Παλάζη, Αρχιγένεια εκπαιδευτήρια (1924)
[Bibliography]

Abbreviation
Παλάζη, Αρχιγένεια εκπαιδευτήρια (1924)
Form of publication
Book

Μαριάνθη Φ. Παλάζη, Αρχιγένεια εκπαιδευτήρια. Γυναικεία διδασκαλική κινητικότητα και κοινωνικότητα 1857-1922 (Επίκεντρο, Θεσσαλονίκη 2024)

ISBN / ISSN
ISBN13: 978-618-204-534-3
Data
Marianthi Palazi, The Archigeneion [Schools and Educational] Institute and Women Teacher Mobility and Sociability: Contribution to the Process of Modernization and National Formation in the Ottoman and Greek Political Context (1857-1922), in Greek.
>>>>>>> This educational institute and school for boys and girls of the Greek Orthodox Community of Epibates, a sea-shore town at the north side (the Thracian side) of the Sea of Marmara functioned from the mid nineteenth century until the Asia Minor Catastrophe (1857-1922). Epibates was the Greek name of today’s Selimpaşa‎‎. >>>>>>>>>> The digitally reconstructed building complex of the Archigeneion Institute is presented in a video providing visitors with a “tour” of each building, and an overall picture of the complex, briefly annotated supplemented. The presentation is supported by a detailed trilingual memorandum (Greek, Turkish and English), also providing the sources used (pdf archive). The project is a joint collaboration by Marianthi Palazi, a PhD candidate at the University of Crete, and Serbay Kocoglu, a researcher of Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality, under the supervision of Dr Katerina Dalakoura, Associate Professor of the Department of Philosophy and Social Studies, University of Crete. Κρήτης. https://web.archive.org/web/20190830062028/http://www.fks.uoc.gr/_/pw/research/palazi_kocoglu_dalakoura/
Key words
Archigenis, Sarantis, doctor.
Archives.
Child, children.
Eastern Thrace / European Turkey.
Greek education.
Late Ottoman – Transitional period.
Late Ottoman period.
Nineteenth century.
Photographic archives.
Romiosyne.
School.
School for Girls.
Sea of Marmara / Propontis.
Selimpaşa in Thrace / Epibatai.
Teacher / Professor.
Thrakiotes, Greeks of Thrace.
Twentieth century.
Women.