'Kallithea' (
Greek: ΚαλλιθÎα
map, meaning "good view") is the 8th biggest municipality in
Greece (110,187 inhabitants, 2001 census) and the 4th biggest in Greater Athens (following
Athens itself,
Piraeus and
Peristeri).
Location
The centre of Kallithea (Davaki Square) lies at a distance of 3 km to the south of the Athens city centre (Syntagma Square) and 3 km to the north-east of the Piraeus city centre (Korai Square) (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, protected in the ancient times (5th century BC) by the Long Walls to the west and the Phaleron Wall to the east (photo 3). Somewhere within this area the ancient town of Xypete existed. This town and its citizens are mentioned amongst elsewhere in
Plato's Dialogues.
The 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 (Thisseos Avenue) the Athens to Phaleron tramway used to run from the beginning (1850) to the end (1955) of its operations. Near the centre of the town the Shooting Range (Skopeftirion) was built to house events of the first modern Olympic Games (
1896 Summer Olympics). These games took place in three venues: the refurbished ancient stadium of Athens (
Panathinaiko Stadium) 2 km NE of Kallithea, the Faliron Velodrome (currently
Karaiskaki Stadium) 2 km SW of Kallithea and the Kallithea Shooting Range (Skopeftirion).
Events of the
Athens 2004 Olympic Games also took place 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).
The growth of the city
Between the first (1896) and the recent (2004) modern Olympic Games in Athens the city of Kallithea grew significantly. First the tramway depot and workshop were built there (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 after the
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 (
Odessa), Marioupolis (
Mariupol',
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 towards
ethnic groups. Their origins were mainly in the east coast of the Black Sea (
Batumi,
Sukhumi,
Novorossiysk,
Anapa etc.)
The first refugees settled originally in the site of the Olympic Shoting Range (1896) until they were gradually transferred to new dwellings. After its evacuation the building of the Shooting Range served as a school until the
Nazi Occupation (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 (e.g.
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 settlements in
Kazakhstan and
Uzbekistan where their Black Sea Greek ancestors were expelled during
Stalin's regime in the 1930s.
Until 2004 south Kallithea (Tzitzifies) housed the only horse track in Greece (Ippodromos - Hippodrome) which moved to
Markopoulon near the
Eleftherios Venizelos Airport. The same area of the city (Tzitzifies) is associated with the development of Greek folk music (
rebetiko and later
laïkó). Popular composers and singers used to perform there (
Markos Vamvakaris,
Vassilis Tsitsanis,
Yannis Papaioannou,
Marika Ninou,
Sotiria Bellou,
Manolis Chiotis,
Mary Linda,
Yorgos Zambetas,
Stelios Kazantzidis,
Marinella,
Poly Panou,
Viki Moscholiou etc.)
Kallithea houses two universities (Harokopion and Panteion), numerous cultural associations and several sport clubs, the most well known among which are
Kallithea FC (soccer) and
Esperos (basketball, volleyball, handball, table tennis as well as soccer in the past).
Transportation
The city is accessed from the east by Syngrou Avenue, from the south by Poseidonos Avenue, from the north and west by Kifissos Avenue/
GR-1 and from the Athens centre by Thisseos Avenue (via Syntagma, Amalias, Syngrou). The metropolitan railway (line 1 stations Kallithea and Tavros), the tramway (stations Kallithea and Tzitzifies) and numerous bus and trolley-bus lines along the Thisseos, Syngrou and Posseidonos Avenues connect Kallithea to almost any destination in the Athens basin.
Sites of interest
★ Harokopion University. http://www.hua.gr/index.php
★ Panteion University. http://www.panteion.gr/
★ 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 4th century BC family tomb, one of the most impressive exhibits of the Piraeus Archaeological Museum.
★
Faliro Coastal Zone Olympic Complex on Kallithea beach from the
Sports Pavilion (Faliro) to the
Olympic Beach Volleyball Centre and the delta of the River Ilisos.
★ "
Argonauts-
Comnenus" (Argonaftes-Komnini) fraternity of the
Pontus Greeks, aiming at the study and preservation of the history and traditions of their fatherlands.
★ "Constantinoplian Society" (Syllogos Konstantinoupoliton) of the
Constantinople Greeks that settled in Kallithea forced to abandon
Istanbul after the
Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922) as well as in subsequent deteriorations of
Greco-Turkish relations.
★ Monument in memory of the
Pontus Greeks in the centre of the city (Davaki Square and Gardens).
★ Municipal Stadium "
Gregoris Lambrakis", where
Kallithea FC has played since
1972.
Historical population
| Year | Municipal population | Change | Density |
|---|
| 1981 | 117,319 | - | 23,463/km² |
| 1991 | 114,233 | -3,086/-2.63% | 22,846/km² |
| 2001 | 110,187 | -4,046/-3.54% | 22,037/km² |
See also
★
List of cities in Greece
External links
★ The Municipality of Kallithea homepage
[1]
★ The Panteion University homepage
[2]
★ The Harokopion University homepage
[3]
★ The
Kallithea FC homepage
[4]
★ The
Esperos sports club homepage
[5]