Author: nia.gr

Makri Street 11: the NIA building, before and after the complete refurbishment (1998-1999).

1 September – 19 October: NIA closed due to refurbishment works!

We would like to inform you that our premises will be closed from Monday 1 September until Sunday 19 October due to extensive refurbishment works. However, the staff of the Institute will remain at your disposal and happy to assist you. Staff members can be reached through the following e-mail addresses: Director Deputy Director Senior […]

22 October: Book presentation by Özge Calafato (University of Amsterdam), ‘Making the Modern Turkish Citizen: Vernacular Photography in the Early Republican Era’

The Netherlands Institute at Athens in collaboration with the Nordic Library and the Finnish Institute at Athens are very pleased to invite you to the book presentation of ‘Making the Modern Turkish Citizen: Vernacular Photography in the Early Republican Era’, by the author Özge Calafato (University of Amsterdam). The event will be moderated by the […]

Royal Museums of Art and History, inv. R.308: cup, c. 490-480 BC, attributed to the Foundry Painter.

Now Online: 15th TEXNH-Lecture “Craftspeople and War in Ancient Economies”, Dr. Natacha Massar (Royal Museums of Art and History, Brussels)

We are happy to share with you the online registration of the 15th session of our TEXNH-series, which took place on May 28. After a short introduction by NIA-director Prof. Ann Brysbaert, Dr. Natacha Massar (Curator of Greek Antiquities, Royal Museums of Art and History, Brussels) “Craftspeople and War in Ancient Economies“. The series is […]

Now Online: Video Registration of the lecture “Axenitika and Misiotika. Two Cappadocian dialects still spoken in Greece” (Prof. em. Mark Janse, 23 April 2025)

It is our pleasure to share the video registration of the hybrid lecture, delivered by Prof. em. Mark Janse (Affiliated Researcher at the Faculty of Modern & Medieval Languages & Linguistics, University of Cambridge), which took place on Wednesday 23 April: “Axenitika and Misiotika. Two Cappadocian dialects still spoken in Greece” In his lecture, Prof. […]