From the DW:
“Greece
celebrates 200 years of independence”
(French and US
warplanes have overflown Athens during a bicentennial marking the start of
Greek uprisings that led to independence from the former Turkish Ottoman Empire
in 1832.)
French and
American leaders renewed allegiance to Greece on Thursday as it marked 200
years since a fractious partisan revolt begun in 1821 led a decade later to
Greek independence. During Thursday's Athens flyover, security was tight, with
4,000 police deployed and spectators not allowed, aside from reporters. Nearly
400 years of Ottoman rule ceased in 1832 in what became Greece after European
powers backed Greek partisans, including leader Theodoros Kolokotronis,
culminating in treaties recognizing its statehood as a new Greek kingdom. A key
moment was in 1827 when intervening British, Russian and French warships beat a
Turkish-Egyptian fleet in the Bay of Navarino in the western Peloponnese. "Two
centuries ago, a handful of determined fighters in and outside Greece raised
the banner of independence," said Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos
Mitsotakis, referring to the 19th-century Greek revolts, joined by disparate
foreign adventurers and intellectuals known as the "Philhellenics." "With
the help of their allies, they fought heroically and won their freedom,"
said Mitsotakis as Athens was visited by Russian Prime Minister Mikhail
Mishustin, Britain's Prince Charles and French Defense Minister Florence Parly.
In an address via Greek television, US President Joe Biden said both the United
States and Greece "shared commitment to liberty, human rights and the rule
of law." French President Emmanuel Macron sent a message to Athens that
"we will stand by your side when history is unfair to you." His
apparent reference to Greek tensions with Turkey follows long-standing differences
between Athens and Ankara, including a row over seabed resources, and
long-divided Cyprus. Greek independence was eventually reached in 1832 after a
European powers' conference in London two years earlier and three so-called
Protocols of London. Among the "Philhellenists" was the
widely-traveled British Romantic-era literate Lord Byron who died during the
Greek independence struggle in 1824. Another was William Townshend Washington
who died of musket wounds in 1827 — reputedly a descendant of the USA's first
president.
'Plato under
their arm' Many volunteers "went there with Pausanias and Plato under
their arm" and stirred by sensational newspaper reports, said Konstantina
Zanou, a Mediterranean Studies specialist at Columbia University. They
included former Napoleonic soldiers, refugees and religious zealots, she added,
with Classical Greece passionately seen as a civilizing influence. Other
sympathizers were French novelist Victor Hugo, German poet Johann Wolfgang von
Goethe and Russian author Alexander Pushkin. On Greek independence, the
Ottoman Empire had extended through the Balkans and modern-day Turkey to North
Africa, the Arabian peninsula and the Caucasus.
^ It’s nice to
see Greece celebrate their 200th Anniversary of Independence. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/greece-celebrates-200-years-of-independence/a-56995342
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