Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
1 A. de Waal recently, and others such as Sen, A. K. (Poverty and families: an essay on entitlement and deprivation (Oxford, 1981)Google Scholar and Rangasami, A. (‘Famine of exchange entitlement theory: a response’, paper given at the International Workshop ‘Women's role in self-sufficiency and food strategies’, Paris, 1985)Google Scholar earlier, questioned the previously assumed links between scarcity of food and/or starvation on the one hand and increased mortality on the other; see de Waal, A., Famine that kills: Darfur, Sudan, 1984–1985 (Oxford, 1989), 9–20.Google Scholar
2 Notable exceptions are Jannetta, A. Bowman, ‘Famine mortality in nineteenth-century Japan: the evidence from a temple death register’, Population Studies 46 (1992), 427–43CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Dyson, T., ‘On the demography of South Asian famines, Part I’, Population Studies 45 (1) (1991), 5–25CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and ‘Part II’, Population Studies 45 (2) (1991), 279–97Google Scholar; Valaoras, V. G., ‘Some effects of the famine on the population of Greece’, Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 24 (4) (1946), 215–34CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Watkins, S. C. and Menken, J., ‘Famines in historical perspective’, Population and Development Review 11 (4) (1985), 647–75CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Pitkänen, K. and Mielke, J. H., ‘Age and sex differentials in mortality during two nineteenth-century population crises’, European Journal of Population 9 (1993), 1–32CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; de Waal, A., ‘Famine mortality: a case study of Darfur, Sudan 1984–5’, Population Studies 43 (1989), 5–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Stein, Z., Susser, M., Saenger, G. and Marolla, F., Famine and human development (New York, 1975).Google Scholar
3 Dyson, , ‘On the demography of South Asian famines, Part I’, 21Google Scholar; ‘On the demography of South Asian famines, Part II’, 292.Google Scholar
4 Jannetta, , ‘Famine mortality in nineteenth-century Japan’, 435.Google Scholar
5 Valaoras, , ‘Some effects of the famine’, 218.Google Scholar
6 Dols, M. J. L. and van Arken, D. J. A. M., ‘Food supply and nutrition in the Netherlands during and immediately after the World War II’, Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 24 (4) (1946), 352–3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
7 Pitkänen, and Mielke, , ‘Age and sex differentials in mortality’, 23.Google Scholar
8 For example Dyson, (‘On the demography of South Asian famines, Part II’, 295Google Scholar) and Pitkänen, and Mielke, (‘Age and sex differentials in mortality’, 24).Google Scholar
9 See Dyson, , ‘On the demography of South Asian famines, Part I’, 18Google Scholar; Jannetta, , ‘Famine mortality in nineteenth-century Japan’, 434Google Scholar; and de Waal, , ‘Famine mortality: a case study of Darfur’, 6.Google Scholar
10 In the period 1935–1937 Greece imported 45 per cent of all consumed cereals; see Diamond, W., Agriculture and food in Greece (UNRRA, Operational Analysis Paper 19, 1947), 5–6.Google Scholar
11 Mazower, M., Greece and the inter-war economic crisis (Oxford, 1991), 79–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
12 Mazower, M., Inside Hitler's Greece: the experience of occupation 1941–44 (New Haven and London, 1993), 50Google Scholar; and The Times, 7 05 1941, 4.Google Scholar
13 Hondros, J., Occupation and resistance: the Greek agony 1941–44 (New York, 1983), 52.Google Scholar
14 The Times, 8 05 1941, 3.Google Scholar
15 Doxiadis, K., The sacrifices of Greece in the Second World War (Athens, 1945)Google Scholar, Table 15 and comments.
16 Mazower, , Inside Hitler's Greece, 24–7.Google Scholar The requisitioned assets were either used to sustain the occupation forces or were shipped out of Greece for the Axis troops.
17 The seizure of the shipping by the Axis authorities is considered by The Times' correspondent as a reason for the extreme severity of the famine on the islands (The Times, 28 10 1941, 5).Google Scholar Mazower mentions that ‘[t]o travel from the capital to the Peloponnese required a permit from the carabinieri and a booking several days in advance’. Also, that ‘[t]he voyage by caique [small boat] from Piraeus to Chios took fifteen to twenty days, and could only be managed at a price beyond most people's reach’ (Mazower, , Inside Hitler's Greece, 33).Google Scholar Still, by January 1942, Bulgarians as well as Italians refused to recognize the passes provided by the Germans, further restricting the population movements (The Times, 10 01 1942, 3).Google Scholar
18 The Times, 15 05 1941, 4.Google Scholar
19 Argenti, P., The occupation of Chios by the Germans and their administration of the island, 1941–44 (Cambridge, 1966), 47.Google Scholar
20 The Times, 22 01 1942, 3Google Scholar; Mazower emphasizes the especially strict prohibition imposed by the Italians on the trade between the islands in the Aegean Sea and the ‘notoriously strict surveillance of fishing boats, which could carry information or even passengers as well as fish’ (Inside Hitler's Greece, 55).Google Scholar
21 Doxiadis, , The sacrifice of GreeceGoogle Scholar, Table 16 and comments. See also The Times, 22 01 1941, 3.Google Scholar
22 The 1941 harvest was especially poor, having produced less than half of the normal output (Hondros, , Occupation and resistance, 67).Google Scholar
23 The Times, 28 10 1941, 5.Google Scholar
24 The Times reported on 5 05 1941 that ‘The scarcity of food, which has always existed in Greece, now threatens to reach catastrophic proportions’ (p. 4).Google Scholar
25 Moreover, Germans arranged with the puppet Greek government and the Bank of Greece the payment of large sums of drachma to the Axis powers as occupation expenses. Thus, the Bank of Greece was forced to print excessive amounts of currency, which further accentuated inflation (Thomadakis, S., ‘Black markets, inflation, and force in the economy of occupied Greece’, in latrides, J. O. ed., Greece in the 1940s: a nation in crisis (oHanover, 1981), 66–7).Google Scholar The price of bread experienced a 23-fold increase between April 1941 and January 1942 and an 89-fold increase between April 1941 and July 1942 (Doxiadis, , The sacrifices of Greece, Table 63).Google Scholar
26 Even the fees of doctors were paid in food (Argenti, , The occupation of Chios, 36Google Scholar, and The Times, 7 09 1942, 3).Google Scholar
27 Valaoras, V. G., ‘Some effects of the famine on the population of Greece’, Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 24 (4) (1946), 233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
28 Thomadakis, , ‘Black markets, inflation, and force’, 72.Google Scholar
29 Mazower, Inside Hitler's Greece, 31Google Scholar, citing USA National Archives (Washington, DC), T-821/249/S29–32, ‘Situazione economica e organizzazione civile nei territori occupati’, 1 11 1941.Google Scholar
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31 Kitsikis, D., ‘La famine en Gréce (1941–1942). Les conséquences politiques’, Revue d'Histoire de la Deuxième Guerre Mondiale 74 (1969), 30–1.Google Scholar
32 Black, M., A cause for our times: Oxfam, the first 50 years (Oxford, 1992), 7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
33 League of Nations, Food rationing and supply 1943/44 (Geneva, 1944), 38.Google Scholar The author of this report emphasized that these averages of calorific intake were only indicative since there was no regular system of food distribution.
34 The Times, 28 02 1942, 4.Google Scholar
35 Kitsikis, , ‘La famine en Grèce (1941–42)’, 19.Google Scholar Fleischer indicates that the guarantee was given in June 1941 and was renewed to the International Red Cross in November 1941. Fleischer, H., Στέµµα kαl σβστlkα: H Eλλάδα τηζ kατoχήζ kαl τηζ αvτiστασηζ 1941–1944 (Athens, 1986), 204–6.Google Scholar
36 Kitsikis, , ‘La famine en Grèce (1941–1942)’, 30.Google Scholar
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38 Laiou-Thomadakis, A., ‘The politics of hunger: economic aid to Greece, 1943–45’, Journal of Hellenic Diaspora VII (1980), 37–8.Google Scholar
39 Valaoras, , ‘Some effects of the famine’, 217.Google Scholar
40 The paper published by Valaoras, ‘Some effects of the famine’, is an exception. Still, it refers exclusively to Athens and Piraeus rather than the whole country.
41 On the vital registration system of Greece, see Valaoras, V. G., ‘National primary socio-economic data structures, V: Greece’, International Social Science Journal 32 (2) (1980), 343–58Google Scholar, and Hionidou, V., ‘The demography of a Greek island, Mykonos 1859–1959: a family reconstitution study’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Liverpool, 1993), 21–5.Google Scholar
42 These problems mainly concern the delay of the registration of vital events in the 1870s and 1880s (Hionidou, , ‘The demography of a Greek island’, 29–31).Google Scholar
43 This linkage constitutes a part of the family reconstitution that has been undertaken for the period 1859–1959 for the civil registration records of Mykonos. For a detailed description of the linkage procedure, see Hionidou, , ‘The demography of a Greek island’, 110–12.Google Scholar
44 The age groups that have been used are: less than one year, 1–4, 5–9, 10–19, 20–29, 30–39, 40–49, 50–59 and over 60.
45 For the other age groups the net error varies between zero and 17 per cent.
46 Similarly, on the island of Chios the performance of burials, baptisms and weddings continued normally during the occupation (‘Report submitted by Leoni Calvocoressi, former Mayor of Chios, to Demosthenes Mavrogordato, Mayor of Chios. Chios, 14 November 1945’, in Argenti, , The occupation of Chios, 45).Google Scholar
47 Mazower, , Inside Hitler's Greece, 38.Google Scholar
48 According to oral accounts a rationing system was established on the island by the Germans, i.e. after the Italians surrendered in September 1943 (Stott, M., ‘The social and economic change of the Greek island of Mykonos 1860–1978: an anthropological perspective’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, London School of Economics, 1982), 95–6).Google Scholar
49 Mazower, , Inside Hitler's Greece, 41.Google Scholar
50 The only drawback in such a study is the non-availability of an age structure of the population at, or around, the time of the famine. The non-availability of an age structure applies to the whole of Greece since the 1940 census returns were destroyed before the analysis was completed. Only the population figures by sex have been published for every community, town and prefecture. However, the total population by sex is available from the 1940 census.
51 Hionidou, , ‘The demography of a Greek island’, Table 6.8, Figure 2.6 and Table 6.2.Google Scholar
52 Stott, , ‘The social and economic change of the Greek island of Mykonos’, 95–6.Google Scholar
53 Valaoras observed a positive association between daily mean air temperature and daily number of deaths in Athens (‘Some effects of the famine’, 224).Google Scholar
54 In the case of the pre-famine rates, the base population figure used was calculated as: Population (1/1/1939) = Population (16/10/1940) + Deaths (1/1/1939 to 16/10/1940)—Births (1/1/1939 to 16/10/1940); and, in the case of the famine base population: Populations (15/2/1942) = Population (16/10/1940)—Deaths (16/10/1940 to 14/2/1942) + Births (16/10/1940 to 14/2/1942).
55 Hionidou, , ‘The demography of a Greek island’, 61–8.Google Scholar
56 Crude death rate is defined as the number of deaths that occurred within a year divided by the mid-year population, the result multiplied by 1,000. It expresses the number of deaths per 1,000 population.
57 Stott mentions that farmers did better than others during the famine (‘The social and economic change of the Greek island of Mykonos’, 99).Google Scholar The Mykoniati newspaper Nea Mykonos mentions in July 1948 that the urban population of the island, and among them especially the families of fishermen, experienced heavy losses during the famine. As mentioned earlier, boats over 50 tons had been confiscated by the occupying forces and fishing was severely restricted.
58 A similar differentiation of the impact of the famine has been described by Argenti for the island of Chios. There, the population of the town and the villages depending on fishing and sailing were the most affected (The occupation of Chios, 48).Google Scholar
59 Only males are examined since very few women (exceptions were the midwife and the school teacher) were reported as having an occupation.
60 During the famine there were 172 deaths of adult males. There were 234 deaths of adult males during the perioda 1930–1939.
61 Valaoras, , ‘Some effects of the famine’, 217.Google Scholar
62 Ibid. Unfortunately, the source for this observation is not made clear.
63 Keys, A., Brozek, J., Mickelsen, O. and Taylor, H. Longstreet, The biology of human starvation (Minneapolis, 1950), Vol. 1, 749–52.Google Scholar
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65 Dyson, , ‘On the demography of South Asian famines, Part I, 22.Google Scholar For a discussion of the ‘anticipated’ decline of fertility, see ‘Forum: on the demography of South Asian famines’, Health Transition Review 2 (1) (1992), 91–113.Google Scholar
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67 See for example, Dyson, , ‘On the demography of South Asian famines, Part I’, 294Google Scholar, and Dols, and Arken, van, ‘Food supply and nutrition in the Netherlands’, 352–3.Google Scholar Similar findings are cited in Jannetta, ‘Famine mortality in nineteenth-century Japan’, 435.Google Scholar
68 This piece of research will continue with interviews of the famine survivors. Their oral accounts will, we hope, expand our knowledge on this issue.
69 Hionidou, , ‘The demography of a Greek island’, Table 6.2.Google Scholar
70 Valaoras, , ‘Some effects of the famine’, 218.Google Scholar
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75 In Athens and Piraeus malaria was the reported cause of death in 205 cases in the period July to December 1942 compared to 20 in the same months of 1941 (Valaoras, , ‘Some effects of the famine’, 221).Google Scholar
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