Being in School, from Constantinople’s Fall to Greek Revolution

How did the Greeks learn to write after the fall of the Byzantine Empire? How was not only the language but also Greek education preserved during the four centuries of Ottoman rule?

Selected exhibits and contemporary interactive applications based on Touch Designer software, will attempt to provide answers to this essential but little-known aspect of Greek education before the 1821 Revolution. The exhibition “How Greeks learned to write from the Fall of Constantinople to the Revolution (1453-1821)” invites us to learn to read by spelling out well-known prayers; to flip through school textbooks and decipher the unknown “μαθηamataria”; to discover unknown aspects of student life; to explore the map of the schools of Hellenism; to do physics experiments; and finally, to write our own name like the students of the time.

image from the touch screens in the exhibition

The Cultural Foundation of the National Bank of Greece opens for the first time the treasures of its Historical Palaeographical Archive, presented alongside rare books from the most important libraries of Greece.

image from the touch screens in the exhibition
The space where the exhibition took place

At the same time, visitors will have the opportunity to discover an emblematic building of Athens, which will host the exhibition: the historically renovated building of the old Stock Exchange, which Charilaos Trikoupis included in the reconstruction programme of the modern Greek State.

image from the touch screens in the exhibition.

The exhibition completed its journey on 30 June, however, the great response of the public, the lively interest of the press, as well as the numerous requests for a visit from the educational community, led to the decision to repeat the exhibition from 15 September to 15 November 2022. Next stop of the exhibition another historical building in Thessaloniki.

touchscreen with projection