Το Anglo-Hellenic League οργανώνει
σήμερα το βράδυ στις 7.00 μ.μ. στο Ελληνικό Κέντρο Λονδίνου (Hellenic Centre,
Great Hall, 16-18 Paddington Street, London W1U 5AS) μια πολύ ενδιαφέρουσα
διάλεξη, με θέμα: «A golden age? British and Greek writers and artists after
the war»!
Ομιλητής θα είναι ο διακεκριμένος Άγγλος επιστήμονας και διπλωμάτης, αλλά πάνω
απ’ όλα αληθινός Φιλέλληνας, Sir Michael Llewellyn-Smith. Το
βιογραφικό του, που αποδεικνύει του λόγου το αληθές, έχει ως εξής:
Michael Llewellyn-Smith was born in
1939 and brought up in England, with two sisters and two brothers, at a school
in Berkshire where his father was headmaster. He was educated at Wellington
College at Crowthorne, Berkshire, a public school founded in memory of the
Great Duke of Wellington, and at New College, Oxford University, where he
studied classics, ancient history and philosophy. He went on to obtain a DPhil
at St Antony's College Oxford, for his doctoral thesis on the Greek occupation
of Smyrna and western Asia Minor in 1919-22.
He is the author of four books with
themes in Greek history and culture. The Great
Island is a book about the history, culture and folklore of the island of
Crete, reflecting his travels and researches there in the early 1960s (travels
with a donkey!). Ionian Vision: Greece
in Asia Minor 1919-1922 is the story of Greece's ill-fated venture into
Asia Minor, ending with the destruction of Smyrna and the end of the ancient
Greek communities of Asia Minor. Olympics
in Athens 1896: the Invention of the Modern Olympic Games is the story of
how the young Greek state and the city of Athens developed rapidly to a point
at which they found it possible to host successfully the first modern Games. Athens: a Cultural and Literary History
presents the life and culture of the city of Athens across the centuries,
explaining how the modern city copes with its ancient heritage.
Michael Llewellyn-Smith has also
written a short book about the history of the British Embassy at Athens, which was the house of the Greek
statesman Eleftherios Venizelos before it became the British Embassy in 1936.
He is currently researching the life of Venizelos. He has lectured extensively
at Universities and for Swan Hellenic Discovery Cruising. He has written
reviews for the Times Literary Supplement and the Anglo-Hellenic Review.
Michael Llewellyn-Smith joined the
British Diplomatic Service in 1970 and served in it for thirty years, in
Moscow, Paris, Warsaw and Athens as well as London. He was British Ambassador
in Poland from 1991-96 and in Greece from 1996-99. As student, teacher,
diplomat and traveller he has spent more than eleven years in Greece.
He is married, to Colette née Gaulier.
They live in south Oxfordshire, and travel often to Greece and France. They
have two children, Stefan and Sophie, and four grandchildren, David, Alexander,
Nicolas and Alice.
Sir Michael Llewellyn-Smith was
awarded the CMG in 1990 and the KCVO in 1996. He is an Honorary Fellow of St
Antony's College Oxford, a Vice President and member of the Council of the
British School at Athens, member of the Council of the Anglo-Hellenic League,
Vice President of the Bristol Institute of Greece, Rome and the Classical
Tradition, Honorary Fellow of the Eleftherios K Venizelos National Research
Foundation, Chania, and Patron of the Friends of Mount Athos. He is a visiting
Professor at King's College London and has been a visiting Fellow of the British
School at Athens, visiting Fellow at Princeton University, foreign Fellow of
the Onassis Foundation, and holder of the Venizelos chair of modern Greek
studies at the American College of Greece (Deree College) for 2009-2010.
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