Shocking images of the 1944 May Day executions in Kaisariani reveal Nazi brutality and spur Greece to preserve its visual history.
A 163-image collection, including rare photographs of the 1944 execution of 200 Greek prisoners, has been declared a monument as the Culture Ministry moves to acquire it from a private collector
Greece moves to reclaim alleged WWII photos tied to the 1944 execution of 200 resistance prisoners, as questions over authenticity, ownership and historical memory ignite political and public debate.
Revelations come as Swiss bank UBS uses legal fight to curb Jewish groups from reopening a decades-old settlement
A military and historical assessment of the most decisive battle of World War II, by Soviet General Pavel Batov
In ongoing second-instance trials, the prosecutor describes Golden Dawn as a structured criminal organization rooted in Nazi ideology, while anti-fascist groups and Pavlos Fyssas’ mother rally public support outside the courthouse
Descendants of a Jewish couple claim Vincent van Gogh’s Olive Picking was seized under Nazi rule and illegally traded before ending up in New York and Athens
The Ministry of Culture officially designated Karya’s railway station in Fthiotida, Central Greece, a historic site, preserving the memory of one of the Holocaust’s lesser-known chapters in the country
In a war filled with unspeakable horror, Lela Karagianni’s story is one of undying light. She turned her family into a fortress of resistance, her home into a battlefield, and her life into a weapon against fascism
The total conclusion of the Second World War, however, would come a few months later, following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the United States.
A team of researchers is tracing the descendants of Nazi victims to return personal items and documents found in concentration camps.
Fresh look at archives unearthed Nazi-linked accounts discovered by bank in 1990s but never disclosed to investigators
The heinous crime committed by Nazi troops in Kalavryta and surrounding areas in December 1943
The first episode of the Australian TV series, which focuses on the artifacts the British Empire has illegally removed throughout its reign from countries from around the world, covered the Parthenon Marbles