{"id":1565,"date":"2015-03-28T23:55:43","date_gmt":"2015-03-28T23:55:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/atcorfu.com\/?p=1565"},"modified":"2024-10-08T22:10:26","modified_gmt":"2024-10-08T22:10:26","slug":"greece-old-photos","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/atcorfu.com\/greece-old-photos\/","title":{"rendered":"150 Old Photos From Greece [1900] by Fred Boissonnas"},"content":{"rendered":"

<\/span> Last updated on October 8th, 2024 at 10:10 pm <\/p>

Black & White Greek Photos – 100+ years ago<\/h2>\n
\"Greece<\/a>
Greece old photos \u2013 Pic of the Parthenon at 1908<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n
This is a photo of whatever remained of Parthenon in 1908. Over the centuries, warfare and other atrocities almost disappear this symbol of our national heritage.
\nThus we see why all restoration was necessary even with their faults, thanks to this, a monument now stands upright with all his majesty over the Acropolis.<\/div>\n

The Philhellene Swiss photographer Fred Boissonnas(1858-1946) was the first foreign photographer who traveled so much in the Greek land<\/a> from 1903 and for nearly three decades following.<\/p>\n

Fred Boissonnas<\/a> was born in 1858 in Geneva from a family that moved from Marseilles in southern France to Switzerland.<\/p>\n

Due to the origin of the family, Fred believed that he was a descendant of Greek navigators, this may explain his interest and love for the Greeks, especially those of the countryside …<\/p>\n

Fred Boissonnas first stepped foot in the Greek island of Corfu<\/a> at 1903,\u00a0from where chronologically his first photos are, after this he went to Athens which had visited numerous times and from there he wandered across the entire Greek territory and also in the new under Greek unification countries as Macedonia, Thrace, Epirus, Aegean islands, etc..<\/p>\n

Generally, he did not leave an inch of Greek soil without recording it with his camera.<\/p>\n

Towards the end of his Greek adventure shortly before 1930, he spends some time in Mount Athos where he photographed many details of monastic life and the monasteries.<\/p>\n

He died in Geneva in 1946.<\/p>\n

\"Fred-Boissonnas\"<\/a>
Fred-Boissonnas<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

His work was innovative and proved decisive in the development of Greek photography during the 20th century.<\/p>\n

Through photos and albums, he presents a panorama of Greece during the interwar period, also helping to shape the European public opinion of Greece for the same period.<\/p>\n

The work of Fred Boissonnas, although known in Europe in the early 20th century, now needs a second showing.<\/p>\n

Progress in technical issues, the discovery of color, easy to use cameras, plus the ease with which we travel, may make the project appear obsolete, but to the historical glance it has great value and it also shows modernism in comparison with other photographers who wandered in Greece at that time.<\/p>\n

The artist has recorded things that have disappeared, but also gives us a picture of Greece that extends beyond simple ethnographic pieces of evidence.<\/p>\n

His great faith and admiration for this country are transmitted through his work with tenderness and love which can be seen through his work even today after so many years.<\/p>\n

These characteristics give soul to these pieces of paper, which otherwise could remain simple pictures …
\n

<\/div>\n

Old Photos from Greece<\/h3>\n

Streets of old Athens. Pictures from Athos showing the difficult life of monks. Rural in Greece of another era. Corfu as Fred’s first stop. Peloponnisos with places like Akrata, Korinth, and Andritsaina. Crete and Epirus. All Greece regions are here.<\/p>\n