Fall of Constantinople - 400 years opression
The
Greek Revolution of 1821 was a nation's triumph, a romantic story of heroic action.
It was a tragedy, a miracle, a myth. After
the conquest of Byzantine Empire, Mehmet II forsaw that his christian subjects
would help to organise his huge state. Commerce, practical arts, administration,
science were unknown to ottomans whose only care was the war. So he appointed
Georgios Yennadhios as Patriarch in Constantinople and leader of all Greeks
(Romaeoi) while he was guaranteed personal inviolability, freedom of movement
and exemption from taxes. The Greek Orthodox Church survived, and it was this
Church who preserved the traditions and the greek language and since Language
means Nation, according to Adhamantios Korais, it was the Orthodox Church
who preserved the national identity of Greeks.
Ottoman
occupation was very harsh for christians and meant not only the destruction
on the grounds of thousands monasteries, churches, monuments, burning of documents,
manuscripts, icons but also meant heavy taxation for non muslim subjects, hard
work on the fields and illiteracy. Many christians became muslims to be saved
from the cruel behavior from the state. A century after the fall of Constantinople
a professor from Tubingen, Martin Crusius, on a visit to Greece lamented: 'In
all Greece studies nowhere flourish. They have no public academies or professors,
except for the most trivial schools in which the boys are taught to read the
Horologion, the Psalter and other books which are used in the lithurgy. But
amongst the priests and monks those who really understand these books are very
few indeed. Historian Thanasis Petsalis - Diomidis wrote: 'In 1630
there isn't not even a single organized school in Greece. Only one exists in
Constantinople and this is the Patriarchical School.' Patriarch Kyrillos,
in 1628 imported a press machine from Great Britain to print books in the greek
language, but after only two years of function, the machine was destroyed by
the janissaries. Church remained in close touch with the people, and taught,
many times in secret, the boys the language of their fathers. Everybody in Greece
knows the rhyme, that boys sung when, secretly in night were going to secret
schools krufa scholia to be educated:
Fengaraki
mo lampro - Little moon, so bright and cool One burden unbearable for non muslim
subjects was the heavy taxation. Greek peasants Another burden, memory
of which still smoulders in the greek national consciousness, was the turkish
system of devschirme: the
forcible conscription of young men and their removal to Istanbul to join the
imperial service, especially in a military role as janissaries.
The Paidomazoma turned the young christians to fanatic muslim soldiers.
After a long and specialized training, these children became the Sultan's most
loyal vassals. He had the right over their life. They also constituted the most
competent army, not only within the Empire, but in the whole of Europe. Also,
beautiful christian girls were taken by force to the harems of the commanders
pashas. Ali Pasha had thousands of women in his harems. He had dozens of
spies, who searched for beautiful boys and girls. It is not an exaggeration to
say that the modern turks are greeks islamized. In 1705 the official sent to Naoussa
of Macedonia to draft new janissaries, was killed, while the crowd shouted their
resistance to giving up their sons. The infidel parents were beheaded and their
severed heads were displayed in the city before sent to the governor of Thessalonika.
According to historian
Paparighopoulos 1 million boys were transformed to Janissaries during the
dark years of ottoman occupation.
Greeks, during ottoman occupation had
tried many revolts, but without success, because they were local and not properly
organized. Immediately, after the fall of Constantinople, Peloponness revolted,
in 1463. Patra, Mystras, Korinthos were temporarily liberated. Greeks counted
on the venetian help, or any european
help but actually Europeans didn't help the local people to ged rid of their
oppressors. Nevertheless Mani remained autonomous during turkish rule. Revolts
took place also in Macedonia, Epirus, Crete. Suli also remained autonomous and
Sfakia of Crete the same. The mountains, where klephtes
lived, were always free:
Also in 1571, when turkish fleet was
defeated in the Lepando (Nafpaktos) naval battle, greeks again in many places
revolted against the oppressor. Dionysios Skulosophos bishop of Thesally
revolted in 17th century and almost managed to conquer Ioannina. He
failed and he was skinned alive. His friend Serafeim, bishop of Fanari,
refused to become muslim and was tortured to death. The last important insurrections
took place in Peloponness in 1769, when Russians promised to help, but they
sent the brothers Orloffs with only 1000 russian soldiers and a few ships. Greeks
this time trusted Russians but in vain. Turkoalbanians
suppressed the revolution and deserted many cities and villages. And the
same happened in 1790 with the revolt of Lampros Katsonis. After the French
Revolution in 1789, Hellenes transferred their hopes to Napoleon Bonaparte.
But soon they knew that they were alone, and only with their own forces they
would throw the opressor away.
Three names are associated with the national
rousement of ideas of independence. Righas
Feraeos, Adamantios Korais and Kosmas
Aitolos. Kosmas Aitolos was a monk and taught in 18th century to
every village of Macedonia, Epirus and Thessaly. He
said to people that schools must be built first and then all the others.
He was betrayed by Jews and was strangled by the pasha of Veration in Northern
Epirus, in 1779. Rigas Feraeos or Velestinlis was born in 1757 in the
Velestino or Phere of Thessaly. After a quarrel with a turk, he ran away and
went to Wallachia, where he became secretary of an Austian baron who brought
him to Vienna in 1790. Vienna, as almost all the big cities of Europe, had a
big community of Greeks who couldn't suffer the turkish oppresion. Righas publiced
many works about sciences, education books but his best works were those who
refered to the liberty and the human rights of all people who suffered under
tyranical regimes. An Hynm, Thourios that was sang from all Greeks of
that time and is still sang today is: Shall
we live in mountain passes, like warriors of old?-Os pote pallikaria tha zoume
sta stena Righas'
ecumenical vision was based aslo on the idea of the supremacy of the law:'let
the law be our coutry's only guide.Rhigas proposed as a state's basic principles:
Liberty, Equality, Security of life, Security of property, Freedom of speech
and of religion. His proposals were very far-sighted. When the government
harasses and disdains the rights of the people, then the people should take
the arms and punish their tyrants. For his ideas Righas was arrested by
dictatorial Austrian authorities, and was handed with seventeen other patriots,
to turks. He was betrayed by a greek named Demetrios Oikonomou. (Greece along
with the heroes had and has many traitors. Efialtis betrayed Leonidas, Greeks
opened the Kerkoporta of Constantinople to the turkish besiegers, Nenekos fought
with 2000 greeks on the side of sultan, against the revolutionaries etc.) Righas
and his comrades after torture from turks were strangled, on 24 June 1798, in
Belgrade.
Adamantios
Korais was born in Smyrna, in 1748. In 1788 he reached Paris and fell immediately
in love with the city. His passion was reading and foreign languages. He translated
ancient greek authors and produced 30 volumes of those translations. His main
preoccupation was with education. He encouraged rich greeks to multiply throught
Greece schools and libraries. Education would ensure not only the achievement
of independence but also the establishment of a proper constitution for the new
state.
A person that played a significant role
in the course of the revolution was the notorious Ali Pasha of Ioannina.
Ali was born in 1750 in Albania. Ali's family was a family of criminals and thieves.
The background of his childhood was the struggle for power at any cost, and the
ruthless elimination of opponents. He became guardian of passes derben aga
in 1778, for the whole central Greece Rumeli. He established a network
of armed bands and through illegal exactions and assassinations, he acquired a
fortune. In the following years Ali led his Albanian warriors on campaigns of
widespread pillaging and extortion. In 1784 he was appointed governor pashas
of Delbino and in 1787 governor of Ioannina. From this point he expanded his domain
to Rumeli, Albania and even to Peloponesse. He became the most powerfull local
despot. His ambitions were even to create an independent state with Albanians
and even Greeks as main elements of his state. This was a sparkle of hope for
greek subjects of the empire to become independent from the power of the Porte
Pili. Ali lived in a resplendently grand style which much impressed his
visitors. He owned dozens of palaces, had thousands of women in his harems, a
large network of spies and of course a powerful army. In this army he used many
greeks as Georgios Karaiskaikis and Odysseas Androutsos. Only one small mountainous area defied
Ali's power. And this was the Heroic Sulli. In 16th century, christians from
Epirus who couldn't tolerate turkish tyranny settled to mountains of Suli
(east of Parga harbour), where they fought against the oppressor remaing free
and independent. Suli lies over the river Acheron and lake Acherousia where
in the greek mythology was the pass for underworld Hades. Suliots had
as main occupation the stockbreeding and of course the war. Ali attacked Suli
many times without success. But suliiots with their brave leaders Georgius Botsares,
Lambros
Tzavelas, Dimos Drakos had always victories. Finally cracks in the solidarity
of the clans had begun to appear. Botsaris family came in quarrel with the Tzavellas
family. So in December 1803, after years of blockade, Suliots starving and exhausted,
fought their last battle. The monk
Samuel blowed himself with many suliots in the stronghold of Kughi.
Suliot women
jumped with their children from the rock of Zalongo,
in order to avoid capture by the Turks.
In 1820, Ali was a powerful man and Ioannina
a rich and prosperous city. But his star began to go down, when Sultan decide
to use force against him. This was the best time for greeks. The civil war between
turks that followed, gave the chance to Romeioi of Peloponesse and Rumeli
to start their insurrection. Sultan sent Ismael pasha to attack Ioannina. Greeks
backed Ali, so that the war could be prolonged as much as possible. Especially
Suliots who had previously escaped to Corfu, allied to Ali and with Markos Botsaris
and Georgios Drakos won many victories around Ioannina.
The sultan dismissed Ismael as commander and appointed Hurshit, pasha of Peloponese
- Morea as commnder of the forces against Ali. It took Hurshit a year
to bring Ali down, a year in which he was unable to spare any forces in the
crucial area of Morea. Ali was murdered in the Monastery of Aghios Panteleimon,
January 1822.
Bibliography
As Sultan Mehmet
II captured Constantinople in Tuesday 29 May 1453, marked the end of Hellenism
or Romiosini (Romania). Greeks (Hellenes) who in ancient times, developed
the best civilisation with names as Platon, Socrates, Aristotle, Hyppocrates,
Diogenes, Herodotus, Thoukidides, were now slaves. Greeks (Romaeoi), who in middle
ages with the glorious Eastern Empire protected the Christianity and the Greek
Civilisation from barbarians with names as Nicephorus Phocas, Basil II Bulgaroctonus,
Alexius Comnenus, were now in disgrace. Minor Asia the birthplace of philosophy,
Athina the birthplace of Democracy, Constantinople the center of Orthodoxy, Macedonia
the birthplace of Alexander the Great, Sparta the homeland of Leonidas were polluted
by the presence of the
asian savages.
fegge mou na perpato - Light me on my way to school
na pigaino sto scholio - Where to study I am free
na matheno grammata - And God's word is taught to me.
grammata spoudasmata
tou theou ta pragmata.
worked as tenants on land owned by an individual landlord or the state and they
had to pay taxes for the products they produced. Also Sultan guaranteed their
lives for a year as long as they paid the harach, the poll tax to the central
government while a major part of their taxes was seized by the corrupted civil
servants. The most glaring example of a local potentate was Ali
Pasha of Ioannina, who increased his private estates at the expense of the
long-suffering peasants. He used to put pressure on the villagers to sell to
him by driving them into debt at high interest rates through extraordinary exactions,
and also by quartering his Albanian soldiers in their houses. When the peasants
could no longer pay their debts, Ali made the village his chiftlik and the villagers
in effect his serfs. In 1821, Ali controlled 915 chiftliks. So Greeks fled many
to Europe, others to the mountains where they became brigands klephtes.
Deserted villages
became a common sight inside Ottoman Empire.
Shall we live alone like lions, on the top of mountains?-monahoi san liontaria
stis rahes, sta vouna?
na feugoume apo ton kosmon gia tin pikri sklavia, na hanoume adelfia, patrida
kai goneis,
tous filous, ta paidia mas kai olous tous siggeneis? No! better an hour of freedom,
than forty years as slaves-Kallio mias oras eleutheri zoi para saranta hronia
sklavia kai fylaki
In 14th September 1814 three Greeks in the port of Euxenus Pontus, Odessa, set
up a secret society whose aim was the liberation of Greece (Romiosini). The
names of the three founders were Nikolaos Skouphas, Athanasios Tsakalov and
Emmanuel Xanthos while the society was given the name of Friendly Association
Philiki Eteria. Their occupation was the commerce. Tsakalov had escaped
from Ioannina, when Alis had asked his mother to send him to the palace. The
first aim of the Philiki Eteria was to be secret because the spies and
the traitors were in large numbers inside the empire. The founders therefore
developed a number of codes. Kolokotronis was 118, Kapodistrias was the man
of good deeds, Tsar the philanthropist etc. Two things were indispensable: money
and members. The first to join was Anagnostopoulos and two rich brothers who
lived in Moscow, George And Panayiotis Sekeris. The founders recruited merchants
and rich expatriates abroad and many military leaders as Anagnostaras, Theodoros
Kolokotronis, Petrobeis Mavromichalis, priests like Papaflessas intellectuals
as Anthimos Gazis and only a woman and that was the shipowner Lascarina
Bubulina from Spetses. The obvious candidate to lead the Philiki Eteria,
was Ioannis Kapodistrias.
Kapodistrias was born in Kerkyra island or Corfu, in 1776. In 1808, he was invited
to St Petersburg and in 1815 he was appointed by Tsar Alexandros as foreign
minister. Kapodistrias was very well informed about the situation in Europe,
where the Holy Alliance, opposed to any revolutionary movement and was
sure that any greek attempt would fail with result the loss of lives of thousands
of innocent people. The alternative candidate was Alexandros
Ipsilantis, a gallant soldier who had lost an arm in Russian service, he
was very rich and was an aide-de-camp of the Tsar. He accepted immediately:I
would gladly make any sacrifice, even of my wealth or myself for my homeland
(patrida).
Constantine Paparhigopoulos - History of Helenic Nation
Spuridon Trikoupis - History of Greek Revolution
Christophoros Perrevos - History of Sulli
Lampros Koutsonikas - History of Sulli
Thanasis Petsalis Diomidis - Mavrolikoi
Fall of Constantinople - 400 years opression March 25, 1821 - The outbreak
Battles in Moreas - 1821 Battles in Roumeli, Epirus, Macedonia, Crete - The first Government
War at Sea - Hydra, Spetses, Psara Second year, battles in Epirus, Rumeli, Moreas - Dervenakia
Greeks divided - Death of Markos Mpotsaris Genocide of Kasos, Psara
Ibrahim's invasion - 1825 Exodus of Mesolonghion - Eleutheroi Poliorkimenoi
Yeorgios Karaiskakis Naval battle of Navarino - Arrival of Ioannes Kapodistrias
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