
The 1923 Exchange of Populations between Greece and Turkey ratified the dislocation of over a million Greek Orthodox Christians from Anatolia and Eastern Thrace to the Kingdom of Greece, while hundreds of thousands of Muslims abandoned their homes on the Greek side to move to Turkey.
Resettlement was a massive challenge for both sides; the incoming refugees settled in the homes of the now departed, or lived in sheds and squats until the first housing projects were completed. Gradually they took over to repair, expand and reshape their dwellings.
During the following decades they made a permanent contribution to the rural and urban landscapes they inhabited, a contribution that is still largely understudied. As the centennial of these events approaches and while the Aegean continues to be a space of crossings, HOMEACROSS looks at the material legacies of the Population Exchange in Izmir and Attica, two provinces that received large numbers of refugees.
First, it records and studies the urban and rural sites of displacement and resettlement – whether new, re-inhabited or abandoned. Second, it raises questions of memory, based on oral accounts and reconstructed or reused monuments. As a great part of the oral history records belong to women survivors, it further examines women’s agency in preserving community memory. Finally the project investigates the evolution of social housing policies in Greece in the 20th century, in order to understand the role of the welfare state in dealing with homelessness.
Combining extensive fieldwork, archival research and digital mapping technologies (GIS) to collect, analyse and visualise the data, this project explores a major event in the two sides’ national histories. While studies until now have mostly focused on the dislocation and the political events that caused it, this research investigates the refugees’ agency in shaping their surroundings, introduces new findings and new historiographical perspectives and contributes to a knowledge-based society.
Host Institution: From February 2021 until October 2024, the host institution of the project was the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP). From November 2024 until the end of the project, the host institution is the National Technical University of Athens (NTUA), and ELIAMEP maintains the role of Partner.
Principal Investigator: Dr Kalliopi Amygdalou
Research Team: Assoc. Prof. Ela Çil (IYTE), Ass. Prof. Fatma Nurşen Kul (IYTE), Assoc. Prof. Ioannis Grigoriadis (ELIAMEP & Bilkent University), Ayşen Etlacakuş (IYTE, Post-doctoral researcher), Emine Çiğdem Asrav (Post-doctoral researcher), Μelis Cankara (Post-doctoral researcher), Leonidas Moiras (Post-doctoral researcher), Alexandra Mourgou (Post-doctoral researcher), Valia Gialia (PhD student, NTUA), Ioulia Kariti (Project Manager), Beylem Doğa Tabur (ΙΥΤΕ, M.Sc.), Nasia Antonatou (NTUA), Stelios Gidis (NTUA).
Advisory Board: Prof. Murat Güvenç (Kadir Has University), Prof. Renée Hirschon (Oxford University), Prof. Paschalis Kitromilidis (Center for Asia Minor Studies), Prof. Georgios Sarigiannis (National Technical University of Athens), Prof. Erkan Serce (Dokuz Eylül University), Prof. Panayotis Tournikiotis (National Technical University of Athens), Prof. Onur Yıldirım (Middle East Technical University).
External Partners: Dr. Gökçen Beyinli (İzmir University of Economics), Assoc.Prof. Elif Koparal (Mimar Sinan University, Istanbul), Dr. Eleni Gadolou (British School of Athens), Dr. Vicky Manolopoulou (Newcastle University).
Third Parties: Izmir Institute of Technology, Izmir / Turkey; Center for Asia Minor Studies, Athens / Greece
For more information visit the project’s website.
News & Media:
The shacks that became a metropolis, Kalliopi Amygdalou, Kathimerini, 11 September 2022.
Participation in a documentary filmed as part of the “Kleinon Asty” series, Alexandra Mourgou, 8 February 2022.
Mapping the new homelands after 1922, Kalliopi Amygdalou, Kathimerini, 4 February 2022.
Music as a bridge of Memory – Transcultural and transgenerational dialogues in the landscape of Piraeus