Skip to content

Main Navigation

100sources
  • ΕΛ
Home
Cities
ChaniaPireausThessalonikiVolos
The Project

The research project “100memories”, starting from the refugee movement of 1922-1924, takes up the multiple migrations that followed over the next 100 years until today. The study of the past and memory meets the digital world and shapes new (analogue, hybrid and digital) narratives. More here: https://100memories.gr/

The Platform

The 100sources digital platform is a digital repository documenting a century of arrivals and departures.

Narratives

Let us think of our cities as spaces that are constantly woven through the journeys, histories and experiences of their inhabitants, through encounters and conflicts, separations and arrivals that always leave traces – more or less visible – in urban space. By unraveling, but also by intertwining, these threads of movement, habitation, work and daily life, we tell aspects of the history of refugee neighbourhoods.

Bibliography

The bibliography concerns all the research aspects studied in the project on the history of migration in Greece.

Map

The map identifies institutions with archival material related to the history of the refugee settlement of 1922-24, collectives and monuments.

Scripts

See the educational scripts developed during the project.

100places

Visit the 100places.gr platform.

Contact

Do not hesitate to contact us for any issue. [email protected]

Textile shop

City

Thessaloniki

Migration Period

Population Exchange

City Narratives

Knitting

Tag

Sewing

Category

Labour

Full Description

The photographs show the textile shop belonging to the Ichtiaroglou family at 6 Ermou Street in 1965. The Ichtiaroglou family were Asia Minor refugees who had lived in the centre of Thessaloniki ever since their arrival in the city. In 1938, the father of Alexandros Ichtiaroglou, the present owner of the company, started working at his uncle’s textile shop at 11 Ermou Street. In 1963, the same shop where he used to work as an employee started operating under the name ‘Ichtiaroglou and Pekos’. A few years later, Alexandros Ichtiaroglou, the present owner, also started working there.

When discussing his work, Alexandros Ichtiaroglou says, ‘My father didn’t want me to go into textiles. He wanted me to become an engineer. Things were hard back then, you know, there was great poverty. Besides, we were refugees. My father believed I would make more money doing something else, but I liked commerce. So, when I was discharged from the army in 1976, I joined the company. The shop has been in our family for three generations, first it was my father’s, then mine, and now my children’s. If you count my uncle, that’s four generations. Our shop sold textiles wholesale to other textile shops throughout Greece. I liked visiting the textile factories and watching the production line. That was how I got answers to my questions about textiles and the materials they’re made of. During the manufacturing boom, we also started selling retail to small manufacturers. I remember the time when scores of manufacturing units were cropping up and we could have 10 to 15 couples a day coming to our shop and saying, “Hi, we want to open a manufacturing business and we’re here to look at textiles”. Those people were not particularly educated and many of them didn’t know the job, but they were unemployed at the time and manufacturing gave them jobs’.

According to Labrianidis, the time period described above was characterised in Thessaloniki by a population increase, a rise in the commercial traffic through the city port, as well as the facilitation of transport to and from Thessaloniki both through the road network and the airlines connecting the city with various domestic and international destinations. In addition, based on the data from the 1984 census, Thessaloniki was boasting a great concentration of both large-scale and small-scale manufacturing units compared to the rest of the country, especially in the sectors of textiles, clothing, tobacco, and footwear. By utilising the newly-developed transportation network from and through Thessaloniki, the sectors of clothing, footwear, and textiles managed to achieve dynamic growth.

Bibliography

Ntina Vaiou and Kostis Chatzimichalis, With the sewing machine in the kitchen and the Poles in the fields. Cities, peripheries and informal labour, Exantas (2nd edition), Athens 1997.

Lois Labrianidis, ‘The city’s development since the 1980s: why opportunities were not effectively utilised’, in Kafkalas, G., Labrianidis, L. and N. Papamichos (eds.) Cities on the Verge: Thessaloniki in a Process of Change, Kritiki, Thessaloniki 2008.

footer-logo

Visit the project website 100memories.gr.

Terms of Use

Website Structure

CITIES

  • Volos
  • Thessaloniki
  • Piraeus
  • Chania

PAGES

  • Bibliography
  • Map
  • Entries

Το ερευνητικό έργο υλοποιείται στο πλαίσιο της Δράσης ΕΡΕΥΝΩ – ΔΗΜΙΟΥΡΓΩ – ΚΑΙΝΟΤΟΜΩ και συγχρηματοδοτείται από την Ευρωπαϊκή Ένωση και εθνικούς πόρους μέσω του Ε.Π. Ανταγωνιστικότητα, Επιχειρηματικότητα & Καινοτομία (ΕΠΑνΕΚ) (κωδικός έργου: Τ2ΕΔΚ-04827)

Manufactured by Sociality