Museum for the Macedonian Struggle
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About Museum for the Macedonian Struggle
The Museum for the Macedonian Struggle is situated in the focal point of the city Thessaloniki in Central Macedonia, Greece. It involves a neo-established building planned by the eminent designer Ernst Ziller and implicit 1893. In its six ground-floor rooms the gallery graphically delineates the cutting edge and contemporary history of Greek Macedonia. It shows the social, monetary, political and military improvements that molded the nearness of Hellenism in the district.
The building was reestablished and turned into the Museum of the Macedonian Struggle in 1980, and was introduced in 1982 by Konstantinos Karamanlis, the Macedonia-conceived President of the Hellenic Republic and relative of a contender of the Macedonian Struggle. The introduction of the authentic foundation in the initial two rooms enables guests to comprehend the unpredictable idea of the Macedonian Struggle. Its different viewpoints, constituent components and essential on-screen characters are introduced in the topical units of the historical center's lasting show, and especially in those rooms committed to the Makedonomachoi and their activities, to the senior and junior pastorate, to the key part of the Greek Consulate-General in Thessaloniki and to the symbolic figure of Pavlos Melas.
This is trailed by brief units on the Young Turk development, which denoted the formal end of the furnished period of the Struggle with Bulgarian groups, and the Balkan Wars, which denoted the finish of the Ottoman nearness in Macedonia in 1913. A short narrative advises guests on later authentic advancements. In the storm cellar four full-scale dioramas acquaint guests with consistently life in mid twentieth century Macedonia.
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