23 Drossopoulos and Enislides, interviews, ibid.
24 Rigopoulas, 24
25 Ibid.
26 Jeanne Oates Angulo, interview, 4/2/2016
27 Clogg (Concise),121; https://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/greek-study-provides-evidence-of-forced-loans-to-nazis-a-1024762.html; https://www.dw.com/en/nazis-stolen-loan-from-greek-bank-will-germany-pay-it-back/a-18224874
28 Mazower (Inside), discusses food rationing, 26–30; Hionidou, 196, notes nourishment dropped as low as 400 calories per capita in Athens, 190
29 Panourgia, 51–2, 14n notes lack of agreement on the numbers.
30 “an oka (nearly three pounds) of bread, which cost 10 drachmas at the time of the Italian invasion, had reached 34,000,000 by the time of the German withdrawal in October 1944.” Clogg (Concise), 124
31 Drossopoulos, interview, 5/31/2012
32 Bernard O’Connor, Sabotage in Greece, Lulu.com, 103, 2/4/2016; http://en.interaffairs.ru/experts/340-ivanov-ainovi-the-russian-james-bond.html; http://akrokorinthos.blogspot.com/2011/07/jerzy-iwanow-szajnowicz.html; interviews with Leonarda Lamprianidou (Ivanof’s niece); Kuzminski, Agent #1
33 The Special Operations Executive, an amalgam of three secret organizations formed in 1940, was tasked with coordinating subversion and sabotage in enemy-occupied countries. https://ww2greekveterans.com/soe-in-greece/
34 Bobotinos, 24–5
35 Bobotinos, 13, 19; interview with Leonarda Lamprianidou, 12/2016
36 O’Connor, 103
3: LOCKED UP
1 Condit, 87; Koliopoulos, 294
2 “Though its leaders thought otherwise, EAM ultimately was a social movement second, a national movement first and foremost.” Nalmpantis, 77
3 Ole L. Smith, “ ‘The First Round’- Civil War During the Occupation,” in Close (ed.) [Civil War], 58–71; Hondros, 171–99 passim.
4 Mazower (Inside), 148; see fn 132.
5 Heer and Naumann, 161; Mazower (Inside), 157
6 “Greek and Foreign Spies in Greece,” Stavros magazine, 10/8/1950
7 EPD preliminary draft memoir [undated], EPDP; supplemented by Amalia Tsiantou research, 6–7/2012
8 Ibid.
9 Ibid.
10 “Site of Historical Memory 1941–1944: 4, Korai Street Ethniki Insurance Mansion,” Department of Historical Archives (undated) and interview with Frini Papageorgiou, 6/2012
11 Drossopoulos, interview, 5/31/2012
12 Op. cit., Stavros magazine, 10/8/1950
13 EPD, undated, unpublished report, supplemented by interviews with Evangelos Louizos, Antonis Drossopoulos, and Amalia Tsiantou
14 Ibid.
15 https://diatribe-column.blogspot.com/2007/11/damaskinos-righteous-among-nations.html; TIME, 10/1/1945
16 https://www.ushmm.org/information/exhibitions/online-exhibitions/special-focus/holocaust-in-greece/athens; TIME, 10/1/1945; Commander was German General Jurgen Stroop in charge of SS and police in Greece.
17 Douzenis, 6
18 Ibid., 7–8
19 Christina Politi 2, Tsoukalis, 91–2; “What the Germans Did to Greece,” LIFE, 11/27/1944. http://www.elliniki-gnomi.eu/o-foveros-apologismos-ton-katastrofon-pou-proxenisan-i-germani-ke-i-simmachi-tous-stin-ellada-kata-tin-diarkia-tou-v-pagkosmiou-polemou-ke-tis-katochis/ (in Greek)
4: DECEMBER UPRISING
1 British Public Records Office, PREM 3/66/7(169)
2 Jordan Baev, “The Greek Civil War Viewed from the North,” http://www.coldwar.hu/publications/greek_civil.html
3 Australian Red Cross letter to ARCS Bureau, Sydney, 9/24/1945, Hellenic Red Cross Archives, Athens.
4 Hondros, 240
5 Gerolymatos (Red), 100