Thursday, June 9, 2011

The Greek Language: A Historical Perspective by Eleni Demetriou


Mykonos; Ελληνική σημαία


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About the author: Eleni Demetriou speaks fluent Greek, as well as some Spanish and Portuguese. A graduate of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, where she earned a Bachelor of Science in Management, as well as Seton Hall University, where she received an MBA in Finance, Ms. Demetriou utilizes her language skills to support a career in international finance.

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Historians have traced the origins of the Greek language to approximately the end of the third millennium BCE, known as the Proto-Greek period. The language was not written at the time, so no known records exist; rather, historians believe this was around the time that Greek speakers first came to Greece. The first written records of the language appeared around the 14th century BCE in Mycenaean texts. In these earliest writings, the Mycenaean civilization used written language called Linear B, and the symbols matched syllables, entire words, or concepts rather than single phonic sounds.

The classical period, occurring around the fifth and fourth centuries BCE, saw the emergence of an array of dialects, including Attic and Ionic, which people spoke in and around Athens. During this time, Alexander the Great brought the Attic-Ionic form of Greek as the language of commerce to the Balkan region of Eastern Europe. As Eastern Europeans adopted Attic-Ionic Greek for business and commerce, their dialects transformed it into Hellenistic Greek. That form of the language remained in use throughout the Roman Empire until the Middle Ages, when Greek was used in the Byzantine Empire as the language of government.

Modern Greek came into its true form in the 1830s when Greece won its freedom from Turkish control. The current form of the language emerged from the dialects spoken at the centers of the new, free Greece: the regions of Athens and Peloponnese.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Prudential Financial

In 2008, I joined Prudential Financial as its Vice President of Institutional Marketing for the Institutional Marketing Strategic Solutions Group. Prudential Financial was founded in 1875 in Newark, New Jersey, as “The Widows and Orphans Friendly Society” by the United States Senator John F. Dryden. Today, Prudential Financial is a Fortune Global 500 company with subsidiaries in the insurance, investment management, and financial product spheres. Prudential Financial's products include life insurance, annuities, mutual funds, pension investments, retirement investments, asset management, securities brokerage, and real estate. Prudential Financial’s Rock of Gibraltar logo is one of the most famous corporate logos worldwide and was originated by an advertising agent passing by Laurel Hill, a volcanic neck, on a train in New Jersey. Since its inception, Prudential Financial has received a number of honors and awards. Every year since 2003, Prudential Financial has received a 100 percent rating on the Corporate Equality Index, which is released annually by the Human Rights Campaign. The magazine Working Mothers named Prudential Financial one of the 100 Best Companies for Working Mothers, and the corporation was featured on Business Week’s 2008 list of The Best Places to Launch a Career. The corporation’s charitable arm, The Prudential Foundation, donated over $450,000 in Prudential CARES Volunteer Grants to nonprofit organizations around the world in 2007. As Vice President of Institutional Marketing, I maintained critical client and consultant relationships and researched vital quantitative and qualitative information necessary to both manage and strengthen these relationships. Continually seeking out potential business opportunities, I kept abreast of the critical issues facing our industry and any innovations that would prove to be an asset to Prudential Financial. I am honored to have served a historic company that continues to champion progressive social and political action.

Friday, February 19, 2010

About Eleni Demetriou

Financial advisor Eleni Demetriou has attained recognition from numerous sources and institutions for her professional and academic success. Eleni Demetriou is featured in the Cambridge Who’s Who, which profiles global executives, and she maintains membership with the Beta Gamma Sigma Honor Society, which inducted her while she earned an MBA at Seton Hall University. Eleni Demetriou also possesses a Stillman School of Business Leadership Award.

Currently a candidate to become a Level II Chartered Financial Analyst, Eleni Demetriou began her career in banking as a Trading Assistant with Prudential Capital Management Group. After joining Prudential in 1990, Eleni Demetriou earned positions with greater responsibility and visibility. Eleni Demetriou became an Associate Manager of Global Small Cap Equities with Prudential Investments in 1997, where she conducted investment and portfolio analyses for a variety of sectors.

Later that year, Eleni Demetriou joined Chase Manhattan Bank as a Jr. Portfolio Manager, quickly receiving the position of Vice President of the bank’s U.S. Fixed Income market. Eleni Demetriou performed transactions across all sectors for the Institutional, Mutual, and Private Banking accounts. In addition, Eleni Demetriou provided her analysis expertise for monthly performance and portfolio attributions. Since her time with Chase Manhattan Bank, Eleni Demetriou has served as a Vice President with JPMorgan Chase & Company, ML, and Prudential Financial.

Making her home in Elizabeth, New Jersey, Eleni Demetriou enjoys spending time with her family and pets, reading Nelson DeMille books, and staying physically active.