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First joint event between Levantine Heritage Foundation and the Centre for Hellenic Studies with guest speaker Richard Calvocoressi.
Abstract
In December 1983, the speaker’s cousin, the historian and publisher Peter Calvocoressi, presented a paper to an Anglo-Greek symposium held jointly by King’s College, London and the Institute of Balkan Studies, Thessaloniki, at Thessaloniki in northern Greece.
An expanded version of Peter’s paper, entitled ‘From Byzantium to Eton: A Memoir of a Millennium’, was published in 1984 by the Centre of Contemporary Greek Studies at King’s College, London (Occasional Paper 2).
In the ensuing forty years, more information has come to light about the slaughter, enslavement or flight of approximately threequarters of the population of Chios in 1822. The speaker’s great-great grandfather, Matthew Calvocoressi, then in his eighties, dictated a first-hand account to his grandson which has only recently been transcribed and translated into English. Eye-witness accounts of the tragic events on Chios are rare, especially by one who, as a teenager, was enslaved and subsequently escaped.
Richard Calvocoressi
Richard Calvocoressi is an art historian who has spent nearly fifty years in the art world: first as a curator, then director, in national collections of modern art (Tate, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh); then as director of an artist-endowed philanthropic charity (Henry Moore Foundation); and latterly as a senior curator in aprivate, commercial gallery (Gagosian, London). He has published widely on modern and contemporary art, curatednumerous exhibitions, and has served on the boards of various charities and public bodies.
Event details
Council RoomStrand Campus
Strand, London, WC2R 2LS