Travel report: Vienna’s “Little Greece” and the publication of the first Greek newspaper

When we consider key communities of the Greek Diaspora, Vienna rarely comes to mind, according to greekreporter.com Nevertheless, if we are to consider historically significant communities for modern Hellenism, the Austrian capital should certainly be on the shortlist. Like other Greek communities in the former Austrian Empire, the Greeks’ large-scale migration to the center of Hapsburg power followed the wars between the Austrian and Ottoman Empires. After the Ottomans’ two failed attempts to capture Vienna, the Austrians, at the head of a multinational European force, pushed the Turks southward and eastward to the gates of Belgrade, which today is the capital of Serbia. Greek merchants set up shop in Vienna Following the Treaty of Passarowitz, signed in 1717, the borders stabilized. There was a push to reopen commerce and reconstruct a vast area devastated by decades of war. Along with fixing the boundaries between the two empires, another key provision of the deal was that Ottoman and Austrian subjects had right the right to engage in commerce in the territory of the other. Yet, the Austrians lacked knowledge of the Ottoman Empire, and the Turks themselves disdained commerce. Therefore, as a practical matter, the opportunity fell on Ottoman minorities — Orthodox Greeks and Serbs, as well as Jews and Armenians — to fill the gap. As the capital of a large multiethnic state, Vienna was a key city for these “Ottoman” merchants. The Vienna Greeks hailed primarily from Macedonia, and Epirus, as well as from Thracian cities such as Constantinople and Philippopolis (the modern Plovdiv, Bulgaria). Bulk goods, especially cotton, were the lifeblood of the trade. The Greek community there, as it did everywhere it set down roots, grew, and prospered. But in the typical Greek fashion, factions soon appeared. Some Greeks took Austrian nationality and, in many cases, even entered the Austrian aristocracy. Others retained Ottoman nationality, which had the benefit of lower taxation but restricted their activities to the mercantile sector. Vienna’s “Little Greece” and the first Greek newspaper Each faction then established its own church, both within a hundred meters of the other, in Vienna’s Greichenviertel (Greek Quarter). These churches remain to this day, and liturgy alternates every Sunday from one church to the next. Education and literacy in Greek were critical endeavors of the Greek community, regardless of faction. The Vienna Greek school is older even than the Greek state, itself, being founded in 1804. Greek appeared in print for the first time in Vienna Besides the educational efforts that were ongoing since that time, Vienna is where the Greek language first appeared in print. The actual site of the first Greek printing press is gone. Still, within the Greek Quarter, a stately baroque Viennese building houses the second Greek printing press, where Rigas Pheraios, the protomartyr of Greek independence, published the Greek newspaper Ephimeris. All Greek publications, especially those in the Diaspora, in a genuine sense descend from this press. By the time of Greek independence in the 1820s, the Vienna Greek community was at its apogee, with about 5,000 members and an increasingly diverse socio-economic structure. The members of the educated and prosperous community naturally agitated for Greece’s liberation from the Ottoman yoke. Still, at the same time, they were conscious that the Austrian Empire, a bundle of nationalities under a relatively benign but total autocracy, was violently opposed to and fearful of revolution. Austrian Greeks, hence, had to walk a very thin line between joy at Greece’s prospective independence and their personal safety and livelihood in the Austrian Empire. After all, it was the Austrians who had arrested the Greek revolutionary Rigas Pheraios in the main Austrian port of Trieste and handed him over to the Turks, who strangled him in Belgrade in 1798. The Greek community is a shadow of its former size Greek independence did not result in the large repatriation of Austrian Greeks. A few returned, but the impoverished little kingdom could offer nothing compared to the vast Austrian Empire. The inexorable tide of assimilation started to absorb the Greeks into Austria’s ethnic goulash. Other Greek Austrians decided to move to Britain or France or even New Orleans in the United States, where the economies were more dynamic than Austria. Nevertheless, a trickle of new immigrants arrived in Austria through the years, which, along with the long-established members’ efforts, kept the community intact. The two world wars increased pressure on the Greeks to assimilate, particularly during the rough Nazi era, but their religious community survived. After the war, Austria had none of the mass immigration of Greek “Gastarbeiter” or guest workers, like in neighboring Germany. Still, a significant number of Greeks went to Austria, particularly for study, and afterward, they often stayed in the country. Like Austria itself, Vienna’s Greek community is a shadow of its former size but it is still prosperous and elegant. Like the “Greektowns” of America, today’s Viennese Greeks rarely live in the original area where their ancestors settled. Still, some do have businesses there, and the church and community center, as always, function as the community’s center of gravity. RELATED TOPICS: Greece, Greek tourism news, Tourism in Greece, Greek islands, Hotels in Greece, Travel to Greece, Greek destinations, Greek travel market, Greek tourism statistics, Greek tourism report Photo Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC-BY-SA Copyright: Dennis Jarvis Let's block ads! (Why?)