Kallithea: Difference between revisions
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| caption1 = Aerial view of the city with the [[Acropolis of Athens]] in the background | | caption1 = Aerial view of the city with the [[Acropolis of Athens]] in the background | ||
| image2 = Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center - 52036972429.jpg | | image2 = Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center - 52036972429.jpg | ||
| caption2 = | | caption2 = [[Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center]] | ||
| image3 = Attica 06-13 Kallithea 04 Church Metamorphosi Sotiros.jpg | | image3 = Attica 06-13 Kallithea 04 Church Metamorphosi Sotiros.jpg | ||
| caption3 = Church of Metamorphosis Sotiros | | caption3 = Church of Metamorphosis Sotiros | ||
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| caption5 = Marina Delta | | caption5 = Marina Delta | ||
}} | }} | ||
| city_flag = | | city_flag = | ||
| city_seal = | | city_seal = | ||
| districts = | | districts = | ||
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}} | }} | ||
[[File:kallithea big.jpg|thumb|300px|Space photo showing the municipality | [[File:kallithea big.jpg|thumb|300px|Space photo showing the municipality ofKallithea (bordered with white dotted line), its location next to the Athens centre (to the right) and the [[Phaleron Bay]] (to the left), as well as the local layout of the [[Athens Metro]] (cyan line) and its stations (yellow circles). Click box right to enlarge]] | ||
[[File:Kallithea ancient2.jpg|thumb|300px|The fifth century BC fortification of Athens (red lines) superimposed on a recent astronaut photo. Also shown the river beds in ancient times (cyan lines), the new river bed (dotted cyan line), the ancient roads coinciding with existing ones (yellow dotted lines) and the Phaleron coastline at ancient times (blue line). Click box right to enlarge]] | [[File:Kallithea ancient2.jpg|thumb|300px|The fifth century BC fortification of Athens (red lines) superimposed on a recent astronaut photo. Also shown the river beds in ancient times (cyan lines), the new river bed (dotted cyan line), the ancient roads coinciding with existing ones (yellow dotted lines) and the Phaleron coastline at ancient times (blue line). Click box right to enlarge]] | ||
'''Kallithea''' ([[Greek language|Greek]]: Καλλιθέα, meaning "beautiful view") is a suburb in [[Athens#Athens Urban Area|Athens agglomeration]] and a municipality in [[South Athens (regional unit)|south Athens regional unit]]. It is the eighth largest municipality in Greece (97,616 inhabitants, 2021 census), as well as the fourth biggest in the Athens urban area (following municipalities of [[Athens]], [[Piraeus]] and [[Peristeri]]).<ref name=census21/> Additionally, it is the [[population density|2nd most densely populated]] municipality in Greece and one of the [[List of cities proper by population density|most densely populated cities in the world]], with {{cvt|20,240|PD/km2}}. The municipality has an area of {{cvt|4.749|km2}}.<ref name="stat01">{{cite web |date=2022-07-19 |title=Population & housing census 2021 (incl. area and average elevation) |url=https://elstat-outsourcers.statistics.gr/Census2022_GR.pdf |archive-url= |archive-date= |publisher=National Statistical Service of Greece |language=el}}</ref> | '''Kallithea''' ([[Greek language|Greek]]: Καλλιθέα, meaning "beautiful view") is a suburb in [[Athens#Athens Urban Area|Athens agglomeration]] and a municipality in [[South Athens (regional unit)|south Athens regional unit]]. It is the eighth largest municipality in Greece (97,616 inhabitants, 2021 census), as well as the fourth biggest in the Athens urban area (following municipalities of [[Athens]], [[Piraeus]], and [[Peristeri]]).<ref name=census21/> Additionally, it is the [[population density|2nd most densely populated]] municipality in Greece and one of the [[List of cities proper by population density|most densely populated cities in the world]], with {{cvt|20,240|PD/km2}}. The municipality has an area of {{cvt|4.749|km2}}.<ref name="stat01">{{cite web |date=2022-07-19 |title=Population & housing census 2021 (incl. area and average elevation) |url=https://elstat-outsourcers.statistics.gr/Census2022_GR.pdf |archive-url= |archive-date= |publisher=National Statistical Service of Greece |language=el}}</ref> | ||
==Location== | ==Location== | ||
The center of Kallithea (Davaki Square) lies at a distance of {{convert|3|km|0|abbr=in}} to the south of the Athens city | The center of Kallithea (Davaki Square) lies at a distance of {{convert|3|km|0|abbr=in}} to the south of the Athens city centre (Syntagma Square) and {{convert|3|km|0|abbr=on}} to the north-east of the Piraeus (photo 1). Kallithea extends from the Filopappou and Sikelia hills in the north to [[Phaleron Bay]] in the south; its two other sides consist of [[Andrea Syngrou Avenue|Syngrou Avenue]] to the east (border to the towns of [[Nea Smyrni]] and [[Palaio Faliro]]), and the [[Ilisos]] River to the west (border to the towns of [[Tavros]] and [[Moschato]]) (photo 2). | ||
The site on which the city was developed covers the biggest part of the area to the south of Athens city | The site on which the city was developed covers the biggest part of the area to the south of Athens city centre, protected in ancient times (5th century BC) by the [[Long Walls]] to the west and the [[Phalerum]] Wall to the east (photo 3). Somewhere within this area the ancient town of Xypete lay. The town and its citizens are mentioned, among other places, in [[Plato]]'s [[Dialogues of Plato|Dialogues]]. | ||
==1896 and 2004 Athens Olympics== | ==1896 and 2004 Athens Olympics== | ||
The plans for the establishment of the new city of Kallithea were officially approved in December 1884. On the longitudinal axis of the town (Thiseos Avenue), the [[Athens Tram|Athens to Phaleron tramway]] once ran, from the beginning (1850) to (1955) and the end of its operations. Near the | The plans for the establishment of the new city of Kallithea were officially approved in December 1884. On the longitudinal axis of the town (Thiseos Avenue), the [[Athens Tram|Athens to Phaleron tramway]] once ran, from the beginning (1850) to (1955) and the end of its operations. Near the centre of the town the Shooting Range (Skopeftirion) was built to house events of the first [[Olympic Games|modern Olympic Games]], the [[1896 Summer Olympics]], and these first modern games took place in three venues: the refurbished ancient stadium of Athens ([[Panathinaiko Stadium]]) {{convert|2|km|0|abbr=on}} NE of Kallithea, the [[Neo Phaliron Velodrome]] (currently [[Karaiskaki Stadium]]) {{convert|2|km|0|abbr=on}} SW of Kallithea, and the Kallithea Shooting Range (Skopeftirion).<ref>[http://www.la84foundation.org/6oic/OfficialReports/1896/1896.pdf 1896 Summer Olympic official report.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080527211831/http://www.la84foundation.org/6oic/OfficialReports/1896/1896.pdf |date=2008-05-27 }} Volume 2. pp. 83-4.</ref> | ||
Events of the [[2004 Summer Olympics|Athens 2004]] Olympic Games were also sited in the district of Kallithea, notably handball and [[Taekwondo]] in the new [[Sports Pavilion (Faliro)]] by the bottom of Syngrou Avenue, and beach volleyball in the [[Olympic Beach Volleyball Center]] on Kallithea Bay (Tzitzifies). | Events of the [[2004 Summer Olympics|Athens 2004]] Olympic Games were also sited in the district of Kallithea, notably handball and [[Taekwondo]] in the new [[Sports Pavilion (Faliro)]] by the bottom of Syngrou Avenue, and beach volleyball in the [[Olympic Beach Volleyball Center|Olympic Beach Volleyball Centre]] on Kallithea Bay (Tzitzifies). | ||
==Growth== | ==Growth== | ||
Between the first modern games (1896) and the [[2004 Summer Olympics|2004 Olympic Games]] in the city, Kallithea grew significantly. Initially the tramway depot and workshop were built here in 1910, followed by the [[Harokopio University|Harokopios Graduate School]] (1925) and the [[Panteion University|Panteios Graduate School of Political Sciences]] (1928). | Between the first modern games (1896) and the [[2004 Summer Olympics|2004 Olympic Games]] in the city, Kallithea grew significantly. Initially, the tramway depot and workshop were built here in 1910, followed by the [[Harokopio University|Harokopios Graduate School]] (1925) and the [[Panteion University|Panteios Graduate School of Political Sciences]] (1928). | ||
In the 1920s the town was flooded by thousands of refugees following the [[Greek genocide]], [[Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922)]], the Asia Minor Catastrophe (1922), and the [[Treaty of Lausanne]] (1923). These refugees arrived in Kallithea mainly from the south [[Black Sea]] ([[Pontus (region)|Pontus]]), from [[Ancient Greece|ancient Greek]] cities such as Sinope (now [[Sinop (Turkey)|Sinop]], Turkey), Sampsus (now [[Samsun]], Turkey), Kerasus (now [[Giresun]], Turkey), [[Trapezous]]-[[Trabzon|Trebizond]] (now [[Trabzon]], Turkey), Tripolis (now [[Tirebolu]], Turkey), Argyroupolis (now [[Gümüshane]], Turkey) and other remnants of the late [[Byzantine Empire]]. | In the 1920s the town was flooded by thousands of refugees following the [[Greek genocide]], [[Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922)]], the Asia Minor Catastrophe (1922), and the [[Treaty of Lausanne]] (1923). These refugees arrived in Kallithea mainly from the south [[Black Sea]] ([[Pontus (region)|Pontus]]), from [[Ancient Greece|ancient Greek]] cities such as Sinope (now [[Sinop (Turkey)|Sinop]], Turkey), Sampsus (now [[Samsun]], Turkey), Kerasus (now [[Giresun]], Turkey), [[Trapezous]]-[[Trabzon|Trebizond]] (now [[Trabzon]], Turkey), Tripolis (now [[Tirebolu]], Turkey), Argyroupolis (now [[Gümüshane]], Turkey) and other remnants of the late [[Byzantine Empire]]. | ||
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A few had arrived earlier (1919) from the north and east (Russian) coasts of the [[Black Sea]], from places such as Odessos ([[Odesa]]), Marioupolis ([[Mariupol]], the [[Sea of Azov]]) and elsewhere, after the failed attempt of the western allies (Greece included) against the young [[Bolshevik]] state during the [[Russian Civil War]]. | A few had arrived earlier (1919) from the north and east (Russian) coasts of the [[Black Sea]], from places such as Odessos ([[Odesa]]), Marioupolis ([[Mariupol]], the [[Sea of Azov]]) and elsewhere, after the failed attempt of the western allies (Greece included) against the young [[Bolshevik]] state during the [[Russian Civil War]]. | ||
[[Black Sea]] immigrants of Greek origin also settled in Kallithea in the 1930s, as a result of the change of Soviet policy toward [[ethnic groups]]. Their origins were mainly in the east coast of the Black Sea ([[Batumi]], [[Sukhumi]], [[Novorossiysk]], [[Anapa]] etc.) | [[Black Sea]] immigrants of Greek origin also settled in Kallithea in the 1930s, as a result of the change of Soviet policy toward [[ethnic groups]]. Their origins were mainly in the east coast of the Black Sea ([[Batumi]], [[Sukhumi]], [[Novorossiysk]], [[Anapa]], etc.) | ||
The first refugees settled originally near the site of the first Olympic shooting range (1896), until they were gradually transferred to new dwellings. After its evacuation the building bound with the shooting range served as a school, until the [[Nazism|Nazi]] Occupation of 1941, when it was converted to a prison. The prison of Kallithea was demolished in 1966; among others, fighters of the [[Greek resistance|Greek Resistance]] and victims of the [[Greek Civil War]] had been jailed there, such as [[Nikos Beloyannis]]. | The first refugees settled originally near the site of the first Olympic shooting range (1896), until they were gradually transferred to new dwellings. After its evacuation the building bound with the shooting range served as a school, until the [[Nazism|Nazi]] Occupation of 1941, when it was converted to a prison. The prison of Kallithea was demolished in 1966; among others, fighters of the [[Greek resistance|Greek Resistance]] and victims of the [[Greek Civil War]] had been jailed there, such as [[Nikos Beloyannis]]. | ||
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==Climate== | ==Climate== | ||
Kallithea has a [[hot semi-arid climate]] (''BSh'') bordering a [[hot-summer Mediterranean climate]] (''Csa'' in the [[Köppen climate classification]]). It has very hot dry summers and mild winters. During the summer of 2024 the [[National Observatory of Athens]] station in [[Harokopio University]] reached a stunning summer mean maximum temperature of {{convert|36.8|°C|1}}. <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.meteo.gr/Monthly_Bulletins.cfm | title=Meteo.gr - Προγνώσεις καιρού για όλη την Ελλάδα }}</ref> | Kallithea has a [[hot semi-arid climate]] (''BSh'') bordering a [[hot-summer Mediterranean climate]] (''Csa'' in the [[Köppen climate classification]]). It has very hot dry summers and mild winters. During the summer of 2024 the [[National Observatory of Athens]] station in [[Harokopio University]] reached a stunning summer mean maximum temperature of {{convert|36.8|°C|1}}.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.meteo.gr/Monthly_Bulletins.cfm | title=Meteo.gr - Προγνώσεις καιρού για όλη την Ελλάδα }}</ref> | ||
{{Weather box | {{Weather box | ||
| Line 92: | Line 92: | ||
| metric first = yes | | metric first = yes | ||
| single line = yes | | single line = yes | ||
|Jan high C=14. | |Jan high C=14.4 | ||
|Feb high C=15. | |Feb high C=15.6 | ||
|Mar high C=18. | |Mar high C=18.4 | ||
|Apr high C=22. | |Apr high C=22.3 | ||
|May high C=26.9 | |May high C=26.9 | ||
|Jun high C=32. | |Jun high C=32.4 | ||
|Jul high C=35. | |Jul high C=35.9 | ||
|Aug high C=35. | |Aug high C=35.1 | ||
|Sep high C=30.4 | |Sep high C=30.4 | ||
|Oct high C=25.3 | |Oct high C=25.3 | ||
| Line 105: | Line 105: | ||
|Dec high C=16.0 | |Dec high C=16.0 | ||
|Jan mean C= 10. | |Jan mean C= 10.6 | ||
|Feb mean C=11. | |Feb mean C=11.6 | ||
|Mar mean C=13. | |Mar mean C=13.9 | ||
|Apr mean C=17. | |Apr mean C=17.4 | ||
|May mean C=21.9 | |May mean C=21.9 | ||
|Jun mean C= | |Jun mean C=27.1 | ||
|Jul mean C=30. | |Jul mean C=30.5 | ||
|Aug mean C=30.1 | |Aug mean C=30.1 | ||
|Sep mean C=25.6 | |Sep mean C=25.6 | ||
| Line 118: | Line 118: | ||
|Dec mean C=12.4 | |Dec mean C=12.4 | ||
|Jan low C= 6. | |Jan low C= 6.7 | ||
|Feb low C= 7. | |Feb low C= 7.6 | ||
|Mar low C= 9. | |Mar low C= 9.5 | ||
|Apr low C=12. | |Apr low C=12.5 | ||
|May low C=16.8 | |May low C=16.8 | ||
|Jun low C=21. | |Jun low C=21.8 | ||
|Jul low C=25. | |Jul low C=25.1 | ||
|Aug low C=25.0 | |Aug low C=25.0 | ||
|Sep low C=20.8 | |Sep low C=20.8 | ||
| Line 132: | Line 132: | ||
|rain color=green | |rain color=green | ||
|Jan rain mm= | |Jan rain mm=52.2 | ||
|Feb rain mm= | |Feb rain mm=34.4 | ||
|Mar rain mm= | |Mar rain mm=28.1 | ||
|Apr rain mm= | |Apr rain mm=19.6 | ||
|May rain mm=19. | |May rain mm=19.2 | ||
|Jun rain mm= | |Jun rain mm=26.7 | ||
|Jul rain mm=9 | |Jul rain mm=8.9 | ||
|Aug rain mm= | |Aug rain mm=13.1 | ||
|Sep rain mm=23.1 | |Sep rain mm=23.1 | ||
|Oct rain mm=27.4 | |Oct rain mm=27.4 | ||
| Line 171: | Line 171: | ||
| Dec record low C = 0.8 | | Dec record low C = 0.8 | ||
|source 1= [[National Observatory of Athens]] Monthly Bulletins (Nov 2016 - | |source 1= [[National Observatory of Athens]] Monthly Bulletins (Nov 2016 - Aug 2025)<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.meteo.gr/Monthly_Bulletins.cfm | title=Meteo.gr - Προγνώσεις καιρού για όλη την Ελλάδα }}</ref> |source 2= Harokopio Athens N.O.A station<ref>{{cite web | url=https://penteli.meteo.gr/stations/harokopio-athens/ | title=Latest Conditions in Harokopio University }}</ref> and [[World Meteorological Organization]]<ref name="WMO">{{cite web | url=https://oscar.wmo.int/surface/#/search/station/stationReportDetails/0-300-1-harokopioathens | title=World Meteorological Organization | accessdate=18 November 2023}}</ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
==Culture== | ==Culture== | ||
Kallithea's main cultural | Kallithea's main cultural centre is the [[Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center]]. South Kallithea (Tzitzifies), is associated with the development of Greek folk music, particularly [[rebetiko]] and later [[laïkó]]. Popular composers and singers once performed here; [[Markos Vamvakaris]], [[Vassilis Tsitsanis]], [[Yannis Papaioannou]], [[Marika Ninou]], [[Sotiria Bellou]], [[Manolis Chiotis]], [[Mary Linda]], [[Giorgos Zampetas]], [[Stelios Kazantzidis]], [[Marinella]], [[Poly Panou]], and [[Viki Moscholiou]]. | ||
===Education=== | ===Education=== | ||
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===Sports=== | ===Sports=== | ||
Until 2004, south Kallithea (Tzitzifies) housed the only horse track in Greece (Ippodromos - Hippodrome), which later moved to [[Markopoulo (Athens), Greece|Markopoulon]], near [[Eleftherios Venizelos Airport]]. Kallithea houses numerous cultural associations and several sport clubs, the most well known of which are [[Athens Kallithea F.C.]] (soccer), [[Esperos]] (basketball, volleyball, handball, and also soccer in an earlier period) and [[Ikaros Kallitheas B.C.|Ikaros Kallitheas]], a multisport club founded in 1991, originally as Ikaros Nea Smyrni.<ref>{{cite web|title=Ιστορία|url=http://www.ikarosbc.gr/?page_id=176|publisher=ikarosbc|access-date=12 March 2015}}</ref> Kallithea had another important club, [[Esperides Kallithea]] with many titles in women basketball. This club merged to Ikaros Kallithea in 2012.<ref>{{cite web|title=Από Εσπερίδες… Ίκαρος|url=http://www.sport-fm.gr/article/559308|publisher=sport-fm.gr|access-date=12 March 2015|language=el}}</ref> | Until 2004, south Kallithea (Tzitzifies) housed the only horse track in Greece (Ippodromos - Hippodrome), which later moved to [[Markopoulo (Athens), Greece|Markopoulon]], near [[Eleftherios Venizelos Airport]]. Kallithea houses numerous cultural associations and several sport clubs, the most well-known of which are [[Athens Kallithea F.C.]] (soccer), [[Esperos]] (basketball, volleyball, handball, and also soccer in an earlier period) and [[Ikaros Kallitheas B.C.|Ikaros Kallitheas]], a multisport club founded in 1991, originally as Ikaros Nea Smyrni.<ref>{{cite web|title=Ιστορία|url=http://www.ikarosbc.gr/?page_id=176|publisher=ikarosbc|access-date=12 March 2015}}</ref> Kallithea had another important club, [[Esperides Kallithea]], with many titles in women basketball. This club merged to Ikaros Kallithea in 2012.<ref>{{cite web|title=Από Εσπερίδες… Ίκαρος|url=http://www.sport-fm.gr/article/559308|publisher=sport-fm.gr|access-date=12 March 2015|language=el}}</ref> | ||
{|class="wikitable" | {|class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
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==Transportation== | ==Transportation== | ||
The main roads of Kallithea are [[Andrea Syngrou Avenue]] towards eastern Athens and [[Poseidonos Avenue]] towards Piraeus and the other southern suburbs. Kallithea is served by [[Line 1 (Athens Metro)|metro line 1]] stations [[Kallithea metro station|Kallithea]] and [[Tavros metro station|Tavros]], by the [[Athens Tram|tram]] stations Kallithea and Tzitzifies, and numerous bus and trolley-bus | The main roads of Kallithea are [[Andrea Syngrou Avenue]] towards eastern Athens and [[Poseidonos Avenue]] towards Piraeus and the other southern suburbs. Kallithea is served by [[Line 1 (Athens Metro)|metro line 1]] stations [[Kallithea metro station|Kallithea]] and [[Tavros metro station|Tavros]], by the [[Athens Tram|tram]] stations Kallithea and Tzitzifies, and numerous bus and trolley-bus lines connect Kallithea to almost every destination in metropolitan Athens. | ||
==Sites of interest== | ==Sites of interest== | ||
Latest revision as of 22:41, 6 September 2025
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Kallithea (Greek: Καλλιθέα, meaning "beautiful view") is a suburb in Athens agglomeration and a municipality in south Athens regional unit. It is the eighth largest municipality in Greece (97,616 inhabitants, 2021 census), as well as the fourth biggest in the Athens urban area (following municipalities of Athens, Piraeus, and Peristeri).[1] Additionally, it is the 2nd most densely populated municipality in Greece and one of the most densely populated cities in the world, with Template:Cvt. The municipality has an area of Template:Cvt.[2]
Location
The center of Kallithea (Davaki Square) lies at a distance of Script error: No such module "convert". to the south of the Athens city centre (Syntagma Square) and Script error: No such module "convert". to the north-east of the Piraeus (photo 1). Kallithea extends from the Filopappou and Sikelia hills in the north to Phaleron Bay in the south; its two other sides consist of Syngrou Avenue to the east (border to the towns of Nea Smyrni and Palaio Faliro), and the Ilisos River to the west (border to the towns of Tavros and Moschato) (photo 2).
The site on which the city was developed covers the biggest part of the area to the south of Athens city centre, protected in ancient times (5th century BC) by the Long Walls to the west and the Phalerum Wall to the east (photo 3). Somewhere within this area the ancient town of Xypete lay. The town and its citizens are mentioned, among other places, in Plato's Dialogues.
1896 and 2004 Athens Olympics
The plans for the establishment of the new city of Kallithea were officially approved in December 1884. On the longitudinal axis of the town (Thiseos Avenue), the Athens to Phaleron tramway once ran, from the beginning (1850) to (1955) and the end of its operations. Near the centre of the town the Shooting Range (Skopeftirion) was built to house events of the first modern Olympic Games, the 1896 Summer Olympics, and these first modern games took place in three venues: the refurbished ancient stadium of Athens (Panathinaiko Stadium) Script error: No such module "convert". NE of Kallithea, the Neo Phaliron Velodrome (currently Karaiskaki Stadium) Script error: No such module "convert". SW of Kallithea, and the Kallithea Shooting Range (Skopeftirion).[3]
Events of the Athens 2004 Olympic Games were also sited in the district of Kallithea, notably handball and Taekwondo in the new Sports Pavilion (Faliro) by the bottom of Syngrou Avenue, and beach volleyball in the Olympic Beach Volleyball Centre on Kallithea Bay (Tzitzifies).
Growth
Between the first modern games (1896) and the 2004 Olympic Games in the city, Kallithea grew significantly. Initially, the tramway depot and workshop were built here in 1910, followed by the Harokopios Graduate School (1925) and the Panteios Graduate School of Political Sciences (1928).
In the 1920s the town was flooded by thousands of refugees following the Greek genocide, Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922), the Asia Minor Catastrophe (1922), and the Treaty of Lausanne (1923). These refugees arrived in Kallithea mainly from the south Black Sea (Pontus), from ancient Greek cities such as Sinope (now Sinop, Turkey), Sampsus (now Samsun, Turkey), Kerasus (now Giresun, Turkey), Trapezous-Trebizond (now Trabzon, Turkey), Tripolis (now Tirebolu, Turkey), Argyroupolis (now Gümüshane, Turkey) and other remnants of the late Byzantine Empire.
A few had arrived earlier (1919) from the north and east (Russian) coasts of the Black Sea, from places such as Odessos (Odesa), Marioupolis (Mariupol, the Sea of Azov) and elsewhere, after the failed attempt of the western allies (Greece included) against the young Bolshevik state during the Russian Civil War.
Black Sea immigrants of Greek origin also settled in Kallithea in the 1930s, as a result of the change of Soviet policy toward ethnic groups. Their origins were mainly in the east coast of the Black Sea (Batumi, Sukhumi, Novorossiysk, Anapa, etc.)
The first refugees settled originally near the site of the first Olympic shooting range (1896), until they were gradually transferred to new dwellings. After its evacuation the building bound with the shooting range served as a school, until the Nazi Occupation of 1941, when it was converted to a prison. The prison of Kallithea was demolished in 1966; among others, fighters of the Greek Resistance and victims of the Greek Civil War had been jailed there, such as Nikos Beloyannis.
In the 1990s, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, a new wave of Greek immigrants arrived in Kallithea from the east coast of the Black Sea, from the Caucasus highlands in Georgia, as well as from distant Greek settlements in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan where their Black Sea Greek ancestors were expelled during Joseph Stalin's regime in the 1930s.
Historical population
| Year | Population |
|---|---|
| 1981 | 117,319 |
| 1991 | 114,233 |
| 2001 | 109,609 |
| 2011 | 100,641 |
| 2021 | 97,616 |
Climate
Kallithea has a hot semi-arid climate (BSh) bordering a hot-summer Mediterranean climate (Csa in the Köppen climate classification). It has very hot dry summers and mild winters. During the summer of 2024 the National Observatory of Athens station in Harokopio University reached a stunning summer mean maximum temperature of Script error: No such module "convert"..[4]
Script error: No such module "weather box".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Culture
Kallithea's main cultural centre is the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center. South Kallithea (Tzitzifies), is associated with the development of Greek folk music, particularly rebetiko and later laïkó. Popular composers and singers once performed here; Markos Vamvakaris, Vassilis Tsitsanis, Yannis Papaioannou, Marika Ninou, Sotiria Bellou, Manolis Chiotis, Mary Linda, Giorgos Zampetas, Stelios Kazantzidis, Marinella, Poly Panou, and Viki Moscholiou.
Education
Kallithea houses two universities (Harokopio University and Panteion University). An even more notable school in Kallithea is Sivitanidios School, one of the oldest technical school in Greece.
Sports
Until 2004, south Kallithea (Tzitzifies) housed the only horse track in Greece (Ippodromos - Hippodrome), which later moved to Markopoulon, near Eleftherios Venizelos Airport. Kallithea houses numerous cultural associations and several sport clubs, the most well-known of which are Athens Kallithea F.C. (soccer), Esperos (basketball, volleyball, handball, and also soccer in an earlier period) and Ikaros Kallitheas, a multisport club founded in 1991, originally as Ikaros Nea Smyrni.[5] Kallithea had another important club, Esperides Kallithea, with many titles in women basketball. This club merged to Ikaros Kallithea in 2012.[6]
| Active sport clubs based in Kallithea | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Club | Founded | Sports | Achievements |
| Esperos Kallitheas | 1943 | Basketball, Volleyball | Earlier presence in A1 Ethniki basketball |
| Athens Kallithea F.C. | 1966 | Football | Earlier presence in A Ethniki |
| Ikaros Kallitheas | 1991 | Basketball | Earlier presence in A1 Ethniki basketball |
Transportation
The main roads of Kallithea are Andrea Syngrou Avenue towards eastern Athens and Poseidonos Avenue towards Piraeus and the other southern suburbs. Kallithea is served by metro line 1 stations Kallithea and Tavros, by the tram stations Kallithea and Tzitzifies, and numerous bus and trolley-bus lines connect Kallithea to almost every destination in metropolitan Athens.
Sites of interest
- Harokopio University
- Panteion University
- Municipal Gallery, housed in the Laskaridou building, one of the first dwellings in the city.
- Aghia Eleousa church of the late Byzantine period.
- Kallithea monument, a fourth-century BC family tomb, one of the most impressive exhibits of the Piraeus Archaeological Museum.
- "Argonauts-Comnenus" (Argonaftes-Komnini) fraternity of the Pontus Greeks, aiming at the study and preservation of the history and traditions of their fatherlands.
- "Constantinopolitan Society" (Syllogos Konstantinoupoliton) of the Constantinople Greeks that settled in Kallithea forced to abandon Istanbul during the Greek Genocide and after the Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922) as well as after the Varlik Vergisi, the Istanbul Pogrom and generally in subsequent deteriorations of Greco-Turkish relations.
- Monument in memory of the Pontus Greeks in the center of the city (Davaki Square and Gardens).
- Faliro Coastal Zone Olympic Complex on Kallithea beach from the Sports Pavilion (Faliro) to the Olympic Beach Volleyball Center and the delta of the River Ilisos.
- Grigoris Lambrakis Stadium, home to Kallithea FC since 1972.
Emblem
The emblem of the Kallithea municipality is Theseus. According to the Greek Mythology, Theseus landed on the shores of Kallithea after returning from Crete, where he had killed the Minotaur.
Notable people
- Demis Anastasiadis, singer and songwriter
- Foivos Delivorias, singer and songwriter
- Eleni Foureira, singer, actress, dancer, and fashion designer
- Stamatis Kraounakis, composer
Gallery
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The church Agia Eleousa (Thisseos Avenue)
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The church Metamorphosi Sotiros
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Kallithea Metro station
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The building of the 20th Primary School of Kallithea
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Old refugees' houses in Kallithea
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Snow in Davaki Square
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One of the Kallithea War Memorial
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View of the city from Stavros Niarchos Foundation Center
See also
References
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External links
- Municipality of Kallithea homepage
- Panteion University homepage
- Harokopion University homepage
- Kallithea FC homepage
- Esperos sports club homepage
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