orthodox & most Greek speakers
- 1159 Jewish population small & scattered: Just 500 Romaniote Jews living in Thessaloniki
- 1202 Byzantine Empire weakens. Venice & others control many Greek territories and trade
- 1376 Ashkenazi Jews from Hungary & elsewhere begin settling in Thessaloniki
THE AGE OF THE OTTOMANS
- 1453 Ottoman Turks capture Constantinople. Greece part of the Ottoman Empire
Thessaloniki becomes a major seaport & city with multi-ethnic population
- 1493 Sephardi influx to Thessaloniki (which they call Salonika) begins
Ottomans welcome Jews from Spain, Portugal, North Africa, Italy, and elsewhere
30 separate congregations in Salonika, most named after native countries and communities
Jewish population includes many Marranos, forced converts to Christianity, expelled from Spain
1553 20,000 Jews in Salonika, making it one of the world’s largest Jewish communities
Most speak Ladino (Judeo-Spanish). They create rich Sephardi culture in city
Salonika Jews also play a key role in growth of international trade
Jewish ties to Ottomans (Muslims, Turks) make them suspect to Greek-speaking Christians
1600 Salonika is nicknamed “ir v’em beYisrael,” the mother-city of Israel
30,000 Jews form majority (68%) in city. Smaller communities in Athens & around Greece
1665 A Jewish tumult. In Salonika & around world, many Jews claim Shabbetai Zevi is the messiah
1666 Threatened with death from Ottoman rulers, Shabbetai converts to Islam
Most in Salonika abandon Shabbetai, downplaying former allegiance to him
They reorganize community. Greater unity and central control, powerful rabbinical courts
1683 But some Shabbetai supporters convert to Islam while practicing Judaism secretly
This group (the Donmeh) remain in Salonika for centuries as separate community
- 1669 Ottoman rule declining. Parthenon damaged as Ottomans & Venetians battle
1770 Ottoman Turks suppress several Greek Christian rebellions
1814 Greek nationalist demands for independence from Ottomans Turks grow
INDEPENDENCE…
- 1821 Greek War of Independence begins. Massacres, heavy casualties on both sides
Ottomans respond to atrocities in Greece by attacking Greek communities in Turkey
- Greeks massacre thousands of Jews as community associated with Ottoman rule
Athens and other Greek Jewish communities diminished or destroyed
- 1829 Greeks win independence with British, Russian, French support
1831 Kingdom of Greece includes Athens & south. Most of north, incl. Salonika, under Ottomans
- Many Greek Jews move north to Ottoman-controlled Salonika
- In “independent” Greece, considerable political instability & Great Power influence
Britain, France and Russia install a Bavarian, King Otto, onto throne
- 1834 Jewish community in Athens gradually revives and grows through migrants
- 1862 Greeks rebel against Otto but British install a new foreign sovereign, the Danish King George
Modernization: A period of relative stability with some economic and technological progress
- 1873 Jews in Salonika, Athens and elsewhere affected by growing western and liberal influence
- 1890 Mass migration: One-sixth of Greeks migrate in next 15 years, mainly to the US and Egypt
1896 The first modern Olympic Games hosted in Athens. The new nation coming of age?
...AND INSECURITY
- 1897 Greeks lose war with Ottomans. Only western powers prevent Turks from taking Athens
1910 Humiliating defeat leads to rise of the “Greek political messiah,” Prime Minister Venizelos
1912 He leads country into Balkan Wars against Ottomans. Greeks double territory and population
Greeks gain southern Macedonia from Ottomans including Thessaloniki (Salonika)
- 90,000 Jews in Salonika. A center of Jewish commerce and Sephardi, Ladino-speaking culture
Jews half city’s population & influential in all walks of life. City, including the docks, closes for Shabbat.
- 1916 Seeking further territory, Greeks join Allies in WWI fighting Germany and Ottoman Turks
1919 Greeks attack Turkey but are defeated by 1923. Greek communities in Turkey massacred
1923 War leads to poverty & political chaos in Greece. 400,000 Turks forced out of Greece
1.5 m. Greeks leave Turkey. Tension between Greek refugees and Jews in Salonika
- Jewish population and influence in Salonica drops. City’s day of rest is now Sunday
- 1935 Right-wing dictator Metaxas imprisons opponents (but does not persecute Jews)
- Jewish communities in 31 cities. Zionism and Aliyah are growing
Salonika remains key Jewish center with a wide range of secular and religious culture
FROM WORLD WAR TO CIVIL WAR…
- 1940 Greeks declare neutrality in WWII. Fascist Italy invades Greece but is beaten back.
1941 Nazis and their allies invade. They defeat Greeks and Allied armies, divide country into 3 zones
400,000 Greeks will die during brutal occupation, including 100,000 from starvation
- About 76,000 Jews in Greece. 57,000 Salonika Jews are trapped in German Zone
6,000 Jews in Thrace under Bulgarians. 13,000 in Athens and elsewhere under Italians
Germans begin arrests, execution of Jewish leadership, plunder of community resources
- 1942 Fierce resistance from Greek partisans, including opposing royalist & Communist groups
- 1943 Salonika Jews forced into ghettos. Over 40,000 deported to Auschwitz, nearly all perish there
Some Salonika Jews survive through protection by Greek citizens or by joining partisans
4,100 Jews in Bulgarian zone deported to Treblinka and murdered
Jews in Italian zone generally protected. Italians refuse to allow deportations
1944 But after Italy surrenders, Germans take over zone and 5,000 Jews are sent to Auschwitz
60-70,000 Greek Jews die in the Holocaust, about 85% of the Jewish population
Post-war Jewish population at 10,000.
- Germans withdraw, but Greek communists and royalists begin civil war
1945 Britain intervenes to ensure Greek royalists take control
1946 After unsteady truce, civil war breaks out again. 50,00 killed. Communists defeated by 1949
1949 A shattered society. Since 1938, population has dropped by 1/8th, 1000 villages obliterated
Greek economy in tatters, 20% of nation homeless
...TO MILITARY JUNTA
- 1949 A conservative, repressive, royalist govt takes power backed by anti-democratic army
Many communists imprisoned. Leftists and their families discriminated against for many years
1952 Greece joins NATO. During Cold War, Greece is a staunch supporter of US
Constant tension with Turkey and also with Slav population in Macedonia
But with massive US aid, economy recovers from free fall although remains stagnant
Mass migration. In next 20 years, 1 million Greeks settle in north Europe, Australia and elsewhere
1961 A flawed “democracy.” Conservatives stay in power after rigged election
The beginning of mass tourism in Greece
1964 Center-left party win election, raising army fears
1967 Supported by king, army seize power. Opponents imprisoned, culture stifled
Military government’s anti-modern attitude includes banning long hair, mini-skirts
- Migration to Israel sees Jewish population drop to 6,500
Athens has largest Jewish community (2,800)
- 1969 Greece banned from Council of Europe but tourism continues
1973 Military violently squashes demonstrations by anti-junta students in Athens
1974 Seeking nationalist boost, military encourage coup in Cyprus, and Cyprus uniting with Greece
A Greek humiliation: Turks respond by capturing Northern Cyprus. Cyprus divided.
A RETURN TO DEMOCRACY & TO EUROPE
- 1974 Failed Cyprus adventure leads to collapse of Greek military junta
A two party (center-right, center-left) system will dominate Greek politics for the next 40 years
They bring stability, security, democracy and gradually, higher standards of living
But huge tax exemptions and heavy spending lay foundations for later economic crises
1975 Economy hit as Greek migrant workers return from recession-hit Germany
1979 Nobel Laureate for Literature Odysseas Elytis part of the growing Greek role in European culture
1981 Greece full member (and poorest state) of European Economic Community
A second Marshall Plan. Greece receives huge payments from EEC and later from the EU
- Greece considered one of Israel’s harshest critics in western Europe
- 1992 Civil marriage example of social liberalization and weakening Greek Orthodox Church
1996 A period of privatization as new leader seeks modernization, integration into EU economy
2000 Left-wing terrorism has diminished but not died. A British diplomat assassinated
2002 Greece accepted into Eurozone (after downplaying level of debt). Drachma replaced by Euro
2004 The Year of Miracles: Greece wins European Soccer Championship and hosts Olympics
Living standards and expectations continue to rise, as does national debt and bank loans
A changing, aging society. Birth rate is 1.4 per woman, as opposed to 4.1 in 1934
- First kosher Greek restaurant since WWII opens
- 2005 Welfare cuts, privatization and end of job security laws lead to protest
2007 International financial crisis leads to concern about Greek level of debt
- 2008 Previously frosty Greek-Israel relations improve significantly. Military, trade and diplomatic ties
- 2009 Fear that Greeks will default on debt repayment starts country’s economic crisis
Over next 8 years, Greece suffers longest recession of any advanced economy on record
Radical austerity measures, social welfare system collapses, migration of many educated
Despite reforms, government requires a series of bailout loans to avoid debt default
2012 Post-junta political system weakens as protests rise and Europe demands more cost-cutting
Far-right, racist Golden Dawn win 7% of votes and 21 parliamentary seats
2013 26.8% of workers unemployed (highest in Europe). Youth unemployment at 60%
Government launches crackdown on hate speech, arrests Golden Dawn leaders
2015 Anti-austerity, radical left-wing party Syriza win elections
Facing expulsion from Eurozone, government agrees to more cuts in exchange for another bailout
Migrant crisis at peak. In one year, 100,000 migrants from Middle East reach Greek Islands
2017 GDP per person has dropped from $32,000 in 2008 to $18,600
2018 A degree of economic stabilization. 33 million tourists visit, tourism 25% of economy
Country of Macedonia changes name to North Macedonia, ending long dispute with Greece
- 2019 Moses Elisaf elected mayor of Ioannina, believed to be the first Jewish mayor in Greece
- Greek population: 10.8 million
- Greek Jewish population: c. 5,000. Communities in nine areas, largest in Athens
J2 STUFF.
We have everything you need to know before you go. Check out our Instagram my_j2adventures for cool updates and interesting tidbits.
The J2 App
available on the App Store & on Google Play.
START PLANNING LET’S EXPLORE.
Whether you have a journey in mind, want to join a featured trip, or simply want to explore, drop us a note. We work really hard to be a loved travel company that delivers amazing and memorable experiences. So please do not be surprised when we say “yes” to every reasonable request you make!