Whenever I visit the Greek islands – with novelist Lawrence Durrell, French historian Fernand Braudel and Greek writer Nikos Kazantzakis in mind – I find myself thinking of this. Behind the facade of the modern world, and the mass tourism that has boomed since the late 1960s, an older world remains just below the surface. You can glimpse it when the summer timetable for the boats ends, the package tours stop jetting in to Santorini and Mykonos, and the beach bars close.
I’m sitting in the little kafenion by the Church of the Anargyri in Tholaria on Amorgos. The owner serves thick, sweet Greek coffee and little glasses of honey-and-clove-flavoured psimeni raki as mourners leave following the mnemosyno – memorial service – for Nikos the fisherman. He and his friend Synodinos died recently, “the two best fishermen in the island gone in the same month”, said one of the old folks, shaking his head. Nikos’s widow hands round cups of kolyva, a thick mixture of boiled wheat kernels with walnuts, almonds, raisins and pomegranate seeds, sweetened with honey – Persephone’s food. Always eaten at funerals, this rich, chewy nourishment protects the living from the ever-present lord of the underworld.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
A modern icon
IVWWAN MORGAN lauds an insightful and clear-eyed examination of a leader blessed with charisma and quality but also marred by personal flaws
Shipwrecks on Scilly
Beneath the clear waters of the Isles of Scilly lurk treacherous rocks on which more than 1,000 ships have foundered. CLARE HARGREAVES discovers their stories
Medieval sambocade
ELEANOR BARNETT recreates an early cheesecake - a dish with surprisingly long roots stretching back well over two millennia
Greek drama
LLOYD LLEWELLYN-JONES is swept along by an engaging exploration of the Ptolemaic rulers of Egypt in the final centuries before Rome conquered this ancient land
Unravelling the enigma
JOSEPH ELLIS is impressed by a detailed, colourful and insightful biography of George Villiers, a Stuart royal favourite who made powerful enemies
The Elusive Pimpernel
Some suffragettes marched with banners, or printed and distributed propaganda pamphlets. Others took more direct action. DIANE ATKINSON tells the story of one activist who employed arson to spark awareness of the burning issue of women’s suffrage
A HILL TO DIE ON
In early 1944, the Allied advance in Italy was brought to a halt at a rocky outcrop called Monte Cassino. And at the heart of the bloodbath that followed, writes James Holland, was flawed leadership
How to build a radical
How to build a radical 6 8 The experiences that shaped Guy Fawkes and his gunpowder plot co-conspirators into violent extremists seem all too familiar today. Lucy Worsley tells a story of religious clashes, state-sanctioned torture and comrades-in-arms willing to die for the cause
WHO WAS GREATEST THE US PRESIDENT?
With Donald Trump set to be inaugurated as the 47th president, we asked seven historians to nominate their choice for the most accomplished American leader
Land of make believe?
Marco Polo's adventures in Asia earned him everlasting fame. But are his accounts of his travels essentially works of fiction? Peter Jackson asks if we can trust this medieval travel-writing superstar