The Greeks of paroikies (mercantile communities) were not a homogeneous social class, but were differentiated
according to their place of settlement and activity, their relations
with the national centre and their special professional, cultural and social
characteristics. Despite these differrences, the Greek Diaspora
contributed decisively to the formation of a new economic, social and ideological
climate that prevailed in Greek society in the crucial period
of the beginning of the twentieth century and especially after the coup of 1909.
In the context of the decline of the Ottoman Empire, colonial expansion
and the development of nationalistic movements in the Balkans,
the Greeks paroikies went through a phase of decline. However,
the political amd economic conjunction of circumstances contributed to
the preservation of old or the creation of some new Greek communities in the
early twentieth century.
After the Russo-Turkish war of 1877-78 southern Russia was the field of numerous
population changes that resulted in a considerable demographic revival.
Thus, Greek homes emerged on the northern and eastern shores of the Black Sea. Later,
the Greek communities of Transcaucasia were reinforced by the waves of Greeks
who arrived there after the persecutions of the Young Turk regime and the withdrawal
of the Russian troops from eastern Pontus in 1917.
The Greek paroikies of the Lower Danube and the wider area of the north-eastern Balkans
were favoured by the strategically economic position of this geographic
area.
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