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Thessaloniki,
the second largest city in Greece with a population of 1.000.000
inhabitants, is one of the oldest cities in Europe. It was founded in
316 B.C. on a site of old prehistoric settlements dating back to 2300
B.C., by Cassander, king of Macedonia, and was named after his wife,
sister of Alexander the Great. Since then, Thessaloniki has become the
chief city of Macedonia. In Roman times it boasted the largest harbour
in the whole region and stood on the spot where the great road from the
north met the main east-west artery. Many foreign merchants lived
temporarily or permanently in this rich commercial centre. It was
visited also by Saint Paul, who preached the new religion, and who
later addressed his two well-known epistles to the Christians of
Thessaloniki. Galerius, the ruler of one of the two parts of the
Eastern Roman Empire, chose Thessaloniki as his imperial seat in A.D.
300.
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