IRSH (), pp. – doi:./S © Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis Family, Gender, and Labour in the Greek Mines, –∗ L EDA P APASTEFANAKI Department of History and Archaeology, School of Philosophy, University of Ioannina, Campus University, Ioannina , Greece Institute for Mediterranean Studies/FORTH, N. Foka str., Rethymno , Greece E-mail:
[email protected] ABSTRACT: To date, research on work in the mines in Greece has ignored the signifi- cance of gender in the workplace, since mining is associated exclusively with male labour. As such, it is considered, indirectly, not subject to gender relations. The article examines the influence of family and gender relations on labour in the Greek mines in the period – by highlighting migration trajectories, paternalistic practices, and the division of labour in mining communities. Sources include: official publications of the Mines Inspectorate and the Mines and Industrial Censuses, the Greek Miners’ Fund Archive, British and French consular reports, various economic and technical reports by experts, literature and narratives, the local press from mining regions, and the Archive of the Seriphos Mines. INTRODUCTION Expanding literature has supplied new research in an effort to make women vis- ible in the mining sector in American and European historiography. Feminist ∗ This work was compiled within the “METOPO – Mediterranean Cultural Landscapes” research project (–), work package “Mining Landscapes in Greece, th–th centuries” of the Institute for Mediterranean Studies/Foundation for Research and Technology. The research project is implemented under the “Action for the Strategic Development on the Research and Technological Sector”, funded by the Operational Programme “Competitiveness, Entrepreneur- ship and Innovation” (NSRF –) and co-financed by Greece and the European Union (European Regional Development Fund).