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  2. Diakopto–Kalavryta railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diakopto–Kalavryta_railway

    In 1970 OSE became the legal successor to the SEK, taking over responsibility for most of Greece's rail infrastructure. On 1 January 1971 the station, and most of the Greek rail infrastructure, was transferred to the Hellenic Railways Organisation S.A., a state-owned corporation. Freight traffic declined sharply when the state-imposed monopoly ...

  3. Hellenic Railways Organisation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hellenic_Railways_Organisation

    OSE Headquarters 1–3 Karolou St., 104 37, Athens. The Hellenic Railways Organisation or OSE (Greek: Οργανισμός Σιδηροδρόμων Ελλάδος, romanized: Organismos Sidirodromon Ellados or Greek: Ο.Σ.Ε.) is the Greek national railway company which owns, maintains and operates all railway infrastructure in Greece with the exception of Athens' rapid transit lines.

  4. Rail transport in Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rail_transport_in_Greece

    The operation of the Greek railway network is split between the Hellenic Railways Organisation (OSE), which owns and maintains the rail infrastructure; GAIAOSE, which owns the building infrastructure (including stations) and the former OSE rolling stock, Hellenic Train; and other private companies that run the trains on the network.

  5. Athens Suburban Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athens_Suburban_Railway

    The Athens Suburban Railway (Greek: Προαστιακός Αθήνας, romanized: Proastiakós Athínas), officially the Athens Suburban and Regional Railway, [3] is a commuter rail service that connects the city of Athens and its metropolitan area with other places in Attica, Boeotia, Corinthia and the city of Chalcis in Euboea.

  6. Austria–Greece relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austria–Greece_relations

    [citation needed] The Austrian government recognized Greek independence in April 1831. [1] Greece has an embassy in Vienna. Austria has an embassy in Athens. There is also a Greek community living in Austria. During the Greek debt crisis, Austria was one of the strongest supporters of Greek positions, [2] such as on the refugee crisis. [3]

  7. Denmark–Greece relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denmark–Greece_relations

    In 1863, the second King of Greece, George I, was of Danish descent, and his successors, the House of Glücksburg, reigned over the country until 1973/1974. In 1967, Denmark and three other countries brought the Greek Case against the Greek junta regime for human rights violations. [1] In 1992 opened the Danish Institute at Athens.

  8. Aromanians in Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aromanians_in_Greece

    The Aromanians of Greece count with the Panhellenic Federation of Cultural Associations of Vlachs, a cultural organization of Aromanians. [ 11 ] [ 9 ] The Aromanian communities, who use the endonym Vlasi, in Macedonia speak Megleno-Romanian , separate from the Aromanian language .

  9. Greçë Memorandum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greçë_Memorandum

    The Greçë Memorandum (Albanian: Memorandumi i Greçës [1] [2]) or the Red Book (Albanian: Libri i Kuq) was a memorandum with twelve requests for the establishment of an autonomous Albanian province within the Ottoman Empire.