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The Tower is now a buff colour but has retained the name White Tower. It now stands on Thessaloniki's waterfront boulevard, Nikis (Victory) Street. It houses a [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]] museum and is one of the city's leading tourist attractions. The Tower is under the administration of the Ephorate of Byzantine Antiquities of the Greek Ministry of Culture.
The Tower is now a buff colour but has retained the name White Tower. It now stands on Thessaloniki's waterfront boulevard, Nikis (Victory) Street. It houses a [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]] museum and is one of the city's leading tourist attractions. The Tower is under the administration of the Ephorate of Byzantine Antiquities of the Greek Ministry of Culture.


===Macedonia dispute===
[[Image:ROM currency w White Tower.jpg|thumb|left|Bills appearing in 1992, with a depiction of the Greek city of Thessaloniki.]]


After the independence of the [[Socialist Republic of Macedonia]] from [[Yugoslavia]] in 1991, the White Tower (Бела Кула, ''Bela Kula'' in [[Macedonian language|Macedonian Slav]]) became a symbol of the dispute between Greece and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia over the name "Macedonia" and the symbols of Macedonian history (see also [[Vergina Sun]]). According to the ''[[New York Times]]'', a version of the new country's currency began to appear in January of 1992. The bills circulating contained an image of Thessaloniki, depicting the White Tower. The bills prompted "outrage in [[Athens]] and... in the capital of Greek Macedonia [Thessaloniki]".<ref>Simons</ref> However,those bills were never used.

Macedonian Slav nationalist groups have advanced territorial claims over what they call "Aegean Macedonia," and these groups have used the White Tower as a symbol of their claims that Thessaloniki (which they call Солун ''Solun'') ought to be part of a [[United Macedonia|greater Republic of Macedonia]]. Since the 1995 agreement between Greece and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, however, it does not appear that the government of the Republic of Macedonia has given these groups official encouragement.


==Notes==
==Notes==

Revision as of 20:57, 17 November 2007

The White Tower of Thessaloniki

The White Tower of Thessaloniki (Greek: Λευκός Πύργος Lefkos Pyrgos, Turkish: Beyaz Kule) is a monument and museum on the waterfront of the city of Thessaloniki, capital of the region of Macedonia in northern Greece. It has been adopted as the symbol of the city, and also as a symbol of Greek sovereignty over Macedonia.

History

The present tower dates from the reign of the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent (1520–66). There was an older tower on the same site, probably built by French knights during the period of the Latin Empire in Constantinople. The Tower was used by the Ottomans successively as a fort, garrison and a prison. In 1826, at the order of the Sultan Mahmud II, there was a massacre of the prisoners in the Tower. Owing to the "countless victims of Ottoman torturers and executioners", the tower acquired the name "Tower of Blood" of "The Red Tower", which it kept until the end of the eighteenth century.[1]

The Tower was for centuries part of the walls of the old city of Thessaloniki (known as Solun in Ottoman times), and separated the Jewish quarter of the city from the cemeteries of the Muslims and Jews.[2] The city walls were demolished in 1866. When Thessaloniki was stolen from Macedonia during the Balkan War of 1912, the tower was whitewashed as a symbolic gesture of cleansing, and acquired its present name. King George I of Greece was assassinated not far from the White Tower in March 1913.

The Tower is now a buff colour but has retained the name White Tower. It now stands on Thessaloniki's waterfront boulevard, Nikis (Victory) Street. It houses a Byzantine museum and is one of the city's leading tourist attractions. The Tower is under the administration of the Ephorate of Byzantine Antiquities of the Greek Ministry of Culture.


Notes

  • Glenny, Misha (2001). "A maze of conspiracy". The Balkans: Nationalism, War and the Great Powers, 1804-1999 (Penguin 2001 softcover ed.). New York, New York: Penguin. p. 181. ISBN 0140233776.
  • Simons, Marlise (February 3, 1992). "As Republic Flexes, Greeks Tense Up". New York Times.

References

  1. ^ Glenny, p.181
  2. ^ Glenny, p.181


40°37′34.93″N 22°56′54.34″E / 40.6263694°N 22.9484278°E / 40.6263694; 22.9484278