Difference between revisions of "Yanaki and Milton Manaki"

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[[File:Ienache manakia.jpg |thumb|200px|Ienache Manakia (photo, 1917)]]
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[[Image:Ienache manakia.jpg |thumb|250px|Ienache Manakia (photo, 1917)]]
[[File:Milton manakia.jpg |thumb|200px|Milton Manakia (scene from the movie ''Camera 300'')]]
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[[Image:Milton manakia.jpg |thumb|250px|Milton Manakia (scene from the movie ''Camera 300'')]]
 
 
 
The brothers Ianachia (Avdella, Ottoman Empire, 1878 – Thessaloniki, Greece, 1954) and Milton Manachia (Avdella, Ottoman Empire, 1882 – Bitola, SFR Yugoslavia, 1964) were pioneering photographers and the first filmmakers in the Balkans. In 1905 they filmed in Avdela the first motion pictures in the Ottoman Balkans, ''The Weavers''.
 
The brothers Ianachia (Avdella, Ottoman Empire, 1878 – Thessaloniki, Greece, 1954) and Milton Manachia (Avdella, Ottoman Empire, 1882 – Bitola, SFR Yugoslavia, 1964) were pioneering photographers and the first filmmakers in the Balkans. In 1905 they filmed in Avdela the first motion pictures in the Ottoman Balkans, ''The Weavers''.
  

Revision as of 00:45, 7 June 2013

Ienache Manakia (photo, 1917)
Milton Manakia (scene from the movie Camera 300)

The brothers Ianachia (Avdella, Ottoman Empire, 1878 – Thessaloniki, Greece, 1954) and Milton Manachia (Avdella, Ottoman Empire, 1882 – Bitola, SFR Yugoslavia, 1964) were pioneering photographers and the first filmmakers in the Balkans. In 1905 they filmed in Avdela the first motion pictures in the Ottoman Balkans, The Weavers.

In honor of their work, the International Cinematographers' Film Festival "Manaki Brothers" is held every year in Bitola, the city where most of their activities were organized. In total, they took over 17,300 photographs in 120 localities.

See also
Literature
  • Marian Ţuţui, Orient Express: filmul românesc şi filmul balcanic sau Cinematograful balcanic, Bucharest: Editura Noi Media Print, 2008. (in Romanian)
External links