Salonika - meaning and definition. What is Salonika
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What (who) is Salonika - definition


Salonika Agreement         
1938 TREATY BETWEEN THE BALKAN ENTENTE AND BULGARIA
Salonika agreement; Thessaloniki Accord; Thessaloniki accord; Thessaloniki Pact; Bulgarian re-armament; Bulgarian rearmament
The Salonika Agreement (also called the Thessaloniki Accord) was a treaty signed on 31 July 1938 between Bulgaria and the Balkan Entente (Greece, Romania, Turkey and Yugoslavia). The signatories were, for the former, Prime Minister Georgi Kyoseivanov and, for the latter, in his capacity as President of the Council of the Balkan Entente, Ioannis Metaxas, Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Greece.
The Salonika Terrorists         
1961 FILM BY ŽIKA MITROVIĆ
Boatmen of Thessaloniki (film)
The Salonika Terrorists (Macedonian: Солунските Атентатори, literally "The Salonika Assassins"), also known as The Assassins from Salonika is a 1961 Yugoslav film. It follows the story of the Boatmen of Thessaloniki.
Salonika Incident         
MURDER OF FRENCH AND GERMAN CONSULS AT SALONIKA
The Salonika Incident was a major diplomatic incident that broke out on 6 May 1876 after a mob murdered the consuls of France and Germany in the Ottoman city of Thessaloniki (then known as Salonika), Jules Moulin and Henry Abbott. After a young woman of Bulgarian and Christian origin, convert to Islam was kidnapped by a group of Christian men.
Examples of use of Salonika
1. In major cities such as Athens and Salonika, construction routinely runs into ancient graves, temples and homes.
2. Mr Erdogan saw the comments on a visit to Kemal Ataturk‘s former home now a museum – in the northern Greek city of Salonika.
3. ARTICLE More than 1,500 Turkish publications will be displayed at two major fairs in Tehran and Salonika in May under the auspices of the Culture and Tourism Ministry.
4. By the first world war, 100,000 Gurkhas had enlisted, fighting and dying in France, Flanders, Mesopotamia, Persia, Egypt, Gallipoli, Palestine and Salonika.
5. Equally we should remember that Nicolas Sarkozy‘s great–grandparents were also citizens of the Ottoman empire, living a few streets away from Ataturk in Salonika, both comfortable members of the Islamo–Judeo elite.