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Greek Australians

Greek Australians (Greek: Ελληνοαυστραλοί, romanizedEllinoafstralí) are Australians of Greek ancestry. Greek Australians are one of the largest groups within the global Greek diaspora. As per the 2021 Australian census, 424,750 people stated that they had Greek ancestry (whether alone or in combination with another ancestry), comprising 1.7% of the Australian population.[1] At the 2021 census, 92,314 Australian residents were born in Greece.[1]

Not to be confused with Australians in Greece.

Greek immigration to Australia has been one of the largest migratory flows in the history of Australia, especially after World War II and the Greek Civil War. The flow of migrants from Greece increased slightly in 2015 due to the economic crisis in Greece,[2] with Australia as one of the main destinations for departing Greeks, mainly to Melbourne, where the Greek Australian community is most deeply established.[3]


88% of Greek Australians speak Greek and 91% are Christians and members of the Greek Orthodox Church.[4]


Australia and Greece have a close bilateral relationship based on historical ties and the rich contribution of Greek Australians to Australian society. In 2019, the export of Australian services to Greece was valued at $92 million, while services imports from Greece totalled $750 million. Australia's stock of investment in Greece in 2019 totalled $481 million, while investment in Australia from Greece was $192 million.[5]

History[edit]

Early Greek immigration[edit]

Greek immigration to Australia began in the early colonial period in the 19th century. The first known Greeks arrived in 1829.[6] These Greeks were seven sailors, convicted of piracy by a British naval court, and were sentenced to transportation to New South Wales. Though they were eventually pardoned, two of those seven Greeks stayed and settled in the country. One settled on the Monaro Plains in Southern New South Wales and one at Picton near Sydney. Their names were Ghikas Bulgaris known as Jigger Bulgari, and Andonis Manolis. Jigger Bulgari married an Irish woman, and they had many children. Jigger was buried at Nimmitabel Pioneer Cemetery. The Hellenic Club of Canberra laid a commemorative marble plaque over his resting place around 2000. Andonis Manolis' grave is in the old cemetery at Mittagong. The first known free Greek migrant to Australia was Katerina Georgia Plessos (1809–1907),[7] who arrived in Sydney with her husband Major James Crummer in 1835. They married in 1827 on the island of Kalamos where Crummer, the island's commandant, met the young refugee from the Greek independence wars. In her youth, she must have been one of the last living people to speak to Lord Byron. They lived in Sydney, Newcastle and Port Macquarie. They had 11 children.[8] The first wave of free Hellenic migrants commenced in the 1850s, and continued through the end of the 19th century, prompted in part by the recent discovery of gold in the country.[9]

– Professor of Musculoskeletal Pathology at Oxford University and Greek-Australian novelist.[24]

Nikos Athanasou

– Professor of Engineering / Executive Dean, Faculty of Science, Engineering and Built Environment Deakin University

Nick (Νικήτας) Birbilis

– Professor of Pervasive Computing at City University London & Director of the Mixed Reality Lab

Adrian David Cheok

– Assoc. Professor of History, at the University of New South Wales

Nicholas Doumanis

– Professorial Fellow at the University of Western Sydney in the School of Humanities & Communication Arts

Nikolas Kompridis

- Emeritus Professor at Flinders University; previous Vice President and Executive Dean, College of Education, Psychology and Social Work

Michael Kyrios

– Professor of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne

Christos Pantelis

– Emeritus Professor at the University of New South Wales, chemical engineer best known for her pioneering work of the vanadium redox battery

Maria Skyllas-Kazacos

– Director of Institute for Ethics in AI and Professor of Ethics and Legal Philosophy at University of Oxford and first Greek-Australian Rhodes Scholar

John Tasioulas

Australia–Greece relations

Cypriot Australians

European Australians

Europeans in Oceania

Greek Cypriots

Greek New Zealanders

Greek Orthodox churches in New South Wales

Greeks

Immigration to Australia

Neos Kosmos

Tamis, Anastasios (2005). The Greeks in Australia. Cambridge University Press.  0-521-54743-1

ISBN

(1992), Australians and Greeks Volume I: The Early Years, Brown, Prior, Anderson Pty. Ltd., ISBN 978-1-875684-01-4

Gilchrist, Hugh

Alexakis, Effy and Janiszewski, Leonard (1998). In Their Own Image: Greek-Australians. Hale & Iremonger Pty Limited.  0-86806-655-9

ISBN

Alexakis, Effy and Janiszewski, Leonard (1995). Images of Home: Mavri Xenitia. Hale & Iremonger Pty Limited.  0-86806-560-9

ISBN

Alexakis, Effy and Janiszewski, Leonard (2013). Selling an American Dream: Australia's Greek Cafe. Macquarie University.  9781741383959

ISBN

Alexakis, Effy and Janiszewski, Leonard (2016). Greek Cafes & Milk Bars of Australia. Halstead Press.  9781925043181

ISBN

Diamadis, Panayiotis – University of Technology, Sydney (2011). . Dictionary of Sydney. Retrieved 4 October 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) (Greeks in Sydney) [CC-By-SA]

"Greeks"

on Culture Victoria

A video of Peter Yiannoudes, who established Greek Cinema in Victoria in the 1950s

State Library of Queensland. Digital stories relating to Greek Australian owned café and milk bars in Queensland

Meet me at the Paragon digital stories