Holy Fire in Jerusalem: A Miracle or a Scam?

Holy Fire
Hundreds of faithful gather every year at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre for the tradition of Holy Fire. Credit: Danels97, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0

A Greek journalist is on trial in an Athens court following a lawsuit by the Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem, which accuses him of fabricating evidence in his attempt to prove that the Holy Fire in Jesus’s tomb does not ignite miraculously but through the use of matches.

Orthodox tradition holds that the Holy Fire happens annually on the day preceding the Orthodox Easter in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in the Old City of Jerusalem. The blue light is said to have emitted within Jesus’ tomb, rising from the marble slab covering the stone bed believed to be that upon which Jesus’ body is to have been placed for burial.

The Greek State in cooperation with the Greek Orthodox Church arranges an elaborate ceremony each year for the arrival of the Holy Fire to Athens and then to the rest of the country.

Journalist Dimitris Alikakos is the man accused by the Patriarchate of Jerusalem of demeaning the tradition by spreading “fake news.”

Holy Fire ignites by a human hand

Alikakos claims that in his book ‘Redemption – About the Holy Light,’ he has gathered testimonies from people involved in the process of touching the light, such as guardians of the Holy Sepulcher and Patriarchs. These testimonies lead to the conclusion, as some of them admit, that it is not a miracle, but rather the touch is facilitated by human intervention

In his book, he presents an interview with the skeuophylax Archbishop Isidoros of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, in which the latter admits that the “Sleepless Candle”, which he, himself, puts into the Church of the Holy Sepulchre during the morning of the Holy Saturday, is ignited by him with a lighter.

The former (1984–1988) skeuophylax (chamberlain) Archbishop Nikiforos makes the same acknowledgement, except that he was using matches.

He said he would never accept that the Holy Fire was a miracle. “Miracles happen when God decides, Not when we decide… Such “miracles” are performed by charlatans and magicians, not the Church.

“Our faith cannot be based on scams,” Nikiforos said.

His testimony was recorded in a video by Alikakos:

@allgood331

ΔΙΚΑΣΤΉΡΙΟ ΑΠΟΦΑΣΊΖΕΙ ΑΝ ΤΟ ΆΓΙΟ ΦΏΣ, ΕΊΝΑΙ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΉ ΑΠΆΤΗ ΜΕΤΑ ΑΠΟ ΔΗΜΟΣΙΟΓΡΑΦΙΚΗ ΕΡΕΥΝΑ! #tvgreece #tv #τικτοκgreece #mpesfy #greektv #ελληνικήτηλεόραση #τικτοκgreece #ελλαδα #τικτοκ #mpes #εκκλησια #αγιοφως #λιαγκας

♬ πρωτότυπος ήχος – Allgood

In the same book, Archbishop Gerason Theofanis states that the Holy Fire does not light up miraculously, but naturally, and the Patriarch then blesses it.

He adds: “We deceive the believers letting them believe that it is a miracle. This is unacceptable, and does not reflect well on us”.

According to Theofanis, the fraud of the “miracle” was invented by Catholic crusaders a few centuries ago, and was later continued by the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate.

In addition, the Metropolitan Bishop Kornilios of Petras, a surrogate of the Jerusalem Patriarchate in 2001, confirmed an older interview, saying that he also had ignited the candles of the Holy Fire with a natural candle, and he described in full detail what he saw when he entered the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

Lastly, in his book, the journalist mentions the chronicle of the deletion of the word “miracle” from the official website of the Patriarchate on 23 June 2018, with the commandment of the Patriarch Theofilos III.

Greek Folk Songs From the 1821 Revolution

Folk Songs of 1821
“Episode from the Greek War of Independence,” Eugene Delacroix, 1856. In the collection of the National Gallery of Greece. Public Domain

Greek folk songs from the 1821 Revolution not only told the stories of brave revolutionaries but also served as historical texts and diffusors of tradition.

Nobel Prize winner Odysseas Elytis once wrote that “no revolution, neither in art nor in life, has more chances to succeed than the one that uses tradition as its base.”

The folk songs of the 1821 Revolution were made in the dens of the revolutionaries, and were created on the spur of the moment in most cases; they were often sung and danced — and, some, unfortunately, were forgotten the next day.

Luckily, the most moving of them remained in our consciousness, not only as documents of the time but also as songs that are sung and danced today, as reminders of the greatest moments in Greek history.

Songs of joy and mourning

The folk songs gave joy and strength to those who listened and rejoiced. The next day, they went out to fight the Ottomans with these songs on their lips.

And so did the ancient Spartans, who would fight after hearing the song that the poet Tyrtaeus wrote especially for them, and that he himself had sung to them the night before a battle.

The songs told stories of battles and brave deeds, of fellow warriors who fell in on the battlefield, of mourning mothers and wives, and of barbaric massacres by the Turks.

They were also songs of faith and devotion to the Orthodox Church, praises of the Panagia (the Virgin Mary) and patron saints, some asking for divine help.

Many of them were not forgotten, though. Today they serve as tiny chapters of a long, rich history, making Greeks feel proud and rejoice in the victory achieved by their ancestors during the War of Independence.

Many of the folk songs were lost over time, tragically. It mustn’t be forgotten that the revolutionaries were mostly farmers and shepherds who did not know how to write.

They were illiterate and even those who could write were often lacking in writing materials, such as pen and paper. But they did not lack in love for Greece and they were determined to kick out the Ottomans from their ancestral land.

Their “writing material” was their tongue — and the rich tradition of the land, and the myths, along with the Panagia and the saints that guided them in the holy cause.

Some warriors, who left one camp and went to another, carried with them not only their rifles but some of the songs they had loved to sing in their previous encampment.

As for the tunes they used, they sang as they pleased, rendering them in the simplest form of measure, even adding and subtracting verses and words at will.

Most of the time, these improvised folk songs did not go beyond the boundaries of each region. Songs sung along the slopes of one mountain, often did not become known in the villages on the mountain across from it.

Each village, mountain, or region had their own heroes and song characters to cry over and mourn, to tell of tricks they played in battles, and relate stories about the family of the warrior.

Folk songs before 1821

In actuality, the Greeks never stopped revolting for a moment against the Ottomans, from the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 onward.

Yet those uprisings were local, small and disorganized; they often had no support and were therefore doomed at birth, in most cases.

Little is known of the pre-1821 Greek War of Independence. Yet, folk songs were the medium that preserved the battles and struggles of the Greeks.

For instance, in 1789 the Ali Pasha aga Yusuf Arapis campaigned with 3,000 Ottoman Turks and Muslim Albanians against the rebelling chieftains of Thessaly and Roumeli.

The revolutionaries led by chieftain Giannakis Kontogiannis fought valliantly, but were outnumbered and were defeated eventually, as we learn in this traditional song:

“What news did you bring me from the chieftains?”
“Bitter news I brought you from the chieftains,
Nikolakis was caught, Konstantis was wounded!”…
“Where are you, Mama, come to me, hold my head,
and tie it tightly, so that I can mourn!
And whom shall I weep for, and whom shall I mourn?”

In 1807 the great revolution of Mount Olympus took place, led by four men in the Lazaios family, or “The Sons of Lazaios (or Lazopoulos),” as Tolias, Christos, Nikos and Kostas were known.

That early revolution was suppressed. The first three remained in Rapsani, while Kostas was held captive by Ali Pasha in Ioannina, as we hear in this old song form the time:

“Three little birds are sitting on Olympus.
One looks to Giannina, the other to Katerini,
the third best mourns and says:
“What evil have we suffered, the poor Lazaios!
Veli-Pasha ruined us, burned our houses,
he took our wives, he took our children!”

In September of 1826, Roumeliotis general Giannis Makrygiannis, along with Giannis Gouras, defended the besieged Acropolis of Athens, which was being attacked by the Ottomans.

Makrygiannis, better known as an historian later on in his life, sang folk songs very well. He was eloquent, and often improvised, making the songs sound like chapters of history.

“The Sun reigned (yes, my Hellene, reigned) and the moon was lost
and the pure Augerinos that goes near Poulia
the four were chatting and chatting secretly.
The Sun turns and tells them, turns and burns them:
“Yesterday when I reigned behind a mountain,
I heard many women crying and men mourning,
for these heroic bodies lying in the plain,
and in pools of blood most are submerged.
For the homeland, they went to Hades, poor souls.”

Folk songs keep history and tradition alive

If it were not for Greece’s folk poetry, many of the most heroic pages of the Greek War of Independence would have been lost.

In 1895, as historian Giannis Vlachogiannis was trying to write a study called “The death of Androutsos,” he discovered that he had trouble collecting material.

It was then he realized that the newly-established Greek state did not keep an archive of documents relating to the War of Independence.

Vlachogiannis then set out on the gargantuan task to search for and save any historical documents about that glorious time for Greece.

In fact, the historian started searching for documents spanning from the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 all the way through the year 1868.

He searched for manuscripts and letters of the revolutionary fighters from their relatives, their friends and their compatriots.

Vlachogiannis found that many such documents had inexplicably been sold — by the kilo — to grocery stores, butcher shops and the like for wrapping food! He bought many of these documents, paying out of his pocket.

From 1888 to 1913 the researcher had managed to collect over 300,000 pages of documents and manuscripts, which he arranged in folders, based on subject and date.

Vlachogiannis also salvaged the “(Revolutionary) Struggle Archive,” which was kept in the National Archives, founded by the first Governor of Greece, Ioannis Kapodistrias.

 

Full Guide to the Acropolis of Athens: Top 10 Monuments to See

The Acropolis of Athens at Sunrise
The Acropolis of Athens at Sunrise. Credit: RobW. CC BY 2.0/flickr

The Acropolis of Athens is a massive archaeological site brimming with the spiritual, artistic, and democratic wonders of ancient Greece, but with every turn, one comes across a new monument. So how does one know what is actually worth visiting?

Thought to be inhabited as far back as 5,000 BC, the Acropolis and its monuments largely remain in suitable condition to this day. In the eighth century BC, the people of Athens dedicated the hill to the goddess of wisdom and military victory, Athena.

Through the ages, as Athens blossomed from a mere settlement village to a large powerhouse in the region, Pericles, who ruled during the golden age of Athens (450 – 400 BC), sought to promote the Acropolis as an exhibition of Athenian pride.

Under Pericles’ leadership, the Acropolis grew from a handful of temples, damaged by the Persians in 479 BC, to a beacon of Classical architecture and symbol of greatness.

Top Monuments to See at the Acropolis of Athens

Archaeological ruins at the Acropolis include temples, statues, sanctuaries, altars, theaters, and even fountains. If you visit, it’s well worth taking the time to appreciate some of the more remarkable sites.

1. The Parthenon

The Parthenon of Acropolis in Athens Greece
The Parthenon of Acropolis. Credit: Flickr / Sam Valadi CC BY 2.0 DEED

The champion of the Acropolis must surely be the Parthenon, which, according to Andrew Stewart’s book One Hundred Greek Sculptors, Their Careers and Extant Works, was designed under the direction of Pericles in the fifth century BC by the ancient architects Phidias, Iktinos, and Callicrates.

The mighty structure lies on the highest ground of the Acropolis and served a dual purpose. Firstly, it was built to house the great statue of Athena, commissioned by Pericles and designed by Phidias and his team of sculptors. Secondly, it was to act as a treasury. The Parthenon was built in the vicinity of at least three earlier temples dedicated to Athena.

The Parthenon is comprised of eight fluted Doric columns at either end, with seventeen on each side. A great amount of the frieze—which depicted the Panathenaic Procession—within the temple, was damaged during a gunpowder explosion in 1687. The Turks had used the Parthenon to store ammunition, and when the Venetians launched a mortar at it, part of the structure crumbled.

Prior to this, the Christians had defaced a number of the pieces of the frieze, but the largest existing part is made up of the Parthenon Marbles, which were taken by Lord Elgin and are now on display in the British Museum.

2. Erechtheion

Erechtheion of the Acropolis of Athens
The Erechtheion of the Acropolis of Athens. Credit: George Rex. CC BY 2.0/flickr

This complex building on the Acropolis of Athens was designed by the ancient Greek architect Mnesikles and built in the last twenty years of the fifth century BC. According to the Acropolis Museum, the structure replaced the Archaios Neos, or ancient temple of Athena Polias, which was partly destroyed by the Persians sixty years prior.

The new temple was divided into two chambers, an eastern room dedicated to Athena which housed the goddess’s wooden cult statue, and a lower western room which accommodated shrines of Poseidon-Erechtheus, Hephaistos, and Boutes, the brother of Erechtheus.

It is generally understood that the temple’s strange shape is the result of its architect’s desire to accommodate all of these cults within one building, while also making the structure adaptable to the uneven surface it sits on.

3. Temple of Athena Nike

Temple of Athena Nike
Temple of Athena Nike. Credit: Tilemahos Efthimiadis. CC BY 2.0/flickr

This marvelous monument on the Acropolis, designed by one of the architects behind the Parthenon, Callicrates, was constructed between 426 and 421 BC on the southwestern edge of the great hill. It is the earliest fully Ionic temple on the Acropolis.

The small temple had a frieze etched into it with a relief of various themes along each side. On the east, there was a gathering of gods around Zeus sitting on his throne, while the other sides displayed war scenes between Greeks and Persians as well as between various Greek groups.

The south side of the temple depicted the great battle of Marathon in 490 BC, when the Greeks, led by the Athenians, became victorious against the Persians. The temple is dedicated to the goddesses Athena, who represented both victory and war, and Nike, the goddess of victory.

4. Propylaea

the Propylaia, entrance gate of the Acropolis of Athens, Greece
The Propylaia of Acropolis. Credit: Alex-David Baldi / Flickr CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 DEED

In ancient Greek architecture, a propylaeon (singular form) is a monumental gate that usually leads to a temple or religious complex. In this case, Pericles had the gates commissioned as the entrance to the Acropolis.

These propylaea were designed to be wide enough to allow chariots to pass through, and the construction was part of Pericles’ rebuilding program for Athens after the Greco-Persian Wars.

Construction of this great entranceway began once the Parthenon was nearly completed. It was supervised by the Athenian architect Mnesicles, and, although work was halted due to the Peloponnesian War, the central parts of the architect’s work were nevertheless completed.

5. Odeon of Herodes Atticus

Odeon of Herodes Atticus
Odeon of Herodes Atticus. Credit: skynet. CC BY-2.0/flickr

Located on the southern slopes of the Acropolis, this amphitheater was built in 161 AD by its namesake in memory of his Roman wife, Aspasia Annia Regilla. It was utilized as a venue for music concerts. With a capacity of around five thousand, it remained intact until its demise by the early Germanic Heruli in 267 AD.

In more recent times, the audience stands and stage have been restored using Pentelic marble. Since then, the site has been the primary venue of the Athens Festival. In 1957, Maria Callas performed at the Odeon during the festival. Moreover, that same year, Edith Hamilton was pronounced an honorary citizen of Athens there at ninety years of age. Frank Sinatra has also played at the venue.

6. Theatre of Dionysus

Theatre of Dionysus, one of the monuments of the Acropolis
Theatre of Dionysus. Credit: nrares. CC BY-2.0/flickr

This ancient Greek theater is thought to be the prototype for others that followed. It is located on the southern side of the Acropolis and has the honor of being the place where all Classical Greek plays were first performed.

Construction at the site began with the orchestra, the circular stone base of around sixty feet in diameter. There is a raised altar in the middle. Used for dramatic plays that were part of the annual spring festival of Dionysus, it was positioned next to temples of nature and the fertility god Dionysus.

During the fifth century BC, the theater was used for theatrical contests during which the plays of Sophocles, Euripides, Aeschylus, and Aristophanes were first performed.

7. Stoa of Eumenes

The Stoa of Eumenes
The Stoa of Eumenes. Credit: George E. Koronaios. CC by 1.0/Wikimedia Commons/George E. Koronaios

The path from the stage of the Theatre of Dionysus leads uphill and westward to the top of the long Stoa of Eumenes. This is a colonnade donated to Athens by Eumenes II, king of Pergamum from 197 to 159 BC, as a shelter and promenade for audiences of the theater.

The Roman architect Vitruvius referenced the structure in speaking about the purpose of stoas. These were constructed near theaters and served as shelter for audiences during inclement weather. Alternatively, they housed theater props.

The level of the stoa floor in ancient times has, by now, been restored. Several of the monument’s pillars on the ground floor remain on the Acropolis.

8. The Caryatids (Porch of the Maidens)

Replica caryatids, south porch, the Erechtheion
Replica caryatids, south porch, the Erechtheion, one of the monuments of the Acropolis. Credit: profzucker. CC BY-2.0/flickr

This presentation of statues, also know as the Porch of the Caryatids, comprises the west end of the south side of the Erechtheion temple. The large caryatid statues now visible on the Acropolis site are reconstructions. Most of the original pieces are on display in the Acropolis Museum.

The gap in the museum’s display is for the ‘missing sister,’ the original having been removed by Lord Elgin and put on display in the British Museum in London, where it has remained since 1817.

A Caryatid is a sculpted female figure that serves as an architectural support, replacing a column or pillar and supporting an entablature on her head. The Greek term Karyatides literally means “maidens of Karyai”, an ancient town on the Peloponnese. Karyai had a temple dedicated to the goddess Artemis in her aspect of Artemis Karyatis. As Karyatis, Artemis, rejoiced in the dances of the nut-tree village of Karyai, those Karyatides who, in their ecstatic round-dance, carried baskets of live reeds on their heads as if they were dancing plants.

9. Beulé Gate

Beule Gate to propylaia
Beulé Gate to Propylaia. Credit: ukdamian. CC BY-2.0/flickr

This is a fortified gate built during the Roman period, leading to the Propylaea monument of the Acropolis. It was constructed mostly from repurposed materials from the Choragic Monument of Nikias, a structure built in the fourth century BC and demolished around six hundred years later. The inscription from Nikia’s monument is still visible on the upper part of the Beulé Gate.

10. Sanctuary of Zeus Polieus

Sanctuary of Zeus Polieus
Sanctuary of Zeus Polieus. Credit: josema. CC BY 2.0/flickr

The Sanctuary of Zeus Polieus was a columned, open-air sanctuary, as per the name, on the Acropolis. It was dedicated to Zeus Polieus, the city protector, around the year 500 BC. Located to the east of the Erechtheion, none of its foundations have been recovered. Its many entrances and ground plan were worked out from rock cuttings on the Acropolis.

The eastern range of the sanctuary is believed to have housed the oxen for the annual Buphonia or ox-sacrificing.

Pausanias described the sanctuary in the second century AD: “There are statues of Zeus, one made by Leokhares and one called Polieus. Upon the altar of Zeus Polieus, they place barley mixed with wheat and leave it unguarded. The ox, which they keep already prepared for sacrifice, goes to the altar and partakes of the grain.”

“One of the priests they call the ox-slayer,” explained Pausanias, “who kills the ox and then, casting aside the axe here according to the ritual runs away. The others bring the axe to trial, as though they know not the man who did the deed.”

 

Greece to Ink Deal for 7 Fire-fighting Aircraft at Mitsotakis Visit to Canada

Mitsotakis Canada Fire-fighting aircraft
Canadairs will help Greece deal with wildfires. Credit: AMNA

Greece is expected to finalize a deal for the purchase of 7 fire-fighting aircraft from Canada early next week during the official visit of PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis to Montréal, and Toronto.

Canada’s PM Justin Trudeau, announced that Mitsotakis, will visit on March 24 and 25, 2024. “As NATO Allies and steadfast partners, the visit will be an opportunity to deepen the friendship between Canada and Greece,” he said in a statement.

During the visit, Trudeau and Mitsotakis will advance co-operation in shared interests, including trade and investment, climate action, and creating good, middle-class jobs. The leaders will also explore ways to tackle regional and global challenges, like supporting Ukraine in its fight against Russia’s unprovoked war, defending the rules-based international order, and promoting democracy around the world.

Mitsotakis’ visit will build on the close relationship between Canada and Greece, built on common values and the close ties between our people, Trudeau said.

Canada and Greece are partners, Allies, and friends. When we work together, we create good jobs, grow trade and investment, take climate action, and protect democracies. I look forward to welcoming Prime Minister Mitsotakis to Canada and advancing our work to make life better for Canadians and Greeks alike.”

This will be Mitsotakis’ first official visit to Canada since his election as Prime Minister of Greece in 2019. An estimated 270,000 Canadians are of Greek descent.

Mitsotakis to seal deal for Canada’s fire-fighting aircraft

During the visit, Mitsotakis is scheduled to finalize a deal to purchase seven DHC-515 Firefighters, the newest water bombers built by De Havilland.

The planes are used in several European countries, including France and Italy, where they are universally known as Canadairs, after the company that originally developed the amphibious tankers in the late 1960s.

Five of the seven planes in the Greek fleet would be purchased by the Greek government. The other two would be purchased by the European Union for its civil protection arm, known as rescEU. The last two will be based in Greece, but will fly, as a priority, to other countries to assist in wildfire emergencies.

The cost for the purchase of the firefighting planes is estimated at €360 million.

Mitsotakis’s official visit will be the first to Canada by a Greek prime minister in 41 years.

“The delay was inexplicable, given the strong ties between Greece and Canada,” he said in an interview to the Globe and Mail. “I had made it a priority to officially visit Canada…to engage with the Greek-Canadian community and to talk about the economic aspect of our co-operation.”

Mitsotakis will meet his Canadian counterpart and fellow son of a Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau in Montreal on Sunday. Then the two leaders will attend the city’s Greek Independence Day parade and an evening event sponsored by the Greek community.

This Is the Oldest Known Cycladic Sculpture of Ancient Greece

Oldest Known Cycladic Sculpture
The figure dates from about 5000 to 4000 BCE. Credit: Konstantinos Stampoulis, CC BY-SA 3.0 gr/Wikipedia

The Fat Lady of Saliagos (also known as The Naked Lady of Saliagos) is the oldest known Cycladic sculpture.

It is a marble figure from the Aegean Neolithic period discovered on the tiny islet of Saliagos between the Greek islands of Paros and Antiparos.

The figure dates from about 5000 to 4000 BC and is the oldest known Cycladic sculpture. The figure is missing its head and left shoulder.

It was found during the excavations of Saliagos in the 1960s and it currently resides in the Archaeological Museum of Paros.

The oldest known Cycladic sculpture and her home on Saliagos

Just 500 meters to the north of Antiparos lies Saliagos, an islet of inestimable historical value and natural beauty.

The islet has a length of 100 metres (from north to south) and a width of 50 metres (east to west). During the Neolithic Period, the level of the sea was at least six metres lower than today, and Saliagos was a peninsula on the isthmus that linked Antiparos to its bigger brother Paros.

oldest Cycladic sculpture
Credit: Google Maps

Known to history lovers the world over owing to the archaeological findings made there, this islet was home to the oldest known settlement in the Cyclades, some 5,300 years ago.

According to archaeologists, humankind started settling in the Cycladic islands at the beginning of the Late Neolithic Period, on the islet of Saliagos, which lies 500 metres from  Antiparos.

The settlement of Saliagos, traces of which were first located in 1961 by Nikolaos Zafeiropoulos, superintendent of antiquities, and brought to light by British archaeologists John Evans and Colin Renfrew in 1964, covers the entire islet and dates to at least the end of the 5th millennium BC approximately.

It was composed of rectangular dwellings with stone foundations, which were surrounded by a wall. The task of constructing a defensive wall demands a coordinated collective effort, a fact that proves that in the Cyclades they had already begun the process that would lead later—during the Early Bronze Age—to the foundation of cities.

The inhabitants of the settlement constructed their tools and arrowheads from obsidian. It seems, in fact, that the processing of obsidian took place to a much greater extent than that which local needs could account for; this indicates that the settlement of Saliagos constituted a centre for the processing of and trade in obsidian from Milos.

Its inhabitants were also involved in fishing, livestock-raising, the cultivation of cereals, pottery-making and basket-weaving.

Spoons made out of mussels, several hoes and tools made out of bones, vases and figurines have also been found on the islet.

Most of the vases unearthed in Saliagos resemble fruit bowls. They are made of dark clay and have a white linear decoration, are open, with an outline that is straight, curved or angled, and have a flat base or, more often, a tall support.

No sites of the so-called ‘Saliagos Civilization’ have survived. Very few facts are known about both the society and the religious convictions of these people, as well as about their origin.

Greece Receives US-Made Romeo MH-60R Seahawk Helicopters

Greece Seahawk Helicopters
Greece even stronger,” Defense Minister Nikos Dendias wrote in a post on the delivery of the helicopters. Credit: Twitter/Nikos Dendias/Minister of Defense

On Wednesday, Greece received three new US-made Romeo MH-60R Seahawk helicopters that will be joining the Hellenic Navy.

The ceremony took place at the Kotroni Air Base near Marathon in East Attica, where Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis made a brief address, emphasizing the dangers Greece faces from Turkey despite improving relations.

“Despite the calmness that currently prevails in the Aegean, we must not forget that our neighbors to the east are also accelerating their own armaments program,” the PM said. “Approaches are always imperative, but under no circumstances are illusions allowed.”

“And we all [need] to be courteous but not naive, staying focused in the direction of peace, international law and cooperation,” Mitsotakis said.

“Greece even stronger,” Defense Minister Nikos Dendias wrote in a post on the delivery of the helicopters.

Greece will acquire seven helicopters from the transnational program co-signed with the United States.

It placed separate orders for MH-60R aircraft—four in July 2020 and three in April 2021—as a Foreign Military Sales purchase with the US government. After delivery of the first three, the remaining four will arrive in 2025, the manufacturer,  Lockheed Martin, said.

It is the seventh country to receive the US Navy MH-60R naval helicopter. In Europe, Denmark operates 9 MH-60Rs. In 2023, Spain and Norway ordered 14 MH-60R helicopters.

Greece strengthens defense with Seahawk helicopters

The MH-60R Seahawks are the most renowned means of naval operations in both anti-submarine and surface warfare. Their sophisticated detection, strike, and countermeasures systems offer unique capabilities in modern maritime warfare.

It is a twin turboshaft engine, multi-mission United States Navy helicopter based on the United States Army UH-60 Black Hawk and a member of the Sikorsky S-70 family. The most significant modifications are the folding main rotor blades and a hinged tail to reduce its footprint aboard ships.

It is deployed aboard aircraft carriers, amphibious assault ships, Maritime Sealift Command ships, and fast combat support ships. Its missions include vertical replenishment, medical evacuation, combat search and rescue, anti-surface warfare, maritime interdiction, close air support, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, and special warfare support.

The arrival of the helicopters to Greece follows the recent decision by the US State Department to approve the sale of up to forty F-35 fighter jets and respective equipment to Greece in an $8.6 billion deal.

“This proposed sale will support the foreign policy goals and national security of the United States by improving the air capabilities and interoperability of a NATO Ally that is a force for political and economic stability in Europe,” the State Department commented in its respective announcement.

Elon Musk’s Neuralink Shows First Brain-Chip Patient Playing Online Chess

Neuralink brain chip patient
Noland Arbaugh, 29, the first person to have the Neuralink computer chip implanted in his brain, plays chess just by thinking. Video screenshot/Neuralink

On Wednesday, Elon Musk’s brain-chip startup Neuralink live streamed its first patient implanted with a chip playing online chess and toggling a music stream on and off.

Noland Arbaugh, a 29-year-old man who is paralyzed from the shoulders down due to a diving accident eight years ago, joined a live stream alongside a Neuralink engineer on X to show the public how the brain-computer interface tech works.

“It’s all being done with my brain. If y’all can see the cursor moving around the screen, that’s all me, y’all,” he said while the live stream showed his cursor moving across an online chess game. “It’s pretty cool, huh?”

Arbaugh received an implant from the company in January and could control a computer mouse using his thoughts, Musk said last month.

“Basically, it was like using the Force on the cursor and I could get it to move wherever I wanted. Just stare somewhere on the screen and it would move where I wanted it to, which was such a wild experience the first time it happened,” he said, referencing Star Wars.

Before receiving the chip, Arbaugh would need another person’s help to play online chess and video games. “Now I can literally just lie in bed and play to my heart’s content,” he said—at least until the battery of his rechargeable chip dies.

The chip contains a thousand electrodes programmed to gather data about the brain’s neural activity and movement intention. It then sends that data to a Neuralink computer for decoding to transform the thoughts into action.

“The surgery was super easy,” says Neuralink brain chip patient

“The surgery was super easy,” Arbaugh said in the video streamed on Musk’s social media platform X, referring to the implant procedure. “I literally was released from the hospital a day later. I have no cognitive impairments.”

“I had basically given up playing that game,” Arbaugh said, referring to the game Civilization VI. “You all (Neuralink) gave me the ability to do that again and played for eight hours straight.”

The US Food and Drug Administration greenlit human trials of the brain chip last year after the company did hundreds of tests on animals—and faced backlash from animal rights groups in the process.

Neuralink has not disclosed how many people will be enrolled in the six-year trial or where the trials will be held. It also has not registered its study on a government website logging medical trials involving human test subjects, according to Wired.

Kip Ludwig, former program director for neural engineering at the US National Institutes of Health, told Reuters that what Neuralink showed was not a “breakthrough.”

“It is still in the very early days post-implantation, and there is a lot of learning on both the Neuralink side and the subject’s side to maximize the amount of information for control that can be achieved,” he added.

Even so, Ludwig said it was a positive development for the patient that they have been able to interface with a computer in a way they were not able to before the implant. “It’s certainly a good starting point,” he said, according to Reuters.

 

Kalavryta: The First Greek Town Liberated From the Ottomans

Kalavryta
Kalavryta was the first Greek town liberated from the Ottomans. Public Domain

On March 21, 1821 the Greek rebels started the siege of Kalavryta, making it the first Greek town to be liberated from the Ottomans, thus declaring the start of the Greek War of Independence.

On the morning of March 21, 600 armed fighters were sworn in under the perennial plane tree of the monastery of Agia Lavra and according to some historians, said: “Not one Turk left in Moria (Peloponnese), nor in the whole world.”

A meeting followed where Bishop Palaion Patron Germanos called on Greeks to revolt and raised the flag of the revolution, a banner depicting the Assumption of Virgin Mary that was on the gate of the Temple of Agia Lavra.

One of the most well-known paintings of the Greek War of Independence is undoubtedly the one painted by Theodoros Vryzakis in 1865 depicting Metropolitan Palaion Patron Germanos, known also as Germanos III of Old Patras.

In the iconic image, Germanos is shown raising the flag of the revolution in the Agia Lavra Monastery and blessing the beginning of the Greek uprising on March 25, 1821.

Germanos was born in Dimitsana, Arcadia, on March 25, 1771. His secular name was Georgios Kozias, son of Ioannis Kozias, who was a jeweler.

Kalavryta
The banner of the revolution at Kalavryta. Public Domain

The Greek chieftains led by Sotiris Charalambis, Asimakis Fotilas, Sotiris Theocharopoulos, Ioannis Papadopoulos, Nikolaos Soliotis and Nikolaos Petmezas, took a small cannon from the Monastery of Agia Lavra and besieged the city fortress.

On March 25 Kalavryta was free

The Turks under the command of Ibrahim Pasha Arnaoutoglou barricaded themselves in three towers, expecting military help from Tripolitsa. Four days later, the Ottomans succumbed and surrendered.

On March 25 Kalavryta was free. Every year Kalavryta celebrates the liberation of the city with festivities around the Agia Lavra monastery. For the next four years the locals never saw Turks wandering in the area.

On March 23 in Mani, Petrobey Mavromichalis and his warriors entered Kalamata and the whole Peloponnese revolted.

Quickly the message of revolution spread to the rest of Greece.

Greeks with the slogan “Freedom or Death” revolted against their ruler and began a brave struggle for freedom. Historian Nikolaos Papadopoulos described the liberation of the city as follows:

“It was dusk when approximately 200 warriors arrived at Kalavryta and started the battle for the liberation of the town. Soon the battle spread out as the rebels took over the Turkish officials’ towers, making the town their own. This was the first victorious battle and Kalavryta was the first free Greek city.”

“In the years of Turkish rule, Kalavryta was the largest city in the Morea and numbered 40,000 residents. The Turks stayed around the current monastery of Agia Aikaterini, where they had built two mosques.”

The people of Kalavryta remain proud that their city and monastery became the birthplace of the Greek War of Independence.

1,000-Year-Old Ice Skate Made of Bone Discovered in Czech Republic

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1,000-year-old bone skate discovered in Czech Republic
Archaeologists discovered a 1,000-year-old bone skate in the Czech Republic. Credit: Zdeněk Schenk

In Přerov, Czech Republic, archaeologists at the Comenius Museum have discovered a thousand-year-old ice skate made of animal bone. This find came during their rescue dig in the city’s Upper Square.

The skate, probably crafted from a horse’s shinbone, was found alongside pottery pieces from the 10th or 11th century. Initially, this area consisted of small settlements by the Bečva River branches.

Over time, it grew into a fortified square and fortress, under the rule of Polish King Boleslav the Brave, according to Archaeology Mag.

Ancient bone skate to travel through frozen surfaces

Zdeněk Schenk, an archaeologist on the excavation team, describes the skate’s design as both straightforward and clever. It’s curved with holes drilled into it, so a strap could be attached.

“The object has a specific shape. On one side, it is curved into a tip which has a hole drilled in it and there is another hole at the back. They were used to thread a strap through, which was used to attach the skate to a shoe or to a wooden sledge,” said Schenk.

This strap would have held the skate onto a shoe or sled, making it easier for people to move across frozen surfaces. Instead of being for fun skating, these bone skates were important for getting around and trading during freezing winters.

Similar items found in Viking settlements across Europe

This discovery in Přerov holds importance beyond its borders. Similar items have been found all over Europe, especially in Viking settlements in places like Scandinavia. Many of these discoveries date back to the 10th century.

The Viking Age in Scandinavian history spanned from the first recorded raids by Norsemen in 793 until the Norman conquest of England in 1066. Vikings navigated the Norwegian Sea and Baltic Sea to reach southern destinations by sea routes.

The Normans descended from Vikings who were granted feudal control over regions in northern France, specifically the Duchy of Normandy, during the 10th century, according to Wikipedia.

These findings show that different cultures shared knowledge about surviving in cold winters. It’s a reminder of how people adapted to harsh conditions and learned from each other, even across great distances.

“We know of other similar pieces found in Central Europe and especially in north-western Europe, in Scandinavia. They mostly come from the same time-frame as the one from Přerov and they are often found in 10th century Viking settlements,” said Schenk.

The bone skate, carefully preserved, will be showcased for the public to see at the Comenius Museum in Přerov Castle. It will serve as a direct connection to the past for everyone who visits, according to Archaeology Mag.

Did the Minoan Civilization Really End Due to Giant Tsunamis?

For hundreds of years historians, geologists, scientists and archaeologists have been trying to discover how Minoan civilization came to an end.
For hundreds of years historians, geologists, scientists and archaeologists have been trying to discover how Minoan civilization came to an end. Credit: w_lemay. CC BY 2.0/flickr

For hundreds of years historians and archaeologists have been trying to find answers as to how the great Minoan civilization of Crete came to an end, but no definitive answer has ever been found.

A Bronze Age culture centered on the island of Crete, what the ancient Minoans built is often regarded as the first true civilization of Europe, with a clear appreciation for art and architecture, all of which was rediscovered in the early 20th century through archaeological excavation.

The Minoan civilization evolved from the local Neolithic culture in around 3,100 BC, with sophisticated urban settlements beginning to be built in around 2,000 BC. After 1,450 BC, the Minoans fell under the cultural and possible political dominion of the mainland Mycenaean Greeks, forming a hybrid culture which lasted until around 1,100 BC.

The Minoans built impressive buildings which were initially labeled ‘Minoan palaces’ by original excavators, and later research showed that they were used for a plethora of religious and economic purposes rather than acting as royal residences – though their precise role in Minoan society is still under debate.

Their palace at Knossos was vast and elaborate, with Europe’s first paved roads and running water. The ancient Greeks wove its magnificence into their myths; it was the home of King Minos and his man-eating bull, the Minotaur, which roamed the palace labyrinth.

The term ‘Minoan’ was coined by Sir Arthur Evans, a British archaeologist and explorer who, along with Greek archaeologist Minos Kalokairinos, excavated the palace of Knossos and the surrounding area and recognized it as culturally distinct from the mainland Mycenaean culture.

Minos Kalokairinos Monument, Palace of Knossos, Knossos, Greece.
Minos Kalokairinos Monument, Palace of Knossos, Knossos, Greece. Credit: w_lemay. CC BY 2.0/flickr

Following this, further excavations uncovered the Palace of Phaistos and the nearby settlement of Hagia Triada, and a further breakthrough in understanding the Minoan civilization came in 1952, when Michael Ventris deciphered Linear B – a late Minoan script first found on clay tablets and sealings in the second palace at Knossos – unlocking a vital source of information on the economic and social organization in the final year of the palace. Minoan sites are still being excavated to this day, with recent discoveries including the necropolis at Armeni and the harbour town of Kommos.

What Was it Like to Live in Minoan Civilization?

The Minoans bred cattle, sheep, pigs and goats, and grew wheat, barley, vetch and chickpeas. They also cultivated grapes, figs and olives, grew poppies for seed and possibly opium. They also domesticated bees.

Vegetable, such as lettuce, celery, asparagus and carrots, grew in the wild on Crete, and pear, quince and olive trees were also native. Date palm trees and cats for hunting, were brought in from Egypt. The Minoans even adopted pomegranates from the Near East. It’s possible that they employed polyculture, with their varied and healthy diet bringing about a population increase.

Linear B tablets convey the importance of orchards (figs, olives and grapes) in processing crops for “secondary products.”

Clay Tablet inscribed with Linear B script.
Clay Tablet inscribed with Linear B script. Credit: vintagedept. CC BY 2.0/flickr

Aside from this complex agricultural and food-sourcing framework, the Minoans were also a mercantile people who were heavily involved in overseas trade, and at the civilization’s height, it may well have had a dominant position in international trade around large portions of the Mediterranean.

Minoan manufactured goods suggest a network of trade with mainland Greece, including Mycenae, Cyprus, Syria, Anatolia, Egypt, Mesopotamia and westward as far as the Iberian peninsula. Religion in Minoan civilization appears to have been centered on female deities, with women officiants.

Though historians and archaeologists are cautious about claims of an outright matriarchy, the predominance of female figures in power roles over males seems to indicate that Minoan society was matriarchal, and among the most well-supported examples known.

How did it all Come to an End?

Around three and a half thousand years ago, the tiny Aegean island of Thera was devastated by one of the worst natural disasters since the Ice Age – an enormous volcanic eruption.

This cataclysmic event took place around 100km from the island of Crete, the home of the thriving Minoan civilization. Just fifty years after the eruption, the civilization was in ruins. Whether the volcano wiped out the Minoans and is responsible for the fall of their civilization has been a question on historians’ minds for decades.

Early 20th-century archaeologists were aware of the devastating natural disaster, and most believed it probably wiped out the Minoan civilization instantly, but the truth might not be as straight forward as that.

To begin with, very little ash had fallen on Crete, with the prevailing winds having taken the volcano’s ash in the opposite direction. Then archaeologists discovered clay tablets which proved the Minoan civilization survived for around 50 years after the eruption. The question is, what accounted for this long gap?

Vulcanologist Ffloyd McCoy, from the University of Hawaii, is particularly passionate about the Thera volcano and whether it ended the Minoan civilization. According to the BBC, he journeyed around gathering evidence from other scientists around the world, trying to find out if there was a connection between the eruption of Thera and the end of the Minoans.

Minoan and Mycenaean Civilizations - Map.
Minoan and Mycenaean Civilizations – Map. Credit: History Maps. CC BY 2.0/flickr

He began on the island of Thera, which was home to thousands and a prosperous trading post for the Minoans until the natural disaster hit. So huge was the volcano that it had great effect, preserving forever the town of Akrotiri.

Strangely, no skeletons have ever been found on the island. Akrotiri’s chief archaeologist, Christos Doumas, believes the people of Akrotiri did not survive, and that the bodies are still to be found.

Prehistoric Site of Akrotiri, Santorini (Thera)
Prehistoric Site of Akrotiri, Santorini (Thera) Credit: Klearchos Kapoutsis. CC BY 2.0/flickr

McCoy was apparently convinced that huge waves, or tsunamis, had been triggered by the volcano. He thinks these waves carried across the open sea to wreak havoc on the northern coast of Crete – but proof was difficult to find.

In 1997 a British geologist, Dr Dale Dominey-Howes of Kingston University, discovered what he thinks is strong evidence of tsunamis on Crete. He drilled deep into the mud at an inland marsh near Malia in Crete, and brought the mud core back to England with him for analysis.

The mud had been deposited, layer upon layer, over thousands of years. In one section, deep in the core, Dr Dominey-Howes uncovered a tiny fossilised shell which only lives in very deep sea water. He claims the shells were brought into the marsh by an ancient tsunami. A Minoan palace near the marsh was buried at the same level as the shells, which suggests the tsunami could have struck soon after the palace was built.

If there had been a tsunami unleashed by the volcanic eruption of Thera, McCoy was keen to understand how big it may have been. He went to Professor Costas Synolakis of the University of Southern California. Professor Synolakis grew up on Crete, and has become one of the world’s top tsunami-prediction experts, trotting around the globe with his computer models.

Professor Synolakis can also reportedly use his technology to determine the size of a wave from the ancient past. He estimated that waves from thera hitting northern Crete may have been as high as 12m in some places. These waves would have decimated boats and coastal villages, and even travel up rivers to flood farmland. But the waves were only part of the tale, and McCoy believed the volcano must have had wider effects.

An extraordinary discovery by a British geologist resulted in a new theory – that the volcano, which was already classed as one of the most destructive of the last 10,000 years, may have been even bigger than scientists had previously thought. Professor Steve Sparks of Bristol University came across clues in very small fragments of evidence. He was apparently surprised to discover clumps of fossilized algae high on the cliffs of the volcano. These algae only live in shallow waters, and their presence suggested there was once a shallow sea inside the crater of the volcano.

If there was indeed a shallow sea, Professor Sparks realised, the shape of the volcano may have been completely different, and a differently shaped volcano might have produced far more ash. His suspicion was that the volcano may have been twice as powerful as geologists had suspected.

McCoy thinks the volcano caused the Minoans trouble for years. Initially it destroyed an entire island which had been key for their trade, and then huge waves hit the Minoan coasts, devastating coastal villages and boats at the harbour. After that the Minoans faced summers of ruined harvests.

An archaeologist who has worked at Knossos, Colin MacDonald, thinks the effects of these disasters were compounded by something more – the Minoans had started to view their way of life differently. MacDonald claims the Minoan people, stripped of their certainties, ceased to obey the priest kings in palaces like Knossos. This, he claims, marked the beginning of a 50-year decline for the whole of Minoan civilization. They were not in a strong position to fight back when the Greeks from the mainland took control of the island.