'this is more Macedonia than Greek when it comes to History" Mate really? 😂 You think that the Greek region of Macedonia is the same with the our neighbor country called North Macedonia? What the hell are you talking about?Do you even familiar with history? Athens, Sparta, Macedonia, Corinth, etc, all Greek city states. What is this "more Macedonia than Greece"? Damn Americans and your lack of knowledge with the history
Macedonia is the northern province of Greece since antiquity. The political propaganda of the former Yugoslavia adopting the Greek name has created confusion among those that aren’t familiar with ancient Hellenic Greek history. Macedonians, Spartans, Corinthians, Athenians are all Greek.
Nice presentation overall, enjoyed your food comments and the enjoyment you expressed. Missed the Rotonda in Thessaloniki ☹️ Your comment about Thessaloniki being Macedonian not Greek is as if you stated that something was Athenian or Spartan, not Greek. Not sure if this was your intention. Just 2 points to assist your understanding. 1. Fundamentally participants in the Olympic Games were exclusive to Greek city states. Non Greeks were never invited and never participated. Macedonians were consistent participants and winners in many games. 2. The well known Greek philosopher Aristotle was Macedonian and was Alexander’s educator during his youth. And the list goes on. Therefore, when referring to Macedonia please refer in the same fashion as you would talk about Crete or Peloponnese or Epirus and so on.
Oh don't worry, from now on I know that. You're not the first to point this out. I am learning. To be fair some of the historical plaques and initial websites about these places need to be more clear on that. That's where I get all my info. I am also kicking myself for not seeing the Rotonda. Again not the first person to mention to me I missed that. I'm kind of sad after looking it up. It looks awesome
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDonStrange, it's the opinion of tourists.... I've traveled half of Europe but I've never found a city that eats very well everywhere, at every single restaurant...
One more thing koulouri is not Turkish. Ancient Greeks were eating it long time before them . I prefer to dispute about these minors issues than to talk about historical facts .
Much appreciated, I asked the owner of the coffee shop what it was and he only told me the name so I looked it up. I only took what I saw on the first web page. That obviously needs done changing
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon Koulouri is Turkish of course-hence the Turkish name koulouri. Much of our food culture (I was born and live in Salonica) is of Turkish origins. Only The statue you pointed is Eleftherios Venizelos and it is not the first prime minister. Hs served in the thirties while greece exists since the mids of the 19th century.
@@Эрл_Грей πρεπει να ξερης οτι οι τουρκοι στην διατροφικη αλισιδα εφερα απο τις στεπες του τουρκεσταν ΜΟΝΟ ΑΛΟΓΟΜΗΓΕΣ κατω απο τα καπουλια των αλογων. Διαβασε τις ιστορικες πηγες που εβαζαν το κρεας ακομη και απο ποντικια κατω απο τα σκελια τους στα αλογα επανω για να μαλακωση!!!! ολη η κουζινα ειναι βυζαντινη παραδωμενη απο την αρχαια Ελλαδα με πολλες επιροες απο περσια και Μεση ανατολη. Διαβασε το αρχαιο συγραμα ,,Δειπνοσοφιστες,, για να εχεις αποψη περι εδεσματων. Παραδειγματα: αρχαια ελληνικα εδεσματα με τις ονομασιες. ο σησαμούς (παστέλι από σουσάμι) η μουστόπιτα (μουσταλευριά), ο μηλοπλακούς (κυδώνι βρασμένο σε μέλι), το λάγανον ή λαλλάγγι (είδος τηγανίτας) ο κοπτοπλακούς (γλύκισμα με φύλλα ζύμης, αμύγδαλα, καρύδια και μέλι που μοιάζει να είναι πρόγονος του σημερινού μπακλαβά) οι πλακούντες (πίτες με ζυμάρι, τυρί, μέλι, σουσάμι και καρυκεύματα) η άμμιλος (τούρτα), η μελιττούτα (μελόπιτα), τα τήγανα (λουκουμάδες) προτου να εκθετης απαξιωτικη γνωμη για την πατριδα σου πρωτα ενημερω σου.
Macedonian history is Greek history. There's no need to separate these two. It's not rocket science, a simple visit on wikipedia will explain it to you.
The historical walk is very cool and the breakfast pizza sounds like a great way to start the day. That Pirate ship looks great, what a place to stop for a drink. So nice you can get a cruise with your drink.
As always thanks for your hard work.,experience and political , news ,this is another outstanding explores ,I will be here again one day ,my father's home land.
What a great day of food! The Pirate ship looked especially fun. So much good food and the traditional dinner seemed great too. Enjoyed this Greek series!
@@TheAverageTourist to really explore Thessaloniki I'd encourage at least a week. I barely scratched the surface. As I was told by locals that watched the video. "You missed this, you missed that!" 😂 So yeah I'd spend at least a week with the city itself. Not to mention the many day trips from Thessalonike
very nice presantation, but you making a mistake when you say Thessaloniki has more of Macedonian history rather than Greek history. Thessaloniki's history is Macedonian Greek, the same way Athens has Athenian Greek history etc... keep making good videos.
This was by far the most informative video on Thessaloniki I've watched. You touched on the historical sights, shopping, and of course places to eat. We are headed there next month. I'll have to look for the other videos you've done. Thanks for the tour!
A point here - Macedonia in Ancient Times was a Greek kingdom, which corresponds to the Greek province of Macedonia today. This has no relation to ‘North Macedonia’, a Slavic country to the north of Greece, which took the name “Macedonia” in the 20th Century, and has attempted to usurp Greek history by claiming they are the descendants of the Ancient Macedonians (and claim the Ancient Macedonias were never Greek). Slavs didn’t arrive in the Balkans until the 6th and 7th century AD (1000 years after the death Alexander the Great). Great episode and thank you for sharing your adventures in Greece.
Those cakes looked delicious Love that bread Lunch looked delicious that sausage 😋 Shopping markets and malls are were we head when it Rains. Beautiful street art. The holy church is absolutely wow 👌 Another excellent vlog
Absolutely mesmerized by the beauty and rich history of Thessaloniki! Your video brilliantly captures the essence of this Northern Gem, from its stunning views to the diverse food culture influenced by empires of old. The blend of historical sites and culinary delights makes for an epic journey. Keep up the fantastic content!
Your videos truly remind me of places I visited in that country, a real nostalgia, especially for the food I also loved. Thank you for this delightful share.
Wow look at the food! so yum and tempting, Northern Greece has also so much to explore. The weather. architecture and mainly food, totally love this side of Greece.
thanks for this one Ben. Thessaloniki was on and off and on and off my itinerary last year. but in the end I thought I would be choosing it over Sofia on the basis I hadnt been to Greece before and at the end of the day I felt I wanted to see more of Greece, and if I didnt have the time I would be wasting my time. so this gives me an idea about the city, which actually seems to have so much going for it! love the boat ride and the bay, but the whole city has a very unique vibe to it very different to Athens and other parts of Greece you've shown us! Thanks for sharing!
Macedonian history... is Greek history. I don't understand why you making sound like it's something different. Also the koulouri is most probably byzantine in origin.
the fact that the Macedonians lived scattered over a larger area does not make them less Greek, on the contrary, since they all had names with Greek etymology, and were the same race as the Spartans...
Tempting me big time. For sure on my next visit to Europe, I am gonna check Greece out. My friend who is Macedonian loves this city and always pokes me to visit it :D
Did you say markets?! I love visiting markets. I like to see the traditional market of Kopani. All delicious fresh foods. And good to see some places eat nearby. Their Hagia Sophia is definitely really nice and looks like it is well maintained. Oooo brunch at Estrella sign me up. And omg, I haven't had a breakfast pizza in a long time! Glad I just ate or I would be hungry!
Thanks for showing my city. Aside the architectural crimes committed through the years, we love it like a mother loves her child, even if it's not the most beautiful one...Travel safe!
"More Macedonian than it was Greek, when it comes to history..." Go figure! Same as saying Larisa was more Thessalian, than it was Greek or Athens was more Attican, than it was Greek. I'm amazed, no matter how familiar foreigners are, with the ancient Hellenic world, many still find it too difficult to understand the concept of different city states or in this case kingdoms, comprised of people of the same nationality?
I think that's because we get our history from that part of the world from history channel specials, or from history video games. That's where I heard my basic history. It wasn't until after I visited Greece and put these videos up that I was told of things I did not know.
There is no such thing as Macedonia being a separate entity to Greece. I understand you are not familiar with history but this is a sensitive topic for us Greeks. Other than that I hope you had a good time and thank you for your video.
So I've been told multiple times since the video came out. Thanks for not lambasting me. I have never received more hate in my life than when I made that statement.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon I can only imagine :) I spent half an hour sending you a message giving you a brief overview of this issue but yt decided it was too long and never actually shown it. Long story short, Greeks found the kingdom of Macedonia in 7th century BC (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonia_(ancient_kingdom)). Macedonians are Greeks historically. 1400 years after Slavs invade from the north. They never had the entire Macedonia under their kingdoms and the Byzantines (roughly medieval Greeks) push them back and fro many times until 1453 AD when the Turks take over (actually a few years before) and suddenly things are not that clear as to what happened with the population. In 1912 Macedonia is liberated by the Greek Army and in Macedonia there are turkish, greek and bulgarian speaking villages, with some Jews in city centres. The majority of the cases the majority of the villages are Greek as was the population but that is disputed by Slavs due to turbulent period and the sometimes conflicting ottoman records. The truth however is that the 'Turks' migrate out after the liberation. In 1914 the Greeks fight the Bulgarians for Macedonia and Thrace and win, so the Bulgarians leave as well. The Bulgarians (Slavs) were terrorising the area from 1870-1900 tried to instill the idea to the mixed population of Macedonia that Macedonians are something different and unique (trying to erase thousands of years of history). Some people (due to lack of education and ottoman oppression) side with that but most don't. After WW2 general Tito and governor of Yugoslavia takes a formerly known prefecture of his called Vardarska and effectively brainwashes the inhabitants into thinking they are 'Macedonians', that they speak the 'Macedonian language' and that they are something different and a unique ethnicity.
The truth is that the Serbs were counting on the momentum of Bulgarian propaganda in brainwashing people (for their own interests) and played the card of 'Macedonia' to a population that never felt Serbian. Both Yugoslavia and Bulgaria were supported by the Russians and later Soviet Union as they were always in the sphere of influence. The target was the lucrative trade in the Aegean and Mediterranean (money is always the reason for wars and disputes, especially for those fabricating claims). So nowadays after the fall of Yugoslavia, we have a bunch of brainwashed individuals living in what would be called no-man's land in the middle of the Balkans wanting to belong somewhere (understandable human emotion) and what a better candidate than Macedonia and its glorious Greek past with Alexander the Great etc etc etc. (not to mention they now think they are 'Macedonians' that were deprived of their national identity and the evil Greeks took their history from them). The result of roughly 100-150 years of propaganda. The language that they speak is a Bulgarian dialect, fully comprehensible by Bulgarians but nothing to do with Greek which is the language the Greek population always spoke in Macedonia (geographical area and ancient kingdom). So their country is now called North Macedonia though for us Greeks allowing them the 'Macedonia' part of their country's name is still painful despite the fact that our inept and slave to the US interests in the region politicians say it is only geographical and not national. The Slavs of this small state though still tout to the world that they are Macedonians something that simply is historically untrue, unacceptable, and might I add outrageous to the people that literally own the name and history those being the Greeks.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon I can only imagine :) I spent half an hour sending you a message giving you a brief overview of this issue but yt decided it was too long and never actually shown it. Long story short, Greeks found the kingdom of Macedonia in 7th century BC. Macedonians are Greeks historically. 1400 years after Slavs invade from the north. They never had the entire Macedonia under their kingdoms and the Byzantines (roughly medieval Greeks) push them back and fro, 1453 the Turks take over (actually a few years before) and suddenly things are not that clear as to what happened with the population. In 1912 Macedonia is liberated by the Greek Army and in Macedonia there are turkish, greek and bulgarian speaking villages, with some Jews in city centres. The majority of the cases the majority of the villages are Greek as was the population but that is disputed due to the not well kept ottoman records. The truth however is that the 'Turks' migrate out after the liberation. In 1914 the Greeks fight the Bulgarians for Macedonia and Thrace and win, so the Bulgarians leave as well. The Bulgarians (Slavs) terrorised the area from 1870-1900 tried to instill the idea to the mixed population of Macedonia that Macedonians are something different and unique (trying to erase thousands of years of history). Some people (due to lack of education and ottoman oppression) side with that but most don't. After WW2 general Tito and governor of Yugoslavia takes a formerly known prefecture of his called Vardarska and effectively brainwashes the inhabitants into thinking they are 'Macedonians', that they speak the 'Macedonian language' and that they are something different and a unique ethnicity.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon 2/2 The truth is that the Serbs were counting on the momentum of Bulgarian propaganda in brainwashing people (for their own interests) and played the card of 'Macedonia' to a population that never felt Serbian. Both Yugoslavia and Bulgaria were supported by the Russians and later Soviet Union as they were always in the sphere of influence. The target was the lucrative trade in the Aegean and Mediterranean (money is always the reason for wars and disputes, especially for those fabricating claims). So nowadays after the fall of Yugoslavia, we have a bunch of brainwashed individuals living in what would be called no-man's land in the middle of the Balkans wanting to belong and what a better candidate than Macedonia and its glorious Greek past with Alexander the Great etc etc etc. (not to mention they now think they are 'Macedonians' that were deprived of their national identity and the evil Greeks took their history from them). The result of roughly 150 years of propaganda. The language that they speak is a Bulgarian dialect, fully comprehensible by Bulgarians but nothing to do with Greek which is the language the Greek population always spoke in Macedonia (geographical area and ancient kingdom). So their country is now called North Macedonia though for us Greeks allowing them the 'Macedonia' part of their country's name is still painful, despite the fact that our, inept and slave to the US interests in the region, politicians say it is only geographical and not national. The Slavs of this small state though still tout to the world that they are Macedonians something that simply is historically untrue, unacceptable, and might I add outrageous to the people that literally own the name those being the Greeks.
It’s still not too late to admit that you made a mistake . Everything look , sound Greek but this Macedonian city is different from the Greeks ? Athenians are not Greek ? You should be more careful when you are referring to those things especially when you already know how sensitive this subject is . Not too late my friend .
Honestly, I didn't know how sensitive this subject was until Greeks posted about the video. Look my apologies if any of this offended anyone and I admit I didn't do my utmost due diligence but, I take most of what I say in the videos from informational plaques around the cities I visit. Or from the first couple sources that pop up on the Internet if my phone even works at the time. So easy information for tourists needs to be looked at and corrected for us tourists that don't have the time to do a deep dive and read all the history books. Now when did I say 'Athenians are not Greek?' this was a video about Thessaloniki. I don't remember even mentioning Athens. Again I admit that I had no idea that there was such a divide between Greek and Macedonian about this. Particularly when I was speaking of ancient Greece not the divide between now Slavic North Macedonia and Greek Macedonia. When I spoke of Ancient Macedon I thought that while, everything is Greek along with the names, that Macedon at the time of Alexander was somewhat culturally different. A kingdom instead of democratic rule. Different dialect of Greek. Again I apologize if I offended any Greeks. I'm coming from a thought process that is like what I know. You can call me American but, I'm from Texas. I am vastly different from an American New Yorker.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon Athens just like Macedonia are two different areas . Why one area is Greek and not the other one when both have the same fundamental characteristics to be called Greek ? That was exactly what I was trying to point out . There is no division or conflict with Greeks and Macedonians because is like you say there is a difference between New Yorkers and Americans . The fact that nowadays everyone has the right to call himself anything he likes doesn’t mean that we delete historical facts .
@@nikosiliakis8954 very true I just didn't know all the facts. I was under the wrong assumption along with what I read on the plaques around the city or whatever sites were the first to pop up when I googled it. Which honestly is almost always Wikipedia 🤦.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDonMacedonia, Thrace, Thessaly, Epirus are regions of Greece, in northern and central Greece, from ancient times to today. Ancient Greek kingdoms/regions/parts of ancient Greek world. Greeks of Macedonia region in Greece are called "Macedonians", Greeks of Sparta city are called "Spartans", Greeks of Athens "Athenians" and so on with other places in Greece
Makedonians language ( written) was Attic Greek - you can see everywhere in their monuments and writings( coins etc) in Greece " N Mns" 🇲🇰 are slavis people ( Fyrom - ex Yugoslavia) and using the Cyrillic language that founded 1000 yrs later
You didnt try the best foods like moussaka,dolmadakia,gemista,kleftico,kokoretsi,kontosouvli,pasticio,strapatsada and many more...why!????? Those werent the bests of us!! 🇬🇷🇬🇷Try them next time pls
Oh I will. Technically in my videos throughout Athens I had Moussaka, Pasticio and Strapatsada. I also off camera did eat Kontosouvli in Athens. Did not try kleftici or kokoretsi. I'll mark those. I only had really two days in Thessaloniki and was sort of going around on my own. Kind of just popped into the first places that caught my eye.
The Macedonians was a greek tribe Alexander the great invaded the Persian empire representing the entire greek people please read more history next time
So I've been told. Although my intent was the connection to the Ancient Kingdom of Macedon under Alexander and the Kings that followed during that time in history. I realize they were all of Greek origin but, they still have a statue of Alexander the Great. So I assumed it was of ancient Macedonian Kingdom.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon you have got things a bit confused. I can't blame you so here is a very short history lesson. Macedonia was a Greek kingdom in the North of Greece found in the 7th century BC (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonia_(ancient_kingdom)). Alexander the Great was one of its kings that later became an emperor after he conquered most of the then known world (Egypt and Asia reaching today's India) - ~330BC. After roughly 1000 years and around the 7th century AD, a today's Ukraine/Moldavia group of tribes invaded and settled today's Serbia, Bulgaria pushing further and further to the south. The Byzantines (Eastern Roman Empire - an equivalent Greek medieval empire) could not stop them and had to effectively allow these people to settle the lands south the Danube river in an attempt to civilize and domesticize them so they stopped raiding, pillaging and destroying everything in their path, as they would penetrate into (today's) Greece during their raids. These people were the Slavs. Over the 700 years that ensued, the Slavs conquered, lost and reconquered many times parts of the ancient kingdom of Macedonia, with the main inhabitants of it being Greeks as they've always been since the beginning. In 1453 AD the Eastern Roman Empire falls and the Turks allowed a more loose population settling regime. In those years and by the time Macedonia (today's northern Greek prefecture and the major part of the ancient Greek Kingdom of Macedonia) was liberated by the Greek state in 1914 AD, had parts of its population calling themselves Turks, parts Bulgarian (Slavs) and parts Greek which was the majority of the population in most areas of Macedonia. Immediately after the liberation the Turks (most were nothing more than islamised Greeks over the centuries that lost their original national identity) were exchanged and left the area for good. The Bulgarians didn't leave before a war broke out in 1914AD between Greece and Bulgaria over the area of Macedonia. The Greeks won liberating a good proportion of all Macedonian lands and all the villages that were considered 'Bulgarian' were emptied of their inhabitants. The Bulgarians always coveted Macedonia (the area) because it gave them access to lucrative trade in the Aegean sea. So they always included taking it back from the evil Greeks in their nationalistic propaganda. Descendants of these people (Slavs) and of the mentality that Macedonia is not Greek but that it has a unique and separate national identity with people speaking a 'Macedonian' language (that is nothing more than a Bulgarian dialect with some Albanian, some Turkish and some Greek words) are the people now inhabiting the former Yugoslav republic that borders Greece in the north. Today this country is called North Macedonia and they are effectively still attempting to appropriate Greek history, wanting to rewrite or alter history according to their false propaganda. This topic is VERY sensitive to Greeks so in the start of the video when you said this place is more Macedonian than Greek, that was a no-no, especially due to the situation I attempted to frame for you. Ancient Macedonians spoke Greek, they were Dorian Greeks, worshipped the 12 Gods of Olympus (like all the rest of the Greeks), had Greek names and customs, took part in the ancient Olympic Games that only Greeks were allowed to take part in, and simply identified theirselves as Greeks. The only 'snag' is that the Greeks further to the south would accuse them of not being as cultured as them (a pun more than anything else, especially after king Philip (Alexander's father) conquered their city-states before preparing to launch an expedition against Persia (something he never got to do due to his assasination but also something that Alexander, his son, actually accomplished). I hope this puts things into perspective and I am sorry it had to be as long. It is quite infuriating when completely foreign groups of people attempt to steal your history (a well documented history I might say) from you but there you have it.
Of course you see a statue of Alexander the great in Thesaloniki, as you will see a statue of Leonidas in Sparta. The one was Macedonian, the other was Spartan. And both they were Greeks. As simple as that.
The finale of my time in Greece. I hope you guys enjoy it. I had a blast making this video!
'this is more Macedonia than Greek when it comes to History"
Mate really? 😂 You think that the Greek region of Macedonia is the same with the our neighbor country called North Macedonia? What the hell are you talking about?Do you even familiar with history? Athens, Sparta, Macedonia, Corinth, etc, all Greek city states. What is this "more Macedonia than Greece"? Damn Americans and your lack of knowledge with the history
Macedonia is the northern province of Greece since antiquity. The political propaganda of the former Yugoslavia adopting the Greek name has created confusion among those that aren’t familiar with ancient Hellenic Greek history. Macedonians, Spartans, Corinthians, Athenians are all Greek.
So I've been told
You keep on separating Macedonia from Greece throughout the video. Xxxxxxxxxx Sure no way to subscribe. Study history mate.
Modern day Greece exists since 1830 and its an artificial nation.
Αγάπη Μακεδονία Ελλάδα ❤❤❤
Northern Greece looks nice, even in winter! That pirate ship bar and cruise looked especially a lot of a fun!
It was relatively nice on the coast not too cold
I went on that pirate ship was amazing
Nice presentation overall, enjoyed your food comments and the enjoyment you expressed.
Missed the Rotonda in Thessaloniki ☹️
Your comment about Thessaloniki being Macedonian not Greek is as if you stated that something was Athenian or Spartan, not Greek.
Not sure if this was your intention. Just 2 points to assist your understanding.
1. Fundamentally participants in the Olympic Games were exclusive to Greek city states. Non Greeks were never invited and never participated. Macedonians were consistent participants and winners in many games.
2. The well known Greek philosopher Aristotle was Macedonian and was Alexander’s educator during his youth.
And the list goes on.
Therefore, when referring to Macedonia please refer in the same fashion as you would talk about Crete or Peloponnese or Epirus and so on.
Oh don't worry, from now on I know that. You're not the first to point this out. I am learning. To be fair some of the historical plaques and initial websites about these places need to be more clear on that. That's where I get all my info. I am also kicking myself for not seeing the Rotonda. Again not the first person to mention to me I missed that. I'm kind of sad after looking it up. It looks awesome
Hard work as always thanks for the beautiful sites and the amazing food perks. So cook sites around Greece.
Glad you enjoyed it.
I've got to stop watching these videos on an empty stomach! Another fantastic food tour and I definitely need to get to Greece!
Indeed you do
Indeed you do
The city with the best restaurants in the world..... With the best food
I can't argue too much with that statement 😁
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDonStrange, it's the opinion of tourists.... I've traveled half of Europe but I've never found a city that eats very well everywhere, at every single restaurant...
Travel more
@@KentBuchlamy job is to travel... you travel, it's better 😅
@@electra1920You're right...the best
One more thing koulouri is not Turkish. Ancient Greeks were eating it long time before them . I prefer to dispute about these minors issues than to talk about historical facts .
Much appreciated, I asked the owner of the coffee shop what it was and he only told me the name so I looked it up. I only took what I saw on the first web page. That obviously needs done changing
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon Koulouri is Turkish of course-hence the Turkish name koulouri. Much of our food culture (I was born and live in Salonica) is of Turkish origins.
Only The statue you pointed is Eleftherios Venizelos and it is not the first prime minister. Hs served in the thirties while greece exists since the mids of the 19th century.
@@Эрл_Грей πρεπει να ξερης οτι οι τουρκοι στην διατροφικη αλισιδα εφερα απο τις στεπες του τουρκεσταν ΜΟΝΟ ΑΛΟΓΟΜΗΓΕΣ κατω απο τα καπουλια των αλογων.
Διαβασε τις ιστορικες πηγες που εβαζαν το κρεας ακομη και απο ποντικια κατω απο τα σκελια τους στα αλογα επανω για να μαλακωση!!!!
ολη η κουζινα ειναι βυζαντινη παραδωμενη απο την αρχαια Ελλαδα
με πολλες επιροες απο περσια και Μεση ανατολη.
Διαβασε το αρχαιο συγραμα ,,Δειπνοσοφιστες,, για να εχεις αποψη περι εδεσματων.
Παραδειγματα: αρχαια ελληνικα εδεσματα με τις ονομασιες.
ο σησαμούς (παστέλι από σουσάμι)
η μουστόπιτα (μουσταλευριά),
ο μηλοπλακούς (κυδώνι βρασμένο σε μέλι),
το λάγανον ή λαλλάγγι (είδος τηγανίτας)
ο κοπτοπλακούς (γλύκισμα με φύλλα ζύμης, αμύγδαλα, καρύδια και μέλι που μοιάζει να είναι πρόγονος του σημερινού μπακλαβά)
οι πλακούντες (πίτες με ζυμάρι, τυρί, μέλι, σουσάμι και καρυκεύματα)
η άμμιλος (τούρτα),
η μελιττούτα (μελόπιτα),
τα τήγανα (λουκουμάδες)
προτου να εκθετης απαξιωτικη γνωμη για την πατριδα σου πρωτα ενημερω σου.
@@Эрл_ГрейThat's quite impossible, because Turks were nomads, so they didn't cultivate anything.
Macedonian history is Greek history. There's no need to separate these two. It's not rocket science, a simple visit on wikipedia will explain it to you.
The historical walk is very cool and the breakfast pizza sounds like a great way to start the day. That Pirate ship looks great, what a place to stop for a drink. So nice you can get a cruise with your drink.
Any cruise with a drink is worth it.
As always thanks for your hard work.,experience and political , news ,this is another outstanding explores ,I will be here again one day ,my father's home land.
You'll have to share your experiences with me when you do.
Welcome to Thessaloniki ,welcome to Macedonia..
Such a wonderful Greece trip. This was a great series and we got to see so much food, culture and sites. Thanks
Anytime
What a great day of food! The Pirate ship looked especially fun. So much good food and the traditional dinner seemed great too. Enjoyed this Greek series!
It was an absolute blast
How long were you in this city? Do you recommend a couple of days or a week?
@@TheAverageTourist to really explore Thessaloniki I'd encourage at least a week. I barely scratched the surface. As I was told by locals that watched the video. "You missed this, you missed that!" 😂 So yeah I'd spend at least a week with the city itself. Not to mention the many day trips from Thessalonike
very nice presantation, but you making a mistake when you say Thessaloniki has more of Macedonian history rather than Greek history. Thessaloniki's history is Macedonian Greek, the same way Athens has Athenian Greek history etc... keep making good videos.
THESSALONIKI❤️MACEDONIA❤️GREECE❤️🇬🇷❤️🇬🇷THESSALONIKI I LOVE YOU✨💘ΘΕΣΣΑΛΙΝΙΚΗ Σ'ΑΓΑΠΩ✨💘Thanks for the beautiful video🙏👉🌹🌹🌹🇬🇷🪕🎶🪕🎶☺️✌️
This was by far the most informative video on Thessaloniki I've watched. You touched on the historical sights, shopping, and of course places to eat. We are headed there next month. I'll have to look for the other videos you've done. Thanks for the tour!
Anytime
A point here - Macedonia in Ancient Times was a Greek kingdom, which corresponds to the Greek province of Macedonia today.
This has no relation to ‘North Macedonia’, a Slavic country to the north of Greece, which took the name “Macedonia” in the 20th Century, and has attempted to usurp Greek history by claiming they are the descendants of the Ancient Macedonians (and claim the Ancient Macedonias were never Greek). Slavs didn’t arrive in the Balkans until the 6th and 7th century AD (1000 years after the death Alexander the Great).
Great episode and thank you for sharing your adventures in Greece.
So I've been corrected on since this came out. Thanks for watching
Αγάπη Μακεδονία Ελλάδα ❤❤❤
Those cakes looked delicious
Love that bread
Lunch looked delicious that sausage 😋
Shopping markets and malls are were we head when it Rains.
Beautiful street art.
The holy church is absolutely wow 👌
Another excellent vlog
Everything was so good.
Absolutely mesmerized by the beauty and rich history of Thessaloniki! Your video brilliantly captures the essence of this Northern Gem, from its stunning views to the diverse food culture influenced by empires of old. The blend of historical sites and culinary delights makes for an epic journey. Keep up the fantastic content!
I appreciate the kind words
Look at that sausage, lunch at central market looked yum, so are the drinks at pirate ship.Nice tour of the historic town.
Glad you enjoyed the tour
Your videos truly remind me of places I visited in that country, a real nostalgia, especially for the food I also loved. Thank you for this delightful share.
Anytime
Wow look at the food! so yum and tempting, Northern Greece has also so much to explore. The weather. architecture and mainly food, totally love this side of Greece.
It was an awesome trip.
Αγάπη Μακεδονία Ελλάδα Θεσσαλονίκη ❤❤
Another informative and delicious video! Looks like you had a great time in Greece! 😄
I did indeed.
Fantastic video! As someone considering an extended trip to Thessaloniki, I am now sold.
Glad it helped
thanks for this one Ben. Thessaloniki was on and off and on and off my itinerary last year. but in the end I thought I would be choosing it over Sofia on the basis I hadnt been to Greece before and at the end of the day I felt I wanted to see more of Greece, and if I didnt have the time I would be wasting my time. so this gives me an idea about the city, which actually seems to have so much going for it! love the boat ride and the bay, but the whole city has a very unique vibe to it very different to Athens and other parts of Greece you've shown us! Thanks for sharing!
Anytime brother. Look forward to your future Greek videos.
Enjoyed it again.
Thanks
Macedonian history... is Greek history. I don't understand why you making sound like it's something different. Also the koulouri is most probably byzantine in origin.
The food is excellent... from the best...
The food was so good.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon exaggeratedly good...
the fact that the Macedonians lived scattered over a larger area does not make them less Greek, on the contrary, since they all had names with Greek etymology, and were the same race as the Spartans...
Tempting me big time. For sure on my next visit to Europe, I am gonna check Greece out. My friend who is Macedonian loves this city and always pokes me to visit it :D
Thessaloniki is definitely worth the visit.
Did you say markets?! I love visiting markets. I like to see the traditional market of Kopani. All delicious fresh foods. And good to see some places eat nearby. Their Hagia Sophia is definitely really nice and looks like it is well maintained. Oooo brunch at Estrella sign me up. And omg, I haven't had a breakfast pizza in a long time! Glad I just ate or I would be hungry!
That breakfast pizza was legit
Enjoyed your style lad. Are you going to do anything on Tennessee or Texas
If you go into my past videos I've got a lot of videos based around Austin and the Central Texas region.
I've only done one video in Tennessee so far, Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg
Ελλάδα ❤❤❤
Be very well. 🙏 👍
Kostantinos from Thessaloniki.
Thanks
Which one is your favorite? Athens or Thessaloniki?
Overall I liked the vibe in Thessaloniki more
Thanks for showing my city. Aside the architectural crimes committed through the years, we love it like a mother loves her child, even if it's not the most beautiful one...Travel safe!
"More Macedonian than it was Greek, when it comes to history..." Go figure! Same as saying Larisa was more Thessalian, than it was Greek or Athens was more Attican, than it was Greek.
I'm amazed, no matter how familiar foreigners are, with the ancient Hellenic world, many still find it too difficult to understand the concept of different city states or in this case kingdoms, comprised of people of the same nationality?
I think that's because we get our history from that part of the world from history channel specials, or from history video games. That's where I heard my basic history. It wasn't until after I visited Greece and put these videos up that I was told of things I did not know.
It would be better if you do some research first before start saying things...
Αγάπη Μακεδονία Ελλάδα ❤❤
Their ignorant and dumb.
There is no such thing as Macedonia being a separate entity to Greece. I understand you are not familiar with history but this is a sensitive topic for us Greeks. Other than that I hope you had a good time and thank you for your video.
So I've been told multiple times since the video came out. Thanks for not lambasting me. I have never received more hate in my life than when I made that statement.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon I can only imagine :) I spent half an hour sending you a message giving you a brief overview of this issue but yt decided it was too long and never actually shown it. Long story short, Greeks found the kingdom of Macedonia in 7th century BC (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonia_(ancient_kingdom)). Macedonians are Greeks historically. 1400 years after Slavs invade from the north. They never had the entire Macedonia under their kingdoms and the Byzantines (roughly medieval Greeks) push them back and fro many times until 1453 AD when the Turks take over (actually a few years before) and suddenly things are not that clear as to what happened with the population. In 1912 Macedonia is liberated by the Greek Army and in Macedonia there are turkish, greek and bulgarian speaking villages, with some Jews in city centres. The majority of the cases the majority of the villages are Greek as was the population but that is disputed by Slavs due to turbulent period and the sometimes conflicting ottoman records. The truth however is that the 'Turks' migrate out after the liberation. In 1914 the Greeks fight the Bulgarians for Macedonia and Thrace and win, so the Bulgarians leave as well. The Bulgarians (Slavs) were terrorising the area from 1870-1900 tried to instill the idea to the mixed population of Macedonia that Macedonians are something different and unique (trying to erase thousands of years of history). Some people (due to lack of education and ottoman oppression) side with that but most don't. After WW2 general Tito and governor of Yugoslavia takes a formerly known prefecture of his called Vardarska and effectively brainwashes the inhabitants into thinking they are 'Macedonians', that they speak the 'Macedonian language' and that they are something different and a unique ethnicity.
The truth is that the Serbs were counting on the momentum of Bulgarian propaganda in brainwashing people (for their own interests) and played the card of 'Macedonia' to a population that never felt Serbian. Both Yugoslavia and Bulgaria were supported by the Russians and later Soviet Union as they were always in the sphere of influence. The target was the lucrative trade in the Aegean and Mediterranean (money is always the reason for wars and disputes, especially for those fabricating claims). So nowadays after the fall of Yugoslavia, we have a bunch of brainwashed individuals living in what would be called no-man's land in the middle of the Balkans wanting to belong somewhere (understandable human emotion) and what a better candidate than Macedonia and its glorious Greek past with Alexander the Great etc etc etc. (not to mention they now think they are 'Macedonians' that were deprived of their national identity and the evil Greeks took their history from them). The result of roughly 100-150 years of propaganda. The language that they speak is a Bulgarian dialect, fully comprehensible by Bulgarians but nothing to do with Greek which is the language the Greek population always spoke in Macedonia (geographical area and ancient kingdom). So their country is now called North Macedonia though for us Greeks allowing them the 'Macedonia' part of their country's name is still painful despite the fact that our inept and slave to the US interests in the region politicians say it is only geographical and not national. The Slavs of this small state though still tout to the world that they are Macedonians something that simply is historically untrue, unacceptable, and might I add outrageous to the people that literally own the name and history those being the Greeks.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon I can only imagine :) I spent half an hour sending you a message giving you a brief overview of this issue but yt decided it was too long and never actually shown it. Long story short, Greeks found the kingdom of Macedonia in 7th century BC. Macedonians are Greeks historically. 1400 years after Slavs invade from the north. They never had the entire Macedonia under their kingdoms and the Byzantines (roughly medieval Greeks) push them back and fro, 1453 the Turks take over (actually a few years before) and suddenly things are not that clear as to what happened with the population. In 1912 Macedonia is liberated by the Greek Army and in Macedonia there are turkish, greek and bulgarian speaking villages, with some Jews in city centres. The majority of the cases the majority of the villages are Greek as was the population but that is disputed due to the not well kept ottoman records. The truth however is that the 'Turks' migrate out after the liberation. In 1914 the Greeks fight the Bulgarians for Macedonia and Thrace and win, so the Bulgarians leave as well. The Bulgarians (Slavs) terrorised the area from 1870-1900 tried to instill the idea to the mixed population of Macedonia that Macedonians are something different and unique (trying to erase thousands of years of history). Some people (due to lack of education and ottoman oppression) side with that but most don't. After WW2 general Tito and governor of Yugoslavia takes a formerly known prefecture of his called Vardarska and effectively brainwashes the inhabitants into thinking they are 'Macedonians', that they speak the 'Macedonian language' and that they are something different and a unique ethnicity.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon 2/2 The truth is that the Serbs were counting on the momentum of Bulgarian propaganda in brainwashing people (for their own interests) and played the card of 'Macedonia' to a population that never felt Serbian. Both Yugoslavia and Bulgaria were supported by the Russians and later Soviet Union as they were always in the sphere of influence. The target was the lucrative trade in the Aegean and Mediterranean (money is always the reason for wars and disputes, especially for those fabricating claims). So nowadays after the fall of Yugoslavia, we have a bunch of brainwashed individuals living in what would be called no-man's land in the middle of the Balkans wanting to belong and what a better candidate than Macedonia and its glorious Greek past with Alexander the Great etc etc etc. (not to mention they now think they are 'Macedonians' that were deprived of their national identity and the evil Greeks took their history from them). The result of roughly 150 years of propaganda. The language that they speak is a Bulgarian dialect, fully comprehensible by Bulgarians but nothing to do with Greek which is the language the Greek population always spoke in Macedonia (geographical area and ancient kingdom). So their country is now called North Macedonia though for us Greeks allowing them the 'Macedonia' part of their country's name is still painful, despite the fact that our, inept and slave to the US interests in the region, politicians say it is only geographical and not national. The Slavs of this small state though still tout to the world that they are Macedonians something that simply is historically untrue, unacceptable, and might I add outrageous to the people that literally own the name those being the Greeks.
It’s still not too late to admit that you made a mistake . Everything look , sound Greek but this Macedonian city is different from the Greeks ? Athenians are not Greek ? You should be more careful when you are referring to those things especially when you already know how sensitive this subject is . Not too late my friend .
Honestly, I didn't know how sensitive this subject was until Greeks posted about the video. Look my apologies if any of this offended anyone and I admit I didn't do my utmost due diligence but, I take most of what I say in the videos from informational plaques around the cities I visit. Or from the first couple sources that pop up on the Internet if my phone even works at the time. So easy information for tourists needs to be looked at and corrected for us tourists that don't have the time to do a deep dive and read all the history books.
Now when did I say 'Athenians are not Greek?' this was a video about Thessaloniki. I don't remember even mentioning Athens. Again I admit that I had no idea that there was such a divide between Greek and Macedonian about this. Particularly when I was speaking of ancient Greece not the divide between now Slavic North Macedonia and Greek Macedonia. When I spoke of Ancient Macedon I thought that while, everything is Greek along with the names, that Macedon at the time of Alexander was somewhat culturally different. A kingdom instead of democratic rule. Different dialect of Greek. Again I apologize if I offended any Greeks. I'm coming from a thought process that is like what I know. You can call me American but, I'm from Texas. I am vastly different from an American New Yorker.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon Athens just like Macedonia are two different areas . Why one area is Greek and not the other one when both have the same fundamental characteristics to be called Greek ? That was exactly what I was trying to point out . There is no division or conflict with Greeks and Macedonians because is like you say there is a difference between New Yorkers and Americans . The fact that nowadays everyone has the right to call himself anything he likes doesn’t mean that we delete historical facts .
@@nikosiliakis8954 very true I just didn't know all the facts. I was under the wrong assumption along with what I read on the plaques around the city or whatever sites were the first to pop up when I googled it. Which honestly is almost always Wikipedia 🤦.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDonMacedonia, Thrace, Thessaly, Epirus are regions of Greece, in northern and central Greece, from ancient times to today.
Ancient Greek kingdoms/regions/parts of ancient Greek world.
Greeks of Macedonia region in Greece are called "Macedonians",
Greeks of Sparta city are called "Spartans",
Greeks of Athens "Athenians" and so on with other places in Greece
Welcome in south Macedonia
Makedonians language ( written) was Attic Greek - you can see everywhere in their monuments and writings( coins etc) in Greece
" N Mns" 🇲🇰 are slavis people ( Fyrom - ex Yugoslavia) and using the Cyrillic language that founded 1000 yrs later
Thessaloniki was named after Alexander the gr8 step sister
🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷💙💙💙❤❤❤🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲
2:57 kolori hahahah
You didnt try the best foods like moussaka,dolmadakia,gemista,kleftico,kokoretsi,kontosouvli,pasticio,strapatsada and many more...why!????? Those werent the bests of us!! 🇬🇷🇬🇷Try them next time pls
Oh I will. Technically in my videos throughout Athens I had Moussaka, Pasticio and Strapatsada. I also off camera did eat Kontosouvli in Athens. Did not try kleftici or kokoretsi. I'll mark those. I only had really two days in Thessaloniki and was sort of going around on my own. Kind of just popped into the first places that caught my eye.
Αγάπη Μακεδονία Ελλάδα ❤❤
Macedonias were Greeks just as Corinthians, Athenias, Spartans, Cretans and others were Greeks. Greek names, Greek customs, Greek gods.
Macedonia=Greece
Oh believe me, I've been told that since this video has come out.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon Hope you enjoyed your time in Greece mate
@@promy563 oh it was one of the best months of my life.
Μακεδονία Ελλάδα αγάπη ❤❤
The Macedonians was a greek tribe Alexander the great invaded the Persian empire representing the entire greek people please read more history next time
So I've been told
Your wrong it is an area of Slavic breeding long ago....
Thessaloniki is or what is now the Republic of North Macedonia?
Has nothing to do with Macedonia....
So I've been told. Although my intent was the connection to the Ancient Kingdom of Macedon under Alexander and the Kings that followed during that time in history. I realize they were all of Greek origin but, they still have a statue of Alexander the Great. So I assumed it was of ancient Macedonian Kingdom.
@@AdventuresOfATravelingDon you have got things a bit confused. I can't blame you so here is a very short history lesson. Macedonia was a Greek kingdom in the North of Greece found in the 7th century BC (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonia_(ancient_kingdom)). Alexander the Great was one of its kings that later became an emperor after he conquered most of the then known world (Egypt and Asia reaching today's India) - ~330BC.
After roughly 1000 years and around the 7th century AD, a today's Ukraine/Moldavia group of tribes invaded and settled today's Serbia, Bulgaria pushing further and further to the south. The Byzantines (Eastern Roman Empire - an equivalent Greek medieval empire) could not stop them and had to effectively allow these people to settle the lands south the Danube river in an attempt to civilize and domesticize them so they stopped raiding, pillaging and destroying everything in their path, as they would penetrate into (today's) Greece during their raids. These people were the Slavs. Over the 700 years that ensued, the Slavs conquered, lost and reconquered many times parts of the ancient kingdom of Macedonia, with the main inhabitants of it being Greeks as they've always been since the beginning.
In 1453 AD the Eastern Roman Empire falls and the Turks allowed a more loose population settling regime. In those years and by the time Macedonia (today's northern Greek prefecture and the major part of the ancient Greek Kingdom of Macedonia) was liberated by the Greek state in 1914 AD, had parts of its population calling themselves Turks, parts Bulgarian (Slavs) and parts Greek which was the majority of the population in most areas of Macedonia. Immediately after the liberation the Turks (most were nothing more than islamised Greeks over the centuries that lost their original national identity) were exchanged and left the area for good. The Bulgarians didn't leave before a war broke out in 1914AD between Greece and Bulgaria over the area of Macedonia. The Greeks won liberating a good proportion of all Macedonian lands and all the villages that were considered 'Bulgarian' were emptied of their inhabitants. The Bulgarians always coveted Macedonia (the area) because it gave them access to lucrative trade in the Aegean sea. So they always included taking it back from the evil Greeks in their nationalistic propaganda.
Descendants of these people (Slavs) and of the mentality that Macedonia is not Greek but that it has a unique and separate national identity with people speaking a 'Macedonian' language (that is nothing more than a Bulgarian dialect with some Albanian, some Turkish and some Greek words) are the people now inhabiting the former Yugoslav republic that borders Greece in the north. Today this country is called North Macedonia and they are effectively still attempting to appropriate Greek history, wanting to rewrite or alter history according to their false propaganda.
This topic is VERY sensitive to Greeks so in the start of the video when you said this place is more Macedonian than Greek, that was a no-no, especially due to the situation I attempted to frame for you. Ancient Macedonians spoke Greek, they were Dorian Greeks, worshipped the 12 Gods of Olympus (like all the rest of the Greeks), had Greek names and customs, took part in the ancient Olympic Games that only Greeks were allowed to take part in, and simply identified theirselves as Greeks. The only 'snag' is that the Greeks further to the south would accuse them of not being as cultured as them (a pun more than anything else, especially after king Philip (Alexander's father) conquered their city-states before preparing to launch an expedition against Persia (something he never got to do due to his assasination but also something that Alexander, his son, actually accomplished).
I hope this puts things into perspective and I am sorry it had to be as long. It is quite infuriating when completely foreign groups of people attempt to steal your history (a well documented history I might say) from you but there you have it.
@@IonidisIXand you think he read all that you wrote ?😂
@@interestingvids-hx2sq yes he has and has replied, its just that youtube is cancelling comments left right and centre, especially the larger ones.
Of course you see a statue of Alexander the great in Thesaloniki, as you will see a statue of Leonidas in Sparta. The one was Macedonian, the other was Spartan. And both they were Greeks. As simple as that.