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- "Title" - The page or user affected by an action. The username uses the "User:" prefix ( User:JohnDoe, not JohnDoe ). Page names use the full title of the page. (for example, "Wikipedia talk:Userboxes" )
- 19:05, 28 May 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Souli (Redirected page to Souliotes) Tag: New redirect
- 19:02, 28 May 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Corinna (Created page with "thumb|200px|''Corinna of Tanagra'' by Frederic Leighton ({{circa|1893}}). '''Corinna''', or '''Korinna''' ({{lang-grc|Κόριννα|Korinna}}; c. 500–401 BCE), was an ancient Greek poet from Tanagra in Boeotia.<ref name=Britannica/> She may have been a contemporary and rival of the Greek poet Pindar.<ref name=Britannica/> Corinna's poetry survives only in pieces and focuses on local Boeotia...") Tag: Disambiguation links
- 04:47, 27 May 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Suliots (Redirected page to Souliotes) Tag: New redirect
- 04:46, 27 May 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Suliotes (Redirected page to Souliotes) Tag: New redirect
- 04:40, 27 May 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Armatolos (Redirected page to Armatoles) Tag: New redirect
- 04:40, 27 May 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Armatoloi (Redirected page to Armatoles) Tag: New redirect
- 04:39, 27 May 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Kleft (Redirected page to Klepht) Tag: New redirect
- 04:39, 27 May 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Klefts (Redirected page to Klepht) Tag: New redirect
- 04:38, 27 May 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Klephts (Redirected page to Klepht) Tag: New redirect
- 04:32, 27 May 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Armatoles (Created page with "thumb|Greek armatolos by Carl Haag (1820–1915). '''Armatoles''' or '''Armatoloi''' (Greek ''plural'' Αρματολοί; ''singular'' '''Armatolos''', Αρματολός) were Christian Greek militiamen.<ref name=Britannica/> They were paid by the Ottomans to enforce the authority of the Sultan in an district called...")
- 03:10, 27 May 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Klepht (Created page with "thumb|150px|Dimitrios Makris, a Greek klepht chief of the 19th century.<ref>{{harvnb|Dontas|1966|p=24}}: "Born in 1800, Demetrios Makris, a kleftis, had succeeded his father to the kapetaniliki in the district of Zyghos. A simple yet very stubborn man, like Dimo - Tselios he was a great patriot."</ref> '''Klephts''' ({{IPAc-en|k|l|ɛ|f|t|s}}; Greek κλέφτης, ''kléftis'', pl. w...")
- 00:39, 8 February 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Dionysius of Halicarnassus (Created page with "{{Infobox person | name = Dionysius of Halicarnassus | image = Dionigi di Alicarnasso.jpg | image_size = | caption = An image of Dionysius of Halicarnassus from the Codices Ambrosiani. | birth_date = {{circa|lk=no}} 60 BC | birth_place = Halicarnassus, Asia, Roman Republic (now Bodrum, Muğla, Turkey) | death_date = {{circa|lk=no}} 7 BC (aged around 53) | death_place...")
- 03:13, 5 February 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Xenocrates of Aphrodisias (Created page with "'''Xenocrates''' ({{lang-el|Ξενοκράτης}}) was an ancient Greek physician from Aphrodisias in Cilicia.<ref>Galen, ''De Simplic. Medicam. Temper, ac Facult.'', vi. praef. vol. xi. p. 793.</ref> He lived around the middle of the 1st century and was maybe the contemporary of Andromachus the Younger.<ref>Galen, ''De Compos. Medicam. sec. Loc.'', iii. 1, vol. xii. p. 627; ''De Ther. ad Pis.'', c. 12. vol. xiv. p. 260.</ref> Galen says that Xe...") Tag: Disambiguation links
- 00:43, 23 January 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes moved page Talk:Pelasgian to Talk:Pelasgians (Primordial Greek language and people.)
- 00:43, 23 January 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes moved page Pelasgian to Pelasgians (Primordial Greek language and people.)
- 00:33, 21 January 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Pherecydes of Leros (Created page with "{{Short description|Ancient Greek historian}} '''Pherecydes of Leros''' ({{lang-grc|Φερεκύδης}}) was an ancient Greek historian from the Aegean island of Leros.<ref name=Fowler-Suda/> He lived during the 5th century BCE and wrote three texts: ''On Leros'' (''Περὶ Λέρου''), ''On Iphigenia'' (''Περὶ Ἰφιγενείας''), and ''On the Festivals of Dionysus'' (''Περὶ τῶν Διονύσου ἑορτῶν'')....")
- 23:22, 19 January 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Pherecydes of Athens (Created page with "'''Pherecydes of Athens''' ({{lang-grc|Φερεκύδης}}) was a Greek historian and genealogist from the 5th century BCE (circa 465 BCE).<ref>{{harvnb|Fowler|2013|p=708}}; {{harvnb|Gantz|1996|p=xv}}; {{harvnb|Huxley|1973|pp=137–143}}.</ref> He wrote a ten-volume book, now lost, titled "Historiai" (''Ἱστορίαι'') or "Genealogicai" (''Γενελογίαι'').<ref>{{harvnb|Huxley|1973|p=137}}; {{harvnb|Jacoby|1947|p=15}}; ''Suda'' [...")
- 23:30, 4 January 2024 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page House of the Tiles (Created page with "{{Short description|Bronze Age building in Lerna, Greece}} thumb|[[Stairway remains of the House of the Tiles.]] The '''House of the Tiles''' is a large Early Bronze Age building with two stories located at Lerna in southern Greece.<ref name=Cline202>{{harvnb|Cline|2012|p=202: "The House of the Tiles was named for the enormous quantity of fired clay roof tiles associated with the building. It was built of mud brick over a substantial stone f...") Tag: Disambiguation links
- 04:19, 25 August 2023 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Simone Stratigo (Created page with "{{Short description|Italian Greek mathematician and nautical science expert}} {{Infobox writer | name = Simone Stratigo | image = Simone Stratigo (1733 - 1824) Greek Dalmatia.jpg | imagesize = | caption = A portrait of Simone Stratigo. | birth_name = Symeon Filippos Stratigos | birth_date = 1733 | birth_place = Zara, Dalmatia, Republic of Venice | death_date = 1824 | death_place = Milan, [[Italy]...")
- 03:38, 24 August 2023 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Athanasios Pipis (Created page with "'''Athanasios Pipis''' or '''Thanas Pipi''' (died in 1821) was a Greek priest and Greek Orthodox leader who fought in the Greek revolution of 1821. ==Life== Pipis was born in the village of Vuno in Himara (Ottoman Empire then, Albania today).<ref name=Ruches>{{harvnb|Ruches|1967|p=123}}.</ref> In July 1804, he joined the Himariote and Souliote regiments of the Russian Empire's army.<re...")
- 00:12, 24 August 2023 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Taverna (Created page with "thumb|right|300px|A taverna on the Greek island of [[Naxos.]] A '''taverna''' (Greek: ταβέρνα) is a small Greek restaurant that serves Greek food. It is an important part of Greek culture. The taverna has become familiar to foreign visitors to Greece and through the building of '''tavernes''' ({{lang-gr|ταβέρνες}}, plural) in countries such as the United States and Australia by Greek...") Tag: Disambiguation links
- 22:51, 22 August 2023 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Souliotes (Created page with "{{Infobox ethnic group | group = Souliotes | native_name = Σουλιώτες | languages = Spoken Languages: Tosk Albanian, Greek; Written Language: Greek<ref name=Protopsaltē15–18>{{harvnb|Protopsaltē|1983|pp=15–18}}.</ref> | image = File:A Souliot in Corfu Nikolos Pervolis, by Louis Dupré - 1827.jpg | image_caption = ''A Souliot in Corfu Nikolos Pervolis'' by French painter Louis Dupré (1827). }} The '''Souliotes''' ({{lan...")
- 19:16, 22 August 2023 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Talk:Konstantinos Zappas (Pre-required reading: new section) Tag: New topic
- 19:15, 22 August 2023 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Talk:Evangelos Zappas (Pre-required reading: new section) Tag: New topic
- 00:26, 20 August 2023 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Souvlaki (Created page with "{{Infobox prepared food | name = Souvlaki | image = Souvlaki in Athens.JPG | image_size = 250px | caption = Souvlaki in Athens, known there also as ''kalamaki'' ({{lang|el|καλαμάκι}} meaning "small reed") | country = Greece | national_cuisine = Greece | creator = | course = | type = Fast food | served = | main_ingredient = Various meats | variations = | calorie...") Tag: Disambiguation links
- 21:46, 24 June 2023 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Paxamus (Created page with "'''Paxamus''', or '''Paxamos''' (Greek: Πάξαμος), was an ancient Greek author from the Hellenistic period.<ref name=Dalby2003>{{harvnb|Dalby|2003|p=252}}.</ref><ref name=Dalby1996>{{harvnb|Dalby|1996|pp=164–165}}.</ref> He wrote a cookbook (''On Cooking'') and a book on farming (''On Farming'').<ref name=Dalby2003/><ref name=Dalby1996/> Athenaeus, another Greek writer, mentioned Paxamus once in his book titled ''De...")
- 20:43, 24 June 2023 Kojak Savalas talk changes moved page Cithara to Kithara (More common spelling.)
- 19:31, 13 December 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Cithara (Created page with "thumb|Apollo kitharoidos ([[Apollo holding a cithara and wearing the traditional kitharōdos’ robes) and ''musagetes'' (leading the Muses). Marble, Roman artwork, 2nd century CE.]] The '''kithara''', or Latinized '''cithara''' ({{lang-el|κιθάρα|translit=kithāra}}, {{lang-lat|cithara}}), was an ancient Greek musical instrument. It was a version of the lyre with seven strings. Th...") Tag: Visual edit: Switched
- 07:54, 12 December 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Hippiatrica (Created page with "{{italics title}}thumbnail|200px|[[Folio from the ''Hippiatrica'' with written and illustrated instructions on drenching a horse to induce diarrhea.]] The '''''Hippiatrica''''' (Greek: Ἱππιατρικά) is a Byzantine compilation of ancient Greek writings, or texts, focused on the care and healing of horses.<ref name=McCabe1>{{harvnb|McC...")
- 00:01, 30 November 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Chaonians (Created page with "right|thumb|175px|Areas of mainland Greece in antiquity. The '''Chaonians''' ({{lang-grc|Χάονες|Cháones}}) were an ancient Greek tribe that lived in the region of Epirus that is today part of northwestern Greece and southern Albania.<ref name=Group>{{harvnb|Encyclopædia Britannica ("Epirus")|2013}}; {{harvnb|Hammond|1998|p=75}}; {{harvnb|Hammond|1994|pp=430, 434}}; {{harvnb|Hammond|1982|p...") Tag: Disambiguation links
- 23:21, 7 August 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Arvanites (Created page with "{{Infobox ethnic group | group = Arvanites | native_name = Αρβανίτες | languages = Arvanitika, Greek | religion = Eastern Orthodox Christianity | image = | image_caption = | population = '''{{circa}} 150,000''' (Arvanite-speakers)<ref>{{harvnb|Lewis|2009}}</ref> | related = Other Albanian-speaking peoples<br/>(most notably Tosk Albanians) }} The '''Arvanites''' ({{lang-gr|Α...")
- 07:47, 6 August 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Placenta cake (Created page with "{{Infobox prepared food | name = Placenta | image = File:Bucharest, Greek pie-maker, 1880.jpg | caption = A Greek plăcintă-maker in Bucharest in 1880. | alternate_name = | country = Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome | region = | creator = | course = | type = Pie | served = | main_ingredient = Flour and semolina dough, cheese, honey, bay leaf|bay lea...") Tag: Disambiguation links
- 04:55, 6 August 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page User:Kojak Savalas (Created page with "thumb|center|300px|Legends are Greek.")
- 04:33, 6 August 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Paximathia (Created page with "thumb|A plate of paximathia. '''Paximathia''', or '''Paximadia''' {{lang-el|παξιμάδια}}; singular: paximathi/paximadi), are hard breads of Greek origin made from wheat, chickpea, or barley-flour.<ref name=Kochilas1999>{{harvnb|Kochilas|Stenos|Pittas|1999|pp=15–16}}.</ref><ref name=Hoffman129>{{harvnb|Hoffman|Wise|2004|loc="Twice-Baked Toasts: Paximadia", pp. 128–129}}.</ref><ref name=Kremezi>...") Tag: Disambiguation links
- 05:17, 5 July 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Flavius Illustrius Pusaeus (Created page with "'''Flavius Illustrius Pusaeus''' was a 5th-century politician of the Roman Empire and a student of the Greek philosopher Proclus. ==Biography== Pusaeus studied Greek philosophy, specifically Neoplatonism, under Proclus.<ref name=O'Meara>{{harvnb|O'Meara|2003|pp=20–21}}.</ref> The other students in Proclus' school were Rufinus (high-level Athenian official), Severianus (provincial governor), Pamprepius (lecturer and...")
- 03:25, 5 July 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Category:5th-century people (Created blank page)
- 20:45, 4 July 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Emmanuel Mormoris (Created page with "'''Emmanuel Mormoris''', or '''Manolis Mormoris''' ({{lang-el|Εμμανουήλ Μορμόρης}}), was a 16th-century Greek military leader from Crete and politician in the Republic of Venice.<ref>{{harvnb|Setton|1991|p=108: "Emmanuele Mormori, a Veneto-Cretan noble"}}.</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Hatzopoulos|1991|pp=55–68: "Emmanuel Mormori, a Cretan officer in the service of the Venetian Republic in the sixteenth century."}}</ref><ref name=Fotiou>{{h...")
- 00:26, 3 July 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Mazaris (Created page with "'''Mazaris''' ({{lang-el|Μάζαρις}}) was a 15th-century Byzantine Greek writer who wrote a satire titled ''Mazaris' Journey to Hades''.<ref>{{harvnb|Mazaris|1975}}.</ref> Because his life is unknown, Mazaris has been loosely connected to two people with the same name: Manuel Mazaris, a hymnographer and ''protonotarios'' (or "chief notary") of Thessaloniki, and Maximus Mazaris, a monk and author of a book on rules of grammar.<ref...")
- 23:18, 2 July 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Theodore Bua (Created page with "'''Theodore Bua''', or '''Theodore Bouas''' (Greek: Θεόδωρος Μπούας), was a 15th-century Greek military leader from Albania who served as a captain of the ''stradioti'' of the Republic of Venice.<ref name=Trombley270>{{harvnb|Trombley|2009|loc=p. 270: "Kladas attracted support from the pro-Venetian Greek militia of Nauplion, who were nominally under Venetian control, and whose Greek commander Theodore Bouas marched...")
- 22:39, 2 July 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Category:1490 deaths (Created blank page)
- 22:37, 2 July 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Krokodeilos Kladas (Created page with "thumb|right|250px|Flag of Kladas. '''Krokodeilos Kladas''' ({{lang-el|Κροκόδειλος Κλαδάς}}, 1425–1490<ref>{{harvnb|Pontificium Institutum Orientalium Studiorum|1992|p=308}}.</ref>) was a Greek military leader and rebel who fought in the medieval Peloponnese (called ''Morea'') against the Ottoman Empire for the Republic of Venice during the 15th century.<ref name=Papadopoulos/><ref name=Se...")
- 19:25, 2 July 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Glaucetas (Created page with "'''Glaucetas''' or '''Glauketas''' ({{lang-el|Γλαυκέτας}}; flourished 315–300 BC), was a Greek pirate mostly active in the Aegean Sea during the 4th century BC. Little is known about his life. Glaucetas is mentioned in ancient Greek inscriptions, or stone markings, describing how the navy of Athens led by Thymochares attacked his base on the island of Kythnos.<ref name=Ormerod>{{harvnb|Ormerod|1924|pp=115–116, 124}}.</ref><ref name...")
- 18:39, 2 July 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Boar's tusk helmet (Created page with "thumb|[[Mycenaean culture|Mycenaean Greek boar's tusk helmet from Mycenae (14th century BC) shown at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens.]] The '''boar's tusk helmet''' is a type of military headwear used in Mycenaean Greece.<ref>{{harvnb|Rutter|1996}}, [https://web.archive.org/web/20081208000641/http://projectsx.dartmouth.edu/classics/history/bronze_age/lessons/les/16.html L...")
- 08:47, 13 February 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Category:Greek architecture (Created blank page)
- 08:46, 13 February 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Megaron (Created page with "thumb|right|Architectural plan of a Greek palace. 1: anteroom, 2: hall (main room or megaron), 3: columns in portico and hall. thumb|right|Greek palace foundation at [[Mycenae, view from the megaron or main hall (circular hearth visible in the foreground) through the anteroom and porch.]] The '''megaron''' ({{lang-grc|μέγαρον}}, {{IPA-grc|mégaron|}}, plural ''megara'') is the rectangular great hall in Mycenae...") Tag: Disambiguation links
- 02:20, 9 February 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Music of Greece (Created page with "thumb|right|250px|A painting on an ancient Greek [[vase shows a music lesson (about 510 BC).]] The '''music of Greece''' is the tradition of music developed by the Greeks as a nation throughout their history. It is divided into three parts: ancient Greek, medieval Greek (or Byzantine), and modern Greek. Different regions of Greece have different variations of Greek music. ==See also== *Oxyrhynchus hym...")
- 01:38, 9 February 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Category:Greek hymns (Created page with "*Oxyrhynchus hymn")
- 01:37, 9 February 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Category:Greek music (Created page with "Category:Greek hymns")
- 01:37, 9 February 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Oxyrhynchus hymn (Created page with "{{Short description|Manuscript of an early Christian Greek hymn}} The '''Oxyrhynchus hymn''' is a Christian Greek religious song with lyrics and musical notation from the 3rd century AD. The hymn was written on a manuscript that was discovered in 1918 in modern Egypt, published in 1922, and now preserved in Oxford University.<ref>{{harvnb|Grenfell and Hunt|1922|pp=21–25}}; {{harvnb|Pöhlmann|Wes...")
- 04:22, 5 February 2022 Kojak Savalas talk changes created page Priscus of Panium (Created page with "thumb|right|200px|Priscus (left) with the Roman embassy at the court of [[Attila the Hun, holding his ΙΣΤΟΡΙΑ (''History'', which the painter has incorrectly spelled ΙΣΤ'''Ω'''ΡΙΑ). Detail from Mór Than's ''Feast of Attila''.]] '''Priscus of Panium''' ({{lang-el|Πρίσκος}}) was a Roman diplomat and Greek historian from the 5th century AD.<ref na...")