Why do we celebrate the Greek War of Independence in 1821? Journalists Marilena Katsimi and Pierros Tzanetakos seek answers to the question "Why we celebrate 1821?" as well as what is the role of memory in public history?
Why are the Greeks divided? Is it only typical for our people to be divided or is it a common political and social phenomenon, the result of the differences between the individual groups that make up each nation?
Angels or Demons? The role of foreigners in Greece. What is the role of foreigners and what is the influence on Greek history? Are foreigners to blame for the country's ills or are they its redeemers?
Was the Greek War of Independence in 1821 a world event? We know revolution as national because Greece was founded. However, the more we learn about the struggle for the independence of the Greeks, the more we realize that it is universal.
War or Peace? From the Orlov revolt of 1770 and the war for independence in 1821 to the wake of the deafening defeat of 1897 and from the Balkan to the two World Wars and the Turkish invasion in Cyprus.
How do foreigners perceive Greeks? Modern Greeks have an obsession with how they are perceived by foreigners and specifically by western Europeans. Why are we so interested in what others say about us?
What's wrong with the Greek economy? How difficult was to establish the state financially after Revolution against the Ottomans? What role had the loans of the Struggle, as well as those of the following decades, in the economy of Greece?
What is the relationship between the Greeks and the sea? Greece is a country surrounded by sea and for the last 50 years Greek shipping, centered on Piraeus, is the greatest in the world.
Why are there Greeks everywhere? Population movements to and from Greece. Mainly due to the geographical position of Greece, population movements to and from its territory are a constant in Greek history.
How is Greece governed? The system of government is determined by the Constitution, namely, the supreme law that is the framework for the operation of the state, but also delimits the relationship of power with the people.
The past, the present and the future. On the 12th and final episode, journalists Marilena Katsimi and Pierros Tzanetakos focus on the three main axes that make up the nation state, namely the territory, the people and the power.