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19th century Athens
Western sources (such as the Catholic Encyclopedia 1908) estimated that shortly
before World war I Smyrna had a population of at least 300,000. Mant Greeks
emigrated to Smyrna to make their fortune in a way similar to Irish emigration
to US.
On the 18th of September 1838 Athens was chosen as capital of Greece. In
February of the same year, the population of Athens celebrated that fact in the
church of St. George, the ancient temple of Thisseio long ago converted into a
Christian church.
Between 1838 and 1896, a thorough attempt was made to lay out the plans of
Athens, "modern" capital, after the current city planning standards of European
cities. Emminent Greek and European architects, engineers and men of arts were
invited to work for this purpose. However, due to financial shortcomings and
political problems, these standards had to be lowered. Rendering Athens with the
inevitably hybrid character of a peripheral European city, unevenly fashioned on
selectively applied, foreign principles. Yet as urban landscape matured with
time, imported elements took root in local soil and, by 1890s, the Greek capital
had taken the familiar - if diminished in scale - outlook of a 19th century
neoclassical city.
Population At that time the Athens population was around 10,000 to 12,000. As
Athens became the capital, many Greeks moved to the city and the urban land
prices rose extremely high. By 1850 the area between Acropolis and Lycabetus was
already covered by buildings. In the population registration of 1879, Athens had
already reached 63,374 inhabitants.
Streets That was the era of neo-classicism, and for that reason, the streets and
squares of Athens were named after great personalities of classical history. We
should point out that streets were not named after Byzantine personalities,
neither after the fighters of the revolution: Byzantium was not yet recognized
as a part of the Greek national history and the history of the revolution was a
very recent, still alive, part of Greek history. Many streets were also named
after important Athenian families from the Ottoman era.
Neighbourhoods The inhabited areas of the time were around Acropolis and Placa.
One of the oldest neighbourhoods was that of Psiri (near Monastiraki); it took
its name from the island of Psara, where most of its first inhabitants came
from; in its center there is Plateia Heroon (Square of Heroes) which was named
after the fighters of the 1821 revolution, who held their gatherings there.
Other old neighbourhoods were that of Neapolis (New city) which very soon became
the students' vicinity, and that of Exarchia, named after the merchant Exarchos,
who opened a general store, very big for the standards of the time.
In 1860 builders families, who migrated from Anaphi (an island near Santorini)
to Athens to work on the Palace construction, founded the neighbourhood of
Anaphiotika at the slope of the Acropolis.
During the span of 19th c., the commercial center of the city was confined by
the two most commercial streets, those of Hermou and Aiolou. The first big and
luxurious private houses were built in the new avenues of Academias (Academy),
Panepistimiou (University) and Stadiou (Stadium); soon the neighbourhood of
Colonaki was built