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Meet Myrtis, an eleven-year-old from Ancient Athens
Istorima
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Meet Myrtis, an eleven-year-old from Ancient Athens

During the construction of the Athens Metro, the skull of child is discovered, who died during the plague in the 5th century BC. Using the skull as a base, Professor Manolis Paparigorakis, who was researching the appearance of ancient Greeks, began to reconstruct the face of the little Athenian, who gained immortality.

Interviewee: Manolis Papagrigorakis Interview by: Vlassis Pogkas Producer: Maya Filippopoulou Sound Designer: Giorgos Ramantanis Sound Editor: Dimitris Papadakis Photos: Manolis Papagrigorakis Voiceover: Steve Lever


Istorima is the largest project for recording and preserving oral histories of Greece. More than 1,000 young researchers find narrators listen, collect and preserve stories of people from all over Greece: Stories of their hometowns, stories of love, stories that changed Greece or defined it, modern or old stories. Stories that are not recorded in the history books and that could easily be lost in time.
It was created by the journalist Sofia Papaioannou and the historian Katherine Fleming and is implemented with a founding grant from the Stavros Niarchos Foundation (SNF), as part of its initiative to Restart and Empower Youth (see more on www.snf.org). More than 20,000 stories are gradually being published in full on www.archive.istorima.org. Excerpts of the stories are published in the form of podcasts, videos, or written stories on www.istorima.org.