Salonica


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Noun1.Salonica - a port city in northeastern Greece on an inlet of the Aegean SeaSalonica - a port city in northeastern Greece on an inlet of the Aegean Sea; second largest city of Greece
Ellas, Greece, Hellenic Republic - a republic in southeastern Europe on the southern part of the Balkan peninsula; known for grapes and olives and olive oil
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References in periodicals archive ?
In a joint press conference, the Cyprus-Greece Business Association and the CCCI presented a table of airfares for the summer months with tickets for Athens reaching e1/4690 and Salonica e1/4508.
Posted to Salonica, Macedonia, Dei was allocated to help wounded soldiers - mostly Serbs - at a field hospital, often entertaining them with poetry and songs.
Salonica Group, an independent investment bank headquartered in London, acted as advisors for this deal, with its director Othman Shoukat leading the transaction.
Pte Smellie joined Scottish Horse at the start of the war and saw service at Gallipoli, Egypt, Salonica and France.
Derek Wiltshire then unveiled stamps issued during World War I in German East Africa ahead of Coatbridge man Jim Fulton's humorous postcards featuring Salonica.
The focus then turned on members'chosen subjects for the night, with Ellen McLuckie, of Motherwell, displaying stamps, covers, postmarks and postcards depicting Nobel Prize Winners.Wishaw'sDerek Wiltshire then unveiled stamps issued during WorldWar I in German East Africa ahead of Coatbridge man Jim Fulton's humorous postcards featuring Salonica.
This weekend marks the centenary of the Allied Forces victory at the Macedonian (or Salonica) Front during World War I, which hastened the collapse of the Western Front and the ultimate victory of the Allies over Germany.
As a committed Zionist, Jonathan's ideals were shaped by his grandfather's childhood in wartorn Salonica, Greece, and his later involvement in the early militias that led to Israeli statehood after World War II.
Jews were attracted to the major economic centers such as Istanbul, Edirne, Salonica, and Izmir, Aleppo and Damascus, Baghdad, Cairo, and Alexandria, whose communities constituted the vast majority of this Jewry.