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Kafenio
In the morning a café, at noon a barber

A game of chess in front of a Turkish coffee house and barber shop, 1845.
A game of chess in front of a Turkish coffee house and barber shop, 1845. | Photo (detail): Martinus Rorbye © The Picture Art Collection/Alamy Stock Photo

Coffee houses – you think of Vienna, of hours buried in thought in the midst of great minds. But in Greece, the coffee house, there called “kafenio”, was a place for not only intellectual encounters but also a hairdressing salon, post office and greengrocer.

By Yiouli Eptakoili

If you follow the trail of the first coffee houses, it will lead you to Mecca and Cairo: there coffee houses are mentioned for the first time around 1510. The institution of the coffeehouse became better known only when two Arabs from Aleppo and Damascus opened the first café in Constantinople in 1554, bringing coffee to the Ottomans. They enthusiastically welcomed the beverage. In a short time, coffee houses spread throughout the city and then to the small towns and villages of Anatolia. At the same time, merchants from the ports of Marseille, Venice and Amsterdam brought coffee culture to all of Europe. In Venice, the first café opened in 1615, in London in 1652.
 
In Greece, they spread quickly. According to the Turkish chronicler and writer Evliya Çelebi, there were already 348 cafés in Thessaloniki in 1668. “Musicians, actors, singers, fools, dandies, poets and writers meet and talk there”, he reports. Coffeehouses had the same function in most European cities: they were a place of communication, of exchange of opinion and of information, for celebrations, entertainment and relaxation, a field of political debate, a scene where people of different social classes met, as in Viennese coffeehouse culture, which has since 2011 even been counted among the UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage. A cup of coffee and a good deal of time: if you ordered something to drink in Vienna, you could sit for hours at your table, reading or writing. Many well-known writers such as Arthur Schnitzler and Stefan Zweig were great proponents of this culture.

  • Traditional kafenio in Arkesini on the island of Amorgos. Photo (detail): Giorgos Pittas
    Traditional kafenio in Arkesini on the island of Amorgos.
  • An old man plays on a Cretan lyre. His grandson watches him enthusiastically in a cafe in the village of Sykia, in the Cretan region of Sitia. Many kafenia in the Greek provinces preserve the local traditions. Photo (detail): Dimitris Tiniakos
    An old man plays on a Cretan lyre. His grandson watches him enthusiastically in a cafe in the village of Sykia, in the Cretan region of Sitia. Many kafenia in the Greek provinces preserve the local traditions.
  • The hand tool of the coffee house owner. Photo (detail): Giorgos Pittas
    The hand tool of the coffee house owner.
  • Kafenio in Kefalo on the island of Kos. Photo (detail): Giorgos Pittas
    Kafenio in Kefalo on the island of Kos.
  • In Greece, coffee culture spread quickly. In 1868 there were 348 coffee houses in Thessaloniki. Photo (detail): Giorgos Pittas
    In Greece, coffee culture spread quickly. In 1868 there were 348 coffee houses in Thessaloniki.
  • A game of chess in front of a Turkish coffee house and barber shop, 1845. Photo (detail): Martinus Rorbye © The Picture Art Collection/Alamy Stock Photo
    A game of chess in front of a Turkish coffee house and barber shop, 1845.
  • Kafenio, wine shop and post office on the Cycladic island of Iraklia. Photo (detail): Giorgos Pittas
    Kafenio, wine shop and post office on the Cycladic island of Iraklia.
But coffee houses changed with the times and needs of their guests. They devoted themselves to new tasks, as in Greece. The Greek kafenio is a social meeting place that has shaped Greek society for many decades and in many ways and brought together in itself numerous functions.

A cup of coffee and a new haircut

In its usually cramped and modest space, the kafenio combined diverse activities with important services in hard to reach mountain villages and on the islands where transport was difficult and the road network only imperfectly developed. In addition to being a coffee house, the kafenio was also a food stall where guests were offered whatever the proprietor’s wife was cooking for the family, a haberdashery, greengrocer, post office and often a barbershop.
 
"Many kafeneia are at the same time also barbershops”, wrote Demetrios Skarlatos Byzantios (1798-1878). In the third volume of his work Constantinople, the eminent Greek scholar of the nineteenth century reports that in this city the “café and hairdressing salon” was a common sight, and spread from there throughout the territory of the Ottoman Empire, going from one generation to the next for several decades. All this has now faded or at least seems far away. It is often very difficult to find even the traces of kafeneia unless you look into old photo albums or illustrated books. Only a few of these versatile Greek coffeehouses have survived. Most now exist only in books. And in the memory of those who once knew them.
Society and community life

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