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<strong>HISTORICAL</strong> <strong>DICTIONARIES</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>EUROPE</strong><br />

<strong>Jon</strong> <strong>Woronoff</strong>, <strong>Series</strong> Editor<br />

1. Portugal, by Douglas L. Wheeler. 1993. Out of print. See no. 40.<br />

2. Turkey, by Metin Heper. 1994. Out of print. See no. 38.<br />

3. Poland, by George Sanford and Adriana Gozdecka-Sanford. 1994.<br />

Out of print. See no. 41.<br />

4. Germany, by Wayne C. Thompson, Susan L. Thompson, and Juliet<br />

S. Thompson. 1994.<br />

5. Greece, by Thanos M. Veremis and Mark Dragoumis. 1995.<br />

6. Cyprus, by Stavros Panteli. 1995. Out of print. See no. 69.<br />

7. Sweden, by Irene Scobbie. 1995. Out of print. See no. 48.<br />

8. Finland, by George Maude. 1995. Out of print. See no. 49.<br />

9. Croatia, by Robert Stallaerts and Jeannine Laurens. 1995. Out of<br />

print. See no. 39.<br />

10. Malta, by Warren G. Berg. 1995.<br />

11. Spain, by Angel Smith. 1996. Out of print. See no. 65.<br />

12. Albania, by Raymond Hutchings. 1996. Out of print. See no. 42.<br />

13. Slovenia, by Leopoldina Plut-Pregelj and Carole Rogel. 1996. Out<br />

of print. See no. 56.<br />

14. Luxembourg, by Harry C. Barteau. 1996.<br />

15. Romania, by Kurt W. Treptow and Marcel Popa. 1996.<br />

16. Bulgaria, by Raymond Detrez. 1997. Out of print. See no. 46.<br />

17. United Kingdom: Volume 1, England and the United Kingdom;<br />

Volume 2, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, by Kenneth J.<br />

Panton and Keith A. Cowlard. 1997, 1998.<br />

18. Hungary, by Steven Béla Várdy. 1997.<br />

19. Latvia, by Andrejs Plakans. 1997.<br />

20. Ireland, by Colin Thomas and Avril Thomas. 1997.<br />

21. Lithuania, by Saulius Suziedelis. 1997.<br />

22. Macedonia, by Valentina Georgieva and Sasha Konechni. 1998.<br />

Out of print. See no. 68.<br />

23. The Czech State, by Jiri Hochman. 1998.<br />

24. Iceland, by Guđmunder Hálfdanarson. 1997. Out of print. See no.<br />

66.<br />

25. Bosnia and Herzegovina, by Ante Cuvalo. 1997. Out of print. See<br />

no. 57.<br />

26. Russia, by Boris Raymond and Paul Duffy. 1998.<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd i<br />

3/30/09 9:45:20 AM


27. Gypsies (Romanies), by Donald Kenrick. 1998. Out of print.<br />

28. Belarus, by Jan Zaprudnik. 1998.<br />

29. Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, by Zeljan Suster. 1999.<br />

30. France, by Gino Raymond. 1998. Out of print. See no. 64.<br />

31. Slovakia, by Stanislav J. Kirschbaum. 1998. Out of print. See no.<br />

47.<br />

32. Netherlands, by Arend H. Huussen Jr. 1998. Out of print. See no.<br />

55.<br />

33. Denmark, by Alastair H. Thomas and Stewart P. Oakley. 1998. Out<br />

of print. See no. 63.<br />

34. Modern Italy, by Mark F. Gilbert and K. Robert Nilsson. 1998. Out<br />

of print. See no. 58.<br />

35. Belgium, by Robert Stallaerts. 1999.<br />

36. Austria, by Paula Sutter Fichtner. 1999. Out of print. See No. 70.<br />

37. Republic of Moldova, by Andrei Brezianu. 2000. Out of print. See<br />

no. 52.<br />

38. Turkey, 2nd edition, by Metin Heper. 2002. Out of print. See no.<br />

67.<br />

39. Republic of Croatia, 2nd edition, by Robert Stallaerts. 2003.<br />

40. Portugal, 2nd edition, by Douglas L. Wheeler. 2002.<br />

41. Poland, 2nd edition, by George Sanford. 2003.<br />

42. Albania, New edition, by Robert Elsie. 2004.<br />

43. Estonia, by Toivo Miljan. 2004.<br />

44. Kosova, by Robert Elsie. 2004.<br />

45. Ukraine, by Zenon E. Kohut, Bohdan Y. Nebesio, and Myroslav<br />

Yurkevich. 2005.<br />

46. Bulgaria, 2nd edition, by Raymond Detrez. 2006.<br />

47. Slovakia, 2nd edition, by Stanislav J. Kirschbaum. 2006.<br />

48. Sweden, 2nd edition, by Irene Scobbie. 2006.<br />

49. Finland, 2nd edition, by George Maude. 2007.<br />

50. Georgia, by Alexander Mikaberidze. 2007.<br />

51. Belgium, 2nd edition, by Robert Stallaerts. 2007.<br />

52. Moldova, 2nd edition, by Andrei Brezianu and Vlad Spânu. 2007.<br />

53. Switzerland, by Leo Schelbert. 2007.<br />

54. Contemporary Germany, by Derek Lewis with Ulrike Zitzlsperger.<br />

2007.<br />

55. Netherlands, 2nd edition, by Joop W. Koopmans and Arend H.<br />

Huussen Jr. 2007.<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd ii<br />

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56. Slovenia, 2nd edition, by Leopoldina Plut-Pregelj and Carole Rogel.<br />

2007.<br />

57. Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2nd edition, by Ante Čuvalo. 2007.<br />

58. Modern Italy, 2nd edition, by Mark F. Gilbert and K. Robert Nilsson.<br />

2007.<br />

59. Belarus, 2nd edition, by Vitali Silitski and Jan Zaprudnik. 2007.<br />

60. Latvia, 2nd edition, by Andrejs Plakans. 2008.<br />

61. Contemporary United Kingdom, by Kenneth J. Panton and Keith<br />

A. Cowlard. 2008.<br />

62. Norway, by Jan Sjåvik. 2008.<br />

63. Denmark, 2nd edition, by Alastair H. Thomas. 2009.<br />

64. France, 2nd edition, by Gino Raymond. 2008.<br />

65. Spain, 2nd edition, by Angel Smith. 2008.<br />

66. Iceland, 2nd edition, by Guđmunder Hálfdanarson. 2009.<br />

67. Turkey, 3rd edition, by Metin Heper and Nur Bilge Criss. 2009.<br />

68. Republic of Macedonia, by Dimitar Bechev. 2009.<br />

69. Cyprus, by Farid Mirbagheri. 2009.<br />

70. Austria, 2nd edition, by Paula Sutter Fichtner, 2009.<br />

71. Modern Greece, by Dimitris Keridis, 2009.<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd iii<br />

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09_152_01_Front.indd iv<br />

3/30/09 9:45:22 AM


Historical Dictionary of<br />

Modern Greece<br />

Dimitris Keridis<br />

Historical Dictionaries of Europe, No. 71<br />

The Scarecrow Press, Inc.<br />

Lanham, Maryland • Toronto • Plymouth, UK<br />

2009<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd v<br />

3/30/09 9:45:22 AM


SCARECROW PRESS, INC.<br />

Published in the United States of America<br />

by Scarecrow Press, Inc.<br />

A wholly owned subsidiary of<br />

The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc.<br />

4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200, Lanham, Maryland 20706<br />

www.scarecrowpress.com<br />

Estover Road<br />

Plymouth PL6 7PY<br />

United Kingdom<br />

Copyright © 2009 by Dimitris Keridis<br />

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,<br />

stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any<br />

means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise,<br />

without the prior permission of the publisher.<br />

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available<br />

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data<br />

Keridis, Dimitris.<br />

Historical dictionary of modern Greece / Dimitris Keridis.<br />

p. cm. — (Historical dictionaries of Europe ; No. 71)<br />

Includes bibliographical references.<br />

ISBN 978-0-8108-5998-2 (cloth : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-8108-6312-5<br />

(ebook)<br />

1. Greece–History–1821—Dictionaries. 2. Greece–Politics and government–<br />

1821—Dictionaries. I. Title.<br />

DF802.K47 2009<br />

949.5003–dc22 2009001203<br />

The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of<br />

American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper<br />

for Printed Library Materials, ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992.<br />

Manufactured in the United States of America.<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd vi<br />

3/30/09 9:45:23 AM


To Roula and all my teachers<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd vii<br />

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09_152_01_Front.indd viii<br />

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Contents<br />

Editor’s Foreword <strong>Jon</strong> <strong>Woronoff</strong><br />

xi<br />

Preface<br />

xiii<br />

Acronyms and Abbreviations<br />

xvii<br />

Maps<br />

xix<br />

1. Map of Ancient Greece<br />

2. Political Map of Greece<br />

3. Road Map of Greece<br />

Chronology<br />

xxiii<br />

Introduction<br />

xxxiii<br />

THE DICTIONARY 1<br />

Appendixes<br />

A. Kings of Greece (1833–1973) 175<br />

B. Presidents of Greece (1828–2008) 177<br />

C. Prime Ministers of Modern Greece (1833–2008) 179<br />

D. National Election Results in Greece (1946–2007) 185<br />

E. Basic Data on Greece 193<br />

F. Economic Statistical Charts 203<br />

Graph 1. Greece: GDP<br />

Graph 2. Greece: GDP per Capita<br />

Graph 3. Greece: Inflation<br />

ix<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd ix<br />

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x • CONTENTS<br />

Graph 4. Greece: Public Deficit<br />

Graph 5. Greece: Imports and Export<br />

Graph 6. Greece: Public Debt<br />

Bibliography 207<br />

About the Author 253<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd x<br />

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Editor’s Foreword<br />

Few countries have as glorious a past as Greece, due both to the prowess<br />

and the culture of its ancient city-states as well as its status as the<br />

center of the Byzantine Empire. Its subsequent history, alas, was less<br />

impressive: domination by the Ottoman Empire for centuries and a succession<br />

of periodic crises as an independent state. Only more recently<br />

has it come into its own once again. It is a significant member of the<br />

European Union and has finally overcome its role as a peripheral nation<br />

now that its traditional hinterland has been freed of Soviet domination<br />

and as closer relations are developing with its old foe, Turkey. This sea<br />

change means that Greece is now far more than just a vacation spot; it<br />

has become a country that, although small, is playing an enhanced role<br />

in Europe. However, this transformation is not generally appreciated,<br />

and present-day Greece is still far less known and understood than it<br />

deserves. It is thus helpful to have a fully new Historical Dictionary of<br />

Modern Greece that can inform readers about the new Greece while still<br />

reflecting the history of Greece in earlier times.<br />

This particular volume deals mainly with the present state and provides<br />

a well-rounded approach. It starts with a particularly helpful list<br />

of acronyms. Then the chronology traces the major events that have<br />

shaped the country. The broader context is described in an introduction<br />

that deals not only with its geography and population, its history and<br />

politics, but also with its economy. The core of the book is a dictionary<br />

section that provides further information on significant persons,<br />

kings and presidents, soldiers and politicians, writers and musicians,<br />

as well as major historical events, the basic political institutions and<br />

parties, and important aspects of its religion and culture. But it also<br />

traces Greece’s roots and, wherever appropriate, the book looks much<br />

further back, dealing with ancient Greece and the Byzantine Empire.<br />

xi<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xi<br />

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xii • EDITOR’S FOREWORD<br />

Further information on major topics can then be sought in the selective<br />

bibliography.<br />

It is important for the author of such a historical dictionary to see the<br />

country both from within and without, so as to understand better what<br />

outsiders want to know and be able to convey this information cogently.<br />

Dimitris Keridis certainly fits the bill. A Greek himself, he studied in<br />

Greece and received a JD from the Law School of the Aristotelian<br />

University of Thessaloniki. He then obtained his PhD from the Fletcher<br />

School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in the United States,<br />

where he also served as the Constantine Karamanlis Associate Professor<br />

in Hellenic and Southeastern European Studies, after serving as director<br />

of the Kokkalis Program and also as a lecturer of Balkan Studies<br />

at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.<br />

At present, he is an associate professor of international politics at the<br />

University of Macedonia in Thessaloniki and a senior associate at the<br />

Karamanlis Foundation in Athens. His main research interests—all of<br />

which were crucial for this book—include foreign policy, European<br />

politics, nationalism, and democracy. He has written widely, most of<br />

this relating to Greece, although his latest book deals with U.S. foreign<br />

policy.<br />

<strong>Jon</strong> <strong>Woronoff</strong><br />

<strong>Series</strong> Editor<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xii<br />

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Preface<br />

Writing a historical dictionary is an exercise in abstraction, parsimony,<br />

and simplification. Having to choose what to include and what to omit<br />

from a vast historical record is the primary, but not the only, challenge.<br />

Each entry should be autonomous and self-contained and yet, there<br />

needs to be an underlying narrative that connects the whole work and<br />

provides an inexperienced reader with a coherent picture of the subject<br />

in its totality.<br />

A historical dictionary written in English for an international audience<br />

carries a great, almost unbearable, responsibility. How to speak<br />

about modern Greece to people who know very little about it? How to<br />

explain and make it comprehensible, with the necessary nuances and<br />

complexities involved, in a very limited space? No matter how hard<br />

one tries, there simply can be no perfect outcome that will meet every<br />

reader’s need, as the historical record is far from settled, the debate<br />

underlying many of the subjects remains lively and controversial, and<br />

current power struggles influence and revise our historical memory.<br />

This is not a project for the fainthearted or for the academician who<br />

prefers to play it safe, who deals with obscure subjects about which<br />

few people care and about which even fewer people will fight. This is<br />

an opportunity, rare for most university professors, to engage a broader<br />

public having in mind an appreciation of the politics and the historicity<br />

involved. This work is a product of its time, conditioned by current<br />

understanding of the subject’s history and, thus, different from similar<br />

works written in the past or those that will be written in the future.<br />

Furthermore, a dictionary is created for a general audience but must<br />

withstand the criticism of connoisseurs, including the professional historian.<br />

The latter may be quick to question why this historical dictionary<br />

is written by a political scientist and an international relations expert.<br />

To answer this, one must remember what a historical dictionary is not.<br />

xiii<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xiii<br />

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xiv • PREFACE<br />

It is not simply based on years of archival research of primary sources.<br />

On the contrary, a dictionary should take full advantage of and include<br />

the works of others, especially—but not exclusively—historians. After<br />

all, some of the most interesting studies on various aspects of modern<br />

Greece have been written not by historians but by other social scientists.<br />

In a sense, a historical dictionary is a political synthesis based on prioritizing<br />

choices. A dictionary of this kind is about a rereading of history<br />

that is already available while contextualizing this history and drawing<br />

parallels with cases elsewhere in the world.<br />

While remaining factual in content and dry in style, this historical<br />

dictionary does not refrain from acknowledging the politics involved.<br />

On the contrary, it consciously strives to challenge many of the established<br />

truths about modern Greece, based on the results of new research<br />

conducted by many talented colleagues, while adapting theunderstanding<br />

of Greece to the changing times.<br />

There were three primary ambitions that underwrote this project.<br />

First, I intend to put modern Greece in context and study it through<br />

a historical perspective and comparative framework. As is the case<br />

elsewhere, Greece may have some unique characteristics, but it shares<br />

many traits and comparable trajectories with its neighbors and countries<br />

of a similar background. Greece is a successor nation-state of the Ottoman<br />

Empire, created in the early 19th century through the interplay of<br />

an evolving Greek nationalism, the crisis of the Ottoman state, and the<br />

intervention of great powers.<br />

Second, I hope to distance the dictionary’s narrative from the stereotypes<br />

of Greek public history. The latter is today mainly composed of<br />

a conventional nationalist history and a post-1960s leftist critique. The<br />

two have powerfully amalgamated into a series of established truths that<br />

view Greece as the perennial victim of history, of unscrupulous foreigners<br />

and their domestic collaborators, while understanding its history as<br />

a succession of conspiracies. In this work, the Greeks and their state are<br />

no longer simply the objects of history. On the contrary, their agency,<br />

as subjects rather than objects of history, is restored. They have a say,<br />

often decisive, in their destiny.<br />

Third, although this work’s focus has been the state and its politics,<br />

an effort has been made to broaden the study of modern Greece to<br />

encompass various aspects of its society, including the economy, arts,<br />

and culture. After all, modern Greece is internationally known not as<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xiv<br />

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PREFACE • xv<br />

much for the achievements of the Greek state but for the success of a<br />

few ambitious and talented individuals in various fields, from shipping<br />

to opera to poetry.<br />

This is work was written over the course of a year but was in the<br />

making for many years, as my thinking continued to slowly evolve and<br />

be cross-fertilized with the acquaintance of foreign lands with which the<br />

Greek experience can be juxtaposed in order to be better understood.<br />

In this journey, studying, researching, and teaching in the United States<br />

for 12 years was a great help. I am particularly grateful for the generous<br />

opportunities given to me as the director of the Kokkalis Program on<br />

Southeastern and East-Central Europe at the John F. Kennedy School<br />

of Government, Harvard University, and, later, as the Constantine<br />

Karamanlis Associate Professor in Hellenic and Southeastern European<br />

Studies at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University.<br />

After all, having to explain Greece to a foreign audience presupposes a<br />

certain understanding of the codes and language of the audience. Furthermore,<br />

having written a doctoral dissertation on neighboring Serbia<br />

was a useful mirror for understanding Greece. It was there and then that<br />

the Greek condition came into perspective for me.<br />

This historical dictionary could not have been written without the<br />

support and guidance of many individuals. I would like to thank in particular<br />

the series editor, <strong>Jon</strong> <strong>Woronoff</strong>; my assistant, Theodoros Vavikis,<br />

who worked tirelessly and without complaint on collecting much<br />

of the data used; Annette Rondos for her superb editorial skills that<br />

improved the quality of the written text; and Aggeliki Anagnostopoulou<br />

for the graphs she created. Some of the many thinkers who contributed<br />

to this work, over the course of many years, are S. Bazzaz, H. Berktay,<br />

D. Chigas, T. Coloumbis, A. Evin, M. Glenny, M. Herzfeld, C. Kafadar,<br />

S. Kalyvas, D. Kiskira, P. Kitromilides, S. Kromidas, I. Lalatsis, L.<br />

Martin, K. Nicolaides, E. Papoulias, R. Pfaltzgraff, E. Prodromou, M.<br />

Protic, P. Roilos, A. Rondos, K. Svolopoulos, M. Todorova, L. Tsoukalis,<br />

N. Tzavella, I. Varakis, E. Voutira, and K. Yfantis.<br />

I would like to dedicate this dictionary to my teachers and to my<br />

critics—the former for everything they taught me and the latter for the<br />

motivation to work harder. This is a work that belongs to everybody<br />

interested in Greece. Mine is a country endowed with stunning natural<br />

beauty, an ancient culture, a vibrant lifestyle, and a rich historical<br />

record that, despite its controversies, includes many achievements and<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xv<br />

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xvi • PREFACE<br />

experiences that are relevant to many nations, and increasing the worth<br />

of knowing and studying Greece.<br />

Dimitris Keridis<br />

Thessaloniki, September 2008<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xvi<br />

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Acronyms and Abbreviations<br />

AKEL<br />

CAP<br />

DEH<br />

DSE<br />

EAM<br />

EC/EU<br />

EDA<br />

EDES<br />

EDIK<br />

EKKA<br />

ELAS<br />

EMU<br />

EOKA<br />

ERE<br />

FF<br />

FYROM<br />

GDP<br />

Anorthotiko Komma Ergazomenou Laou (Progressive<br />

Party of the Working People, PPWP—Communist Party<br />

of Cyprus)<br />

Common Agricultural Policy<br />

Dimosia Epihirisi Hilektrismou (Public Power Company,<br />

PPC)<br />

Dimokratikos Stratos Elladas (Democratic Army of Greece,<br />

DAG)<br />

Ethniko Apeleftherotiko Metopo (National Liberation<br />

Front, NLF)<br />

European Community/European Union<br />

Eniaia Dimokratiki Aristera (Unified Democratic Left,<br />

UDL)<br />

Ethnikos Dimokratikos Ellinikos Syndesmos (National<br />

Democratic Greek Link, NDGL)<br />

Enosi Dimokratikou Kentrou (Union of the Democratic<br />

Center, UDC)<br />

Ethniki Kai Koinoniki Apeleftherosi (National and Social<br />

Liberation, NSL)<br />

Ellinikos Laikos Apeleftherotikos Stratos (National Peoples’<br />

Liberation Army, NPLA)<br />

Economic and Monetary Union<br />

Ethniki Organosi Kyprion Agoniston (National Organization<br />

of Cypriot Fighters, NOCF)<br />

Ethniki Rizospastiki Enosis (National Radical Union,<br />

NRU)<br />

Finos Films<br />

Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia<br />

Gross domestic product<br />

xvii<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xvii<br />

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xviii • ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS<br />

GSEE<br />

ICJ<br />

KEA<br />

KKE<br />

NATO<br />

NBG<br />

ND<br />

NGO<br />

OECD<br />

PAK<br />

PASOK<br />

PEEA<br />

PLO<br />

PPC<br />

SEKE<br />

SYN<br />

SYRIZA<br />

UN<br />

Geniki Synomospondia Ergaton Ellados (General Confederation<br />

of Workers of Greece, GCWG)<br />

International Court of Justice<br />

Kinima Ethnikis Amynis (Movement of National Defense,<br />

MND)<br />

Kommounistiko Komma Elladas (Communist Party of<br />

Greece, CPG)<br />

North Atlantic Treaty Organization<br />

National Bank of Greece<br />

Nea Dimokratia (New Democracy)<br />

Nongovernmental Organization<br />

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development<br />

Panellinio Apelftherotiko Kinima (Panhellenic Liberation<br />

Movement, PLM)<br />

Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima (Panhellenic Socialist<br />

Movement)<br />

Politiki Epitropi Ethnikis Apeleftherosis (Political Committee<br />

of National Liberation, PCNL)<br />

Palestinian Liberation Organization<br />

Public Power Company (Dimosia Epihirisi Hilektrismou,<br />

DEH)<br />

Sosialistiko Ergatiko Komma Elladas (Socialist Labor<br />

Party of Greece, SLP)<br />

Synaspismos [tis Aristeras kai tis Proodou] (Coalition [of<br />

the Left and Progress])<br />

Synaspismos tis Rizospastikis Aristeras (Coalition of the<br />

Radical Left, CRL)<br />

United Nations<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xviii<br />

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Map 1. Map of Ancient Greece<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xix<br />

3/30/09 9:45:26 AM


Map 2. Political Map of Greece<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xx<br />

3/30/09 9:45:26 AM


Map 3.<br />

Road Map of Greece<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xxi<br />

3/30/09 9:45:27 AM


09_152_01_Front.indd xxii<br />

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Chronology<br />

3000–2000 BC An early Bronze Age civilization emerges in the Cyclades,<br />

in the southern Aegean.<br />

2700–1450 BC The Minoan civilization flourishes in Crete.<br />

1600–1100 BC The first Greek civilization, a late Bronze Age civilization<br />

called Mycenaean, dominates southern Greece and Crete.<br />

1100–800 BC Following the Dorian invasion from the north, the Mycenaean<br />

civilization collapses and Greece enters what historians have<br />

called a Dark Age.<br />

900–500 BCA network of Greek city-states emerges; the geometric<br />

period is succeeded by the archaic before giving rise to the classical age<br />

in the 5th century BC.<br />

776 BC First recorded Olympic Games held in Greece.<br />

508 BC Kleisthenes, completing previous reforms by Solon, democratizes<br />

the constitution of Athens.<br />

490 BC Battle of Marathon, the first of the Persian Wars, is won by<br />

the Athenians in spite of being outnumbered by the Persians.<br />

480 BC Athenian fleet defeats Persian King Xerxes at the naval battle<br />

of Salamina.<br />

479 BC Remaining Persian army defeated at the battle of Platea.<br />

431 BC The Peloponnesian War breaks out between Athens and<br />

Sparta and their respective allies. It lasts for 27 years and ends in 404<br />

BC when Athens sues for peace and Sparta abolishes Athenian democracy.<br />

xxiii<br />

09_152_01_Front.indd xxiii<br />

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xxiv • CHRONOLOGY<br />

334 BC Alexander the Great embarks on his campaign to Asia and<br />

defeats the Persian army at the River of Granicus.<br />

323 BC Alexander the Great dies in Babylon, having established an<br />

empire reaching the Indus River.<br />

149 BC Allied Greek forces are defeated by the Romans at the battle<br />

of Corinth, and Greece falls under the Roman control.<br />

330 AD Roman Empire’s capital moves from Rome to Byzantium,<br />

under Emperor Constantine I, marking the beginning of the Byzantine<br />

Empire.<br />

1054 AD Christian Church is divided into the Catholic Church<br />

(headed by the pope in the Vatican) and the Orthodox Church (headed<br />

by the ecumenical patriarch in Constantinople).<br />

1024 AD Capture of Constantinople by the Fourth Crusade.<br />

1453 AD Fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans and the end of the<br />

Byzantine Empire.<br />

1774 AD Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca between the Russian Empress<br />

Catherine II and the sultan of the Ottoman Empire, providing trading<br />

privileges and certain freedoms to Orthodox citizens of the Ottoman<br />

Empire.<br />

1780–1820 Greek Enlightenment spreads throughout southeastern<br />

Europe, preparing the ground for the Greek War of Independence.<br />

1821 War of Independence, organized by Filiki Eteria, breaks out<br />

simultaneously in Peloponnesus, Greece, and Vlachia, Romania. The<br />

ecumenical patriarch is executed by the Ottomans on Easter Day.<br />

1822 First constitution of independent modern Greece is proclaimed.<br />

1827 Joint Ottoman–Egyptian fleet is defeated by the allied British–French–Russian<br />

fleet during the naval battle at Navarino, in southwestern<br />

Peloponnesus.<br />

1828 Arrival of Count Ioannis Capodistrias in Greece as the first<br />

president of the country.<br />

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1829 At the conclusion of a Russo–Turkish war, the Treaty of Adrianople<br />

is signed between Russia and the Ottoman Empire, guaranteeing<br />

the autonomy of Greece.<br />

1830 3 February: London Protocol is established, in which independent<br />

Greece is recognized by Great Britain, France, and Russia.<br />

1831 Assassination of Ioannis Capodistrias in the first capital of<br />

Greece, Nafplio.<br />

1833 Otto Wittelsbach of Bavaria, the first king of Greece, arrives in<br />

the country. Greek Orthodox Church declares its independence from the<br />

Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.<br />

1843 A popular revolt demanding a constitution from King Otto takes<br />

place in front of the royal palace.<br />

1844 Greece is declared a constitutional monarchy.<br />

1854 During the Crimean War, the port of Piraeus is blocked by British<br />

and French troops to impose neutrality on Greece.<br />

1862 King Otto is ousted and leaves Greece.<br />

1863 Prince George Glücksburg of Denmark becomes the new king.<br />

1864 Britain cedes the Ionian Islands to Greece. Greece is declared a<br />

crowned democracy.<br />

1866–1869 An uprising in Crete against Ottoman rule fails to free the<br />

island.<br />

1871 Nonlegitimized peasant landowners are granted legal title<br />

deeds.<br />

1875 King George declares his respect for the sovereignty of Parliament<br />

(Arhi Tis Dedilomenis).<br />

1881 The provinces of Thessaly and Arta are added to the Greek<br />

state.<br />

1896 Greece becomes involved in the Cretan rebellion against Ottoman<br />

rule.<br />

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xxvi • CHRONOLOGY<br />

1897 Greek forces, led by Prince Constantine I, are defeated by the<br />

Ottoman army in Thessaly.<br />

1903 Outbreak of the Macedonian struggle against the Bulgarian<br />

rebels.<br />

1908 Outbreak of the Young Turks’ revolution in Thessaloniki.<br />

1909 Revolt by the Military League in Goudi, Athens, results in parliamentary<br />

reforms. Eleftherios Venizelos arrives in Greece.<br />

1910 Venizelos prevails in the national elections and begins implementing<br />

his reform program.<br />

1911 Following the war in Libya, Italy occupies the Dodecanese<br />

islands.<br />

1912 Venizelos’ Liberal Party wins the national elections. First Balkan<br />

War: Greece enters into alliances with Bulgaria, Serbia, and Montenegro<br />

against the Ottoman Empire.<br />

1913 Second Balkan War: Bulgaria against Greece and the Balkan<br />

allies. King George is assassinated in Thessaloniki. King Constantine I<br />

becomes king. 30 May: Treaty of London. 10 August: Peace Treaty of<br />

Bucharest. Both treaties add Crete, Macedonia, Epirus, and the eastern<br />

Aegean Islands to Greece.<br />

1915 The National Schism (Ethnikos Dihasmos) begins, following a<br />

disagreement between Prime Minister Venizelos and King Constantine<br />

I on Greece’s participation in World War I.<br />

1916 Venizelos establishes a revolutionary government in Thessaloniki<br />

and enters World War I.<br />

1917 King Constantine I is forced to abdicate and his second son,<br />

Alexander, becomes king. Venizelos returns to Athens, and his government<br />

establishes its authority over the whole of Greece.<br />

1918 The end of World War I finds Greece among the victors.<br />

1919 15 May: At the invitation of the Allies, Greek forces land in<br />

western Asia Minor and occupy Smyrna (Izmir); the three-year Greek<br />

campaign in Asia Minor begins. 27 November: With the Treaty of<br />

Neuilly, Greece is awarded western Thrace from Bulgaria.<br />

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1920 10 August: The Treaty of Sèvres is signed; Greece acquires<br />

eastern Thrace up to the outskirts of Istanbul, along the Chatalja line,<br />

the Aegean islands of Imvros and Tenedos, and the temporary command<br />

of the Smyrna (Izmir) district. 25 October: King Alexander dies.<br />

1 November: Venizelos is defeated in the national elections, followed<br />

by the return of King Constantine I to the throne.<br />

1922 Greek forces are defeated in Asia Minor and withdraw to the<br />

islands of eastern Aegean. Smyrna (Izmir) is burned and the Greek<br />

population suffers heavily from reprisals by Turkish nationalists; survivors<br />

escape to Greece. A military coup ousts King Constantine I. 27<br />

September: George II becomes king.<br />

1923 24 July: Treaty of Lausanne establishes Greece and Turkey’s<br />

boundaries and imposes an exchange of populations; approximately 1.5<br />

million refugees arrive in Greece.<br />

1924 Greece is declared a republic. 25 March: George II steps<br />

down.<br />

1925–1926 General Theodoros Pangalos establishes a short-lived<br />

dictatorship.<br />

1928–1932 Venizelos’ last term in power.<br />

1933 Popular Party wins the elections.<br />

CHRONOLOGY • xxvii<br />

1935 1 March: An antiroyalist preemptive coup fails. 10 October:<br />

A royalist coup succeeds. 3 November: George II is recalled to the<br />

Greek throne.<br />

1936 4 August: George II agrees to the suspension of the constitution,<br />

which permits Prime Minister Ioannis Metaxas to establish a<br />

dictatorship.<br />

1940 28 October: Fascist Italy declares war against Greece. Greek<br />

army achieves significant victories on the Albanian front<br />

1941 6 April: German forces invade Greece, occupy the country, and<br />

attack Crete. George II, the royal family, and part of the Greek army<br />

move to Egypt, where a government in exile is established. Greece is<br />

occupied by German, Italian, and Bulgarian forces.<br />

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xxviii • CHRONOLOGY<br />

1943 Following the surrender of Italy, hostilities between left- and<br />

right-wing resistance organizations intensify.<br />

1944 The Germans leave. The communists try to occupy Athens but<br />

fail.<br />

1946 The right wins the first postwar elections, helped by the abstention<br />

of the communists. George II returns to Greece.<br />

1946–1949 Greek Civil War between the communists and government<br />

forces comprised of royalists and liberals and supported by Britain<br />

and the United States.<br />

1947 Under the Treaty of Paris, the Dodecanese islands are ceded to<br />

Greece. The Truman Doctrine provides massive aid to Greece. 1 April:<br />

George II dies and is succeeded by his brother Paul.<br />

1952 Greece enters the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).<br />

Marshal Alexandros Papagos’ conservatives win the elections.<br />

1955 The crisis in Cyprus escalates and provokes an anti-Greek<br />

pogrom in Istanbul. Papagos dies and is succeeded by Konstantinos<br />

Karamanlis.<br />

1956 Karamanlis’ National Radical Union wins the national election.<br />

1957 Cypriot struggle for union with Greece reaches its peak and<br />

British authorities of Cyprus deport Archbishop Makarios to the Seychelles.<br />

1958 Karamanlis’ National Radical Union wins the national election<br />

for the second time, while the communist-controlled Unified Democratic<br />

Left comes second.<br />

1959 Greece applies to the European Community (EC) for associate<br />

membership. The London–Zurich Agreements providing for an independent<br />

Cyprus are signed.<br />

1960 Cyprus gains its independence. Archbishop Makarios becomes<br />

president and Dr. Fazil Küçük vice president.<br />

1961 Karamanlis’ National Radical Union wins the national election<br />

for the third time. Papandreou, leader of the Center Union Party (Enosis<br />

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CHRONOLOGY • xxix<br />

Kentrou), dismisses the results as the product of a dishonest election<br />

and inaugurates an unyielding (anendotos) struggle against Karamanlis’<br />

government.<br />

1963 Papandreou’s Center Union wins a plurality in the national<br />

elections. Outbreak of violence in Cyprus between Greek-Cypriots<br />

and Turkish-Cypriots. Karamanlis resigns from politics and leaves for<br />

Paris.<br />

1964 Papandreou’s Center Union wins in landslide elections. 6<br />

March: King Paul dies and, his son, Constantine II, becomes king.<br />

1965 Quarrel between King Constantine II and Prime Minister Papandreou<br />

leads to the prime minister’s resignation and political instability.<br />

1967 21 April: A group of colonels establish a military dictatorship<br />

in a bloodless coup. 13 December: King Constantine II leaves Greece<br />

after failing to end the junta.<br />

1973 Unsuccessful coup by the navy against the regime. The army<br />

suppresses a student uprising at the Polytechnio, the Athens Engineering<br />

School. A coup within the coup ends the junta’s attempt at liberalization<br />

and strengthens the hard-liners.<br />

1974 The Greek junta organizes a coup in Cyprus that deposes but<br />

fails to kill Archbishop Makarios. Turkey invades Cyprus, leading to<br />

the collapse of the military regime and the restoration of democracy<br />

in Greece. Karamanlis returns from Paris as leader of a government of<br />

national unity. The Communist Party of Greece becomes legal. 17 November:<br />

Karamanlis wins in a landslide national election with his new<br />

party, New Democracy. 8 December: In a referendum, Greece votes in<br />

favor of a republic.<br />

1975 The 1952 Constitution is replaced. Parliament elects Konstantinos<br />

Tsatos as president.<br />

1976 Turkish survey ship explores for oil in the continental shelf<br />

claimed by Greece, causing a new crisis in Greek–Turkish relations.<br />

1977 Karamanlis’ New Democracy Party wins the national election.<br />

1979 Karamanlis signs the treaty of Greece’s accession to the EC.<br />

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xxx • CHRONOLOGY<br />

1980 Karamanlis resigns from the premiership and becomes president<br />

of the republic. George Rallis becomes prime minister.<br />

1981 Greece enters the EC. 18 October: The Panhellenic Socialist<br />

Movement of Andreas Papandreou wins in a landslide national election.<br />

1983 The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, recognized only by<br />

Turkey, is proclaimed.<br />

1984 Konstantinos Mitsotakis is elected leader of the New Democracy<br />

Party, succeeding Evangelos Averoff.<br />

1985 Resignation of Karamanlis and election of Christos Sartzetakis<br />

as president. 2 June: The Panhellenic Socialist Movement wins the<br />

election.<br />

1986 In the municipal elections, New Democracy wins in Greece’s<br />

three major cities, including Athens.<br />

1987 Greece and Albania formally put an end to the 47-year “state of<br />

war” between them. A crisis develops between Greece and Turkey over<br />

oil-drilling rights in Aegean waters.<br />

1988 Prime Ministers Papandreou of Greece and Turgut Özal of Turkey<br />

meet in Davos, Switzerland, to discuss Greek–Turkish relations.<br />

1989 18 June: Papandreou loses the elections and is ousted from<br />

power. The inconclusive results lead to an unprecedented coalition<br />

government under New Democracy deputy Tzannis Tzanetakis with<br />

the support of the Communist Party of Greece. 5 November: New Democracy<br />

comes first in elections but fails to win a majority. An all-party<br />

government is formed under banker Xenophon Zolotas.<br />

1990 8 April: New Democracy, under Mitsotakis, wins the national<br />

election with a marginal parliamentary majority. Karamanlis becomes<br />

president of the republic.<br />

1991 8 September: The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia<br />

(FYROM) declares its independence. The foreign ministers of the EC<br />

decide that, before granting recognition to FYROM, the country should<br />

“adopt constitutional and political guarantees ensuring that it has no<br />

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CHRONOLOGY • xxxi<br />

territorial claims towards a neighboring Community state,” implying<br />

Greece.<br />

1992 Greek foreign policy focuses on the Balkan conflict. Economic<br />

immigrants from Albania and the former Soviet Union start arriving in<br />

Greece in great numbers.<br />

1993 9 September: At the instigation of former foreign minister<br />

Andonis Samaras, the government falls. 10 October: Papandreou’s<br />

Panhellenic Socialist Movement wins the national election. Miltiades<br />

Evert succeeds Mitsotakis as leader of New Democracy.<br />

1994 Greece imposes a full trade embargo on FYROM in order to<br />

force the country to abandon its claims over the name “Macedonia.”<br />

1995 Karamanlis completes his second presidential term and retires<br />

from politics. Konstantinos Stephanopoulos is elected president of<br />

the republic. After pressures from the EC, the embargo on FYROM is<br />

lifted. An Interim Agreement is signed between the two countries with<br />

U.S. mediation. Papandreou is hospitalized following a serious deterioration<br />

of his health.<br />

1996 17 January: Papandreou resigns from the premiership and is<br />

succeeded by Kostas Simitis. U.S. intervention diffuses another crisis<br />

between Greece and Turkey over Imia (Kardak), an Aegean islet.<br />

23 June: Papandreou dies. 22 September: The Panhellenic Socialist<br />

Movement, led by Kostas Simitis, wins the national election.<br />

1997 Kostas Karamanlis, nephew of the retired president, is elected<br />

president of the New Democracy Party.<br />

1999 Kurdish PPK leader Abdulah Otsalan (Abdullah Ocalan) is arrested<br />

by Turkish intelligence on his way out of the Greek embassy in<br />

Nairobi, Kenya. Greece provides aid to FYROM during the Kosovo<br />

crisis. Devastating earthquakes in Istanbul and Athens contribute to a<br />

Greek–Turkish rapprochement. The European Council of the European<br />

Union (EU) meets in Helsinki and, with Greek support, officially recognizes<br />

Turkey as a candidate for full membership.<br />

2000 The Panhellenic Socialist Party, led by Simitis, narrowly wins<br />

the national election for the second time. Stephanopoulos is reelected<br />

president of the republic.<br />

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xxxii • CHRONOLOGY<br />

2001 Greece enters the Economic Monetary Union (EMU). Greece<br />

supports FYROM’s integrity during its ethnic crisis.<br />

2004 Georgios Papandreou, son of Andreas, is elected president of<br />

the Panhellenic Socialist Party. 7 March: New Democracy, led by<br />

Karamanlis, wins the election. Greek-Cypriots overwhelmingly reject<br />

the Annan Plan of the United Nations for the reunification of the island.<br />

The Republic of Cyprus enters the EU. Greece successfully hosts the<br />

2004 Olympic Games.<br />

2005 Karolos Papoulias is elected president of the republic.<br />

2007 16 September: New Democracy, led by Karamanlis, wins<br />

reelection. After a tough intraparty struggle, Papandreou is reelected<br />

president of the Panhellenic Socialist Party Movement.<br />

2008 Following the failure to reach a compromise with FYROM,<br />

Greece vetoes its neighbor’s entry into NATO.<br />

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Introduction<br />

Located in the southernmost tip of the Balkan Peninsula in Europe’s<br />

southeast, Greece is a small country of some 11 million people. It is<br />

also a fairly young country, founded in 1830, although it has a long<br />

history. This is where much of Europe’s civilization emerged from and<br />

later flourished as evidenced by the cultural, political, and scientific<br />

achievements of classical Hellas. Organized around self-governed<br />

city-states, ancient Greece expanded its influence across much of the<br />

Mediterranean before succumbing to the unifying force of Macedonia.<br />

Its king, Alexander the Great, defeated the Persian Empire and brought<br />

Greek civilization to the Middle East, creating the common cultural<br />

space from which Christianity later arose and spread. Alexander’s<br />

empire fragmented after his premature death in Babylon and, in the<br />

middle of the second century BCE, the Greek lands were conquered by<br />

Rome. The Romans assimilated much of the Greek culture and ethos,<br />

while the Greek language continued to be widely spoken in the eastern<br />

Mediterranean.<br />

After the transfer of its capital to Constantinople in 330 CE and the<br />

loss of the western provinces to the invading Germanic tribes, the surviving<br />

Roman Empire in the East was progressively further Hellenized<br />

and came to be known in the West as Byzantium. This was a medieval<br />

civilization that lasted for a millennium before succumbing first to the<br />

Crusaders and then to the rising Ottomans. The Ottomans used a few<br />

of the Byzantine traditions and recognized some rights for their subjects,<br />

including their Greek-speaking Orthodox Christians. In a sense,<br />

the Ottoman conquest prolonged the Middle Ages in the Greek lands,<br />

although some limited contact with the emerging Europe of the Renaissance,<br />

the Reformation, and the Enlightenment in the West did occur.<br />

The Greeks’ secession from the Ottoman imperial order was a long<br />

and gradual process that had a lot to do with the increasing influence of<br />

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xxxiv • INTRODUCTION<br />

the national idea coming from the West, the growing mercantile Greek<br />

elite, the decline of Ottoman authority, and the rivalry of Europe’s<br />

great powers. The making of modern Greece went hand in hand with<br />

the making of Greek nationals out of a polyglot, Christian Orthodox,<br />

mostly rural society. Following a national revolution in 1821, the kingdom<br />

of Greece was established in 1830 under British tutelage.<br />

Independent Greece adopted Western laws and institutions, but<br />

social and economic progress was slow and most Greeks remained<br />

outside the country’s borders. On the eve of World War I, Greece<br />

doubled its size to the detriment of the Ottomans but in 1922 it experienced,<br />

at the hands of nationalist Turks led by Kemal Atatürk,<br />

a crushing military defeat that forced the evacuation of all Greeks<br />

from Asia Minor and western Thrace. This misfortune was followed<br />

by other calamities, including the economic crisis of the 1930s, the<br />

persistence of political polarization, the turn to authoritarianism, war,<br />

foreign occupation, and then a civil war that defeated a powerful<br />

communist insurgency in 1949.<br />

Having preserved its Western orientation, Greece became a member<br />

of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), associated itself<br />

with the rising European Community (EC), benefited from the Marshall<br />

Plan, and began modernizing and growing rapidly. Greek parliamentary<br />

politics broke down in 1967 but were reinvigorated in 1974. Since then,<br />

Greece has consolidated a stable and well-functioning democracy, and<br />

after 1989 and the fall of communism in Eastern Europe, it has emerged<br />

as an important player in the Balkans with considerable economic, political,<br />

and cultural influence.<br />

LAND AND PEOPLE<br />

Greece is a land of mountains and islands. Continental Greece is<br />

dominated by the Pindus mountain chain, which runs southwards and<br />

is an extension of the Dinaric Alps in the north. The Pindus Mountains<br />

divide Greece into a wet western coastand a dry eastern region. The<br />

highest mountain is Mt. Olympus, the legendary home of ancient Greek<br />

gods. The mountains run into numerous small valleys, bays, peninsulas,<br />

and capes. There are two main plains, one in Thessaly and one in<br />

central Macedonia. There are no large, commercially navigable rivers<br />

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INTRODUCTION • xxxv<br />

in Greece; the longest river is the Aliakmonas in the north, while many<br />

large Balkan rivers flow into northern Greece.<br />

Forests cover less than one fifth of Greece, a low proportion compared<br />

with other European countries, and which is further declining due<br />

to forest fires and land development. Only one third of Greece is cultivated,<br />

while the remaining area is arid and unused. Much of the cultivated<br />

land is not very fertile and suffers from a chronic lack of water.<br />

Thus, traditionally the Greek lands were poor and, in the past, Greeks<br />

migrated massively or turned to trade in search of enrichment abroad.<br />

Historically, poverty has been the defining condition of much of<br />

Greece, and it is only in the past 50 years that an affluent society, accompanied<br />

by a consumerist, hedonistic, carefree lifestyle, has emerged.<br />

The effect of this newly arrived wealth is profound, multifaceted, and<br />

yet not fully understood. It has produced an asymmetry as many Greeks,<br />

although well off, continue to think of themselves and their country as<br />

an underdog and a victim. This delay of the Greek mentality to adapt<br />

itself to the current conditions of Greek reality has reinforced a certain<br />

self-centered and self-referential narcissism and blinding provincialism:<br />

Someone else is always to blame for its troubles; Greece bears no responsibility<br />

for its actions or omissions; and there are no other problems<br />

in the world except for those related to Greece itself.<br />

Since ancient times, geography has conditioned the development of<br />

Greece and made overland communication difficult. Often, it impeded<br />

the establishment of land-based empires, fragmented Greece into isolated<br />

communities or city-states, and favored the sea as the fastest and<br />

safest route. Coastal trade developed very early on, aided by the existence<br />

of the many small islands that dot the Greek seas.<br />

Overall, squeezed among the three continents of Europe, Asia, and<br />

Africa, the lands of modern Greece have often been a crossroad of civilizations<br />

and invaders. After the great discoveries of the 15th century,<br />

Greece, together with the rest of the Mediterranean, lost much of its<br />

traditional geostrategic significance as trade moved westwards toward<br />

the northern Atlantic. However, after the opening of the Suez Canal<br />

in 1869, Great Britain renewed its interest in keeping Greece under its<br />

influence. During the Cold War, Greece provided an important link<br />

between Italy and Turkey, at the center of the North Atlantic Treaty<br />

Organization’s (NATO) southern flank. In the meantime, Greece has<br />

continued to control important sea routes toward the Black Sea and<br />

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xxxvi • INTRODUCTION<br />

across the Mediterranean. In particular, Crete hosts an important U.S.<br />

air and naval base in Souda Bay.<br />

Athens is the capital and the biggest city, by far, of Greece. More<br />

than Paris in France, Athens houses one third of the nation’s population,<br />

maintains half of its economic life, and initiates most of its cultural production.<br />

The only other significant cities are Thessaloniki in the north<br />

and Patras in the southwest. Most other Greek cities have a population<br />

of fewer than 100,000 people. Much of the countryside and most of the<br />

islands, with the exception of Crete, Corfu, Lesvos, and Rhodes, are<br />

depopulated. State policy in support of the periphery has proved inefficient<br />

and Greece remains heavily centralized. Most of the nation’s<br />

creative minds and energy are found in Athens.<br />

It is hard to define modern Greek culture. A starting point should<br />

be the Greek language. Greek is an ancient language that possesses<br />

an extraordinary literary tradition, encompassing both the classics and<br />

the New Testament, in a variety of dialects. Modern Greek is derived<br />

from the colloquial Greek spoken in the southern part of the mainland.<br />

Despite evolution, the linguistic continuity of Greek from ancient times<br />

to the present is both remarkable and unprecedented. This continuity<br />

buttressed modern Greek nationalism and has often been abused by<br />

traditionalists. To a certain extent, it has stunted the cultural development<br />

of the new nation, whose intellectual life has been haunted by the<br />

“ghosts” of famous ancestors.<br />

Modern Greek literature emerged in the late Byzantine era, in the<br />

Venice-held Crete and Ionian Islands, and later in the Greek diaspora<br />

communities. After becoming the capital and endowed with a modern<br />

university, Athens emerged as the center of the intellectual life of the<br />

nation. Much of the early intellectual production of the newly independent<br />

nation was characterized by conservatism, academic formality, and<br />

an uncritical imitation of advanced Europe. The turning point came in<br />

the 1930s and 1940s with changes brought by the incoming refugees<br />

from the east and the political turmoil of the interwar period and World<br />

War II.<br />

Designated as the generation of the 1930s, this period produced a<br />

new, innovative synthesis of a modern Greek culture that creatively<br />

accommodated the indigenous tradition with European norms and ecumenical<br />

aspirations. Literature, music, and the visual and performing<br />

arts flourished; after World War II, a few Greeks, such as Cornelius<br />

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INTRODUCTION • xxxvii<br />

Castoriades and Nikos Poulantzas, contributed to a pan-European philosophical<br />

dialogue. Progressively, Greek art has become less political<br />

while its underlying discourses have fragmented as Greek society has<br />

pluralized. This, together with the overmarketing of a pop culture, is<br />

often felt as a decline, but in reality Greek culture, albeit transformed<br />

and adapted to new conditions, is alive and well.<br />

THE MAKING <strong>OF</strong> GREECE<br />

Greece is an ancient land. Its first historical civilization was that of<br />

the Minoans, who flourished in the island of Crete and left behind a<br />

written record and some superb palaces and works of art. The Minoans<br />

extended their influence to the surrounding seas and in the process<br />

absorbed the Cycladic culture of the islands north of Crete. Originally<br />

they were pre–Indo-Europeans and succumbed to the invading Greeks<br />

from the north around 1400 BCE. These Greeks established the Mycenaean<br />

civilization, named after Mycenae in northeastern Peloponnesus,<br />

the strongest city-kingdom of the time. Their civilization became world<br />

famous, centuries later, thanks to the epic poems of Homer and the<br />

Trojan War described in the Iliad. Theirs marked the last phase of the<br />

Bronze Age.<br />

Around 1100 BCE, the Mycenaean civilization collapsed and Greece<br />

entered what many historians call a “dark age,” with a declining population<br />

and the weakening of its city culture. Many blamed this development<br />

on the destruction caused by the invasion of new Greek tribes, the<br />

Dorians. Greek culture started flourishing again in the eighth century<br />

BCE. Progress was rapid and by the fifth century BCE, Greece was<br />

experiencing its classical age. This was centered on the city of Athens.<br />

Following internal reforms that strengthened the power of the citizenry<br />

and the defeat of the invading Persians, Athens, under the leadership of<br />

Pericles, established a maritime empire through parts of the Mediterranean.<br />

Arts, philosophy, and science flourished to an unprecedented<br />

degree, setting the foundation for what is widely known as the Western<br />

or Greco-Roman civilization.<br />

However, Athens’ rise antagonized the old Greek hegemony of<br />

Sparta and led to a devastating war that weakened the Greek city-states<br />

and opened the way for the rise of Macedonia under Phillip II and his<br />

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xxxviii • INTRODUCTION<br />

son, Alexander the Great. Having united the old Greek world under<br />

Macedonian authority, Alexander defeated and conquered the Persian<br />

Empire. His main achievement was to further spread the Greek civilization<br />

and language throughout the Middle East, creating a common cultural<br />

space where Christianity, four centuries later, would flourish. In<br />

a sense, Christianity is a Hellenized reinterpretation of Judaism, and it<br />

was the ecumenical spirit of classical Greece that turned it into a global<br />

religion. St. Paul himself, the primary Christian messenger, was a Hellenized<br />

Jew who was deeply immersed in the classical Greek traditions.<br />

The very concept of “love” that distinguishes Christianity from all other<br />

monotheistic religions had first been developed by Greek philosophers<br />

from the time of Plato and after.<br />

However, after his early death, Alexander’s empire fragmented<br />

among its successors. Finally, after the battle of Corinth in 146 BCE,<br />

the Greek world came under the control of Rome. Having lost its independence,<br />

Greece fertilized the emerging Roman Empire with its<br />

culture and ethos. When the imperial capital moved eastwards to Constantinople<br />

in 330 CE and the western half was lost forever after Justinian<br />

in the sixth century CE, the eastern Roman Empire progressively<br />

Hellenized. Later called Byzantine by Western scholars, the empire<br />

rested on the synthesis of the Roman imperial legacy and administration,<br />

and on Christianity—a product of Jewish monotheism and Greek<br />

culture and language. Byzantium, an astounding if often misunderstood<br />

medieval civilization, succumbed to the Crusaders in 1204 CE and was<br />

completely destroyed by the Ottoman Turks who conquered Constantinople<br />

in 1453 CE.<br />

The Ottomans incorporated Byzantine traditions into their empirebuilding<br />

project and, as time passed, Greeks came to play an increasingly<br />

important role in the administration of parts of the Ottoman state<br />

and lands. However, beginning in the late 18th century, nationalism,<br />

a modern ideology that had originated in the West for the creation of<br />

an independent state (separated from the Ottomans), came to dominate<br />

politics in the Greek lands.<br />

Modern Greece emerged from a long and multifaceted process that<br />

included a cultural revival, economic modernization, war, gradual<br />

territorial expansion, the rivalry of great powers, and the decline of<br />

Ottoman power. Starting in the second half of the 18th century, Greek<br />

Enlightenment carried the European spirit of nationalism and liberal-<br />

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INTRODUCTION • xxxix<br />

ism to the Greek lands. This cultural “renaissance” was centered on<br />

both a renewed appreciation for the classics and secular rationalism.<br />

It was supported by an expanding network of Greek merchants who<br />

contributed to and benefited from the integration of the Ottoman dominions<br />

into the world economy and the global distribution of labor.<br />

The project of Greek nation-building was pillared by the legacy of<br />

classical Hellas and the strength of its hold on the European imagination.<br />

In their quest for an independent nation, the Greeks were further<br />

privileged in comparison to all other Ottoman peoples by the existence<br />

of a Greek-speaking bureaucratic elite, coming mainly from the<br />

Fanar district of Istanbul where the patriarchate has been based. This<br />

elite had access to church and state institutions and, increasingly, to<br />

a foreign, secular education. Overall, the classical heritage that had<br />

dominated the European Enlightenment facilitated Greek rapprochement<br />

with Europe and the rupture with the Ottoman regime by the<br />

newly rich Greek merchants and an increasingly Western-oriented<br />

bureaucracy.<br />

The tremors of the great French Revolution, which Napoleon carried<br />

eastwards, were strongly felt in Greece through the Greek diaspora<br />

trade communities and the Ionian Islands, which witnessed firsthand<br />

the destruction of Venice’s feudal order and the dawn of the new era.<br />

Six years after Waterloo and the triumph of conservative restoration,<br />

the Greek national Revolution of 1821 sought to create—and eventually<br />

succeeded in establishing—the first independent nation-state emerging<br />

from the Ottoman Empire. In that sense, Greece pioneered the historical<br />

process in the Ottoman East of replacing an imperial order with nation-states.<br />

This process continues to the present day in places such as<br />

Cyprus, Kosovo, Kurdistan, and Palestine.<br />

After some initial military successes, due largely to the Ottomans’<br />

preoccupation with the rebellion of the powerful Ali Pasha of Jannina,<br />

the Greek Revolution fell victim to fierce infighting and its own internal<br />

contradictions. The Fanar Greeks, the diaspora merchants, Roumeli’s<br />

military leaders, the nobles of Peloponnesus, and the seamen of the<br />

Aegean Islands formed powerful but competing constituencies, sharing<br />

contrasting visions for an independent Greece. Success came, thanks<br />

largely to the intervention of foreigners. Despite the sultan’s stubborn<br />

opposition, a small, independent Greek kingdom was established after<br />

the naval battle at Navarino in 1827 when Great Britain, France, and<br />

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xl • INTRODUCTION<br />

Russia sunk the Egyptian–Ottoman fleet and after Russian victory in a<br />

war against the Ottomans in 1829.<br />

Independent Greece was immediately faced with enormous challenges.<br />

Impoverished and encompassing only a quarter of Ottoman<br />

Greeks, the new nation embarked on building a centralized, bureaucratic,<br />

homogenous, and modern state according to the European<br />

norms, under the enlightened despotism of, first, Governor Ioannis<br />

Capodistrias and then the Bavarians, with the young King Otto. Despite<br />

some progress, the first 50 years of independence after 1830 were<br />

characterized by stagnation and economic failure. As a result, Ottoman<br />

Turkey continued to offer more opportunities for entrepreneurial<br />

Greeks than Greece itself.<br />

Nevertheless, under British protection and tutelage, Greece managed<br />

to expand moderately and consolidate a tradition of liberal parliamentary<br />

politics. The acquisition of the Ionian Islands in 1864 strengthened<br />

the country’s Western outlook and orientation, and the addition of<br />

Thessaly in 1881 made Greece self-sufficient in foodstuffs and provided<br />

some vital space for economic expansion. Under the premiership<br />

of Harilaos Trikoupis, the 1880s marked the first consistent attempt at<br />

systematic modernization. Trikoupis’ ambitious program to upgrade the<br />

infrastructure and industrialize the Greek economy fell victim to the<br />

country’s limited financial resources, the world economic crisis, and<br />

the demands of Greek irredentism. In the 1890s, Greece was declared<br />

bankrupt and humiliatingly lost a war to Ottoman Turkey.<br />

Shortly thereafter, the modernization of the Greek state and its<br />

economy blossomed under Eleftherios Venizelos, who came to power<br />

in 1910 following a military revolt that demanded changes in managing<br />

the country, and was influenced by the nearby success of the<br />

Young Turks’ revolution in 1908. Greece’s finest moment came with<br />

the victories in the two Balkan Wars in 1912–1913, which resulted in<br />

the doubling of its territory upon the acquisition of Macedonia, Epirus,<br />

and the islands of the eastern Aegean and Crete. Venizelos coupled his<br />

diplomatic successes abroad with an ambitious program of reforms at<br />

home that increased the state’s capacity to regulate the economy and<br />

provide for its people. Change was dramatic and mismanaged, and led<br />

to a clash between Venizelos and King Constantine in 1915 over the<br />

question of Greece’s entry into World War I.<br />

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INTRODUCTION • xli<br />

The conflict between Venizelos’ modernizers and the king’s traditionalists<br />

was fierce, destroyed the old political consensus, and inaugurated<br />

a long period of turbulent, often extraparliamentary, politics that<br />

lasted until 1974. The defeat of the Greek campaign in Asia Minor in<br />

1922 and the subsequent arrival in Greece of 1.5 million refugees contributed<br />

further to the country’s political instability. Overall, the period<br />

of 1915–1974 is largely characterized by an ongoing crisis of national<br />

integration as Greece struggled to accommodate new lands, “new”<br />

Greeks, and the new politics that this process generated.<br />

For a brief moment in the aftermath of World War I, Greece, supported<br />

by Great Britain, seemed to be on its way to becoming the<br />

dominant regional power, in control of the whole Aegean coastline<br />

and reaching all the way to the Black Sea. The Asia Minor catastrophe<br />

brought virulent irredentism to an end and was the single most important<br />

event in the transformation of Greek society, polity, economy, and<br />

identity. The destitute but industrious and often well-educated refugees<br />

provided cheap and skilled labor for a second wave of industrialization,<br />

and lent their support to liberal republicanism and, later, to a Marxist<br />

left. The newcomers fertilized Greek popular culture with their own<br />

experiences and traditions, strengthened the urban areas in an otherwise<br />

agrarian nation, and helped reimagine Greek identity within a broader<br />

European and ecumenical framework that led to a flourishing of Greek<br />

arts after the 1930s.<br />

The interwar republic failed because of the economic crisis and the<br />

fragmentation of Venizelist forces. World War II was a cataclysm with<br />

grave long-term consequences. Allied to Britain, Greece was attacked<br />

by but defeated Fascist Italy before succumbing to Nazi Germany. The<br />

foreign occupation was brutal. It impoverished and radicalized the nation,<br />

marginalized the old political class, and provided the conditions<br />

for the rise of a communist-led resistance with growing ambitions for<br />

dominating postwar Greece. Thanks to British intervention and the<br />

communists’ Stalinist ethos and political incompetence, these ambitions<br />

were frustrated—but not before a full-blown civil war had destroyed<br />

much of mountainous Greece, deepened the divisions, and hampered<br />

the democratic growth of the nation. Unlike postwar Italy and France,<br />

where the large communist parties were integrated into the political process,<br />

Greece had to wait for the defeat of a bloody communist insurgency<br />

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xlii • INTRODUCTION<br />

before reconstruction could begin, and full political normalization was<br />

achieved only after 1974.<br />

In the meantime, an internationalist United States replaced Britain<br />

as Greece’s guarantor and the dominant naval force in the Mediterranean.<br />

Greece became not only a frontline state in the U.S. strategy of<br />

containment against the Soviet Union but also a test case for a Western-sponsored<br />

policy of liberal modernization. U.S. aid and guidance<br />

poured in generously while parliamentary politics, albeit restricted,<br />

wererespected. In the 1950s, Greece found in Konstantinos Karamanlis<br />

a young, dynamic, and progressive leader who tirelessly promoted<br />

economic growth and the modernization of the country’s physical and<br />

institutional infrastructure.<br />

However, Greek politics failed to cope with rapid social change and<br />

demands for more political and social inclusion through further liberalization<br />

and wealth redistribution. Royal interventionism in support of<br />

a conservative establishment led to the breakdown of the democratic<br />

order and to a seven-year military dictatorship. In 1974, the junta ended<br />

in tragedy in Cyprus, where its policy provoked the invasion of Turkey<br />

and the violent partition of the island. The military rule stimulated a<br />

powerful long-term reaction in the Greek body politic and the establishment<br />

of a certain leftist discourse as the hegemonic ideology of<br />

post-1974 democratic Greece. Traumatized by the Turkish threat, this<br />

ideology remains suspicious of the United States, foreign alignments,<br />

liberalism, and the market, while embracing nationalist and collectivist<br />

instincts.<br />

Upon his return from Paris, Karamanlis succeeded in establishing a<br />

well-functioning democracy. Greece became a republic, abolished all<br />

restrictions to political participation, renewed its European-Western<br />

orientation, and sought to deflate diplomatically tensions with Turkey.<br />

Karamanlis’ crowning achievement came on 1 January 1981 when<br />

Greece became the 10th member of the European Community (EC),<br />

five years ahead of Spain and Portugal. In the 1980s, under the premiership<br />

of Andreas Papandreou, Greece experienced a populist backlash<br />

that hurt the economy, public finances, and the public administration<br />

but fully legitimized the strategic choices made and the institutions<br />

designed by Karamanlis. Since the 1990s, Greece has tried, with mixed<br />

results, to reform and adapt to the demands of intensified European<br />

integration and accelerated globalization.<br />

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INTRODUCTION • xliii<br />

NEW CHALLENGES<br />

Since 1989, the year the Cold War ended and communism fell, Greece<br />

has experienced serious socioeconomic changes in its effort to avoid<br />

marginalization in Europe and to secure a place at the center of European<br />

integration. Initially, Greece reacted alarmingly and defensively<br />

against the destabilization caused by the forceful change of borders<br />

in its neighborhood. Its opposition to the disintegration of Yugoslavia<br />

was often misinterpreted as support for Slobodan Milosevic’s policy<br />

for a greater Serbia. In the meantime, Greek nationalism has provided<br />

a convenient cover for domestic corporate interests in their defense<br />

of undeserved privileges and in opposition to market reforms and the<br />

opening of the Greek economy.<br />

As a result of mounting social pressures and political infighting, the<br />

reform-minded government of Konstantinos Mitsotakis fell in 1993.<br />

The return of Papandreou to power weakened but did not reverse the reformist<br />

drive. This was enhanced after the election of Kostas Simitis to<br />

the premiership in 1996 and of Kostas Karamanlis, a nephew of the old<br />

statesman, in 2004. Thus, the 1990s and the 2000s have been a period of<br />

macroeconomic stabilization, economic liberalization and privatization,<br />

and the further Europeanization of Greece.<br />

Greece today is a more open, pluralistic, cosmopolitan, individualistic,<br />

unequal, dynamic, and achievement-oriented society. The market<br />

has expanded to the detriment of the state, while the economy dominates<br />

politics rather than the other way around, which was the case in<br />

the 1970s and the 1980s. Greek politics have become more managerial<br />

and consensus oriented, while old cleavages represented by polarizing,<br />

charismatic, and messianic leaders seem to belong to the past.<br />

On the other hand, income and regional disparities have increased.<br />

Athens is the main beneficiary while old sectors, such as agriculture and<br />

textiles, decline in favor of services. Nowhere is change more evident<br />

and more pronounced than in the demographic profile of the country.<br />

The arrival of about a million economic immigrants, mainly from Albania,<br />

in a very short period of time introduced multiculturalism to a<br />

largely homogenous country. Today, Greece is no longer an exporter<br />

but an importer of labor and the percentage of nonnative residents, at<br />

around 10 percent of the total population, is comparable to that of the<br />

United States.<br />

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xliv • INTRODUCTION<br />

As in most modernizing societies, Greece exhibits a pronounced<br />

dualism between an innovative, progressive, and self-confident core<br />

and a traditional, conservative, and defensive periphery. Thus, change<br />

is haphazard and asymmetrical. Greece continues to suffer from an<br />

oversized, inefficient, and corrupt state bureaucracy that overtaxes and<br />

overregulates the productive capacity of the nation. Education at all<br />

levels, but especially tertiary, is in crisis. The social security system is<br />

bankrupt. Public policy in almost every field remains hostage to special<br />

interests that use their privileged access to power to parasitize on state<br />

resources.<br />

Three challenges are particularly acute. The first is that Greece is aging<br />

rapidly, despite the influx of immigrants, due to low fertility rates<br />

since 1980. With 1.3 children per fertile woman, Greece has one of the<br />

lowest reproductive rates in the world. As a result, the population of<br />

Greece might decline to fewer than 9 million by 2050 while the percentage<br />

of people over 60, which has already doubled in the past 40 years,<br />

will double again in the next 40.<br />

The second challenge is the extent of its corruption. There is usually<br />

a correlation between poverty and corruption. Greece is an exception;<br />

although rich, it suffers from widespread corruption usually associated<br />

with the Third World. Corruption permeates the entire state structure,<br />

including the judiciary, police, church, and tax and urban planning<br />

authorities. Corruption wastes precious resources, dampens economic<br />

growth, rescinds public policy, reinforces inequality, and makes Greece<br />

unattractive to investment. It is no coincidence that Greece has failed<br />

to draw substantial greenfield foreign investment (that is, investment<br />

in new assets). Nor is it a coincidence that the serious Greek money is<br />

made in shipping, where the corrupt Greek state is mostly absent and<br />

where Greek entrepreneurship is allowed to flourish unhindered. Carrying<br />

out or creating a business in Greece means having to work through<br />

a labyrinth of laws and state agencies that are often more determined to<br />

satisfy their own self-interests rather than the good of the public.<br />

The third challenge is that Greece’s natural environment is under<br />

threat. The crystal waters, the unspoiled coastline, the pristine mountains,<br />

and the extraordinary biodiversity of the land are Greece’s most<br />

precious resource and the country’s unique comparative advantage in<br />

an increasingly competitive world economy. The density of Greek cities<br />

has saved the country from the suburban sprawl that has afflicted most<br />

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INTRODUCTION • xlv<br />

of the developed world and has left much of the countryside untouched.<br />

However, in a country where tourism and land speculation constitute<br />

primary economic activities, considerable damage has already been<br />

done. If “progress” is left unchecked, Greece’s environment will be<br />

condemned.<br />

Despite these unmet challenges, there have been many achievements.<br />

Since the mid-1990s, the Greek economy has grown rapidly, at a rate<br />

of 3.5 percent a year, which is well above the Eurozone average (see<br />

graphs 1 and 2 in appendix F); inflation and public finances have been<br />

brought under control (see graphs 3 and 4 in appendix F); and although<br />

public debt remains among the highest in the European Union (EU),<br />

unemployment is declining. Despite widespread initial doubts, Greece<br />

joined the European Monetary Union (EMU) and has benefited from<br />

the resulting monetary stability and low interest rates. Although much<br />

of the growth has been caused by a real estate bubble and a dramatic<br />

credit expansion, the Greek economy is much healthier today than it<br />

was in the late 1980s. Greece’s greatest achievement during this growth<br />

was the successful hosting of the Olympic Games in Athens in 2004 and<br />

the physical endowment of state-of-the-art highways, airports, underground<br />

transportation, and athletic and cultural venues. The Olympics<br />

also enhanced the image of Greece. International preconceptions of its<br />

infrastructure and administration changed positively.<br />

Progress has been even more significant at the nonmaterial level.<br />

Greek political discourse is less ideological, messianic, and absolutist<br />

today than it used to be. It is also less tolerant of violent practices, as exercised<br />

in the past by the now-defunct terrorist group called November<br />

17. Greek morals are considerably more liberal, alternative lifestyles<br />

are tolerated and occasionally even celebrated, the position of women<br />

has improved, and Greek nationalism exhibits some signs of becoming<br />

more civic and less ethnic. Overall, as the richest and oldest democracy<br />

in its region, Greece today is more self-confident than at any moment<br />

in its modern history.<br />

This is further reflected in Greek foreign policy. Not concerned with<br />

its own survival, as was the case for much of its past, Greece is favorably<br />

positioned to project its influence on and play a leadership role in southeastern<br />

Europe. Greece’s trade and investments abroad have increased<br />

considerably. For the first time, it provides some modest foreign aid. It has<br />

moderated its demands on the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia<br />

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xlvi • INTRODUCTION<br />

(FYROM) and has tried to accommodate its neighbor’s national<br />

identity. Overall, Greece has supported the accession of southeastern<br />

Europe into the EU and the completion of the European project both<br />

geographically and institutionally. As Greece has moved closer to the<br />

European core, it has become an ardent Eurofederalist. Put simply, for<br />

Greece, the more Europe the better.<br />

At the same, Greece has lent its support to Turkey’s European vocation<br />

and strives to engage rather than confront it, while supporting<br />

United Nations efforts to resolve the Cyprus problem. Turkey remains<br />

Greece’s first and foremost strategic challenge. It is not only that Turkey<br />

is by far the largest and richest of Greece’s neighbors; it is also<br />

that the antagonism with Turkey after 1955 complicated greatly and<br />

unnecessarily the modernization of Greece and negatively affected its<br />

political development. Fear of Turkey increased Greece’s insecurity<br />

and siege mentality, and created fertile ground for the growth of a<br />

defensive, xenophobic, and antimodernist nationalism. Turning this antagonism<br />

into a partnership will not only be beneficial economically but<br />

will also partially liberate Greece (and Turkey) from a political culture<br />

that holds back the country. For this reason, the successful conclusion<br />

of the Greek policy of rapprochement with Turkey forms a cornerstone<br />

for any program of modernization and reform in Greece.<br />

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT<br />

After 30 years of rapid growth, Greece stagnated in the 1980s and<br />

diverged from the European average. More recently, Greece has been<br />

catching up and today real per capita income has come close to 90<br />

percent of the EU average. Despite this wealth, which is evident in the<br />

consumerist lifestyle enjoyed by the expanding Greek middle class,<br />

many of the country’s economic, political, and social structures remain<br />

archaic and traditional.<br />

It is worth remembering that manufacturing constitutes only 10 percent<br />

of the economy, which is one of the lowest ratios in the developed<br />

world. Greek exports are minimal, with a value of less than $25billion a<br />

year, or one fifteenth of Belgium’s, a country of similar size (see graph<br />

5 in appendix F). The rate of employment, or the active population as a<br />

percentage of the total, is among the lowest in Europe; less than half of<br />

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INTRODUCTION • xlvii<br />

all Greek women work. Almost half of the Greeks are self-employed,<br />

and the percentage of the salaried workforce in the private sector remains<br />

low. Most of Greek businesses are small, family-owned, undercapitalized,<br />

and of low technology and productivity. At the same time,<br />

the state is an overstaffed behemoth with some 700,000 employees, or<br />

one sixth of the total workforce. Finally, the continued decline of Greek<br />

agriculture will release some 200,000–300,000 unskilled laborers who<br />

cannot easily find employment elsewhere.<br />

Furthermore, Greek public finances, despite considerable progress,<br />

remain in a precarious state. Public debt is stubbornly high and equals<br />

the gross domestic product (GDP); see graph 6 in appendix F. State<br />

liabilities are three to four times the GDP, if pension pledges are included.<br />

One third of the economy, if not more, operates underground<br />

and is unregulated and untaxed. At the same time, the demographic<br />

decline has acquired an inescapable dynamic that will inevitably shrink<br />

the future productive base of the country. In sum, Greece suffers from a<br />

central paradox: Greece enjoys a First World level of consumption with<br />

a productive structure that often resembles the Third World. Much of its<br />

growth was achieved without real modernization.<br />

All these speak of a society faced with serious, structural problems<br />

in need of deep and painful reforms. And yet, the reformist drive has<br />

been weakening recently and will not gather steam in the absence of the<br />

pressures of an economic downturn. Greece has been fortunate to have<br />

benefited enormously from globalization and relies on foreign sources<br />

of income that have financed a domestic level of consumption that the<br />

real productive capacity of the country could not have supported. These<br />

sources have historically included the diaspora’s remittances and, more<br />

recently, tourism, shipping, and EU aid. Shipping alone has brought<br />

more than $100 billion into the country in the past decade. At the same<br />

time, being part of the EU has provided a strong cushion against the<br />

side effects of populist politics at home—as was the case in 1989 when<br />

bankruptcy was avoided thanks to EU support.<br />

Not paying the price for past mistakes is one reason why nationalist<br />

and collectivist instincts and suspicion of the market are probably<br />

stronger in Greece than anywhere else in Europe. Often, it feels as<br />

though Greece is stuck in the 1970s, refusing to realize that the Cold<br />

War is over, the free market won, and the country is among the winners.<br />

Whereas former communist countries have quickly liberalized,<br />

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xlviii • INTRODUCTION<br />

large sections of Greek society long for the protection of an all-embracing<br />

state. At the same time, while many Greeks are accustomed to<br />

expecting everything from the government, they do their best to avoid<br />

contributing to the state. The end result is an omnipresent but weak and<br />

dysfunctional public administration.<br />

Resolving these paradoxes is both a gradual and historical process,<br />

and a political choice. It takes time to mend past traumas. Healing is<br />

further complicated because some political forces, especially on the<br />

left, have invested in preserving the memory of these traumas as a way<br />

of surviving politically. However, no matter how much past-oriented<br />

opinion makers try, theirs is a lost cause. Under the surface, Greece has<br />

been modernizing rapidly. A new generation of Greeks is coming of age<br />

that is less ideological and more results oriented. These Greeks belong<br />

to a generation with no memory of poverty and violent conflict. Their<br />

universe and outlook is distinctly European.<br />

Thus, Greece has come a long way. A client state, first of Britain<br />

and then of the United States, for much of its modern existence, it has<br />

secured an equal place at the top tables of NATO and the EU. It has<br />

grown quickly but modernized haphazardly. When compared to its<br />

region, it is, undoubtedly, a great historical success and a model for its<br />

neighbors. This ancient land, blessed with a stunning natural beauty and<br />

an inspiring cultural heritage but burdened with history and conflict,<br />

has reached a state of normalcy that feels novel, almost unnatural. In<br />

the past, the Greek identity was forged through traumas. How it will<br />

survive its present affluence and comfort remains to be seen and studied<br />

by the historians of the future.<br />

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The Dictionary<br />

– A –<br />

ADMINISTRATION, PUBLIC. Greece is a unitary and highly centralized<br />

state, although since the 1980s, local administration has been<br />

strengthened. Greece is organized around municipalities, districts,<br />

and regions. Mayors and district governors are directly elected for a<br />

fixed four-year term. However, the central government continues to<br />

control most of the state revenues and thus dictates policy. The public<br />

administration of Greece has been notorious for its bureaucracy,<br />

overstaffing, inefficiency, and corruption. From the early days of independence,<br />

the Greek state became hostage to special interests while<br />

patron–client relations between politicians and voters flourished.<br />

A public service job has traditionally provided financial security<br />

and has been much coveted. In the early 1980s, the public administration<br />

expanded further and suffered from the incoming socialists’<br />

attempt to fully control and politicize it. It is difficult to know the<br />

exact number of public-sector employees as the state continues to<br />

offer employment to thousands of Greeks through numerous special<br />

schemes and contracts that are not centrally registered or accounted<br />

for. A good estimate is around 700,000 employees, half of whom<br />

are civil servants—mostly employed in the ministries and local<br />

governments—and many of whom are medical, security, and teaching<br />

personnel. Total government expenditure for salaries in 2008 is<br />

projected to reach €15 billion; pensions, social security, and health<br />

expenditures, €19 billion; public investments, €9 billion; and interest<br />

paid on the public debt, €11 billion. The central government’s tax<br />

revenues in 2008 are budgeted at €54 billion or around 21 percent<br />

of the annual gross domestic product (GDP): €22 billion from direct<br />

and €32 billion from indirect taxation.<br />

1<br />

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2 • AEGEAN SEA<br />

Some reforms aiming at streamlining, introducing some meritocracy,<br />

and information and digital technology have been—gradually<br />

and reluctantly—put in place since the 1990s, with mixed results.<br />

Public administration is one of Greece’s most serious, urgent, and<br />

difficult problems to be solved today.<br />

AEGEAN SEA. Named after Aegeas, king of Athens and father of<br />

Theseas, the Aegean is the sea between mainland Greece and Asia<br />

Minor. The Aegean has played a unique role in shaping Greece and<br />

Greek culture. The Aegean is an archipelago of 8,000 islands, islets,<br />

and rock formations of stunning beauty. Mild and green in the north,<br />

dry and windy in the south, the Aegean has provided the ecosystem<br />

for the development of maritime civilizations based on the sea and<br />

sea trade.<br />

Trade was facilitated by high winds, the short distances between<br />

most Aegean islands, and the Aegean’s geostrategic position among<br />

the three continents of Europe, Asia, and Africa. From 3500 to<br />

1100 BCE, the archaic Cycladic civilization in the Cycladic islands<br />

flourished together with the Minoan civilization in Crete. In the<br />

fifth century BCE, most of the Aegean Islands became part of the<br />

Athenian hegemony. Later, the Aegean fell under the control of the<br />

Roman Empire and its successor, the Byzantine Empire. As imperial<br />

control weakened, piracy thrived and Crete was briefly lost to the<br />

Arabs in the 10th century CE. Following the Fourth Crusade, much<br />

of the Aegean fell under the control of the northern Italian city-states<br />

of Venice and Genoa. Under Venice, trade and culture grew. Today,<br />

in a few Cycladic islands, some Catholic communities survive within<br />

an otherwise overwhelmingly Greek Orthodox nation. Gradually,<br />

the Ottomans, the previously reluctant navigators, managed to expel<br />

the Venetians, but Crete was not seized until 1669 CE. During the<br />

Napoleonic Wars, some islanders, especially in Hydra, Spetses, and<br />

Psara, amassed great fortunes by breaking the British continental<br />

embargo. Their wealth served as the basis of an emerging procapitalist,<br />

moneyed economy and, after 1821, financed the Greek War of<br />

Independence.<br />

Modern Greece established its sovereignty over the Aegean in<br />

the course of more than a century. In 1830, Greece incorporated the<br />

small Saronic islands close to Athens, the Cyclades, and the Spo-<br />

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AGRICULTURE • 3<br />

rades, and after the Balkan Wars of 1912–1913, the islands of the<br />

eastern Aegean and Crete. The Dodecanese in the southeast were<br />

latecomers in this process and were awarded to Greece only in 1947<br />

following the defeat of Italy in World War II. Only two Aegean<br />

islands, Imvros and Tenedos, at the entrance of the Straits of Dardanelles,<br />

were retained by Turkey under the Treaty of Lausanne of<br />

1923. Today, the Aegean is mostly famous for generating Greece’s<br />

bulk of tourist earnings and for the dispute between Greece and<br />

Turkey over the delineation of the Aegean continental shelf and the<br />

respective territorial waters of the two adjoining nations. The dispute<br />

was aggravated by successive crises over Cyprus and the prospect of<br />

discovering large oil deposits in the Aegean seabed.<br />

AGRICULTURE. Greece has traditionally been an agricultural country.<br />

Even today, after half a century of relative agricultural decline,<br />

around half a million Greeks, or 10 percent of the labor force, are<br />

still employed in farming, contributing 5 percent to the country’s<br />

gross domestic product (GDP). Twenty years ago, both figures were<br />

double that. This is the highest proportion in Western Europe and one<br />

of the highest in the European Union (EU). Greek agriculture has<br />

grown into a serious social problem. Despite generous EU funding<br />

since 1981, Greek agriculture has mostly failed to restructure and remains<br />

internationally uncompetitive and dependent on EU and state<br />

subsidies. Periodic unrest by farmers has become an endemic feature<br />

of Greek politics, and discontent is bound to increase as the EU’s<br />

Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) continues reforms and as fewer<br />

rural job opportunities are available.<br />

Traditionally, Greek agriculture faced two main obstacles: the<br />

scarcity of fertile land and its fragmentation into unsustainable small<br />

plots. Only one third of Greece’s surface is arable land, mostly<br />

concentrated in small valleys in Peloponnesus and the large plains<br />

of Thessaly and central Macedonia in the north. The latter is exceptional<br />

in that it is well irrigated and highly fertile. Historically,<br />

Greece has been a country of small landowners who have formed<br />

the backbone of the country’s social structure and infused a certain<br />

conservative and egalitarian ethos in its politics. Surplus labor was<br />

exported from the countryside to the cities, mainly Athens, and<br />

abroad.<br />

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4 • ALBANIA<br />

Greece was integrated, for the first time, in the expanding world<br />

capitalist economy, with the development of the cultivation of the<br />

currant in the late 19th century. The currant was Greece’s first cash<br />

crop, facilitating the transition from subsistence to a money-based<br />

agriculture, and was replaced by tobacco, which remained Greece’s<br />

main export throughout most of the 20th century. Today, Greece exports<br />

olive oil, fruits and vegetables, and cotton and remains self-sufficient<br />

in cereals. Fish farming has expanded spectacularly during the<br />

past 20 years, making Greece one of the largest producers throughout<br />

Europe. Dairy production and animal husbandry remain much more<br />

problematic—local production of meat and dairy products covers<br />

only 20 percent of total domestic consumption. Overall, despite considerable<br />

exports, Greece remains a food-importing country.<br />

ALBANIA (RELATIONS WITH). Albania is one of the four neighbors<br />

with which Greece shares a land border. This border has been<br />

much contested since Albania’s independence in 1912. The creation<br />

of a modern Albanian nation-state was mainly sponsored by Italy<br />

and Austria-Hungary against the wishes of neighboring Serbia and<br />

Greece. In several instances, as at the conclusion of World War I,<br />

Greece put forward a claim for much of southern Albania or northern<br />

Epirus, which contains a large Greek minority.<br />

Under Italian occupation, Albania became the launching pad for<br />

Benito Mussolini’s attack against Greece in October 1940. At the<br />

end of World War II, Greek forces expelled approximately 5,000<br />

Albanian-speaking Chams from the border district of Thesprotia,<br />

who were accused of collaborating with the Nazi Germans. In the<br />

Greek Civil War that followed, communist Albania provided assistance<br />

to Greek communist rebels and an escape route when they<br />

were defeated in the late summer of 1949. Throughout the Cold War,<br />

the Greek–Albanian border remained closed and heavily guarded<br />

while the “state of war” between the two neighbors persisted until<br />

1987. Albania’s Stalinism was particularly harsh in its treatment of<br />

the Greek minority, which was doubly discriminated against for both<br />

its ethnic origin and its relative bourgeois social status. Albania did<br />

participate reluctantly in a few Balkan-wide regional initiatives, but<br />

overall it remained fiercely independent, suspicious of foreigners,<br />

and isolated.<br />

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ALBANIA • 5<br />

Change came abruptly and dramatically in 1991, when the Stalinist<br />

regime collapsed and chaos ensued. Greece opened its borders<br />

with the intention of assisting its long-suffering Greek minority. This<br />

resulted in a flood of thousands of Albanian economic immigrants.<br />

Consequently, there are two separate but interrelated issues: state relations<br />

between Greece and Albania, and relations between the Greek<br />

state and Greek society with the incoming Albanians.<br />

Since 1991, the situation in Albania has improved and its economy<br />

has grown. Today, it is estimated that Greece is home to approximately<br />

700,000 ethnic Albanians, who constitute the largest immigrant<br />

group in the country. They are mostly employed in low-paid<br />

menial jobs in construction, agriculture, tourism, and as domestic<br />

staff. They have taken advantage of many job opportunities in<br />

Greece’s unregulated, labor-intensive, and service-based economy.<br />

They have contributed to lowering production costs while expanding<br />

the domestic market and have played a significant part in energizing<br />

the Greek economy from its previous stagnation to its current<br />

dynamic growth.<br />

For all the occasional sensational stories of sporadic Albanian<br />

criminality and a certain suspicion, if not racism, on the part of many<br />

Greeks, the integration of Albanians into contemporary Greek society<br />

should be considered a success, especially when compared to the<br />

difficulties other European countries experience in assimilating large<br />

immigrant populations. In particular, Albanian children go to Greek<br />

schools and grow up as Greek citizens, many excelling academically<br />

and in sports.<br />

Historically, Albanian-speaking Christians, called Arvanites, inhabited<br />

the area around Athens and proudly participated in the Greek<br />

War of Independence. Prior to 1991, there were many village communities<br />

less than an hour’s drive from downtown Athens where<br />

Albanian was also spoken. Furthermore, for all the nationalistic<br />

antagonism, much of southern Albania has remained culturally and<br />

economically under substantial Greek influence. It is worth noting<br />

that southern Albania is much more urban and developed compared<br />

with northern Albania’s tribal and feudal character, multiplying further<br />

the relative influence of interacting with Greece. This influence<br />

increased exponentially after 1991 due to Albanian immigration to<br />

Greece and the expansion of strong social networks between the<br />

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6 • ALEXANDER GLÜCKSBURG<br />

Albanians’ new and old homes, Greek business with and investment<br />

in Albania, and the reestablishment of a Greek-led Albanian Orthodox<br />

Church under the inspired leadership of the ecclesiastical leader<br />

Archbishop Anastasios.<br />

Nationalists on both sides remain uncomfortable with the improved<br />

relationship. Greece’s initial warming to Serbia’s Slobodan<br />

Milosevic left a legacy of suspicion on both sides. The two nations,<br />

given the difference in their recent past, seem to stand on opposite<br />

sides on many issues. Whereas Albania strongly supports the independence<br />

of Kosovo, Greece remains sensitive to Serbia’s objections.<br />

Although Albania enthusiastically welcomed and greeted as a<br />

hero President George W. Bush of the United States in June 2007,<br />

Greek anti-Americanism shows no sign of abating.<br />

Despite some initial concerns, the return of Sali Berisha to the<br />

premiership did not witness a rebound of the polemics of the 1990s<br />

in Athens. Coming from the north and representing a northern constituency<br />

that has largely remained outside the Greek orbit, Berisha<br />

confirmed the increased pragmatism that characterizes the relations<br />

between the two nations, to the mutual benefit of both and the region.<br />

Furthermore, Greece’s improved relations with Turkey have greatly<br />

weakened Greece’s siege mentality and fears, and have enabled the<br />

country’s leadership to pursue a policy of constructive engagement<br />

in its region.<br />

Given the historical ties between Greeks and Albanians and the<br />

existence of large ethnic Albanian immigrant communities in Greece<br />

whose presence in Greek life will increase, the Greek–Albanian relationship<br />

is of great strategic importance for the future development of<br />

Greece (and Albania), second only to Greece’s relations with Turkey.<br />

See also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

ALEXANDER GLÜCKSBURG (1893–1920). Born in Athens, the<br />

second son of King Constantine I and Queen Sophia, Alexander was<br />

the brother of the future King George II and King Paul. He studied<br />

at the Military Academy of Athens and participated in the Balkan<br />

Wars (1912–1913) as an officer in the Greek armed forces. In 1917,<br />

Alexander became king after his father’s abdication. Constantine I<br />

was forcibly exiled by the Entente due to his pro-German position of<br />

keeping Greece neutral during World War I against the wishes of<br />

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ALEXANDER THE GREAT • 7<br />

the popularly elected prime minister, Eleftherios Venizelos. The rift<br />

between the two developed into a destructive quasi Civil War known<br />

as the National Schism (Ethnikos Dihasmos).<br />

The fact that Alexander was an Anglophile was the main reason he<br />

became king, but many Greeks continued to remain loyal to his deposed<br />

father. Alexander’s marriage in 1919 to Aspasia Manou, who<br />

was not a member of a royal family, was a scandal in the Athenian<br />

society of the time. As a king, Alexander was more interested in easy<br />

living than in the Greek state and politics.<br />

If Alexander’s life was unremarkable, his untimely death in Athens<br />

had important historical consequences. In October 1920, he was<br />

bitten by a monkey in the palace garden and died from a serious<br />

infection three weeks later. His death came unexpectedly during<br />

the election campaign called by Liberal Prime Minister Venizelos,<br />

who, having achieved the landing of Greek forces in western Asia<br />

Minor and the signing of the Treaty of Sèvres, was confident of<br />

his reelection. However, after eight years of war and bitter domestic<br />

infighting, Alexander’s premature death galvanized the monarchist<br />

opposition to Venizelos and reopened the question of a return to the<br />

throne of Constantine, Alexander’s popular father. Surprisingly, the<br />

monarchists won the elections, Venizelos left Greece, and Constantine<br />

returned to the Greek throne against the fierce opposition of the<br />

Entente victors of World War I. First France and then Great Britain<br />

gradually distanced themselves from Greece and its efforts to<br />

implement the postwar settlement of the Treaty of Sèvres against the<br />

increasing resistance of a nationalist Turkey led by Kemal Atatürk.<br />

Eventually, Greece was defeated in 1922 and abandoned both Asia<br />

Minor and eastern Thrace.<br />

ALEXANDER THE GREAT (356–323 BCE). Born in Pella in present-day<br />

northern Greece, Alexander, the king of ancient Macedonia,<br />

was a military genius and a great conqueror. He remained undefeated<br />

in battle and expanded his rule as far as India. Following the unification<br />

of the Greek city-states by his father Phillip II, Alexander<br />

engaged in a military campaign that destroyed the Persian Empire<br />

and brought the Greek culture to the Middle East, Mesopotamia,<br />

Persia, and Egypt—all homes of great ancient civilizations. His work<br />

culturally united a vast area and created the receptive conditions for<br />

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8 • ANCIENT GREECE<br />

the rise of a new monotheistic religion, Christianity. Although he<br />

died in Babylon at a very young age and his empire fragmented soon<br />

thereafter, his legacy lived on and he left a significant imprint on<br />

world history.<br />

In the 20th century, Alexander’s historical impact has been entangled<br />

in nationalist controversies between Greece and the neighboring<br />

Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM). Slav-Macedonians<br />

dispute his Greek origin and often claim him as a distant ancestor.<br />

Although the Slavs arrived in the Balkans a millennium after<br />

Alexander’s death and most of ancient Macedonia lies within present-day<br />

Greece, Skopje initially chose the ancient Macedonian sun<br />

as its national flag following FYROM’s independence in 1991. More<br />

recently, Skopje named its airport after Alexander. Squares, streets,<br />

airports, and so forth in Greece bear Alexander’s name, where he is<br />

venerated as a Greek hero.<br />

ANCIENT GREECE. Modern Greece is often unfavorably juxtaposed<br />

to ancient Greece. Although modern Greece has benefited greatly<br />

by its association with its distant but glorious relative, comparisons<br />

between the two have complicated the development of modern Greek<br />

consciousness and national identity. Ancient Greece is hard to define<br />

precisely, both chronologically and geographically. It has been<br />

roughly equated with classical Hellas, an area similar to present-day<br />

Greece, with its center southwards around Athens and Peloponnesus<br />

from the sixth century to the Macedonian conquest in the middle<br />

of the fourth century BCE, and organized around city-states, most<br />

prominent of which emerged first Sparta and then Athens.<br />

Greeks belonged to Indo-European tribes that came from the north<br />

and settled in the southernmost part of the Balkan Peninsula around the<br />

middle of the second millennium BCE. Having subjugated local populations,<br />

they established kingdoms and developed a civilization that is<br />

described and glorified by Homer in his two epic poems. The primary<br />

center of power became Mycenae in northeastern Peloponnesus. Its supremacy<br />

ended with the invasion of Dorian Greeks around 1200 BCE.<br />

After four centuries of what might be called a dark age, a network of<br />

thriving and expanding Greek city-states emerged, with Sparta the strongest<br />

among them. Starting with internal reforms in the sixth century that<br />

increased the powers of the citizenry, Athens benefited greatly from the<br />

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ANENDOTOS • 9<br />

defeat of the invading Persians in the early fifth century and claimed<br />

the leadership of the whole of the Greek world. Sparta responded reluctantly<br />

to the challenge and, after an exhausting Peloponnesian war,<br />

temporarily prevailed. This infighting allowed Macedonia, a distant<br />

kingdom to the north under the leadership of Philip II, to gradually<br />

dominate Greece and unite it under his authority. His son, Alexander,<br />

later used these united resources to campaign in the east and conquer<br />

the vast Persian Empire, taking Greek culture and language as far as<br />

India. In the meantime, ancient Greece was subsumed by the expanding<br />

Roman Empire and became a Roman province.<br />

It is hard to exaggerate the role ancient Greece has played in world<br />

developments and the tight hold it has had on Western imagination—an<br />

unparalleled contribution to the development of philosophy,<br />

science, the arts, and the birth of the humanistic spirit and the democratic<br />

ideal. Much idealized by the Renaissance and the Enlightenment,<br />

ancient Greece formed the central pillar of what has been<br />

called Western or Judeo-Christian civilization, together with Roman<br />

law and Jewish monotheism. Ancient Greece remains subject to constant<br />

reinterpretations. Recently, scholars have turned their attention<br />

from its uniqueness to the study of its relations and interactions with<br />

its Semitic surroundings in the eastern Mediterranean.<br />

ANENDOTOS. Literally meaning unyielding, unbending, uncompromising,<br />

and unrelenting, anendotos was the way Georgios<br />

Papandreou defined his and his party’s political struggle against<br />

Konstantinos Karamanlis’ government after 1961. In the general<br />

elections of 1961, the conservative National Radical Union (NRU;<br />

Ethniki Rizospastiki Enosis, ERE), headed by Karamanlis, prevailed<br />

once again against the centrist opposition of Georgios Papandreou’s<br />

Center Union (Enosis Kentrou) with a remarkable 51 percent of the<br />

popular vote. The elections were not conducted by Karamanlis but,<br />

as was customary, by a caretaker government comprised of staunch<br />

conservatives appointed by the king. As soon as voting was concluded,<br />

evidence of irregularities emerged. It seemed that in the rural<br />

areas voters were intimidated by police and regime loyalists to vote<br />

for the government and in some urban centers the counting of votes<br />

was fraudulent. The exact extent of violence and fraud is still being<br />

debated and will probably never be fully known.<br />

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10 • ANENDOTOS<br />

Karamanlis would have been reelected in any case albeit with a<br />

smaller margin. It became evident later that the main target of voters’<br />

intimidation was not the center but the left. Although the Communist<br />

Party of Greece (CPG; Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE)<br />

remained outlawed, a left-wing party called Unified Democratic Left<br />

(UDL; Eniaia Dimokratiki Aristera, EDA) participated in the elections.<br />

In the 1958 elections, it performed exceptionally well, capturing<br />

one quarter of the votes and becoming the largest opposition<br />

party in Parliament. Its continuous success, only a few years after<br />

the conclusion of a bloody Civil War and at the height of the Cold<br />

War, troubled many conservatives (especially around the palace and<br />

in the army) and the United States government. Many centrist leaders,<br />

probably including Papandreou himself, were aware of plans to<br />

suppress the leftist vote. Some welcomed the possibility in the hope<br />

that they would benefit from it. Fine-tuning electoral mingling is<br />

never easy and it seems that the center suffered some losses itself.<br />

The initial announcement of the election results disappointed Papandreou,<br />

who hesitated to declare his future course of action. Having<br />

to lead a fractured opposition and a disunited party with many<br />

challengers, he decided not to recognize the results and proceeded<br />

to polarize Greek politics. He proved very successful. Anendotos<br />

touched a raw nerve in the Greek body politic of the time. Many<br />

Greeks felt it was time to move on with the liberalization and normalization<br />

of Greek politics, away from the restrictions and traumas of<br />

the recent past. Anendotos channeled and gave voice to an emerging<br />

liberal and independent-minded Greece. It soon escalated into massive<br />

marches and demonstrations across the whole country, gradually<br />

eroding support for Karamanlis’ government and softening opposition<br />

within the regime to a possible defeat of the ERE. Eventually,<br />

the Center Union won a landslide victory in 1964, with King Paul’s<br />

help, and Karamanlis left Greece for Paris, where he remained in<br />

self-imposed exile until 1974.<br />

Anendotos served Papandreou well. It papered over the fissures<br />

among the various factions of his party and it united not only the<br />

Center Union but the entire opposition, including to a large extent<br />

the left. It rebranded him as a radical opposition leader, sharpening<br />

his differences with the conservatives with whom he had worked<br />

many times in the past. It allowed him to take advantage of his con-<br />

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ANGELOPOULOS, THEODOROS • 11<br />

siderable rhetorical skills without having to explain policy specifics,<br />

and it helped isolate Karamanlis, who was the primary target, from<br />

the regime and the king. Twice, in less than a year, King Paul did<br />

Papandreou’s bidding: King Paul forced Karamanlis to resign in the<br />

summer of 1963 without immediately dissolving Parliament, and he<br />

conceded to Papandreou’s request for a new election in February<br />

1964, following the inconclusive elections of November 1963.<br />

In retrospect, anendotos destabilized Greek politics and initiated a<br />

process that led to the collapse of parliamentarianism with the coup<br />

of April 1967. Although much celebrated in Greek democratic mythology,<br />

anendotos polarized Greek politics at a time when Greece<br />

was moving away from its Third World status and aspired to a European<br />

future and when popular expectations were rising too fast for<br />

the socioeconomic system to adequately satisfy. The management<br />

of this transition required visionary leadership capable of careful<br />

planning and resistant to populist outburst. This proved a tall order<br />

for the Greek political class, whose infighting allowed extraconstitutional<br />

forces to impose their own solution on the country’s political<br />

problem.<br />

ANGELOPOULOS, THEODOROS (1935– ). Born in Athens, Angelopoulos<br />

is Greece’s most internationally celebrated cinema director.<br />

A master of imagery, he best represents the transition of the Greek<br />

movie industry from the mass production of popular light comedies<br />

and melodramas for domestic consumption in the 1960s into a more<br />

demanding, artistic, slow-moving, and soul-searching filmmaking<br />

with some international aspirations. This transition was marked by<br />

technological change, by the advance of television and corresponding<br />

decline in movie-going, and by political change, embodied in the<br />

democratization and legalization of the Communist Party of Greece<br />

(CPG; Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE) in 1974.<br />

Starting in the mid-1970s and aided by newly available state<br />

subsidies and a keen interest by post-junta Greek governments in<br />

promoting contemporary Greek culture abroad and, especially, in<br />

Europe, Angelopoulos created some epic films centered on the heroic<br />

defeat of the left in the Civil War and its aftermath. Shot in the Greek<br />

mountains, far away from Greece’s coastline tourist attractions, rich<br />

in symbolism but parsimonious with words or a plot, Angelopoulos<br />

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12 • ANNAN PLAN<br />

developed a reputation for difficult but majestic cinematography that<br />

became particularly popular among the left, the up-and-coming new<br />

urban sophisticates, and a few audiences abroad, especially in France.<br />

Some of his most memorable works include The Traveling Players,<br />

Voyage to Cythera, and Eternity and a Day, which won the Palme<br />

d’Or at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival. Recently, as the memory of<br />

the epic struggles of resistance and insurgency has faded away and<br />

Greece seems to have left behind the heroic politics of its recent past,<br />

Angelopoulos’ popularity has declined and his vocabulary seems out<br />

of touch with the younger, less politicized, generations.<br />

ANNAN PLAN. Named after United Nations (UN) Secretary-General<br />

Kofi Annan, this plan was the most comprehensive attempt, to date,<br />

on the part of the United Nations and the international community for<br />

the resolution of the Cyprus problem and the peaceful coexistence<br />

of Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots who live on and share the island.<br />

Put forward for approval in two separate referendums on 24 April<br />

2004, the plan was voted for by the Turkish-Cypriots but defeated<br />

by the Greek-Cypriots, after which it was abandoned. The plan was<br />

an elaborate and detailed attempt to provide for a functional bizonal,<br />

bicommunal federation that has long been accepted as the basis for<br />

the reunification of the island, which has remained divided since<br />

1974. Greek and Turkish nationalists denounced the plan as a sellout.<br />

The plan’s defeat angered Europeans and Americans and increased<br />

the distance between Greek liberals and the Cypriot cause. See also<br />

FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

ANTIPAROHI. See CONSTRUCTION.<br />

APOSTASIA. Literally meaning defection, apostasia came to negatively<br />

describe the defection of parliamentarians from the ruling<br />

Center Union (Kentro Enosis) Party in order to form a new government<br />

in the summer of 1965. This royally sanctioned government<br />

enjoyed the support of the conservative opposition party of the National<br />

Radical Union (NRU; Ethniki Rizospastiki Enosis, ERE) and<br />

was led, after two failed attempts to win a parliamentary majority, by<br />

Stefanos Stefanopoulos.<br />

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ARAB WORLD • 13<br />

Apostasia was the direct result of the clash between the popularly<br />

elected Prime Minister Georgios Papandreou and the young,<br />

inexperienced, and ill-advised King Constantine II. Starting with<br />

a disagreement over control of the Greek armed forces, the king<br />

forced Papandreou to resign and quickly moved to divide his party.<br />

Apostasia became a turning point of post–Civil War Greek politics<br />

and highlighted the restrictions under which Greek democracy was<br />

forced to operate, embodied by the king’s insistence on interfering<br />

and guiding the political process. It directly questioned the vitality of<br />

Greek parliamentarianism and made a mockery of the Greek political<br />

class. It caused a massive political mobilization and created an<br />

escalating crisis that led to the downfall of democratic politics with<br />

the military coup of 21 April 1967. Finally, apostasia turned the Papandreous—the<br />

father and his son Andreas—into popular fighters for<br />

democracy and sovereignty and was a severe blow to the legitimacy<br />

of the monarchy, from which it never really recovered.<br />

ARAB WORLD (RELATIONS WITH). Greece has traditionally enjoyed<br />

warm relations with the Arab world due to historical, cultural,<br />

and geographical proximity. Three of the five ancient Christian patriarchates<br />

are located in the Arab world and two of them, in Alexandria<br />

and Jerusalem, are headed by Greeks. There were tensions in the past<br />

when, for example, Greek communities fell victim to Arab nationalism<br />

in Egypt and elsewhere. But Greece remains particularly sympathetic<br />

to the national struggle of Palestinians and critical of Israeli<br />

and United States policy in the Arab world, whereas Arab states<br />

have diplomatically supported Greece on the issue of Cyprus. Many<br />

Arabs, especially Lebanese, Palestinians, Saudis, and Syrians, reside<br />

in Greece, in particular in the southern suburbs of Athens. Economic<br />

relations are based on oil, shipping, and tourism. The high point of<br />

Greece’s relations with the Arab world came in the early 1980s with<br />

the arrival of Andreas Papandreou, who cultivated his connection<br />

with Arab nationalist leaders like Yasser Arafat, Muammar Qaddafi,<br />

and Hafez Assad, despite American objections. In the summer of<br />

1982, the fighters of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO)<br />

were evacuated from Beirut with the assistance of Greek ships, and<br />

Papandreou briefly contemplated offering Arafat and his movement<br />

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14 • ARMED FORCES<br />

a home in Greece. PLO headquarters moved to Tunis but Athens<br />

remained particularly welcoming to Arabs. The end of the Cold War<br />

refocused Greek attention on the Balkans and the violent disintegration<br />

of Yugoslavia, and Greece remained largely absent from the<br />

Arab–Israeli peace process in the 1990s, although it did participate<br />

in the first Gulf War in 1990–1991. More recently, there has been<br />

a renewed Greek interest in the Arab world, and Greek business is<br />

taking advantage of the liberalization of Arab economies, primarily<br />

in Egypt, Jordan, Libya, and the Gulf, while some Arab oil money is<br />

being invested in Greece. See also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

ARMED FORCES. The armed forces of Greece comprise an army, a<br />

navy, and an air force, while the civilian authority rests with the Ministry<br />

of National Defense. The Greek armed forces rely on universal<br />

male conscription. Recently, military service has been shortened to<br />

one year. The total number of soldiers in uniform has fallen below<br />

200,000 and will continue to decrease as the country suffers from a<br />

demographic decline. The government is promoting the further professionalization<br />

of the army with a generous recruitment policy.<br />

Historically, Greece is one of the biggest defense spenders of the<br />

North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Currently, defense<br />

expenditures total 3.5 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP),<br />

or around €7 billion a year. Moreover, Greece is one of the top importers<br />

of military equipment worldwide. Most of the Greek weaponry<br />

comes from the United States and, in recent years, has included<br />

third-generation jet fighters, attack helicopters, tanks, antiaircraft<br />

missiles, submarines, frigates, reconnaissance planes, and high-tech<br />

telecommunication equipment. Despite a few attempts, Greece has<br />

failed to develop a reliable national defense industry. Most of the<br />

Greek army is stationed along the border with Turkey and on the<br />

islands of the eastern Aegean. Greek contingencies are currently<br />

serving in several missions of the United Nations (UN) and NATO,<br />

including Kosovo and Afghanistan.<br />

ART. Growing under the shadow of an overwhelming classical heritage,<br />

modern Greek art has struggled to balance itself between indigenous<br />

and European forms. Greek painting in the 19th century was<br />

heavily influenced by Munich and is best represented in the works<br />

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ASIA MINOR CATASTROPHE • 15<br />

of Nikolaos Ghysis, Konstantinos Volanakis, Nikiforos Lytras, and<br />

Georgios Iakovidis. Paris exerted a powerful influence in the first<br />

half of the 20th century with the postimpressionist works of Konstantinos<br />

Parthenis and Konstantinos Maleas. Photis Kondoglou rejected<br />

foreign influences and revived the Byzantine tradition, whereas<br />

postwar Greek painters such as Yannis Tsarouchis, Yannis Moralis,<br />

and Spyros Vassiliou masterfully combined Greek and Western influences.<br />

However, it is in poetry, music, and theater where Greek art stands<br />

in a class of its own. Greek poetry earned two Nobel Prizes, in 1963<br />

and in 1979 for the works of Georgios Seferis and Odysseas Elytis<br />

respectively, and has provided the lyrics for much of contemporary<br />

Greek music. Blending distinctly oriental sounds with Western orchestration,<br />

Greek music is spectacularly popular and is heard across<br />

the eastern Mediterranean. Athens remains a theatrical metropolis<br />

in Europe, and postwar Greece has developed a world-class tradition<br />

in staging ancient Greek drama. See also LITERATURE.<br />

ASIA MINOR CATASTROPHE (1922). The defeat of the Greek<br />

forces in Asia Minor by Turkish nationalists led by Kemal Atatürk<br />

in August 1922 was a major turning point in modern Greek history.<br />

In the age of nationalism, the Greek military defeat meant the ethnic<br />

cleansing of all Greeks of Asia Minor. The evacuation of the Greek<br />

army was followed by the expulsion of more than a million Asia Minor<br />

Greeks, while many thousands perished and never made it to the<br />

Greek islands across the western Anatolian coast. Ancient communities<br />

were destroyed or uprooted, and the demographic and cultural<br />

composition of much of western Asia Minor changed dramatically.<br />

The catastrophe brought an abrupt end to a century-long irredentist<br />

project of expanding Greece into Ottoman territory with large<br />

Greek communities. After 1922, Greece turned from a revisionist to<br />

a conservative power, abandoned foreign adventurism, and focused<br />

on domestic development and the demanding task of assimilating the<br />

refugees.<br />

With a broken army, Greece was forced to agree to the evacuation<br />

of eastern Thrace as well, in order to sign an armistice with Turkey.<br />

This meant that additional Greek refugees poured in, who—together<br />

with the Greeks from Bulgaria—brought the total to more than 1.5<br />

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16 • ASIA MINOR CATASTROPHE<br />

million people, at a time when Greece’s native population was no<br />

more than 5.5 million.<br />

Funding, housing, and employing the hundreds of thousands of<br />

destitute refugees were a monumental challenge for the impoverished<br />

and war-torn nation. The task was facilitated by the departure of half<br />

a million Muslim Turks from northern Greece who were exchanged<br />

for the incoming Greeks, but later this was complicated by the world<br />

economic crisis of 1929. Overall, the Greek state performed well and<br />

the infusion of refugees provided for the industrialization of the<br />

Greek economy, the ethnic homogenization of Greek Macedonia<br />

and Thrace, and the overall modernization of Greek society. Politically,<br />

the refugees lent massive support to the Liberals of Eleftherios<br />

Venizelos by blaming the royalists for their misfortunes, and<br />

increasingly provided a receptive audience to a growing communist<br />

left.<br />

Who was to blame for the catastrophe? In the immediate aftermath<br />

of the defeat, the military revolted against the king and the royalist<br />

government. The army demanded and secured the sentencing and<br />

execution of the six royalist leaders, including the former prime<br />

minister and the head of the army. Constantine I abdicated and two<br />

years later a republic was proclaimed. It took years for the royalists<br />

to recover politically from the blame.<br />

In retrospect, the decision to land Greek forces in Izmir (Smyrna)<br />

in May 1919 was a risky gamble. At the time, Venizelos had belatedly<br />

allied Greece with the victorious Entente and was invited by<br />

British Prime Minister Lloyd George to land in Asia Minor and assist<br />

in the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire. However, the<br />

landing of the Greeks was bound to raise fierce opposition among<br />

the Turks. Not only did their former subjects suddenly threaten the<br />

very heartland of the Turkish nation, but unlike the British, French,<br />

and Italians, the Greeks, if allowed, were there to stay since they<br />

already had a strong demographic presence in Izmir and its vicinity.<br />

As a result, as soon as news of the landing spread, irregular Turks<br />

slaughtered Greeks in the areas they controlled, especially inland and<br />

on the Black Sea. The Greeks committed their own share of atrocities<br />

against the local Muslim population in the areas they controlled,<br />

poisoning further the relations between the two peoples and making<br />

their coexistence increasingly unattainable. The nationalist dream of<br />

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ASIA MINOR CATASTROPHE • 17<br />

Venizelos for a Greece of the two continents and the five seas was<br />

not as widely shared as one might have thought; many soldiers from<br />

old Greece, especially from Peloponnesus, longed to return home<br />

and to lead civilian lives after almost a decade of mobilization.<br />

Venizelos did not anticipate the emergence of a fierce and wellorganized<br />

Turkish nationalist resistance led by a charismatic Kemal<br />

Atatürk, in opposition to the compliant government of the sultan<br />

based in Istanbul. Furthermore, having secured most of the Greek<br />

claims under the Treaty of Sèvres, which the defeated Ottoman<br />

Turkey was forced to sign in 1920, Venizelos did not expect to lose<br />

the forthcoming elections. Running on a pacifist ticket, the royalist<br />

opposition unexpectedly won what proved to be one of the most<br />

fateful elections of Greek history. The change of government denied<br />

Greece the great diplomatic skills of Venizelos, a longtime friend of<br />

the Entente, at a time when they were most needed, while the change<br />

in the leadership of the army created a turmoil that was never fully<br />

resolved. Once in power, the royalists openly defied Great Britain<br />

and France by orchestrating the return to the throne of anti-Entente<br />

King Constantine I, who had been expelled in 1917 by Entente forces<br />

because of his pro-German sympathies. Rather than bringing the war<br />

to a quick end as promised, the new government was trapped into<br />

expanding the war effort inside Anatolia all the way to the outskirts<br />

of Ankara in a desperate effort to force Kemal to compromise.<br />

In the summer of 1921, the Greek forces reached the limit of their<br />

overextension and were repelled at the Saggarios River. Greece<br />

desperately sued for a diplomatic settlement but Kemal would make<br />

no deal. Exhausted and isolated internationally after the return of<br />

King Constantine from exile, Greece looked for a miracle that never<br />

happened. Instead, Kemal carefully planned a massive attack on the<br />

overextended Greek lines; the Greek forces were defeated, which led<br />

to a panic rush to the Aegean coast, leaving behind thousands of civilian<br />

Greeks trying to survive the onslaught. On 5 September 1922,<br />

the Turkish forces entered Izmir (Smyrna), which was burned to the<br />

ground four days later. Allied naval forces, including many British<br />

and French ships, declined to offer help to the fleeing Greeks—a<br />

tragic end of millennia of Hellenism on the eastern shores of the<br />

Aegean. Eventually, a new peace treaty was signed in Lausanne in<br />

1923. Turkey, alone among the defeated powers of World War I,<br />

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18 • ATHENS<br />

managed to revise the initial Treaty of Sèvres in its favor. The Treaty<br />

of Lausanne became the cornerstone of relations between Greece<br />

and Turkey. See also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

ATHENS. Athens is the capital of Greece. It was also the epicenter of<br />

much of classical Hellas and, to this day, resonates with a powerful<br />

symbolism associated with the classical age. With around four million<br />

inhabitants, Athens is a modern metropolis and the largest city<br />

in Greece. Approximately 65 percent of the Greek gross domestic<br />

product (GDP) is produced in Athens, where most of the Greek industry<br />

is concentrated. Even more than Paris in France, Athens is the<br />

administrative, economic, and cultural center of the very centralized<br />

modern Greek nation-state.<br />

After having declined to the status of a large village after the<br />

Middle Ages, Athens was chosen to be the capital of the newly independent<br />

Kingdom of Greece by the incoming young King Otto and<br />

his Bavarians in 1833, thanks to its classical glory. Urban planning<br />

was daring but fell victim to the lack of resources and popular pressures.<br />

The center of Athens is still marked by the old town at the foot<br />

of the Acropolis with the Bavarian new city, the Parliament building,<br />

and a number of majestic neoclassical buildings surrounding it.<br />

Athens’ population continued to increase throughout the 19th<br />

century and reached one million on the eve of World War I. Its<br />

population exploded in the aftermath of the Asia Minor catastrophe<br />

with the arrival of hundreds of thousands of Greek refugees. Many of<br />

its suburbs bear names from Asia Minor such as Nea Smyrni (New<br />

Izmir), Nea Ionia, Nea Philadelphia, and so forth. Athens suffered<br />

greatly during the first winter of Nazi occupation in 1941–1942 when<br />

food supplies were diverted to German troops and the civilian population<br />

was left to starve. Athens was the main stage for the “second<br />

round” of the Greek Civil War in December 1944. After the Civil<br />

War, Athens received many relocated highlanders who abandoned,<br />

forcefully or willingly, their mountainous villages to escape the<br />

war.<br />

Athens expanded rapidly in the 1950s and 1960s as thousands of<br />

peasants moved there to take advantage of new job opportunities.<br />

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ATHENS • 19<br />

More recently, there has been an influx of Albanians. Rapid growth<br />

changed the character of the city and put enormous pressure on its<br />

infrastructure. By the 1980s, Athens reached a low point, suffering<br />

from chronic traffic congestion, record air pollution, and a lack of<br />

green spaces. Since the early 1990s, conditions have improved with<br />

the creation of a modern new subway, superfast beltway road, new<br />

airport, a number of state-of-the-art stadiums, a network of pedestrian<br />

streets, and new public spaces. The height of this rejuvenation came<br />

with the hosting of the Olympic Games in August 2004.<br />

Although not particularly beautiful, Athens occupies a favorable<br />

position surrounded by a scenic coastline, is close to many historical<br />

sites and natural attractions, and is blessed with a temperate<br />

Mediterranean climate—dry in the summer and mild in the winter.<br />

Built in a valley and surrounded by mountains, Athens’ horizon is<br />

dominated by the Acropolis, which is home to some of the world’s<br />

most celebrated structures, including the Parthenon. Athens is a city<br />

buzzing with energy and with countless cafes, bars, restaurants, and<br />

night clubs that cater to all tastes. On a cultural note, Athens has renowned<br />

museums, more than 150 theater companies, and hosts many<br />

international art and music festivals. Several institutions of higher<br />

learning are based in Athens, including the oldest modern university<br />

in southeastern Europe, the National and Capodistrian University of<br />

Athens, founded in 1837, and the National Technical University of<br />

Athens (Polytechnio), Greece’s leading engineering school, founded<br />

in 1836.<br />

Although densely built, with a vibrant downtown and an expanding<br />

subway that brings its suburbs closer together, Athens is still five<br />

cities wrapped in one. There is central Athens with the posh district<br />

of Kolonaki; the northern suburbs housing the Athenian middle and<br />

upper classes; the western, working-class suburbs; the port city of Piraeus<br />

with a strong local identity; and the expanding California-like<br />

southern suburbs along the coast. There is not much left on which to<br />

build in the central valley, and new development occurs in Mesogia,<br />

an area to the east where the new airport is located, and in formerly<br />

industrial sites within the city, such as the Gazi district and around<br />

Piraeus Street. See also ANCIENT GREECE.<br />

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20 • BALKAN WARS<br />

– B –<br />

BALKAN WARS (1912–1913). The Balkan Wars have been independent<br />

Greece’s most territorially profitable military engagement,<br />

resulting in almost doubling its territory and population. Greece’s<br />

gains in Epirus, Macedonia, and the Aegean were disproportionate<br />

to the costs of the military campaigns because both wars were<br />

short in duration. For all the victories of the Greek armed forces,<br />

especially of the Greek navy that dominated the Aegean, much of<br />

the Greek success should be attributed to the able diplomacy of its<br />

prime minister, Eleftherios Venizelos, who twice placed Greece on<br />

the winning side.<br />

The First Balkan War was sparked by the Christian Balkan states’<br />

desire to expel Ottoman Turkey from Europe. Despite the opposition<br />

of the great powers (such as Great Britain, andGermany) who<br />

worried about regional instability, Greece and its allies—Serbia,<br />

Bulgaria, and Montenegro—were surprisingly successful and the<br />

Ottoman front, as far as the outskirts of Constantinople (Istanbul),<br />

quickly succumbed. Having won a bloody battle in Yanitsa and led<br />

by Prince Constantine, the Greek army’s finest hour came when it<br />

entered Thessaloniki, the Ottomans’ largest city in Europe after Istanbul,<br />

only a few hours before the Bulgarians, on St. Dimitrios Day,<br />

26 October 1912. Simultaneously, the Greek fleet, commanded by<br />

Pavlos Koundouriotis, defeated the Ottomans at sea and liberated the<br />

islands in the northern and eastern Aegean (Lesvos, Chios, Imvros,<br />

Tenedos, Limnos, Samos, and Ikaria islands).<br />

The First Balkan war ended with the Treaty of London, which<br />

obliged the Ottomans to abandon the territories lost to the Balkan<br />

alliance, without specifying the new borders of the Balkan countries.<br />

This ambiguity and Bulgaria’s increasing frustration, having fought<br />

the hardest but gained the least—especially when compared to the<br />

territories it was promised by the unrealized Treaty of San Stefano in<br />

1878—led to the Second Balkan War in July 1913. The war ended<br />

with the Treaty of Bucharest in August 1913.<br />

The Second Balkan War was fought between Bulgaria and the<br />

rest of the region, including Ottoman Turkey and Romania, for the<br />

distribution of the spoils. Fighting alone, Bulgaria lost and had to<br />

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BALKANS • 21<br />

give up much of Macedonia, the main contested territory, to Greece<br />

and Serbia.<br />

Greece’s expansion partially fulfilled the long-lasting irredentist<br />

project of Megali Idea (or Greater Greece) and should be attributed<br />

to the success of its domestic modernization on the eve of the war<br />

and to Venizelos’ inspiring leadership. Incorporating the new lands,<br />

especially Macedonia with its heterogeneous ethnic composition,<br />

was a challenge for the Greek state. As a result, in the years that followed<br />

and until recently, Greek politics were dominated by a multifaceted<br />

crisis of integration that had much to do with the transfers of<br />

territories and populations, in the period that started with the Balkan<br />

Wars in 1912 and ended with the Asia Minor catastrophe in 1922.<br />

In the meantime, Constantine became the king of Greece, following<br />

his popular father’s assassination in March 1913 in Thessaloniki, and<br />

used his own recently acquired popularity as the military “liberator”<br />

of Macedonia to confront his prime minister, Venizelos. See also<br />

BALKANS; FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

BALKANS. Greece lies at the southernmost part of the Balkan Peninsula.<br />

As part of the Balkans, Greece shares much of the history<br />

and culture of the region, including the common legacy left by the<br />

Byzantine and Ottoman empires and by Orthodox Christianity.<br />

However, the Greeks form a national group distinct from the Slavs to<br />

the north and the Turks to the east. Furthermore, surrounded by the<br />

sea, Greek identity has been influenced by the Mediterranean to a<br />

degree rarely found in the rest of the Balkans.<br />

During the Cold War, Greece was cut off from the Balkans and<br />

looked to the west. From the 1970s onward, relations with the Balkan<br />

neighbors gradually improved as a result of the Europe-wide détente<br />

and the deterioration of Greece’s relations with Turkey. Following<br />

the fall of communism, a natural Balkan hinterland reemerged, offering<br />

numerous opportunities for trade, investment, and cultural<br />

and social exchanges. Although Greeks opposed and were saddened<br />

by the disintegration of Yugoslavia, the truth is that the elimination<br />

of the large Yugoslav federation to the north has allowed Greece to<br />

claim a leadership role in the region based on its superior economic<br />

and political resources.<br />

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22 • BANKING<br />

Greece has been an ardent supporter of Balkan cooperation, sponsoring<br />

the establishment of numerous fora in politics, the economy,<br />

and sports, among others. Recently, however, the drive for regional<br />

integration has been superseded by European integration itself and<br />

the desire of all Balkan countries to enter the European Union (EU)<br />

as soon as possible. In their quest, Greece has been supportive, arguing<br />

in favor of EU enlargement in southeastern Europe. See also<br />

ALBANIA; BALKAN WARS; BULGARIA; FOREIGN POLICY;<br />

MACEDONIA, FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC <strong>OF</strong>; SERBIA.<br />

BANKING. Banking is one of the most dynamic and profitable sectors<br />

of the Greek economy. The Greek banking sector is currently<br />

booming, bank profits are at a record high, totaling some €4.5 billion<br />

in 2007 alone, and profit margins are among the highest in Europe.<br />

There are many reasons for this success, including the liberalization<br />

reforms since the mid-1980s, the rapid expansion of domestic credit,<br />

mergers, consolidation, and expansion abroad.<br />

Until Greece’s entry into the European Union (EU) in 1981,<br />

Greek banking was dominated by state-owned or state-controlled<br />

institutions. To a large extent, banks were an extension of the government’s<br />

economic and developmental policy. In addition, banks<br />

were obliged to lend to the state at very low rates. The result was<br />

the overpoliticization of credit that became scarce and costly. Half<br />

of the market was controlled by the National Bank of Greece (NBG),<br />

the oldest and largest Greek bank. The NBG was founded in 1841,<br />

following several unsuccessful attempts to establish such a bank, and<br />

had the right to issue banknotes until the establishment of the Bank<br />

of Greece in 1928.<br />

Since the late 1980s, Greek banks have undergone a dramatic<br />

change, and since the 1990s, they have expanded vigorously into<br />

southeastern Europe. Today, the 3,200 branches of Greek banks that<br />

operate in the Balkans control around 20% of the market. The most<br />

celebrated deal was NBG’s acquisition of Turkey’s Finansbank<br />

for around $4 billion, the largest commercial transaction in history<br />

between Greece and Turkey. This confirmed the extroversion of the<br />

Greek banking sector and further boosted investors’ confidence in the<br />

current Greek–Turkish détente.<br />

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BARTHOLOMEW I • 23<br />

Today, there are five major banks: NBG (the only bank in which<br />

the state still has a controlling influence), followed by Alpha, EFG<br />

Eurobank, Piraeus, and Commercial Bank (which is owned by<br />

France’s Credit Agricole). Greek banks aggressively took advantage<br />

of the new economic conditions in Greece caused by its membership<br />

in the EU, which included the lifting of previously tight controls and<br />

the macroeconomic stability introduced by the euro. Thus, retail<br />

credit has rapidly expanded to mortgages and consumers. Nevertheless,<br />

Greek banks are still burdened by an excessive workforce,<br />

generous pension liabilities, and militant unions, and continue to<br />

provide some of the most expensive credit in the Eurozone. There is<br />

ample room for further consolidation, computerization, and increased<br />

competition. In the meantime, although fairly conservative and riskaverse,<br />

Greek banks have been hit by the global economic downturn<br />

in 2009, mainly through their exposure in the Balkans.<br />

BARTHOLOMEW I (1940– ). As the Ecumenical Patriarch in Istanbul<br />

(Constantinople), Bartholomew is recognized as the nominal<br />

spiritual leader of all Orthodox Christians, a position much disputed<br />

by Turkey and Russia. Born in 1940 on the island of Imvros in<br />

Turkey, he studied at the ancient Divinity School of Halki in the<br />

Marmara Sea. He received his master’s degree from the Eastern<br />

Studies Institute in Rome and his PhD from the Gregorian University<br />

of Rome. In 1968, Bartholomew obtained a faculty position at<br />

the Patriarchal Divinity School in Halki and in 1972 became director<br />

of the Patriarchal Office. In 1973, he was ordained metropolitan<br />

of Philadelphia, an ancient but flockless metropolis in present-day<br />

Turkey, and in 1990 was enthroned metropolitan of Chalcedon. Bartholomew<br />

was elected Ecumenical Patriarch in 1990 after the death<br />

of Patriarch Dimitrios.<br />

A polyglot and well educated, Bartholomew has promoted the<br />

unity of the Orthodox Church, more contacts with the Vatican, better<br />

protection of the environment, and an enhanced understanding of<br />

the patriarchate’s troubled relationship with Ankara. His ambition is<br />

to reopen the Halki School for the education of new recruits to the<br />

aging patriarchate. Nevertheless, Bartholomew has not avoided controversy,<br />

as evidenced by his clash with the dynamic and politically<br />

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24 • BAVARIAN RULE<br />

savvy Archbishop Iakovos of North and South America, the patriarchate’s<br />

most important province, which led to Iakovos’ retirement<br />

and a decline in the Greek Church’s political influence in the United<br />

States. Furthermore, he clashed with the ambitious Greek Archbishop<br />

Christodoulos over the control of Greek Macedonia’s dioceses.<br />

BAVARIAN RULE (VAVAROKRATIA). The short period in the<br />

early years of the newly independent Greek state, when the administration<br />

of the country was assumed by a three-man Regency Council,<br />

designated by King Otto’s father and king of Bavaria, Ludwig I. In<br />

1832, Otto was chosen by the great powers (mainly Great Britain,<br />

Russia, and France) to be the Greek king and arrived in Greece in<br />

1833 at the age of 18, unable to assume his royal duties until the age<br />

of 20. During that period, Otto’s father formed a group of Bavarian<br />

nobles in order to rule Greece and prepare the country for his son’s<br />

reign. The Bavarian Regency Council consisted of Count Joseph<br />

Ludwig von Armansperg, Major-General Karl von Heideck, and<br />

Professor Georg Ludwig von Maurer. The Regency Council ruled<br />

Greece in the most centralized way, repulsing the Greeks from<br />

any control over their state and subsequently provoking general<br />

discontent. However, the Bavarians worked hard and efficiently to<br />

modernize the administration, justice, and education systems, the<br />

economy, public finances, and the army of the Greek kingdom. Furthermore,<br />

they declared the Greek Orthodox Church independent<br />

from the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople in Ottoman<br />

Turkey.<br />

In 1835, Otto came of age and assumed his royal duties. He was<br />

neither interested in nor capable of governing, and the Bavarian<br />

Council continued to control the country. In 1837, under strong British<br />

and French pressure, Otto dismissed the regents and appointed<br />

Greeks to his cabinet. However, he refused to grant a constitution or<br />

to allow for a popularly elected legislature. The authoritarianism of<br />

the Bavarian rule and its generally heavy-handed involvement in the<br />

country’s politics contributed to the popular uprising of 1843 and the<br />

final ousting of Otto in 1863.<br />

BULGARIA (RELATIONS WITH). In the past, the emergence of<br />

Bulgarian nationalism, supported by Slavic Russia after the mid-19th<br />

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BYZANTINE EMPIRE • 25<br />

century, was bound to challenge Greece’s cultural prerogatives and<br />

political aspirations in the southern Balkans and especially in the<br />

Ottoman province of Macedonia, which was to become the bone<br />

of contention over which the two nations would fight several times<br />

in the first half of the 20th century. What started as an ecclesiastical<br />

dispute between the Greek-controlled Ecumenical Patriarchate<br />

in Istanbul (Constantinople) and the newly independent Bulgarian<br />

Exarchate after 1870, quickly degenerated into a low-intensity conflict<br />

as pro-Bulgarian and pro-Greek bands fought to secure support<br />

of the mostly illiterate Christian peasant population of Macedonia<br />

for their respective causes. Greece emerged from the Balkan Wars<br />

victorious, fostering a strong revisionist revanchism in Bulgaria. In<br />

both World War I and World War II, Bulgaria sided with Germany<br />

in its bid to recover Macedonia and, twice, it failed. During the occupation<br />

of Greek territories, Bulgarian forces committed numerous<br />

atrocities against Greek civilians. In the meantime, Greece and Bulgaria<br />

exchanged populations, and with the arrival of the Asia Minor<br />

refugees Greece consolidated its hold on its part of Macedonia. Revisionism<br />

has long since died in Bulgaria, and the independence of<br />

a neighboring Macedonia in 1991 did not have much of a nationalist<br />

impact on Sofia, where economic development remains the primary<br />

concern.<br />

Greece’s relations with Bulgaria have improved markedly since<br />

the mid-1970s and are currently in an excellent state. In the latter<br />

stages of the Cold War, Greece warmed to Bulgaria to counterbalance<br />

Turkey and to promote the Helsinki spirit of détente in the<br />

Balkans. Greece strongly supported Bulgaria’s bid for the European<br />

Union (EU) and invested heavily in the opening of the Bulgarian<br />

economy after 1989, while hosting thousands of immigrants and welcoming<br />

hundreds of thousands of Bulgarian tourists, especially in<br />

the north of the country. See also ASIA MINOR CATASTROPHE;<br />

FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

BYZANTINE EMPIRE (BYZANTIUM). The terms Byzantine and<br />

Byzantium were introduced by Westerners after the Renaissance to<br />

describe, often in a derogatory manner, the Eastern Roman Empire<br />

with Constantinople as its capital and Christian Orthodoxy as its<br />

state religion. The empire was Roman in its institutional structure<br />

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26 • CALLAS, MARIA<br />

and historical and ideological consciousness but it was, gradually,<br />

Hellenized, as it slowly lost its non-Greek-speaking provinces in<br />

the eastern Mediterranean and contracted to a culturally Greek<br />

core. It lasted for a thousand years until the fall of Constantinople to<br />

the Ottoman Turks in 1453, having withstood numerous invasions<br />

and weakened by the crusades and Frankish rule after 1204. The<br />

Byzantines did not simply serve as the transmitters of the classical<br />

Greek and Roman civilization to the present day but were creators<br />

of a superb medieval civilization themselves, as can be traced in the<br />

architecture, literature, painting, and philosophy they left behind.<br />

Reaching its peak in the 10th century under the Macedonian dynasty,<br />

the empire’s deepest and longest lasting historical imprint has<br />

been the Christianization of the Slavs, most of whom came to share<br />

Byzantium’s Orthodoxy and the Cyrillic alphabet, which is based on<br />

the Greek alphabet.<br />

Modern Greece has had a complicated relationship with Byzantium.<br />

Early Greek nationalists looking westwards and, being critical<br />

of the church, preferred to focus on classical antiquity, which formed<br />

the cornerstone of the Enlightenment’s historical narrative. Newly independent<br />

Greece chose Athens as its capital and broke off relations<br />

with the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul (Constantinople). It<br />

fell upon the late 19th-century historian Konstantinos Paparigopoulos<br />

to restore Byzantium in the Greek nationalist narrative and to<br />

“imagine” a continuity for the Greek nation from ancient to medieval<br />

to modern times. Such a restoration was in line with 19th-century<br />

Romantic thinking as well as the Greek Church’s power exigencies.<br />

Today, Byzantine history forms part of the core curriculum in Greek<br />

schools, Byzantine monuments are maintained and often wonderfully<br />

restored, and the Byzantine museums in Athens, Thessaloniki, and<br />

elsewhere have been turned into major cultural centers.<br />

– C –<br />

CALLAS, MARIA (1923–1977). Maria Anna Sophia Cecelia Kalogeropoulou,<br />

known as Maria Callas, was born in New York and<br />

died of a heart attack in Paris. Callas is probably considered modern<br />

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CAPODISTRIAS, IOANNIS • 27<br />

Greece’s greatest and best known artist. A soprano of unmatched talent,<br />

she is one of opera’s greatest and best-selling vocalists.<br />

Callas was born into poverty and struggled with a dominating<br />

mother and a lack of self-confidence in her appearance. She came<br />

of age in Athens studying in the national music conservatory but<br />

quickly moved on to an international career, starting in Italy, after<br />

World War II. Callas is universally admired as a musical revolutionary.<br />

By modernizing the great bel canto tradition, she took an<br />

old-fashioned art form with a declining audience and made it trendy<br />

again with millions of new admirers.<br />

Her personal life was no less dramatic. Originally married to<br />

Giovanni Meneghini, she fell in love with her fellow Greek, Aristotle<br />

Onassis, a shipping tycoon. For a while, their affair attracted<br />

enormous publicity as both were prominent members of the international<br />

jet set in the 1960s. The affair ended in 1968 when Onassis<br />

married Jackie Kennedy, although they continued to see each other<br />

until Onassis’ untimely death in 1975. Two years later, Callas died<br />

alone in her apartment in Paris. Her body was cremated and her ashes<br />

were scattered in the Aegean according to her wishes.<br />

CAPODISTRIAS, IOANNIS (1776–1831). Count Ioannis Antonios<br />

Capodistrias, or Conte Capo d’Istria in Italian, was born in Corfu,<br />

the richest and most developed of the Ionian Islands, which were<br />

controlled by Venice until the Napoleonic wars. He was tragically<br />

assassinated in Nafplio, the first capital of independent Greece. Capodistrias<br />

was originally a career Russian diplomat. Having reached<br />

the position of foreign minister at the court of Czar Alexander I,<br />

Capodistrias was elected in 1827 by the Greek National Assembly to<br />

serve as the first president of the country for a seven-year term.<br />

A Greek of international repute with extensive diplomatic and administrative<br />

experience, Capodistrias arrived in Nafplio in 1828 and<br />

was immediately confronted with the devastation and poverty that the<br />

War of Independence had wreaked on the country. Where there was<br />

chaos, he tried to establish order following the latest administrative<br />

principles of the advanced states of Europe. His primary purpose was to<br />

centralize power, but in the process he encountered the opposition of local<br />

nobles and warlords who, having just fought a war of independence<br />

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28 • CASTORIADIS, CORNELIUS<br />

against the Turks, had no desire to succumb to the authority of a<br />

centralizing, modern state.<br />

Capodistrias introduced significant reforms in newly independent<br />

Greece’s administration, economy, education system, and armed<br />

forces. His diplomatic skills proved essential in safeguarding the independence<br />

of Greece and the inclusion of more territories in the new<br />

country than initially planned. Nevertheless, France and especially<br />

Great Britain did not cease to be suspicious of his supposed Russophilia.<br />

Their hostility—coupled with the growing dissatisfaction<br />

of local nobles, especially the powerful Mavromihalis family from<br />

Mani—led to his political isolation and, subsequently, his assassination.<br />

His death provoked much civic strife and chaos, and some of<br />

his reforms were rescinded. He was succeeded by the Bavarians<br />

and King Otto, who ruled Greece until 1864 under the protection of<br />

Britain.<br />

Capodistrias is rightly considered independent Greece’s first modernizer<br />

and one of its four leading statesmen, followed chronologically<br />

by Harilaos Trikoupis, Eleftherios Venizelos, and Konstantinos<br />

Karamanlis. Although much of recent historiography accuses<br />

him of authoritarianism and a failure to appreciate local conditions,<br />

Capodistrias was a man of his times, a product of the Enlightenment,<br />

and a believer in rationalism. He implemented a radical program of<br />

reforms that aimed to turn an Ottoman backwater into a European<br />

nation-state. His assassination not only inaugurated a tradition of<br />

violence in Greek politics but was followed by more authoritarianism<br />

and disregard for Greek sensitivities by the Bavarians.<br />

CASTORIADIS, CORNELIUS (1922–1997). Born in Istanbul, Castoriadis<br />

was a political philosopher of much influence in postwar<br />

Western Europe. He is best known for offering a devastating leftist<br />

critique against the Soviet Union, its socioeconomic system, and<br />

the international communist movement it sponsored, through his<br />

participation in the French journal Socialisme ou Barbarie and the<br />

publication of major works such as The Imaginary Institution of Society<br />

and Crossroads in the Labyrinth. Following a long tradition and<br />

like many Greek intellectuals of his generation, he found a hospitable<br />

home in France where, during the Cold War, lively debates between<br />

new and post-Marxists took place. He died in Paris.<br />

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CENTER UNION • 29<br />

CAVAFY, CONSTANTINE (1863–1933). Born in Alexandria,<br />

Egypt, and having spent time in England and Istanbul before returning<br />

to settle in his native Alexandria, Cavafy is Greece’s most<br />

internationally acclaimed poet. His writing was unique both in the<br />

use of the Greek language and in the forms he employed. In the<br />

154 short poems he published, he wrote on aspects of the human<br />

condition in a universal spirit. Making use of historical narratives,<br />

mainly with references to the Hellenistic era, Cavafy, a master of<br />

irony and ambivalence, spoke of love, longing, youth, alienation,<br />

decadence, and human dignity. A homosexual, he lived a quiet,<br />

secluded life as a public servant. Recognition came late and mainly<br />

after his death (in Alexandria), but his reputation grew during<br />

the postwar period and today Cavafy’s work is read and taught<br />

throughout the world. See also LITERATURE.<br />

CENTER UNION (ENOSIS KENTROU). The Center Union Party<br />

formed in 1961 by Georgios Papandreou with the participation of<br />

Sofoklis Venizelos. Bringing together a wide spectrum of centrist<br />

politicians and old liberals, ranging from the center-left with Ilias<br />

Tsirimokos to the center-right with Konstantinos Mitsotakis, its aim<br />

was to provide a credible government alternative to the hegemony<br />

of the Greek right and Konstantinos Karamanlis. Helped by the<br />

charismatic personality and great oratory skills of Papandreou and<br />

an understanding with King Paul, the Center Union won the 1963<br />

and 1964 elections. It was propelled to power on a wave of rising<br />

popular expectations in favor of social and political reforms. However,<br />

the Center Union proved disunited while in power and broke<br />

down when Papandreou was forced to resign by the new and young<br />

King Constantine II in July 1965. Nevertheless, the Center Union<br />

recovered and was on its way to reclaiming power in the May 1967<br />

elections when the colonels’ coup of 21 April froze the political process<br />

for the following seven years. Following the fall of the junta in<br />

1974, the Center Union’s successor party, Union of the Democratic<br />

Center (UDC; Enosi Dimokratikou Kentrou, EDIK) rapidly declined<br />

and much of its old constituency followed Andreas Papandreou,<br />

son of Georgios, into his new Panhellenic Socialist Movement<br />

(PASOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima) that eventually came to<br />

power in 1981.<br />

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30 • CENTRAL GREECE<br />

CENTRAL GREECE (STEREA ELLADA). Traditionally called<br />

Roumeli, Sterea Ellada, or Central Greece, is part of old Greece or<br />

the original kingdom of Greece that was established after the War<br />

of Independence. With a surface area of 24,391 square kilometers<br />

and a population of 1,235,558, excluding Athens, Central Greece is<br />

a large, mountainous region that stretches from the Ionian Sea to the<br />

Aegean Sea north of Peloponnesus and the Bay of Corinth. In addition<br />

to Athens, world-famous ancient sites such as Thebes and Delphi<br />

and Byzantine monasteries such as that of St. Lucas are located in<br />

Central Greece.<br />

CHRISTODOULOS, ARCHBISHOP (1939–2008). Born in Xanthi<br />

in Thrace, he studied law and theology and became a priest in 1965.<br />

In 1974 Christodoulos was elected bishop of Dimitriada in Volos in<br />

Thessaly. In 1998, the Holy Synod of the Greek Church elected him<br />

archbishop after the death of his predecessor, Serafim.<br />

Christodoulos distinguished himself as a dynamic, young bishop<br />

in Volos, working with the local civil society on a number of social<br />

problems, including drug abuse and poverty. Upon his ascension to<br />

the leadership of the Orthodox Church, he strove to modernize the<br />

church’s profile and role in Greek society in accordance with the<br />

changing times. Although always powerful and sanctioned by the<br />

Constitution, the leadership of the church had chosen to lie low in<br />

the aftermath of the fall of the junta in 1974. By 1998, the Greek<br />

Church was confident enough to claim a stronger role in Greek society,<br />

take advantage of a global religious revival, and mount a defense<br />

against the excesses of globalization, Europeanization, and the erosion<br />

of national identity. Fairly youthful, media savvy, and easygoing,<br />

Christodoulos embodied the church’s new ambition. Initially,<br />

Christodoulos’ popularity skyrocketed as disadvantaged Greeks,<br />

tired of the politicians, warmed to him but he soon came into conflict<br />

with the political leadership.<br />

He was in a difficult position: appointed for life and a high public<br />

functionary paid by the Greek taxpayer, Christodoulos flirted with<br />

a political role that made him and the church vulnerable to all sorts<br />

of attacks. The high point of the confrontation came in 2001 when<br />

the Socialist government of Kostas Simitis introduced legislation<br />

eliminating religious affiliation (judging this a private matter) from<br />

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CINEMA • 31<br />

the identity cards issued to all Greek citizens. Christodoulos led a<br />

popular revolt, tried to turn this minor reform into a major assault on<br />

the Greek nation, but failed to force the government to back down.<br />

A strong and charismatic personality, Christodoulos confronted<br />

the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew in Istanbul (Constantinople)<br />

and much of his own Holy Synod as his centralizing tendencies<br />

threatened the prerogatives of many bishops. He was able to ignore<br />

much of the conservative opposition within the church when he successfully<br />

hosted Pope John Paul II in Athens in 2001, lending his<br />

support to the reconciliation of the Catholic and Orthodox churches.<br />

In 2005, the church and some of his close associates were implicated<br />

in serious financial improprieties. He survived the storm and<br />

remained popular while growing wiser over the years. Christodoulos<br />

died in Athens in 2008.<br />

His controversial tenure reopened the old debate on the separation<br />

of church and state. Many of Christodoulos’ liberal enemies consider<br />

this is a way to weaken the church and its hold on much of the Greek<br />

populace. However, it is doubtful whether an independent church<br />

leader would be less, rather than more, powerful than he already is.<br />

Ieronymos, Christodoulos’ successor, seems to have opted for a more<br />

spiritual and less political leadership role.<br />

CINEMA. Although several attempts had already been made, Greek<br />

cinema really became popular only after World War II. Its development<br />

can be divided into four distinct phases. The first ran through<br />

1960, with the founding of commercial studios such as Finos Films<br />

(FF) and the emergence of inspiring directors such as Georgios<br />

Tzavellas and Nikos Koundouros and talented actors such as Vasilis<br />

Logothetidis and Aliki Vougiouklaki, and, more importantly, the<br />

development of a certain cinematographic vocabulary. The second<br />

phase, from 1960 to 1973, was the most popular and most commercial,<br />

with production consisting mainly of light comedies, musicals,<br />

and melodramas, reaching some 80 films per year. The works of<br />

Alekos Sakellarios and Yannis Dalianidis best represent this period.<br />

The third phase was influenced by the political change of the mid-<br />

1970s and the return of a hegemonic left and its narrative. As the<br />

mass audience deserted the movie theaters in favor of television,<br />

Greek cinema sought to speak artistically and politically following<br />

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32 • CIVIL SOCIETY<br />

the pioneering, if difficult, work of Theodoros Angelopoulos. With<br />

the fall of communism and the deconstruction of the heroic leftist<br />

narrative, a fourth phase emerged. Greek movies in the 1990s and<br />

thereafter left behind old traumas and focused on contemporary<br />

subjects and contexts with the promising works of directors such as<br />

Nikos Perakis and Konstantinos Giannaris. See also THEODORA-<br />

KIS, MIKIS; ZORBAS, ALEXIS.<br />

CIVIL SOCIETY. Despite recent progress, the civil society in Greece<br />

is considered underdeveloped compared with its Western partners. It<br />

has fallen victim to an overextended and omnipresent state, which has<br />

become more pervasive in the 20th century, and to the Greeks’ notorious<br />

individualism and attachment to the family unit. Greeks have<br />

come to expect most services from a leviathan state and have been<br />

reluctant to self-organize. This was not always the case. In Ottoman<br />

times and during the 19th century, wealthy Greeks took great pride<br />

in bestowing on their communities works of philanthropy and, in the<br />

absence of a state, took the initiative of providing for the education,<br />

health, and care for the poor, the elderly, and the underprivileged.<br />

Greece’s democratization in the 1970s witnessed the strengthening<br />

of the political parties, turning them into the main bridges between<br />

society and the state. Parties have absorbed most of the Greeks’ spirit<br />

of civic-mindedness, turning Greece into a party society. Recently,<br />

however, there is increased activity by the multiplying nongovernmental<br />

organizations (NGOs), mainly on the environment and quality-of-life<br />

issues. Wealthy Greeks, especially shipowners and their<br />

endowments, such as the Onassis, Niarchos, and Latsis Foundations<br />

as well as the Bodossakis, Kokkalis, and Leventis Foundations, have<br />

renewed their interest in investing part of their expanding wealth in<br />

social works.<br />

CIVIL WAR (1946–1949). Greece was ravaged by civil strife between<br />

communists and nationalists in the 1940s. With the exception of the<br />

national revolution and the Asia Minor catastrophe, no other event<br />

in modern Greek history has exerted as great a political influence as<br />

the Civil War. The root causes of the conflict lay in the country’s<br />

brutal triple occupation by Germany, Italy, and Bulgaria in April<br />

1941. With its political class demoralized and fleeing into exile as<br />

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CIVIL WAR • 33<br />

local socioeconomic conditions rapidly deteriorated, a massive communist-led<br />

resistance movement grew, centered on the National<br />

Liberation Front (NLF; Ethniko Apeleftherotiko Metopo, EAM)<br />

and its military wing, the National Peoples’ Liberation Army<br />

(NPLA; Ellinikos Laikos Apeleftherotikos Stratos, ELAS). Although<br />

broadly based and fairly inclusive, NLF/EAM remained under the<br />

direct control of the Communist Party of Greece (CPG; Kommounistiko<br />

Komma Elladas, KKE), which, having been outlawed, been<br />

repressed, and gone underground during the Ioannis Metaxas dictatorship<br />

prior to World War II, quickly seized upon the opportunity<br />

presented by the occupation to consolidate its position in the country,<br />

with an eye to dictating its future after liberation.<br />

The first round of the Civil War came in late 1943 when the NLF/<br />

EAM and NPLA/ELAS attempted and largely succeeded in eliminating<br />

all other rival resistance organizations and monopolized the<br />

antioccupation struggle. The disbanding of the National and Social<br />

Liberation (NSL; Ethniki Kai Koinoniki Apeleftherosi, EKKA) and<br />

the execution of its leader, Dimitris Psaros, in April 1944 marked the<br />

high point of this effort. However, the NPLA/ELAS failed to eliminate<br />

Napoleon Zervas and his group, the National Democratic Greek<br />

Link (NDGL; Ethnikos Dimokratikos Ellinikos Syndesmos, EDES),<br />

which continued to control Epirus in northwestern Greece.<br />

The second round occurred following the withdrawal of the<br />

Germans in late 1944 and the communists’ violent attempt to seize<br />

Athens and come to power, in what became known as Dekembriana<br />

or the December Affair. With their military power broken and their<br />

political fortunes in decline, the Greek Communist Party conceded<br />

to the Varkiza Agreement in February 1945. However, both sides<br />

violated the agreement. When elections were proclaimed in March<br />

1946, the communists and their sympathizers decided to abstain and<br />

soon thereafter created their Democratic Army of Greece (DAG;<br />

Dimokratikos Stratos Elladas, DSE) and escalated a campaign of<br />

guerrilla warfare in the mountainous provinces of the country.<br />

Thus, the third and bloodiest round began. Initially, the loyalist<br />

Greek army proved unable to contain the insurgency. However, three<br />

factors contributed decisively to the victory of the anticommunist<br />

forces. First, the increasing unpopularity of the communists was coupled<br />

with the fact that the Greek government continued to be led by<br />

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34 • CLIMATE<br />

moderate old liberals, starting with Georgios Papandreou who was<br />

succeeded by Nikolaos Plastiras and, later, Themistoklis Sofoulis.<br />

These men managed to expand the political appeal of the anticommunist<br />

cause beyond the right wing. Second, massive aid—military,<br />

financial, and diplomatic—was provided by the United States after<br />

the proclamation of the Truman Doctrine in March 1947. Third, the<br />

Tito–Stalin split in 1948 alienated the Greek communists’ greatest<br />

supporter from their cause and led Tito to close the Yugoslav border<br />

and cease all aid to the rebels. The final act of the war was played out<br />

in August 1949 in the mountains of Grammos and Vitsi in northwestern<br />

Greece where the last communist outposts were uprooted.<br />

The destruction caused by the Civil War was immense. About<br />

80,000 Greeks died, mainly on the rebels’ side. Hundreds of thousands<br />

of villagers, mostly from the highlands, were displaced and relocated,<br />

some permanently, to the cities. The remaining defeated rebels<br />

passed through Albania to Eastern Europe, where approximately<br />

75,000 political refugees lived in exile before they started returning<br />

home after 1974. More than the physical destruction caused, the Civil<br />

War poisoned Greek politics and the country’s postwar development.<br />

Unlike Italy or France, which managed to democratically accommodate<br />

the postwar rise of the popularity of the communists, the Greek<br />

Civil War led to the restriction, albeit not the elimination, of civil<br />

liberties and democratic rights. Greece’s democratic deficit was effectively<br />

addressed only as late as 1974, in the period that followed<br />

the fall of the military junta. Overall, the Civil War was one of the<br />

most important events in modern Greek history and left an imprint<br />

that remains to this day.<br />

CLIMATE. The climate of Greece is Mediterranean with dry summers<br />

and mild winters, as no part of the country is more than 150 kilometers<br />

from the sea. Contrary to the southern Mediterranean littoral,<br />

the Greek climate is neither as humid nor as hot. There are some important<br />

regional variations. Western Greece is wet with a much higher<br />

annual rainfall than eastern Greece. Northern Greece is colder and<br />

subject to cold northern winds coming south through the Balkan river<br />

valleys. The southern Aegean suffers from violent winds, especially<br />

when the summer heat energizes the atmosphere. Overall, Greece enjoys<br />

a very temperate climate, although there is a growing concern of<br />

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COALITION <strong>OF</strong> THE RADICAL LEFT • 35<br />

a negative climatic change as the North African desert encroaches on<br />

southern Greece and sea levels are projected to rise.<br />

COALITION <strong>OF</strong> THE RADICAL LEFT (CRL; SYNASPISMOS<br />

TIS RIZOSPASTIKIS ARISTERAS, SYRIZA). Also known as<br />

the Coalition of the Left of the Movements and Ecology, the party<br />

represents the non-Stalinist Greek left. The old outlawed Communist<br />

Party of Greece (CPG; Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE)<br />

split in 1968, following the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. Out<br />

of this rift grew a reformist, Eurocommunist alternative to the CPG/<br />

KKE’s communist orthodoxy and blind obedience to Moscow. After<br />

1974, the party, led by the charismatic Leonidas Kyrkos, competed<br />

in elections with unimpressive results and the CPG/KKE remained<br />

the dominant force in the left. While barely, if at all, represented in<br />

Parliament due to Greece’s prohibitive majoritarian electoral laws,<br />

the party developed a following among Greek intellectuals, students,<br />

journalists, and urban professionals.<br />

In the late 1980s, forced by the crisis of world communism and<br />

the decline in the fortunes of the Panhellenic Socialist Movement<br />

(PASOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima), the CPG/KKE and the<br />

Eurocommunists joined forces, creating the Coalition of the Left and<br />

Progress. Despite the initial euphoria in the elections of 1989, the<br />

coalition failed to unseat PASOK as the main governmental alternative<br />

to the conservatives of New Democracy (ND; Nea Dimokratia)<br />

and, later, paid an electoral price for cooperating with them. In 1991,<br />

the majority of the CPG/KKE decided to leave the coalition and run<br />

independently. A reformist or revisionist minority remained in the<br />

coalition and, together with the old Eurocommunists, turned it into<br />

a party. In 1993, the coalition failed to cross the 3 percent threshold<br />

and enter Parliament. However, in recent years, helped by the crisis<br />

in PASOK and a dynamic oppositionist leadership, the coalition is<br />

enjoying a mild upsurge.<br />

The electoral support of the coalition is heavily concentrated in the<br />

urban centers and, especially, in Athens among well-educated voters.<br />

While it is well represented in white-collar trade unions, it is almost<br />

nonexistent in rural areas and in much of the Greek hinterland. Historically,<br />

the coalition is credited with bringing a certain renewal in<br />

the ideas and practices of the Greek left, making it more responsive<br />

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36 • COMMUNIST PARTY <strong>OF</strong> GREECE<br />

to a new era away from the heroism and the traumas of the Civil War<br />

and helping it connect with broader European currents.<br />

In this regard, unlike PASOK or the CPG/KKE, the old Eurocommunists<br />

lent their support to Konstantinos Karamanlis’ bid to have<br />

Greece join the European Community (EC). In recent years, the<br />

coalition has tried to respond to the worldwide crisis of the left by<br />

espousing a canopy of causes such as the environment and the fight<br />

against “neoliberal” globalization. While it remains socially progressive,<br />

the coalition has adopted a certain polemical antiestablishment<br />

rhetoric that is popular among younger voters but does not always<br />

suit its elitist background. See also RUSSIA.<br />

COMMUNIST PARTY <strong>OF</strong> GREECE (CPG; KOMMOUNISTIKO<br />

KOMMA ELLADAS, KKE). Founded in 1918 as the Socialist<br />

Labor Party of Greece (SLP; Sosialistiko Ergatiko Komma Elladas,<br />

SEKE), the party was renamed Kommounistiko Komma Elladas<br />

(KKE) in 1924. After 1920, it was affiliated with the Third International<br />

and was based on democratic centralism. The party played a<br />

leading role in trade unionism and the founding of the General Confederation<br />

of Workers of Greece (GCWG; Geniki Synomospondia<br />

Ergaton Ellados, GSEE).<br />

Despite the favorable social conditions, the CPG/KKE was slow<br />

to grow mainly because part of its agenda ran against Greek nationalism.<br />

Greek communists opposed the military campaign in Asia<br />

Minor in 1919 as imperialistic and sympathized with Macedonian<br />

nationalism. Politically, they were faced with the hostility of the<br />

Greek liberals who dominated Greek interwar politics up to 1935.<br />

After the 1936 elections, the CPG/KKE held the balance of power in<br />

Parliament, which was divided between the liberals and the royalists.<br />

Espousing the logic of a popular front, the CPG/KKE seemed<br />

willing to lend its support to a liberal government but the Liberals,<br />

after some hesitation, refused. The CPG/KKE supported a wave of<br />

strikes in May 1936 that were violently suppressed and accelerated<br />

the establishment of a dictatorship by Ioannis Metaxas. Metaxas<br />

outlawed the CPG/KKE, imprisoned many of its members, and successfully<br />

suppressed its organization.<br />

Following Adolf Hitler’s attack against the Soviet Union in June<br />

1941, the CPG/KKE mobilized a popular resistance network in oc-<br />

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COMMUNIST PARTY <strong>OF</strong> GREECE • 37<br />

cupied Greece. During World War II, in the absence of a legitimate<br />

government, the CPG/KKE’s fortunes grew to the point where upon<br />

liberation, in the fall of 1944, it was the strongest force in the country.<br />

Nevertheless, it failed to win power violently in December 1944<br />

as it encountered the resistance of noncommunists and the British.<br />

Following the CPG/KKE’s abstention from the first postwar elections<br />

in March 1946, the row escalated into a Civil War in which the<br />

CPG/KKE was defeated.<br />

The CPG/KKE remained outlawed up to 1974. However, a sister<br />

party, the Unified Democratic Left (UDL; Eniaia Dimokratiki<br />

Aristera, EDA), did compete in the postwar elections and performed<br />

exceptionally well in 1958 when it came second. In the meantime,<br />

the CPG/KKE leadership, accused of Stalinism, was purged in 1956<br />

by Moscow. Intraparty feuding continued and escalated in a major<br />

breakup in 1968 following the Soviet invasion in Czechoslovakia,<br />

which further traumatized and jeopardized the CPG/KKE’s future.<br />

In November 1974, the first elections in which it had participated<br />

since 1936, the CPG/KKE took part in an electoral alliance together<br />

with other leftists. The experiment failed and was not repeated until<br />

1989. During this period, the CPG/KKE was confined to around 10<br />

percent of the electorate and managed to beat its reformist Eurocommunist<br />

rival and consolidate its dominant position in the left.<br />

However, due to its ideological rigidity and sclerotic leadership, the<br />

CPG/KKE was unable to halt, or benefit, from the spectacular rise<br />

of Andreas Papandreou’s Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PA-<br />

SOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima) in the 1970s. Having failed<br />

in its electoral competition, the CPG/KKE was initially confined to<br />

supporting PASOK. The high point of this policy of implicit support<br />

was when the CPG/KKE lent PASOK the necessary votes in Parliament<br />

to have the socialist candidate elected to the presidency of the<br />

republic in 1985.<br />

A year later, however, the CPG/KKE changed its course and increasingly<br />

distanced itself from PASOK by withholding its support<br />

to PASOK’s candidates in the second round of the 1986 municipal<br />

elections. This resulted in the election of conservatives in Greece’s<br />

three largest cities. On the eve of the 1989 elections, the CPG/KKE<br />

decided to form the Coalition of the Left and Progress (CLP; Synaspismos<br />

tis Aristeras kai tis Proodou, SYN), together with its former<br />

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38 • CONSTANTINE I GLÜCKSBURG<br />

Eurocommunist rival. Following inconclusive results, it participated<br />

in an unprecedented coalition government with the conservatives,<br />

which proceeded to charge the former prime minister, Andreas Papandreou,<br />

with criminal offenses.<br />

This was a policy that proved controversial and did not benefit<br />

the CPG/KKE politically. In 1991, a majority of the members of the<br />

CPG/KKE’s Central Committee decided to leave the CLP/SYN and<br />

promoted Aleka Papariga, an unreconstructed woman activist, to the<br />

party’s leadership. Thus, the CPG/KKE returned to its isolationism<br />

and reacted to the collapse of Soviet communism with reinforced<br />

neo-Stalinism. In the 1993 elections, the CPG/KKE suffered heavy<br />

losses and in the following years its share of the vote was cut in half,<br />

to around 5 percent. Recently, however, the CPG/KKE has been<br />

enjoying a mild upsurge due to increased social inequality and the<br />

fatigue the electorate feels with the two major parties that have alternated<br />

in power since 1974. See also FLORAKIS, HARILAOS.<br />

CONSTANTINE I GLÜCKSBURG (1868–1923). Constantine was<br />

born in Athens and died in exile in Palermo, Sicily. There have<br />

been two kings named Constantine who ruled modern Greece. Both<br />

caused a constitutional crisis and lost their throne. At the time of his<br />

enthronement, Constantine I enjoyed enormous popularity and goodwill,<br />

thanks to the leadership he provided during Greece’s successful<br />

military campaigns in the Balkan Wars (1912–1913). However, he<br />

quickly misused his political capital in an effort to dictate the foreign<br />

policy of Greece against the wishes of its elected premier, Eleftherios<br />

Venizelos, and its protector, Great Britain. Thus, Constantine<br />

was exiled twice. He managed to return the first time but not the<br />

second, and he died abroad. The damage he caused to the throne was<br />

such that Greece was proclaimed a republic in 1924 and remained<br />

so until 1935.<br />

Constantine was the first son of King George I and Queen Olga.<br />

As was customary at the time, he studied at the Military Academy in<br />

Germany and was brought up to admire Prussian militarism. His German<br />

sympathies were reinforced by his marriage to the sister of the<br />

German Kaiser Wilhelm II, Princess Sophia. For the king of a state<br />

that was traditionally in the orbit of Great Britain and always vulner-<br />

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CONSTANTINE I GLÜCKSBURG • 39<br />

able to the intervention of the British navy in the Mediterranean, such<br />

sympathies were to prove detrimental.<br />

During the disastrous Greco–Ottoman war of 1897, Constantine<br />

was the commander in chief of the Greek armed forces and he and<br />

his fellow royals were accused of being responsible for the defeat.<br />

However, Constantine’s reputation recovered when he led the Greek<br />

forces during the Balkan Wars. Constantine became king of Greece<br />

in 1913, quite unexpectedly, after his father’s assassination.<br />

Constantine’s dispute with Prime Minister Venizelos over whether<br />

Greece should enter World War I on the side of the Entente, as<br />

Venizelos strongly favored, or stay neutral, as the king urged, compelled<br />

the prime minister to resign twice. The dispute escalated to a<br />

constitutional crisis and a fierce polarization between the Venizelists<br />

and royalists that became known as the National Schism (Ethnikos<br />

Dihasmos). Constantine was convinced of Germany’s victory. Unable<br />

to support Germany openly due to the presence of the British<br />

fleet, he insisted on neutrality and imposed his will on the parliamentary<br />

majority. Disgusted, Venizelos abstained from the new elections,<br />

and, in the late summer of 1916, he left Athens and organized a<br />

rebellious government in Thessaloniki for the “national defense” of<br />

the recently acquired Macedonia, which was at risk of being taken<br />

over by Bulgaria, a German ally. Constantine went so far in keeping<br />

Greece neutral as to have the Fourth Army Corps in Kavala surrender<br />

to the much hated Bulgarians.<br />

By 1917, the Entente had already landed troops in Thessaloniki<br />

in support of a Balkan front against the Germans and the Bulgarians<br />

from the north and had had enough. Entente naval forces landed and<br />

marched into Athens and forced Constantine into exile. His second<br />

son, Alexander, who, unlike his father, was an Anglophile, assumed<br />

the throne. But this was not the end of Constantine’s remarkable<br />

life. Venizelos’ return to Athens was not unanimously welcomed.<br />

Many southern Greeks resented the breaching of Greek sovereignty<br />

and the occupation by Entente forces. Constantine was a charismatic<br />

leader with a certain appeal that resonated with a broad spectrum of<br />

the electorate. The abuse of many royalists by Venizelos’ supporters,<br />

especially Cretan militiamen, further enhanced Constantine’s<br />

popularity.<br />

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40 • CONSTANTINE II GLÜCKSBURG<br />

In 1920, after the unexpected death of Alexander and the electoral<br />

victory of the anti-Venizelists, Constantine returned to the Greek<br />

throne, against the wishes and the explicit warnings of the Entente<br />

powers. His return greatly contributed to Greece’s isolation from its<br />

powerful allies, especially France, which started befriending Kemalist<br />

Turkey at the time of Greece’s greatest need. When the Asia<br />

Minor catastrophe occurred in 1922, Constantine was immediately<br />

blamed for the debacle and left for Italy, where he died a few months<br />

later in disgrace.<br />

CONSTANTINE II GLÜCKSBURG (1940– ). Born in Athens,<br />

Constantine II was the last king of Greece and with him both the<br />

Glücksburg dynasty and monarchy came to an end. He ascended to<br />

the throne at a young age, but his reign was short and was interrupted<br />

by the military coup of 21 April 1967. Constantine was implicated in<br />

the political crisis of the 1960s that led to the coup and was accused<br />

of undermining parliamentary sovereignty. Upon the restoration of<br />

democracy in 1974, the Greeks decided freely and irrevocably, in a<br />

referendum, in favor of a republic by a wide margin of two to one.<br />

Currently, Constantine resides in London, enjoys his royal connections<br />

as brother of Queen Sophia of Spain, visits Greece frequently,<br />

and, from time to time, offers his opinion publicly.<br />

Constantine was the first son of King Paul and Queen Frederika.<br />

He married Princess Anna Maria of Denmark. Together they made a<br />

beautiful, photogenic couple. In 1960, in the Rome Olympic Games,<br />

he won the gold medal in sailing. When he became king after his<br />

father’s death in 1964, the good-looking Constantine was hailed as a<br />

symbol of a new, young, optimistic, and forward-looking Greece that<br />

was rapidly healing from the wounds of the Civil War and all the<br />

misfortunes that had afflicted it in the recent past.<br />

However, his youth and inexperience proved decisive. He misread<br />

Greek politics and underestimated the rising expectations of most<br />

Greeks for liberal reforms. He remained under the influence of his<br />

strong-willed and controversial mother, Queen Frederika, and he<br />

intervened in politics tactlessly and against the Constitution, which<br />

he was supposed to safeguard. When he dismissed his popular prime<br />

minister, Georgios Papandreou, he plunged Greece into a political<br />

crisis that eventually led to the colonels’ coup. When the military<br />

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CONSTANTINOPLE • 41<br />

took power in the coup of April 1967, Constantine was surprised as<br />

he expected to have the army under his control. He was forced to<br />

concede but in December 1967 he plotted to reassert his control over<br />

the army and the country through a royalist counter-coup. He failed<br />

and was forced to fly off to Rome in humiliation. He never returned<br />

to his throne.<br />

Upon the restoration of democracy in the summer of 1974, Konstantinos<br />

Karamanlis decided to resolve democratically, once and<br />

for all, the constitutional question that had destabilized Greece in the<br />

past, through a referendum. Having clashed with Constantine’s parents<br />

who led him to withdraw from Greek politics in 1963, Karamanlis<br />

refrained from lending his support to the king. Without Karamanlis’<br />

support, Constantine’s fate was sealed and Greece was declared<br />

a republic. An open issue remained between Constantine as a private<br />

citizen and the Greek state, especially in regard to the royal property.<br />

Having nationalized most of it in the 1990s, Greece was forced by<br />

the European Court of Human Rights to pay a small compensation to<br />

Constantine and thus the matter was resolved.<br />

CONSTANTINOPLE. Present-day Istanbul, Constantinople is Turkey’s<br />

largest city and its commercial and cultural hub. As the capital<br />

city of the Byzantine Empire, seat of the Ecumenical Patriarchate,<br />

home of what used to be a prosperous Greek community and of<br />

priceless monuments related to the culture and traditions of modern<br />

Greece, Constantinople carries a symbolism and emotional attachment<br />

for Greek nationals parallel only to that of Athens. Founded<br />

by and named after Constantine the Great as the new capital of his<br />

Roman Empire in 330 CE, Constantinople resonates with a certain<br />

imperial tradition that cannot be easily understood by modern nation-states.<br />

Thus, in recent history, both Greece and Turkey have<br />

had a strained relationship with “the City” as it is commonly called<br />

in Greek.<br />

The Greeks of Istanbul, an ancient community of mostly sophisticated<br />

urbanites, numbering some 150,000 at the time of the Asia<br />

Minor catastrophe, were exempt from the compulsory exchange<br />

of populations mandated by the Treaty of Lausanne. However, the<br />

Turkish Republic, established by Kemal Atatürk in 1923, discriminated<br />

heavily against them. In 1942, during World War II, much<br />

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42 • CONSTITUTION<br />

of their property was confiscated as they were unable to pay the discriminatory<br />

Verlik Vergisi capital gains tax. Furthermore, the community<br />

fell victim to a Turkish pogrom on 6 and 7 September 1955,<br />

which destroyed much of its property; many Greeks were killed,<br />

injured, and raped, after which most Greeks left for Greece. Today,<br />

fewer than 2,000 Greeks remain in a megacity of more than 10 million<br />

inhabitants. Every year, thousands of Greeks visit the City, while<br />

a few study, work, or buy property there. Deepening liberal reforms<br />

in Turkey hold the promise that the city will regain some of its old<br />

multicultural appeal, further advancing Greek–Turkish relations.<br />

CONSTITUTION. Independent Greece has known many constitutions.<br />

This succession of constitutions is evidence of the political instability<br />

that Greece has suffered during much of its history. Nevertheless,<br />

despite periods of authoritarianism, from early on, constitutionalism<br />

sank deep roots in the nation’s body politic.<br />

The first constitution was adopted in Epidavros in 1822 during<br />

the War of Independence and it was a strikingly liberal document.<br />

More revolutionary constitutions followed but when peace came,<br />

Otto, the first king of Greece, decided to rule without one, as an<br />

absolute monarch. On 3 September 1843, the Athens’ garrison<br />

spearheaded a revolt that demanded a constitution and the king acquiesced.<br />

In memory of this event, the main square of Athens is called<br />

Constitution Square.<br />

Following the ousting of Otto, Greece acquired a new constitution<br />

in 1864 that introduced the supremacy of a parliament and was designed<br />

after the liberal Belgian Constitution of 1830. More changes,<br />

consolidating the rule of law, came in 1911. In the interwar period,<br />

a republic was proclaimed in 1924 only to have the monarchy restored<br />

in 1935. The constitution was changed and then suspended<br />

altogether on 4 August 1936, with Ioannis Metaxas’ dictatorship.<br />

In the aftermath of the Civil War, a fairly restrictive constitution<br />

was approved in 1952. Konstantinos Karamanlis’ effort at constitutional<br />

reform in 1962 fell victim to the growing political unrest<br />

and it was not enacted. The colonels’ junta experimented with some<br />

constitutional engineering. Its sudden and nonnegotiated downfall in<br />

1974 opened the way for a complete break with the past. In 1975, the<br />

current constitution of Greece was approved.<br />

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CONSTRUCTION • 43<br />

Since then, Greece’s constitution has been amended three times,<br />

in 1986, in 2001, and in 2008. The Greek Constitution of 1975 established<br />

a liberal parliamentary republic that has produced stable<br />

democratic politics with regular alterations in power between the two<br />

main political parties, the center-right New Democracy (ND; Nea<br />

Dimokratia) and the center-left Panhellenic Socialist Movement<br />

(PASOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima). There is no constitutional<br />

court. Judicial review is dispersed and all courts are obliged not to<br />

implement laws contravening the Constitution following the American<br />

legal practice. Amendments are difficult to pass and require an<br />

election and a three-fifths majority in Parliament.<br />

Designed by Konstantinos Karamanlis, the 1975 Constitution was<br />

initially accused, by the opposition, of being authoritarian and consolidating<br />

the tyranny of the majority. However, it quickly proved both<br />

democratic and effective in providing efficient governance albeit at<br />

the cost of overfavoring the executive and turning the prime minister<br />

into the primary and unrivalled center of political power. The list of<br />

constitutional rights endowed Greece with the most liberal regime<br />

of its history and created one of the freest societies in the world.<br />

Future constitutional debates will focus on pressing new challenges,<br />

including the protection of the environment, the defense of privacy,<br />

the separation of church and state, the protection of minorities, the<br />

expansion of educational opportunities, and the better control of and<br />

transparency in the workings of governmental agencies.<br />

CONSTRUCTION. In the first 30 postwar years, the construction industry<br />

was the locomotive of the Greek economy. While providing<br />

housing to the rapidly expanding Greek cities and a modern infrastructure<br />

to a growing nation, construction created thousands of jobs.<br />

Until recently, the sector remained heavily dependent on residential<br />

construction and public works.<br />

Much of the initial boom in construction was based on land<br />

speculation provided by an ingenious Greek legal relationship, called<br />

antiparohi, literally meaning a trade-off. In conditions of financial<br />

scarcity and a lack of banking credit, homeowners on small urban<br />

land plots traded their property to a private engineer or contractor in<br />

exchange not for money but for a share in the future high-rise apartment<br />

building that the contractor promised to build. In the meantime,<br />

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44 • CONTINENTAL SHELF<br />

the contractor would presell apartments in the building-to-be; with<br />

the collected down payments, capital was created to finance the start<br />

of the construction of the apartment building itself. The more the<br />

contractor built, the more money was collected from the apartment<br />

owners-to-be with which he was to complete the building. In this<br />

way, cities were built and expanded rapidly, often without much<br />

planning or consideration for future urban conditions.<br />

Today, construction continues to play a significant role, comprising<br />

some 10 percent of the Greek gross domestic product (GDP)<br />

and growing by some 5 percent annually, faster than the rest of the<br />

Greek economy. The Greek state, aided by generous grants and loans<br />

from the European Union (EU), is a key sponsor of large projects,<br />

including highways, subways, and airports. The construction industry<br />

is consolidated around a few large groups that provide economies of<br />

scale and that can enter and exploit the financial markets. In addition,<br />

the construction industry is expanding abroad, especially in Eastern<br />

Europe and the Arab world . The three largest construction groups<br />

are AKTOR-Elliniki Technodomiki, JP, and GEK-TERNA. These<br />

firms are no longer simply contractors but financiers and managers of<br />

major projects, such as the Athens Beltway, the Rio-Antirio Bridge<br />

over the Bay of Corinth, and the Athens–Thessaloniki highway.<br />

CONTINENTAL SHELF. The continental shelf is the seabed roughly<br />

200 meters off the coast. According to international law, a state’s<br />

sovereignty extends to the continental shelf that lies below its territorial<br />

waters. The law provides different ways of equitably sharing<br />

the shelf that lies beyond a state’s territorial waters. In the past, when<br />

technology was less advanced and exploration of the continental<br />

shelf in deep waters was virtually impossible, such an issue remained<br />

theoretical. Recent progress and the quest for minerals, especially oil,<br />

have increased the interest of coastal states in the continental shelf<br />

that lies beyond their territorial waters. Greece has extended its territorial<br />

waters to six miles but has refrained, threatened by Turkey<br />

with war, from going to 12 miles as international law provided after<br />

1982. Thus, almost half of the Aegean Sea remains in international<br />

waters and the continental shelf that lies under these waters remains<br />

a question of dispute between the two coastal nations of Greece and<br />

Turkey.<br />

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The question of how to delineate the continental shelf between<br />

the two countries arose in the early 1970s when some oil was found<br />

south of the northern Greek city of Kavala. Since then, Greece and<br />

Turkey have failed to agree; Greece has favored letting the International<br />

Court of Justice (ICJ) decide while Turkey has insisted<br />

on bilateral negotiations first. The Turkish position that the Greek<br />

islands in the Aegean have no continental shelf of their own and that<br />

the Aegean continental shelf should be equally divided between the<br />

Greek and the Turkish mainland is totally unacceptable to Greece. It<br />

would mean that some Greek islands lay within the Turkish continental<br />

shelf and are cut off from mainland Greece by an intervening<br />

Turkish territory. On the other hand, while it is generally accepted<br />

that islands do have a continental shelf of their own, such a position,<br />

if fully implemented in the Aegean, would not leave much of a continental<br />

shelf for Turkey to claim. Thus, some adjustments in favor of<br />

Turkey, as a coastal state, taking into consideration the peculiarities<br />

of the geography of the Aegean, might be needed and the ICJ could<br />

be the right forum to provide a solution that would be acceptable to<br />

both countries. Such a formula seems increasingly possible as Turkey<br />

moves closer to the European Union (EU).<br />

Traditionally, for Greece, the delineation of the Aegean continental<br />

shelf has been the only outstanding dispute with Turkey and<br />

should be resolved according to international law as applied by the<br />

ICJ. Turkey, meanwhile, believes that this disagreement is only one<br />

of several outstanding issues needing resolution through bilateral<br />

negotiations. These include Greece’s territorial waters, airspace,<br />

military fortification of the Aegean islands, status of the minority<br />

population in Greek Thrace, and, more recently, gray zones of disputed<br />

sovereignty over certain uninhabited Aegean islets. See also<br />

FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

COUP <strong>OF</strong> 21 APRIL 1967. See JUNTA.<br />

CRETAN QUESTION • 45<br />

CRETAN QUESTION. The Cretan question concerned the future of<br />

Crete, a large, strategically located island in the eastern Mediterranean<br />

that had belonged to the Ottomans since 1669 and used to have<br />

a Greek Christian majority and a sizeable Turkish Muslim minority.<br />

It was part of the broader “Eastern question” that kept European<br />

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46 • CRETAN QUESTION<br />

diplomacy busy for much of the 19th century and, one can argue,<br />

continues to do so in Kosovo and elsewhere. The Eastern question<br />

itself was the product of the emergence of multiple nationalist secessionisms<br />

within the Ottoman dominions and the concern of the great<br />

powers of how to replace Ottoman sovereignty without upsetting the<br />

balance of power in Europe.<br />

Since the time of Venetian rule, Cretans developed a reputation for<br />

being freedom loving and independent minded. This reputation survives<br />

today as Crete continues to preserve a unique gun culture and<br />

a strong local identity distinct from the rest of Greece. Having been<br />

left outside the independent Greek kingdom created by the London<br />

Protocol of 1830, the Greeks of Crete agitated against foreign rule<br />

from the mid-19th century onwards, demanding the island’s union<br />

with Greece. The Ottomans, and the Egyptians at periodic intervals,<br />

brutally suppressed several revolts, with the massacre in the Arkadi<br />

monastery in 1866 stirring an international outcry. In response, the<br />

Ottomans introduced, in 1868, the “Organic Law of Crete” that upgraded<br />

the position of the Christians and provided for their participation<br />

in the island’s administration. Delays in the implementation<br />

of the law coupled with mounting international tensions and the<br />

Russo–Turkish war of 1877 led to a new uprising.<br />

At the Congress of Berlin in 1878, the defeated Ottoman Turkey<br />

was forced to grant the Halepa Charter, which gave the Christians<br />

several freedoms and upgraded the status of Crete to that of a semiindependent<br />

province. Against the opposition of the sizeable Muslim<br />

minority and especially the beys (the Muslim land-owning nobles),<br />

Crete acquired full autonomy by 1898, ruled by a Christian governor<br />

and protected by the great powers (Austria-Hungary, France, Germany,<br />

, Great Britain, andRussia).<br />

Although Prince George of Greece was appointed high commissioner<br />

of the island and the sultan had no more rights, Cretans,<br />

headed by leaders such as Eleftherios Venizelos, Greece’s future<br />

prime minister, remained restless and collided with the Greek prince<br />

himself. Finally, the Cretan question was resolved at the end of the<br />

First Balkan War in 1913, when, with the Treaty of London, Crete<br />

was united with Greece.<br />

Greece was naturally supportive of the Cretan struggle but its<br />

willingness to act was constrained by its military inferiority and its<br />

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CYCLADES • 47<br />

dependence on Great Britain. Thus, the Greek leadership sought to<br />

remain neutral against the popular impulse. Increasingly after the<br />

1870s, Greece turned most of its attention northwards to the fiercely<br />

contested Macedonia, calculating that it was a matter of time before<br />

the Ottomans would leave Crete in Greek hands. The great powers<br />

played their own distinct role in the Cretan question, using it to advance<br />

their interests and often to extract concessions from both the<br />

Ottoman Empire and Greece.<br />

Today, the Cretan question is mostly historical and holds no political<br />

significance other than, occasionally, being used by Turkish<br />

nationalists as the model to be avoided at all costs in Cyprus, where a<br />

Turkish Muslim minority community shares the island together with<br />

a Greek Christian majority.<br />

CRETE. The largest Greek island and the fifth largest in the Mediterranean,<br />

Crete has a surface area of 8,335 square kilometers and a<br />

population of 562,276. Crete was the basis of Europe’s most ancient<br />

civilization, the Minoan civilization. Due to its geographical position<br />

among the three continents of Europe, Asia, and Africa, Crete<br />

experienced the influence of many different civilizations. After the<br />

Byzantines, it was held by Venice until 1669 CE when it passed<br />

to the Ottomans. After several uprisings, it became autonomous<br />

in 1898 and was united with Greece in 1913. With the exchange of<br />

populations between Greece and Turkey in 1923, Cretan Muslims,<br />

comprising some 12 percent of the population, left for Turkey.<br />

Crete is famous for its distinct, strong, proud, and independent<br />

local identity. Politically, Crete, the birthplace of Eleftherios Venizelos,<br />

has been liberal and, more recently, a socialist stronghold,<br />

where neither the conservatives nor the communists have had much<br />

power. Blessed with a long summer season, a spectacular coastline,<br />

and the cultural heritage of ancient civilizations, Crete is the locomotive<br />

of the Greek tourist industry, receiving the most foreigners each<br />

year of all of Greek provinces. Agriculture, especially the off-season<br />

production of fruits and vegetables, is highly developed. See also<br />

CRETAN QUESTION.<br />

CYCLADES. A group of approximately 120 small islands in the Aegean,<br />

southeast of Athens, known for their dry, barren, windblown<br />

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48 • CYPRUS QUESTION<br />

scenic landscape, the Cyclades are a world of their own. The islands<br />

gave birth to the major preclassical Cycladic civilization and prospered<br />

during much of the antiquity but fell victim to increasing piracy<br />

and the lack of water. They were included in modern Greece from the<br />

start in 1830. After World War II, tourism boomed first in Mykonos<br />

and Santorini and, more recently, almost everywhere else.<br />

CYPRUS QUESTION. Half a century after Cyprus’ independence<br />

from Great Britain in 1960, the Cyprus question is still unresolved.<br />

The island remains divided between the internationally recognized<br />

Greek-Cypriot Republic of Cyprus and the Turkish Republic of<br />

Northern Cyprus where 40,000 Turkish troops are stationed, since<br />

Turkey’s invasion in the summer of 1974.<br />

Cyprus became an Ottoman dominion in 1571 and passed to<br />

Great Britain with the Congress of Berlin in 1878, in exchange for<br />

London’s help in annulling the San Stefano Treaty and keeping<br />

Macedonia in Ottoman hands. Under the British, Greek-Cypriots<br />

prospered but remained committed to the unification with Greece,<br />

following the example of Crete.<br />

In 1931 Greek-Cypriots revolted but were left unaided by Greece,<br />

which was recovering from the Asia Minor catastrophe and did not<br />

want to upset its relationship with Britain at a time of rising Italian<br />

revisionism in the Mediterranean. The British easily suppressed the<br />

revolt, exiled Greek-Cypriot leaders, and marginalized the bourgeois<br />

nationalists, leaving the church as the main political representative of<br />

the Greek-Cypriot community. Following World War II, against a<br />

rising communist party, the church, headed by the newly appointed,<br />

young, ambitious, and charismatic Archbishop Makarios, seized the<br />

leadership of the anticolonial struggle. With Greek public opinion on<br />

Makarios’ side, the Greek government, after much initial hesitation,<br />

brought the matter to the United Nations General Assembly in 1954,<br />

where the Greek position was soundly defeated, having failed to secure<br />

the support of the United States.<br />

Makarios turned to Georgios Grivas, a military officer with strong<br />

nationalist and anticommunist views, who organized the National<br />

Organization of Cypriot Fighters (NOCF; Ethniki Organosi Kyprion<br />

Agoniston, EOKA) to fight the British. NOCF/EOKA’s campaign<br />

started in April 1955 and was met with violence by the British<br />

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CYPRUS QUESTION • 49<br />

and the increasingly assertive Turkish-Cypriots. Makarios was exiled<br />

to the Seychelles but it was evident that British rule was coming to<br />

an end.<br />

The United States pressed for a diplomatic solution as the unrest<br />

threatened the unity of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization<br />

(NATO) and the Western alliance in the crucial area of the eastern<br />

Mediterranean, where the Soviet Union began antagonizing Western<br />

interests through the support of Arab nationalism. However, the<br />

Greek-Cypriots failed to secure their primary goal of Cyprus’ unification<br />

with Greece. Faced with the unyielding opposition of Turkey<br />

and the Turkish-Cypriots, British manipulation, and Greece’s foreign<br />

dependence and military weakness, a compromise was reached<br />

among the governments of Britain, Greece, and Turkey first in Zurich<br />

and then in London that, in 1960, granted Cyprus its independence,<br />

guaranteed by the three countries, and provided enhanced political<br />

rights to the Turkish-Cypriots.<br />

Makarios was elected president of the new Republic of Cyprus<br />

but was forced to share power with his Turkish-Cypriot vice president.<br />

Amid rising frustration among many Greek-Cypriots and<br />

against the advice of the Greek government, in November 1963,<br />

Makarios suggested a constitutional revision to curtail the rights<br />

of the Turkish-Cypriots. In protest, the latter withdrew from all<br />

of the republic’s institutions and isolated themselves in limited<br />

ethnic enclaves protected, after 1964, by a United Nations (UN)<br />

peacekeeping force. Twice Turkey threatened to invade but was<br />

restrained by the United States—first in 1964 and then in 1967.<br />

Makarios’ relations with Athens deteriorated, especially after the<br />

coup in 1967, and Washington was openly hostile to his leadership.<br />

In July 1974, the Greek junta overthrew Makarios but failed to<br />

assassinate him.<br />

This gave Turkey a good enough reason to realize what was<br />

long in the planning, a full-scale invasion of the island to secure its<br />

geostrategic interests and protect the Turkish-Cypriot community.<br />

Cyprus was violently divided, with Turkish-Cypriots remaining in<br />

the northern 36percent of the island and the Greek-Cypriots being<br />

pushed to the southern and less developed part of the island. The<br />

international community did not recognize the partition of the island<br />

although it failed to effectively confront Turkey.<br />

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50 • CYRIL AND METHODIUS<br />

Since 1974, the Greek-Cypriot south has prospered, taking advantage<br />

of a liberal economic regime and the devastation caused by<br />

a civil war in neighboring Lebanon. More recently, the tables have<br />

turned as the Republic of Cyprus became a member of the European<br />

Union (EU) in 2004, and thus acquired a veto in Turkey’s relations<br />

with the EU.<br />

Apart from the cost to lives and properties, the size of the collateral<br />

damage to Greece and Hellenism caused by the conflict over Cyprus<br />

is difficult to underestimate. As a result, the remaining Greek communities<br />

of Turkey, especially the prosperous Istanbul (Constantinople)<br />

Greeks, were uprooted. Greece redirected valuable resources<br />

to its defense against the Turkish threat, and Greek public opinion<br />

was radicalized in ways that remain relevant to the present day.<br />

Cyprus seriously complicated the postwar efforts at domestic<br />

modernization of Greece, destroyed the Greek–Turkish friendship,<br />

and poisoned Greece’s relations with its Western allies, especially<br />

the United States. The dispute gave rise to a new age of anticolonial<br />

nationalism and enhanced the electoral appeal of nationalists and<br />

populists alike, especially on the Greek left. Even the preeminent<br />

postwar Greek leader Konstantinos Karamanlis, who signed the<br />

Zurich–London compromise in an effort to put Cyprus behind and<br />

refocus on Greece’s domestic development, saw his pre-junta administration<br />

suffer because of his reluctance to play the nationalist and<br />

anti-Western card. See also ENOSIS; FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

CYRIL AND METHODIUS. See ORTHODOXY.<br />

– D –<br />

DECEMBER AFFAIR (DEKEMBRIANA). The December Affair,<br />

better known as Dekembriana in Greek, refers to the violent disturbances<br />

that shook Athens in December 1944, only two months after<br />

the withdrawal of the Germans. At that time, government forces,<br />

aided by the British, fought against the communist-led National Peoples’<br />

Liberation Army (NPLA; Ellinikos Laikos Apeleftherotikos<br />

Stratos, ELAS), the military wing of the largest resistance movement,<br />

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DECEMBER AFFAIR • 51<br />

the National Liberation Front (NLF; Ethniko Apeleftherotiko<br />

Metopo, EAM).<br />

The government won and the communists failed to take control<br />

of the capital. Thus, Greece, unlike the rest of southeastern Europe,<br />

remained under British and Western influence. However, unlike Italy<br />

and France, Greece failed to incorporate peacefully the postwar rise<br />

of communism and went through a devastating Civil War followed<br />

by the regime of a “restricted” democracy. It would not be until 1974<br />

before a fully functioning, liberal, and inclusive democracy was<br />

introduced, steered by the statesmanship of Konstantinos Karamanlis.<br />

Dekembriana is generally recognized as the second round in a civil<br />

conflict that started during Greece’s occupation by the Axis over<br />

the control of the future development of the country. Dekembriana<br />

resulted in containing the communist influence over Greece at the<br />

cost of further poisoning Greek politics, at a time when recovery and<br />

reconstruction were most needed. The end result of the escalating<br />

polarization between the left and the right was a full-blown Civil War<br />

(the third round) between 1946 and 1949.<br />

Upon his arrival in newly liberated Athens, Georgios Papandreou,<br />

heading an all-party government formed in exile in Lebanon,<br />

ordered the disarmament of all the guerrilla troops, including the<br />

NPLA/ELAS. Although necessary in order for the government to<br />

establish its authority, disarmament threatened the NPLA/ELAS’<br />

overwhelming supremacy as the largest fighting force in the country<br />

and was flatly rejected by the NLF/EAM, NPLA/ELAS’ political<br />

branch.<br />

The NLF/EAM organized mass demonstrations in downtown Athens<br />

in a poorly coordinated attempt to force its way to power. Vastly<br />

outnumbered government forces, consisting mostly of police, had to<br />

rely on the British expeditionary forces. Clashes ensued for days and<br />

even Winston Churchill, in the midst of the Allied effort against Nazi<br />

Germany, had to visit Athens on Christmas Day 1944 to ensure that<br />

the capital did not fall into communist hands. A few days later, on 11<br />

January 1945, the new prime minister, centrist Nikolaos Plastiras,<br />

and British General R. M. Scobie reached an agreement with the<br />

NLF/EAM and hostilities ceased.<br />

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52 • DEFENSE<br />

On 12 February 1945, the Plastiras government and the NLF/EAM<br />

concluded the Agreement of Varkiza, according to which the NPLA/<br />

ELAS had to disarm while its soldiers were granted general amnesty;<br />

free elections and a plebiscite on the future of the monarchy were<br />

promised. Unfortunately, the Varkiza Agreement was violated by<br />

both sides. Many of the NPLA/ELAS’ arms were kept hidden while<br />

the government harassed many of the NPLA/ELAS’ soldiers and<br />

sympathizers.<br />

What led to the Dekembriana remains much debated, as each side<br />

stresses the other side’s responsibility and tries to avoid its own. It<br />

seems that the Communist Party of Greece (CPG; Kommounistiko<br />

Komma Elladas, KKE) attempted to impose facts on the ground,<br />

emboldened by its military superiority and the communist takeover<br />

in Eastern Europe, especially Tito’s success in neighboring Yugoslavia.<br />

However, it was confronted by the British who fought, sent<br />

reinforcements, and managed to keep Greece under their influence.<br />

The Soviets did not provide much help as they were concerned with<br />

preserving their wartime alliance with Great Britain in fighting the<br />

Germans. Irrespective of where one stands in apportioning blame, it<br />

seems that the Dekembriana was a colossal miscalculation and a major<br />

defeat, both militarily and politically, for the communists. More<br />

were to follow so that by 1949 the communists, who in 1944 were<br />

so close to playing an important role in postwar Greece, were totally<br />

defeated and outlawed.<br />

DEFENSE. See ARMED FORCES.<br />

DELIGIANNIS, THEODOROS (1820–1905). Born in Kalavryta in<br />

northern Peloponnesus and murdered in Athens as he was entering<br />

the Parliament, Theodoros Deligiannis was a prominent Greek politician<br />

of the second half of the 19th century, who succeeded Alexandros<br />

Koumoundouros as head of the nationalist faction. Representing<br />

the nationalism and conservatism of the small peasant landowners,<br />

Deligiannis emerged as the main political opponent of Harilaos<br />

Trikoupis and his modernizing efforts. After defeating Trikoupis,<br />

he led Greece into the disastrous war with Ottoman Turkey in 1897.<br />

Deligiannis’ career fell within a rich tradition of populism in Greek<br />

politics that survives to the present day.<br />

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DEMOCRACY • 53<br />

DELIGIORGIS, EPAMINONDAS (1829–1879). Born in Tripoli in<br />

Peloponnesus, Deligiorgis was a distinguished Greek politician in<br />

the 19th century and a pioneer of progressive ideas and modern, liberal<br />

politics. He served four times as prime minister for short terms.<br />

Deligiorgis was involved in politics since he was a student at the Law<br />

School of Athens and in 1859 was elected for the first time member<br />

of the Greek Parliament. In 1862, Deligiorgis, who was an ardent<br />

antiroyalist, played a significant role during the popular uprising that<br />

ousted King Otto from the throne. Contrary to most of his fellow<br />

politicians, Deligiorgis supported Greek–Turkish friendship and,<br />

realizing his country’s weakness, did not hesitate to distance himself<br />

from the popular irredentist rhetoric of his day. He died in Athens.<br />

DEMOCRACY. Democracy was established in Greece as recently as<br />

in 1974 and yet, Greek democracy has a very long history. It is not<br />

simply that democracy, as an idea and as a political practice, was born<br />

in ancient Greece. It is also the less well-known fact that the democratic<br />

ideal can be traced back to the period leading to the national<br />

Revolution of 1821 when Greeks fought to govern themselves.<br />

The first revolutionary Constitution of Epidavros in 1822 established<br />

a republic. However, Greek infighting and foreign pressures led<br />

to the initial establishment of royal absolutism. This did not last long. A<br />

constitution limiting the monarch’s prerogatives was approved in 1844.<br />

Democratic rights were further expanded with the liberal Constitution<br />

of 1864 and were fully recognized in 1875, when the king accepted that<br />

the government needed a parliamentary majority.<br />

In the 20th century, Greek democracy often fell victim to the turmoil<br />

caused by the incorporation of new territories, wars, military<br />

defeats, the influx of refugees, an overall crisis of national integration,<br />

and the rise of communism. A stillborn republic was established<br />

in the interwar period between 1924 and 1935. After World War II,<br />

democracy and parliamentarianism survived with many restrictions<br />

that progressively became unsustainable, leading to a crisis between<br />

King Constantine II and his elected prime minister, Georgios Papandreou,<br />

that paved the way for the colonels’ coup in 1967.<br />

Democracy was fully established seven years later, in 1974,<br />

thanks, to a great extent, to the leadership provided by Konstantinos<br />

Karamanlis. As far as democratic transitions go, the Greek case<br />

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54 • DEMOGRAPHY<br />

enjoys an exemplary record. Karamanlis founded, quickly and peacefully,<br />

a well-functioning open democracy. Called the Third Republic<br />

and based on the 1975 Constitution, post-1974 democracy has contributed<br />

to the reconciliation of the left and the right while providing<br />

a stable, liberal, and fairly effective governance of the country.<br />

DEMOGRAPHY. Greece today has a population of 11 million. Since<br />

1980, the fertility rate has dropped dramatically and births are only<br />

around 100,000 a year. The rate of children per woman at a reproductive<br />

age is around 1:3, far below the 2:1 necessary to sustain a<br />

constant population. In the past few years, the number of births has<br />

been lower than the number of deaths. As a result, the demographic<br />

structure of Greece is aging rapidly, as one in four Greeks is 60 years<br />

old or older. Since the early 1990s, the population of Greece has been<br />

growing thanks only to immigration.<br />

Until then, Greece was one of the most homogenous countries in<br />

Europe, comparable only to Iceland, Norway, and Portugal. Traditionally,<br />

more than 97 percent of Greeks have been Christian Orthodox.<br />

The largest minority in the country is the Muslim community<br />

in Thrace of some 120,000 people. There are a few Catholics, Old<br />

Calendarists, and Jehovah Witnesses, and even fewer Protestants.<br />

Ethnically, many Greek Muslims identify themselves as Turks while<br />

there are a few Slav-Macedonians in northern Greece.<br />

Since the 1990s, Greece has become much more diverse. Currently,<br />

it is estimated that Greece hosts some 900,000 immigrants<br />

mainly from Albania but also from Eastern Europe, the Arab world,<br />

Pakistan, Afghanistan, and the Philippines as well as Kurds from Iraq<br />

and Turkey. Only about half of these immigrants are legal; therefore,<br />

an accurate census is difficult. See also DIASPORA.<br />

DEMOTIC GREEK. See LANGUAGE.<br />

DIASPORA. Since ancient times, Greeks have emigrated to escape<br />

their poverty and in search of trading and enriching opportunities<br />

abroad. Until the advance of nationalism in the 19th century, there<br />

were large and prosperous Greek communities across much of the<br />

eastern Mediterranean, the Black Sea, and southeastern Europe,<br />

mainly in the ports of Izmir, Istanbul, Trabzon, Odessa, Burgas, Trieste,<br />

and Alexandria in Egypt.<br />

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DIMAS, PYRROS • 55<br />

Today’s Greek diaspora is of a different kind. Starting in the late<br />

19th century, Greeks of Peloponnesus immigrated to the United<br />

States because of the deteriorating economic conditions and the<br />

increased difficulty in exporting Greece’s main cash crop, the currant.<br />

This migration abated in the aftermath of World War I as the<br />

United States closed its borders. Following World War II, Greeks<br />

left for Germany, Belgium, Sweden, Australia, and various European<br />

colonies in Africa, taking advantage of their booming economies. It<br />

is estimated that today there are approximately five million Greeks<br />

living outside Greece, although it is both difficult to count and determine<br />

who exactly is a Greek and who is not.<br />

The Greek diaspora is mostly organized around the Orthodox<br />

Church, which, in the absence of the Greek nation-state, plays an<br />

important cultural and political role in the defense of the community.<br />

More recently, the Greek state has appeared more concerned with<br />

expatriates’ well-being, including their education and preservation<br />

of their identity. Furthermore, the Greek government has decided to<br />

allow many expatriates to vote in Greek elections, something that<br />

might revolutionize the relationship of the diaspora with the mother<br />

country in the future.<br />

Greeks are proud of their diaspora and the achievements of Greeks<br />

abroad. It is estimated that in the United States alone, there are more<br />

than 3,000 university professors of Greek origin. Famous diaspora<br />

Greeks include physician George Papanikolaou (who invented the<br />

Pap test), philosopher Cornelius Castoriadis, shipping tycoon<br />

Aristotle Onassis, opera singer Maria Callas, U.S. presidential<br />

candidate Mike Dukakis, and aviation groundbreaker Stelios Hatziioannou.<br />

Excelling in science, the arts, business, and even politics,<br />

hyphenated Greeks of the diaspora preserve a long tradition of ingenuity,<br />

perseverance, and entrepreneurship that often seems missing<br />

from the motherland. See also DEMOGRAPHY.<br />

DIMAS, PYRROS (1971– ). Born in Himara in southern Albania<br />

to ethnic Greek parents, Pyrros Dimas is a Greek sports hero. As<br />

a weightlifter, Dimas won gold medals in the Olympic Games in<br />

Barcelona in 1992, Atlanta in 1996, Sydney in 2000, and a bronze<br />

in Athens in 2004. Thus, Dimas is the most decorated and accomplished<br />

modern Greek athlete. His victories made weightlifting popular<br />

and contributed to an athletic renaissance in a nation, which, until<br />

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56 • DODECANESE<br />

recently, was not accustomed to victories in Olympiads and world<br />

championships. Repatriated Greeks from Eastern Europe, such as<br />

Dimas and his fellow weightlifter Kakhi Kakhiashvilli, have contributed<br />

greatly to these recent Greek successes.<br />

DODECANESE. A small archipelago of 12 (dodeka) islands in the<br />

southeastern Aegean Sea between Crete and the Asia Minor coast,<br />

the largest of which is Rhodes. Following the Crusades, Rhodes became<br />

the home of the Knights of St. John, who endowed it with one<br />

of the grandest, still preserved, medieval, fortified cities in Europe.<br />

The Ottomans came fairly late and stayed until 1912, and after their<br />

defeat in Libya the islands were transferred to Italy. The Italians<br />

left behind an interesting, interwar architecture. Having preserved a<br />

Greek culture, both in language and religion, the islands were finally<br />

united with Greece in 1947 with the Treaty of Paris. This was the last<br />

expansion of the Greek state.<br />

Today, the islands, with Rhodes and Kos at the forefront, have<br />

developed a robust tourist industry and form one of the wealthiest areas<br />

of Greece. Lying very close to the Turkish coast, the presence of<br />

Greek troops in defensive formations remains an irritant for Turkey,<br />

which objects to their militarization and claims relevant treaty provisions.<br />

In January 1996, an engagement between the two countries’<br />

navies, at the small islet of Imia (Kardak in Turkish) off the island of<br />

Kalymnos, threatened briefly to escalate into war. From time to time,<br />

Turkey disputes the sovereignty of certain uninhabited island formations<br />

in the archipelago.<br />

DOMAZOS, MIMIS (1942– ). Born in Athens, Mimis Domazos has<br />

probably been Greece’s best soccer player. Playing for the Panathinaikos<br />

soccer team from 1959 until 1980 as a midfielder, he won<br />

many titles, became immensely popular, and remained a public icon<br />

throughout the 1960s and 1970s. See also SPORTS.<br />

– E –<br />

ECONOMY. The economy probably remains the greatest paradox of<br />

modern Greece. Although, to a certain degree, archaically structured<br />

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ECONOMY • 57<br />

and dependent on revenues from abroad, Greece is a prosperous<br />

country with one of the highest per capita incomes in the world. Its<br />

current gross domestic product (GDP) totals $330 billion. This is<br />

more than the GDP of the economies of all the Balkan countries<br />

combined. In the meantime, the Greek GDP continues to expand robustly<br />

at a healthy average rate of 3.5 percent a year. Overall, Greece<br />

is placed in the top 25 countries of the United Nations Human Development<br />

Index worldwide.<br />

Historically, the Greek lands, especially the highlands and much<br />

of the arid coastline, suffered from poverty, and social stability was<br />

only maintained through emigration. After independence, Greece<br />

developed very slowly and entrepreneurial Greeks continued to seek<br />

enrichment in the Ottoman lands. The situation improved slowly in<br />

the 1870s and progressed rapidly in the 1880s under the premiership<br />

of Harilaos Trikoupis, who initiated an ambitious program of major<br />

public works while welcoming home Greek capitalists from abroad.<br />

Growth was followed by stagnation until the eve of World War I.<br />

After the war, the arrival of Asia Minor refugees enlarged the domestic<br />

market and endowed Greece with an industrious and experienced<br />

workforce. Industrialization progressed but, once more, it was interrupted<br />

by the world recession and war. Following World War II,<br />

reconstruction was delayed by the Civil War, which destroyed and<br />

displaced the population of much of mountainous Greece.<br />

What followed, however, has been described as the Greek<br />

“economic miracle.” Through the stewardship of Prime Minister<br />

Konstantinos Karamanlis and of other Greek politicians, such as<br />

Georgios Kartalis and Spyros Markezinis, foreign aid and favorable<br />

international conditions were coupled with macroeconomic stability,<br />

a liberal regime that welcomed foreign investment, the existence of<br />

a cheap and abundant workforce, and an activist state that invested<br />

heavily in public works and industrialization. This formidable combination<br />

produced high growth rates from the 1950s onwards, with the<br />

exception of the 1980s, and has helped place Greece among the rich<br />

nations of the world. Although industrialization was important, overall<br />

manufacturing remains particularly weak in Greece, providing<br />

less than 10 percent of the GDP. Rather, growth has come through<br />

construction, tourism, shipping, and other services such as trade<br />

and banking.<br />

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58 • ECUMENICAL PATRIARCHATE<br />

Greece enjoys a high standard of living, comparable to that of<br />

Italy and Spain, but the structure of its economy remains markedly<br />

different from its partners in Europe as it is dominated by small, family-owned<br />

firms, an overblown public sector, a relatively large but<br />

not very productive agricultural sector, and an extensive untaxed,<br />

shadow economy. Salaried labor, in proportion to the population, is<br />

the lowest in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development<br />

(OECD) and the self-employed continue to make up almost<br />

half of the total workforce.<br />

Despite an unsupportive business environment at home, evident<br />

by Greece’s inability to attract much greenfield foreign investment<br />

and an ossified educational system, Greece is greatly aided by the<br />

acceleration of globalization and the new economic opportunities<br />

this provides. A booming China and Southeast Asia have enriched<br />

Greek shipowners while newly rich East Europeans and Russians<br />

are competing for a share of the unique Greek coastline. See also<br />

EMPLOYMENT; ENERGY; FINANCES.<br />

ECUMENICAL PATRIARCHATE. One of the five ancient patriarchates<br />

of the early Christian church, based in Constantinople and<br />

headed by the bishop of New Rome. Following centuries of rivalry<br />

with the pope and the bishop of (old) Rome, the two Christian leaders<br />

excommunicated each other in 1054 CE and the church was divided<br />

between an eastern Orthodox and western Catholic part. The Ecumenical<br />

Patriarch never managed to exercise a centralized control<br />

over the various Orthodox churches, in the way the pope did over his<br />

Catholic dominions. Autonomous Orthodox churches headed by their<br />

own patriarch or archbishop have proliferated since the late Middle<br />

Ages. However, the patriarch of Constantinople was recognized as<br />

the spiritual leader of all and the ultimate arbiter of disputes among<br />

Orthodox churches. Following their own tradition, the Ottomans<br />

upgraded the position of the patriarch to that of the leader of the<br />

Christian Orthodox millet (protected religious minority), irrespective<br />

of ethnicity.<br />

The rise of nationalism spelled the end of the patriarch’s political<br />

authority, and newly independent national churches broke away from<br />

his jurisdiction. With the departure of Orthodox Christians from Turkey,<br />

the patriarch has been left with a very small following. However,<br />

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EDUCATION • 59<br />

he continues to lead the Orthodox Greeks of the diaspora. Turkey<br />

continues to resist the ecumenical character of the patriarchate, afraid<br />

that such an admission might infringe on its sovereignty. Ankara has<br />

imposed a series of restrictions on the operation of the Ecumenical<br />

Patriarchate that has put its long-term survival in Istanbul in doubt<br />

and has contributed to the rivalry with Greece. Russia, being the<br />

largest and strongest Orthodox country in the world, would like to<br />

have the patriarch of Moscow recognized as the leader of worldwide<br />

Orthodoxy, something the United States does not favor. The Ecumenical<br />

Patriarchate is familiar with political controversy and, for all<br />

the changes brought by nationalism, it has survived throughout the<br />

centuries. The current patriarch is Bartholomew I.<br />

EDUCATION. Education in Greece is highly prized and Greek parents<br />

do not hesitate to spend their wealth on their children’s education.<br />

Demand for a good university education remains strong and feeds a<br />

national frenzy every June at university entry exam periods. Some<br />

students attend technical or special schools following their completion<br />

of high school. Historically, the educational system has been a<br />

primary mechanism in support of upward social mobility. Concerted<br />

efforts to secure open access to education for all has greatly contributed<br />

to making Greece a fairly egalitarian society, lacking the great<br />

social divides found elsewhere.<br />

Education in Greece is provided mostly by the state and controlled<br />

by a large bureaucratic, centralized machinery headed by the Ministry<br />

of National Education and Religious Affairs. Overall, the system<br />

consists of a six-year elementary school, a three-year secondary<br />

school, and a three-year high school. The mandatory education is<br />

nine years in duration. There are some good private high schools,<br />

mainly in Athens and Thessaloniki, often affiliated with foreign<br />

educational institutions, the best known being Athens College and<br />

Anatolia College, both supported by United States education boards.<br />

There are more private elementary schools and a very large number<br />

of preschools, as the demand by working mothers remains unmet.<br />

In the past, Greece used to have one of the largest university student<br />

populations abroad, mainly in Great Britain, Italy, and Eastern<br />

Europe. Recently, many new university departments, often of<br />

dubious quality, have opened, especially in small provincial towns,<br />

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60 • ELYTIS, ODYSSEAS<br />

doubling the available supply and almost meeting existing demand,<br />

although admission to the prestigious medical, law, and a few engineering<br />

schools remains very competitive.<br />

Higher education is constitutionally the exclusive prerogative of<br />

the state. One serious side effect of the bottlenecks in the system is<br />

the growth of a vast unregulated network of private, profit-making,<br />

preuniversity preparatory tutoring schools used by high school students<br />

in search of university admission. Another is the proliferation<br />

of profitmaking, postsecondary, skill-oriented private colleges for<br />

those who fail the university entry exams. Most of the problems and<br />

public attention focus on the state of the Greek university, which suffers<br />

from the excesses of reforms introduced in the 1980s. Some, especially<br />

from the left, claim that the most serious issue is underfunding,<br />

and it is true that many departments are not adequately staffed.<br />

But meritocracy, accountability, and discipline standards are low and<br />

no matter how much more money the state spends, it is doubtful if<br />

the present system can produce better results.<br />

It is often said that Greek education is in a crisis and in dire need<br />

of reform. Reform, however, has proved extremely difficult and<br />

cumbersome as governments are faced with strong resistance from<br />

unions, student activism, and pressing demands elsewhere. It seems<br />

that educational changes can wait, the costs of which are politically<br />

paid up front but the benefits are enjoyed many years after they have<br />

been introduced.<br />

Recently, the Greek government, obliged to follow its European<br />

partners in respecting a common minimum of educational standards,<br />

introduced a few mild reforms that it had to dilute because of fierce<br />

opposition. In the past, the Greek educational system served the<br />

Greek nation-state adequately by contributing to a modern, homogenous,<br />

national-minded, upwardly mobile society. However, in the<br />

age of globalization and the rise of a knowledge-based economy,<br />

Greek education needs to prepare Greek society to meet intense international<br />

competition. This seems to be an issue that will dominate<br />

Greek politics in the years to come.<br />

ELYTIS, ODYSSEAS (1911–1996). Born in Herakleio in Crete but<br />

with family origins from the island of Lesvos, Odysseas Elytis was<br />

a poet and a Nobel laureate for literature (1979). He belonged to the<br />

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ENERGY • 61<br />

so-called generation of the 1930s. Following the Asia Minor catastrophe<br />

and the “closing in” of Greece’s national horizons, Elytis’<br />

generation balanced between tradition and European modernism in<br />

an attempt to redefine contemporary Greek identity. Employing surrealism<br />

and vivid imagery, Elytis’ poetry is full of the light found in<br />

his native Aegean Sea and speaks optimistically of man’s struggle<br />

for liberty. He died in Athens in 1996.<br />

EMPLOYMENT. Officially, Greece has one of the lowest levels of<br />

employment in the developed world. Only one in two Greeks is<br />

employed. This has to do with a high rate of youth unemployment,<br />

early retirement, low female participation in the job market, and an<br />

extensive unregistered market of self-employed workers. In addition,<br />

the Greek labor market has a number of distinct characteristics. Half<br />

of the Greeks who work, work for themselves. Only half of the labor<br />

force is salaried and only a small fraction of it works for a private<br />

establishment with more than 100 employees. Besides an inflexible<br />

official labor market that protects those with jobs to the detriment<br />

of those without jobs, there exists a large underground economy of<br />

unregulated and untaxed jobs.<br />

Furthermore, Greece still employs a disproportionate share of its<br />

people in agriculture and the primary sector. The largest employer<br />

is the wider public sector with some 700,000 employees, although<br />

the exact number is unknown. Unemployment started rising after<br />

1980 and remains among the highest in the European Union (EU),<br />

although recently it has fallen below 10 percent. Traditionally a labor-exporting<br />

country, Greece has turned into a labor importer in the<br />

past two decades, hosting close to one million economic immigrants.<br />

See also ECONOMY.<br />

ENERGY. Greece’s only indigenous energy source is the polluting lignite,<br />

abundantly found in western Macedonia. Lignite provides the<br />

fuel for the production of half of the country’s electricity. Some small<br />

oil deposits off the island of Thassos in the north have been mostly<br />

depleted. Alternative sources include the full use of all of the country’s<br />

small rivers through an extensive system of hydroelectric dams.<br />

More recently, solar and wind power have expanded. Nevertheless,<br />

Greece remains heavily dependent on imports of oil from the Middle<br />

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62 • ENLIGHTENMENT<br />

East. In the mid-1990s, Russian and Algerian gas was introduced in<br />

increased quantities and an extensive gas network covering most of<br />

the country’s urban centers is constantly expanding.<br />

Greek energy ambitions include satisfying the growing demand<br />

for electricity, which rises by around 5 percent annually, complying<br />

with tighter environmental regulations against the emission of<br />

greenhouse gases, turning Greece into an energy hub, with gas and<br />

oil pipelines crossing the country from north to south and from east<br />

to west, while liberalizing the energy market in compliance with the<br />

regulations of the European Union (EU). The most important recent<br />

energy projects include the Burgas-Alexandroupoli oil pipeline,<br />

between Greece and Bulgaria, circumventing the Bosporus Straits,<br />

and the Turkey-Greece-Italy gas pipeline that will deliver Caspian<br />

gas to Western Europe, circumventing Russia. See also ECONOMY;<br />

PUBLIC POWER COMPANY.<br />

ENLIGHTENMENT. See KORAIS, ADAMANTIOS.<br />

ENOSIS. Meaning “union” in Greek, enosis refers to the demand by<br />

Greek-Cypriots to unite Cyprus with Greece, following the departure<br />

of the British. Enosis was defeated by Turkey’s strong opposition,<br />

Great Britain’s manipulation, and Greek infighting. Instead, Cyprus<br />

became an independent republic. After independence, Archbishop<br />

Makarios, its first president, continued to pay lip service to enosis.<br />

With the exception of the communists, so did most of the Greek-<br />

Cypriot politicians. For a while, enosis was favorably regarded internationally.<br />

In search of a solution to the Cyprus conflict, the United<br />

States suggested the Acheson Plan, which provided for Cyprus’<br />

union with Greece in exchange for a large military base for Turkey.<br />

All sides involved rejected the plan as unfair.<br />

The concept of enosis destabilized Cyprus domestically and poisoned<br />

relations between Greek and Turkish Cypriots. In 1971, a few<br />

Greek-Cypriot right-wing extremists led by Georgios Grivas took<br />

up arms and formed EOKA B, supposedly a reincarnation of the<br />

original anticolonial military organization, the National Organization<br />

of Cypriot Fighters (NOCF; Ethniki Organosi Kyprion Agoniston,<br />

EOKA), created to force the implementation of enosis. Supported<br />

by the Greek colonels, EOKA B terrorized communists, antagonized<br />

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ENVIRONMENT • 63<br />

the Cypriot government, and participated in the coup of the National<br />

Guard that temporarily overthrew Makarios on 15 July 1974.<br />

As a result of Greece’s postwar anticommunist authoritarianism,<br />

enosis was not simply contested along ethnic lines, between Greeks<br />

and Turks in Cyprus, but also along political lines, between communists<br />

and anticommunists. Enosis with Greece, a country where the<br />

Communist Party was banned until 1974, was naturally unappealing<br />

to the numerous Cypriot communists for the same reason that it was<br />

particularly attractive to Greek-Cypriot right-wing anticommunists.<br />

The overthrow of democracy in Greece in 1967 made enosis even<br />

less appealing to the Greek-Cypriots, as unification could only lead<br />

to being ruled by a Greek military dictatorship.<br />

If enosis was used in Cyprus to politically marginalize the left, it<br />

worked the other way in Greece, where the conservative Prime Minister<br />

Konstantinos Karamanlis was accused by his opponents, to his<br />

left and to his right, of having conceded to the abandoning of enosis<br />

in the 1959–1960 negotiations that gave Cyprus its independence.<br />

The pro-enosis demands helped the Greek left polish its nationalist<br />

credentials that had been tarnished during the Civil War and to bring<br />

the centrist Georgios Papandreou to power in 1963–1964.<br />

The Turkish invasion of 1974 put a violent end to any plan for<br />

Cyprus’ unification with Greece. After 1974, the Republic of Cyprus<br />

emphasized the distinctiveness of a common Cypriot identity and<br />

Cypriot nationalism bonding Greeks and Turks living on the island,<br />

and stressed that Cyprus’ independence was being violated by Turkey.<br />

Ironically, for many Turkish nationalists, Cyprus’ entry into<br />

the European Union (EU) in 2004 brought enosis through the back<br />

door, as Greece is a member of the EU but Turkey is not. See also<br />

CYPRUS QUESTION.<br />

ENVIRONMENT. Despite its comparatively small size, Greece is endowed<br />

with a unique and diverse natural environment of high mountains,<br />

small plains, thousands of islands, and a 16,000-kilometer-long<br />

coastline. Greece’s weak industrialization and the density of its urbanization<br />

have kept much of the countryside pristine and unspoiled,<br />

although booming tourism is a real threat. Since arable land occupies<br />

only one third of the total, much of Greece is left to its natural flora.<br />

Forests occupy less than 20 percent of the total surface of the country<br />

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64 • EPIRUS<br />

and their size is shrinking because of fires, herding, and construction.<br />

The Greek seas remain among the cleanest in Europe.<br />

Urban pollution is a problem. In the 1980s, Athens, the largest<br />

Greek city, became infamous for its air pollution caused by old cars<br />

and trucks using low-quality gas. Thermaikos, Thessaloniki’s shallow,<br />

closed bay in the north, has been virtually dead due to massive<br />

residential and industrial waste.<br />

Environmental consciousness remains underdeveloped and the<br />

prerogative of a few urban sophisticates. A few nongovernmental<br />

organizations (NGO), such as Greenpeace and the World Wildlife<br />

Fund, have had some sporadic success. However, concern for the environment<br />

is often hypocritical and the façade behind which special<br />

and entrenched interests hide.<br />

The Greek state has created a series of national parks and protected<br />

zones for the benefit of wildlife. More recently, it introduced stricter<br />

regulations, offered incentives, and invested in public transportation<br />

networks in order to improve the urban environment, where the<br />

majority of Greeks live. Thanks to new car technologies, the use of<br />

natural gas for heating and in industry, and the operation of a subway<br />

system, Athens is no longer the most polluted city in Europe.<br />

Although, the coasts of Greece have avoided the overbuilding that<br />

occurred in Spain, land speculation, a cumbersome legal system, and<br />

an ineffective and corrupt public administration continue to put<br />

extraordinary pressure on a unique environmental resource.<br />

EPIRUS. Greece is famous as an archipelagic nation. However, Greece<br />

is also a land of steep mountains and alpine landscapes. Nowhere is<br />

that more true than in Epirus, the country’s northwestern region bordering<br />

Albania. With a surface area of 9,450 square kilometers and a<br />

total population of 338,147, Epirus is divided into four districts with<br />

Ioannina (Jannina) as its largest city and regional capital.<br />

In the past, Epirus became prominent three times: first, because<br />

of a brilliant Hellenistic general called Pyrrhus (318–272 BCE) who<br />

fought numerous campaigns in Italy; second, as one of the Byzantine<br />

Greek states that emerged from the Fourth Crusade in 1204,<br />

the Despotate of Epirus (founded in 1205), which lasted until 1479<br />

when it fully succumbed to the advancing Ottomans; and third,<br />

when it emerged as a semiautonomous Ottoman province under the<br />

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EURO • 65<br />

leadership of an ambitious and clever Ottoman pasha, Ali of Tepelen<br />

(1787–1822), before provoking the wrath of the sultan who sent his<br />

army to defeat and kill him.<br />

Present-day Greek Epirus is the southern part of a region that was<br />

divided between Greece and Albania to the north. Greece acquired<br />

the city of Arta in 1881 and the rest of Epirus after the First Balkan<br />

War in 1912. The Greek advance against the fortifications of Jannina<br />

was slow and difficult and the city surrendered four months after<br />

Thessaloniki in Macedonia. For many years after the war, Greece<br />

continued to claim northern Epirus from Albania, where a sizeable<br />

Greek minority has lived. During World War II, Greece repelled<br />

the attacking Italians and advanced deep into northern Epirus but<br />

withdrew after Nazi Germany intervened. Following the end of the<br />

war, several thousand Albanian-speaking Chams, accused of collaboration<br />

with the occupiers, were expelled from Greek Epirus. The<br />

border with Albania remained closed until 1991 when the Stalinist<br />

regime in Tirana abruptly collapsed and Epirus, together with the rest<br />

of Greece, was flooded with Albanian economic immigrants.<br />

Epirus is a region of stunning, wild natural beauty with a developing<br />

winter tourist industry. Despite some modest government aid,<br />

the region remains underpopulated and the poorest in Greece, and<br />

one of the poorest in Western Europe.<br />

EURO. Today, the euro is the official currency of Greece. It replaced<br />

the drachma on 1 January 2002. The euro is the common European<br />

currency, currently shared by 15 member-states of the European<br />

Union (EU), and the basis of the Economic and Monetary Union<br />

(EMU). Per the treaty of Maastricht in 1991, Greece initially struggled<br />

to join the EMU as it did not satisfy any of the entry criteria.<br />

After a great effort, Greece lowered its inflation rate and public<br />

deficit, although it continues to struggle with a large public debt that<br />

is estimated to be around 100 percent of the gross domestic product<br />

(GDP). The Greeks supported the EMU. After 30 years of inflationary<br />

politics and soft money, Greece has acquired a strong currency<br />

and has benefited greatly from the low interest rates the euro has<br />

brought. However, there are complaints that the conversion from the<br />

drachma to the euro has favored the speculators and has made everyday<br />

life more expensive.<br />

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66 • <strong>EUROPE</strong>AN COMMUNITY<br />

<strong>EUROPE</strong>AN COMMUNITY (EC). Greece became a member of<br />

the European Community (EC) on 1 January 1981, having signed<br />

the accession treaty on 28 May 1979. Under the leadership of<br />

Konstantinos Karamanlis, a committed Europeanist, Greece was<br />

the first country to become an associate member of the, recently<br />

formed, EC in 1961. Karamanlis had explored an EC–Greece association<br />

as early as 1957, the year the Rome treaty founding the<br />

EC was signed. Negotiations started in 1958 and were concluded<br />

with an agreement in 1959. Thus, from early on, Greece had participated<br />

in the project of European integration. When it became a<br />

member, five years ahead of Spain and Portugal, Greece was the<br />

only Christian Orthodox member and, until the 2007 accession of<br />

Bulgaria, the only EU country with no common border with any<br />

of its EU partners.<br />

Nevertheless, relations between Greece and the EU have not always<br />

been smooth. During the seven-year dictatorship (1967–1974),<br />

relations froze and the association agreement stalled. Furthermore,<br />

the first decade of Greece’s membership in the 1980s was troubled<br />

by Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou’s Third-Worldism and<br />

populist economic policies.<br />

The speedy Greek accession after the fall of the junta and the<br />

overall general strategic orientation of Greece toward the EU should<br />

undoubtedly be attributed to the tenacity of Karamanlis. He overcame<br />

strong opposition both in Europe and at home to make Greece<br />

a member. Karamanlis’ reasoning had a lot to do with his desire<br />

to secure Greece’s democracy and frontiers. However, the Greeks<br />

warmed to Europe as soon as EU subsidies began pouring in, first in<br />

support of agriculture and later to upgrade the country’s infrastructure.<br />

Since then, Greece has grown into a committed Europeanist. In<br />

debates over the future of Europe, Greece systematically sides with<br />

the Eurofederalists.<br />

For Greece, the more Europe the better. With the exception of<br />

the small Communist Party, almost all of the Greek political forces<br />

share this view, as the country has benefited enormously through its<br />

association with and membership in the EU, having received close<br />

to $150 billion so far in EU money. And the benefits are not only<br />

financial. They include the consolidation of democratic politics, the<br />

introduction of Europe’s advanced public policy practices, opening<br />

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FERAIOS, RIGAS • 67<br />

of the economy to competition, and enhancement of Greece’s international<br />

diplomatic position, among other benefits. A negative aspect<br />

is that the EU’s generosity, channeled through an inefficient Greek<br />

state, has often fed corruption, dampened the urgency of domestic<br />

reforms, and preserved a certain corporatist economic culture that,<br />

eventually, will be incompatible with globalization.<br />

Nevertheless, the strong desire to remain in and benefit from the<br />

hard core of European integration has been a powerful incentive<br />

to reform, as Greece’s rush to join the European Monetary Union<br />

(EMU) and to adopt the euro in 2002 proved. Today, Greece is a<br />

medium-size partner in Europe and appears increasingly adept at<br />

playing European politics constructively, having placed several of its<br />

nationals in key positions. The European Court of Justice is headed<br />

by a Greek jurist, the vice president of the European Central Bank<br />

is a Greek banker and economist, and the European ombudsman is a<br />

Greek academician. Furthermore, having strongly favored the EU’s<br />

enlargement eastwards, Greece has found in the EU the best possible<br />

way to normalize its troublesome relations with some of its neighbors,<br />

including, first and foremost, Turkey. See also FOREIGN<br />

POLICY.<br />

<strong>EUROPE</strong>AN UNION (EU). See <strong>EUROPE</strong>AN COMMUNITY.<br />

– F –<br />

FERAIOS, RIGAS (1757–1798). Born in Velestino near ancient<br />

Pherae in Thessaly in Central Greece, Rigas Feraios was the most<br />

eminent prerevolutionary Greek hero and is widely recognized as a<br />

forerunner of the 1821 uprising. Well educated and well traveled,<br />

Feraios worked for the Greek administrators of the Danube provinces<br />

of the Ottoman Empire in present-day Romania. He was deeply<br />

moved by the French Revolution and thought that a similar popular<br />

movement could free the Christian Orthodox population from the<br />

Ottoman oppression. He wrote inspiring poems, the best known of<br />

which is “Thourios,” and reflected on a future independent Balkan<br />

commonwealth. He was arrested by the Austrians while he was traveling<br />

to Venice on his way to meet Napoleon, whose help he needed,<br />

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68 • FILIKI ETERIA<br />

and was handed over to the Ottomans in Belgrade, where he was<br />

strangled by the Ottoman authorities while in prison.<br />

FILIKI ETERIA (ASSOCIATION <strong>OF</strong> FRIENDS). A secret society<br />

created to obtain the liberation of Greece from the Ottoman Empire,<br />

Filiki Eteria played a significant role in preparing the Revolution<br />

of 1821. Supported by members of an emerging and assertive<br />

Greek middle class, the Filiki Eteria was founded in 1814 by three<br />

merchants, Nikolaos Skoufas, Athanasios Tsakalof, and Emanouel<br />

Xanthos, in the prosperous Russian port of Odessa in the Black Sea.<br />

Modeled after the Masonic philosophy, the association was financed<br />

by the Sekeris brothers who were prominent merchants from Constantinople.<br />

They all shared the liberal vision of Rigas Feraios.<br />

To increase membership and credibility, the organization’s leaders<br />

spread rumors that a great power, implicitly Russia, backed their<br />

plans and that an invisible authority was in charge. After Ioannis Capodistrias,<br />

who was later to become president of Greece, declined,<br />

Alexandros Ypsilantis, an officer of the Russian army, accepted the<br />

leadership of the association.<br />

Filiki Eteria made an enormous contribution toward the revolution,<br />

mobilizing Greeks within and without the Ottoman Empire, collecting<br />

funds, organizing an army, and finally, choosing the time and place<br />

for the outbreak. Its attempt in the Ottoman provinces of Moldovia<br />

and Wallachia, where the Ottoman army needed Russia’s permission<br />

to enter, met with defeat and Ypsilantis himself was killed. A month<br />

later, however, in March 1821, the revolution broke out in Peloponnesus.<br />

Soon, Alexandros’ brother, Dimitris Ypsilantis, was elected<br />

as leader of the revolutionaries. Many Filikoi, or members of the association,<br />

took prominent positions in the developing revolutionary<br />

institutions, but relations with the native population became progressively<br />

strained. Overall, the members of the association had a much<br />

more modern outlook and political agenda compared with the locals.<br />

Although outnumbered by the locals, their organizational skills and<br />

cosmopolitanism contributed decisively to the overall success of the<br />

struggle for independence and the establishment of a modern Greek<br />

nation-state.<br />

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FINOS FILMS • 69<br />

FINANCES. The Greek economy suffers from a number of deficits;<br />

trade and fiscal deficits are the two most important. The government<br />

or fiscal deficit is the result of chronic overspending and massive<br />

tax evasion. For most of the postwar period and up until the late<br />

1970s, the deficit remained fairly low. Following the second oil crisis<br />

and the socialists’ expansionary policies in the 1980s, the deficit<br />

exploded to the point of threatening the Greek treasury with bankruptcy.<br />

Since the early 1990s, much of the fiscal balance has been<br />

restored, thanks mainly to an increase in taxation rather than any<br />

major spending cuts. Today, the fiscal deficit remains under 3 percent<br />

of the gross domestic product (GDP), although Greece is burdened<br />

with a high public debt, around 100 percent of the GDP, the servicing<br />

of which consumes a great part of the annual public revenues. In<br />

addition, long-term pension liabilities require a large primary surplus<br />

today, if the current state of affairs is to be sustainable in the medium<br />

to long term.<br />

FINOS FILMS (FF). Founded and owned by an entrepreneurial producer,<br />

Filopemen Finos, Finos Films (FF) was the largest and most<br />

successful studio of the emerging Greek postwar film industry.<br />

Starting in the 1940s, FF produced the greatest Greek blockbusters<br />

and established a number of young movie stars, first among whom<br />

was actress Aliki Vougiouklaki. FF offered a variety of melodramas,<br />

film noirs, comedies, and musicals. It employed smart, well-written,<br />

straightforward scenarios with simple, easily identifiable characters,<br />

centered mainly on a love story where the lovers had to overcome<br />

social and other obstacles before reaching happiness. A happy ending<br />

was essential.<br />

FF’s productions were criticized for their naiveté, commercialism,<br />

lack of artistry, and a certain social escapism since they created an<br />

idealized universe quite different from the hardships of the first postwar<br />

years. Although gradually films of a few gifted, young directors<br />

were released, FF remained oriented toward large audiences who,<br />

in the absence of television, flocked to the movie theaters by the<br />

thousands. Television was the undoing of FF and of the Greek commercial<br />

movie industry in general. See also CINEMA.<br />

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70 • FLAG<br />

FLAG. The Greek national flag is rectangular with nine horizontal blue<br />

and white stripes and a white cross in four blue boxes on the upper<br />

left side. It was adopted in 1822 by the revolutionary constitutional<br />

assembly in Epidavros. There is a debate about the symbolism of its<br />

shape and colors. Most claim that the blue was chosen to refer to the<br />

sea and the ancient maritime traditions of Greece, the nine stripes<br />

correspond to the nine syllables of the revolutionary slogan “freedom<br />

or death” in Greek, and the cross is the symbol of Christianity.<br />

FLORAKIS, HARILAOS (1914–2005). Born in Karditsa in Thessaly<br />

in Central Greece, Florakis was the general secretary of the<br />

Communist Party of Greece (CPG; Kommounistiko Komma Elladas,<br />

KKE) during its transition from a clandestine organization<br />

to a legitimate participant in elections, parliamentary politics, and<br />

even the government after 1974. In that capacity, Florakis played a<br />

crucial, although often underappreciated, role in the democratization<br />

and normalization of Greek politics.<br />

Florakis attended the Law School of Athens, but never completed<br />

his studies due to his leftist beliefs. He joined the Communist<br />

Youth and participated in the resistance against the occupying Axis<br />

forces during World War II. Later he fought in the Greek Civil War<br />

(1946–1949) where he became known by his nom de guerre Captain<br />

Giotis. In 1949, together with his fellow fighters, he left the country<br />

for Eastern Europe as a political refugee. He returned to Greece in<br />

1954 but was arrested, tried, and imprisoned for 17 years for his communist<br />

activities.<br />

In 1972, while Greece was under a military dictatorship and anticommunist<br />

harassment had intensified, Florakis was elected general<br />

secretary of the Greek Communist Party in exile. A year later, with<br />

the return of democracy, the party took part in parliamentary elections<br />

for the first time since 1936. In 1988, sensing international<br />

political changes and the declining fortunes of the Soviet Union,<br />

Florakis moved to strengthen the unity of the left by forming a broad<br />

left-wing alliance, together with the CPG/KKE’s former reformist<br />

rivals, called the Coalition of the Left and Progress (CLP; Synaspismos<br />

tis Aristeras kai tis Proodou, SYN). Florakis became president of<br />

the new coalition while resigning from his post as general secretary<br />

of the CPG/KKE. For a while, following the inconclusive 1989 elec-<br />

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FOREIGN POLICY • 71<br />

tions, Florakis and the left became the kingmakers of Greek politics.<br />

Together with his coalition partner, Leonidas Kyrkos, he took the<br />

left into an unprecedented coalition government with the conservative<br />

New Democracy (ND; Nea Dimokratia) Party. This move<br />

proved controversial and was hostile to Andreas Papandreou’s<br />

Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko<br />

Kinima). By 1991, internal fighting between the various factions of<br />

the leftist coalition and CPG/KKE’s traditional reluctance to weaken<br />

its autonomy and suspicion of partners, brought the coalition to an<br />

end. Florakis retired from the leadership as an honorary president of<br />

his party.<br />

Florakis supervised the transition of a battered, traumatized, and<br />

clandestine party to parliamentary politics and practices. This was<br />

a process that greatly legitimized Greece’s young democracy. After<br />

1974, he failed to contain the advance of Andreas Papandreou’s PA-<br />

SOK that kept the CPG/KKE confined to around 10 percent of the<br />

electorate. Speaking in simple Greek with a heavy accent, Florakis<br />

exhibited a certain political wisdom that in his later years made him<br />

widely popular among his fellow Greeks. Although a Stalinist, treading<br />

carefully and appearing to move slowly, Florakis was capable<br />

of some bold initiatives, such as his refusal to back PASOK in the<br />

1986 municipal elections, the formation of the leftist coalition in<br />

1988, and the left’s participation in the government in 1989–1990.<br />

Unlike its Italian counterpart, the Greek Communist Party has not<br />

been particularly fortunate with its leaders. Overall, Florakis appears<br />

to be somewhat of an exception in the party’s long history. He died<br />

in 2005 in Athens.<br />

FOREIGN POLICY. Greece is a founding member of the United<br />

Nations (UN) and an early participant in Euro-Atlantic institutions.<br />

It became a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization<br />

(NATO) in 1952, an associate member of the European Community<br />

(EC) in 1961, and a full member in 1981. Thus, Greek foreign<br />

policy has a well-established Western orientation, inherited from the<br />

Cold War and beyond.<br />

Historically, Greek foreign policy can be better understood<br />

through a series of contrasting poles. Until 1922, Greece was a revisionist<br />

state, dissatisfied with the territorial status quo in southeastern<br />

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72 • FOREIGN POLICY<br />

Europe and striving to expand, in order to incorporate as many of<br />

the Ottoman Greeks as possible. During that first half of its independent<br />

existence, Greece’s foreign policy was a perilous balancing<br />

act between its warlike impulses and the country’s limited resources.<br />

Following the Asia Minor catastrophe in 1922, Greece has become<br />

a conservative power, opposing strongly the forceful change of borders.<br />

As a small state dependent on the protection of great powers,<br />

Greece was drawn between Great Britain, the dominant naval<br />

power in the Mediterranean, and Russia, the dominant land power<br />

in Eastern Europe. The Greek people have remained sympathetic<br />

toward the Russian co-religionists, helped by Russia’s continual<br />

antagonism with Turkey. However, the Greek elites, aware of their<br />

country’s vulnerability from the sea due to its extensive coastline, allied<br />

Greece with Britain. After 1947, the United States replaced Britain<br />

as the dominant naval force in the Mediterranean and Greece’s<br />

patron. The alliance with Britain and the United States has provided<br />

Greece with several collateral benefits, including the strengthening of<br />

the country’s liberal and democratic traditions when compared with<br />

its Balkan neighbors.<br />

Moreover, Greek foreign policy has oscillated between a popular<br />

discourse on rights and justice and the international reality of power<br />

balances. Nowhere has this been more evident than in Greece’s relationship<br />

with Turkey and the United States. Since the 1950s, Greece’s<br />

main foreign policy problem has been what Greece perceives to be<br />

a growing Turkish threat against Hellenism in the Aegean, Thrace,<br />

and Cyprus. The Greek people have felt that the United States and the<br />

Western alliance have not done enough to help Greece and restrain<br />

Turkey. This gave rise to a virulent anti-Americanism that, over<br />

the years, has become instinctive, reflexive, and institutionalized.<br />

However, because of Turkey, Greece has needed the United States<br />

and has depended on the Western alliance even more. Thus, successive<br />

Greek governments have felt obliged to safeguard the country’s<br />

Western orientation and participation in NATO and the EU, while<br />

rhetorically engaging in sporadic anti-U.S. criticism for domestic<br />

political consumption.<br />

The end of the Cold War in 1989 repositioned Greece from a<br />

frontline state in the American strategy of containment into a regional<br />

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FRANCE • 73<br />

leader. As the richest and oldest democracy in southeastern Europe,<br />

Greece supported, both politically and economically, the accession<br />

of the Balkan countries into Euro-Atlantic institutions. Fearful of<br />

border changes, Greece opposed the disintegration of old Yugoslavia<br />

and was slow to realize that this was often misinterpreted as support<br />

for the policy of Slobodan Milosevic, in favor of a greater Serbia.<br />

Finally, since 1991, Greece has engaged in a lonely diplomatic effort<br />

to neutralize Macedonian nationalism.<br />

Progressively, and especially after 1999, Greek foreign policy has<br />

become more realistic, proactive, and less vulnerable to emotional<br />

impulses. Greece has espoused a policy of engagement with the Europeanization<br />

of Turkey, while it has striven to renew its partnership<br />

with its allies in Europe and the United States. Finally, Greek foreign<br />

policy is uniquely Eurofederalist.<br />

As an active UN member, Greece participates in UN peacekeeping<br />

missions around the world, including Kosovo and Afghanistan, with a<br />

force of 1,000 soldiers and civilian personnel. Greece has supported UN<br />

efforts for the resolution of the Cyprus question. In 2004, it advised<br />

in favor of, but avoided pushing the Greek-Cypriots to espouse, UN<br />

Secretary General Kofi Annan’s plan. In recognition of its international<br />

standing, Greece was elected as a nonpermanent member of the UN<br />

Security Council for 2005 and 2006. See also ALBANIA; ANNAN<br />

PLAN; ARAB WORD; BULGARIA; FRANCE; IRREDENTISM;<br />

MACEDONIA, FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC <strong>OF</strong>.<br />

FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC <strong>OF</strong> MACEDONIA (FY-<br />

ROM). See MACEDONIA, FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC<br />

<strong>OF</strong> (FYROM).<br />

FRANCE (RELATIONS WITH). Modern Greece has had a close<br />

relationship with France. The Greek Revolution of 1821 was largely<br />

inspired by the French Revolution of 1789 and its ideals that had<br />

spread to the east by Napoleon and his conquests. The Greek-populated<br />

Ionian Islands fell under the French rule briefly between 1797<br />

and 1800 and between 1807 and 1815. France participated in the<br />

naval battle of Navarino against the Ottoman–Egyptian fleet and<br />

in the negotiations that led to the establishment of the independent<br />

kingdom of Greece in 1830.<br />

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74 • FREDERIKA, QUEEN <strong>OF</strong> GREECE<br />

However, France never managed to supersede the influence of<br />

Great Britain, which—thanks to its naval superiority in the Mediterranean—dominated<br />

Greek politics. In the aftermath of independence,<br />

a French party competed for power against an English party<br />

and a Russian party. Led by the populist Ioannis Kolettis, it enjoyed<br />

a considerable following. Toward the end of the 19th century, Greek<br />

infrastructure projects, including the building of the Corinth canal<br />

and the railway system, attracted French capital. French officers advised<br />

the Greek army and helped in its modernization.<br />

During World War I, in September 1915, French troops landed in<br />

Thessaloniki to create a Balkan front against the Central Powers and<br />

Bulgaria, which had just entered the war. A year later, French troops<br />

forced the resignation of the government in Athens and in the spring<br />

of 1917 the departure into exile of King Constantine I, who had<br />

strongly advocated in favor of Greece’s pro-German neutrality. After<br />

the war, France initially lent its support to the Greek territorial claims<br />

put forward by Eleftherios Venizelos but was quick to abandon the<br />

Treaty of Sèvres and find an accommodation with Kemal Atatürk’s<br />

nationalists after Venizelos’ defeat in the elections of 1920.<br />

In the postwar period, the influence of France in Greek affairs<br />

declined but remained strong in cultural matters. Many young Greek<br />

intellectuals left to study and made successful careers in France,<br />

including philosopher Cornelius Castoriadis and composer Yannis<br />

Xenakis. During the seven-year junta, France provided a welcoming<br />

refuge for Greek democrats. After 1974, having studied in France,<br />

members of the Greek intellectual class, the media, and parts of the<br />

political elites, although not in business, continued to draw inspiration<br />

from the French way. Greece’s three most prominent prime<br />

ministers—Harilaos Trikoupis, Eleftherios Venizelos, and Konstantinos<br />

Karamanlis—stayed in France when they could not live in<br />

Greece for political reasons. The former two died in France.<br />

FREDERIKA, QUEEN <strong>OF</strong> GREECE (1917–1981). Born in Blakenburg<br />

in Germany into a family of high nobility, related to both<br />

the British and German royal houses, Frederika was married to the<br />

future King Paul I in 1938 and was the mother of King Constantine<br />

II (and of Queen Sophia of Spain and Princess Irene of Greece and<br />

Denmark).<br />

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GEOGRAPHY • 75<br />

Frederika played an important, if controversial, role in postwar<br />

Greece. When King George II died in 1947 and Paul ascended to<br />

the throne in the midst of the Greek Civil War, strong-willed and<br />

ambitious Queen Frederika energetically supported the government’s<br />

efforts against the communist insurgents. She sponsored a network<br />

of children’s protection camps. However, she was of the opinion that<br />

the sovereign rules and thus, she had a proclivity to interfere in political<br />

affairs in defense of the monarchy’s prerogatives and Greece’s<br />

alliance with the United States. She supported the appointment of<br />

young Konstantinos Karamanlis to the premiership in 1955 and his<br />

dismissal in 1963 when he tried to curtail the monarch’s autonomy.<br />

After the death of her mild-mannered husband in 1964, Frederika exerted<br />

her influence on her young and inexperienced son, Constantine<br />

II, in his fateful confrontation with the popular and democratically<br />

elected Prime Minister Georgios Papandreou in 1965. During the<br />

military dictatorship, she followed her son’s family into exile, died in<br />

Madrid, and was buried in her old palace in Tatoi, outside Athens.<br />

– G –<br />

GALIS, NICK (1957– ). Born in New Jersey, Nick Galis was a great<br />

athlete who revolutionized the game of basketball in the land of his<br />

parents. After a short but promising career in the American college<br />

league, Galis was drafted by Thessaloniki’s Aris basketball team in<br />

1979 and won a series of titles. His triumph came in 1987 when he<br />

led Greece to victory in the European Basketball Championship. See<br />

also SPORTS.<br />

GEOGRAPHY. Greece is a land of mountains and islands. Continental<br />

Greece is dominated by the Pindus mountain chain, an extension of<br />

the Dinaric Alps in the north. The Pindus divides Greece into a wet<br />

western and a dry eastern part. The highest mountain is Mt. Olympus,<br />

the legendary home of the ancient gods. The high mountains run into<br />

numerous small valleys, bays, peninsulas, and capes. There are two<br />

main plains, one in Thessaly and one in central Macedonia. There<br />

are no commercially navigable rivers; the longest river is Aliakmonas<br />

in the north.<br />

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76 • GEORGE I<br />

Since ancient times, geography has affected the development of<br />

Greece. Overland communication was difficult and impeded the establishment<br />

of land-based empires, fragmented Greece into isolated<br />

communities or city-states, and favored the sea as the fastest and safest<br />

route. Coastal trade developed early on, aided by the existence of<br />

numerous small islands that dot the Greek seas.<br />

Positioned among the three continents of Europe, Asia, and Africa,<br />

the Greek terrain has formed the crossroad of civilizations and invaders.<br />

After the great discoveries of the 15th century, Greece—together with<br />

the rest of the Mediterranean—lost much of its traditional geostrategic<br />

significance. However, after the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869,<br />

Great Britain made sure that Greece remained under its influence.<br />

During the Cold War, thanks to its geography, Greece provided an important<br />

link between Italy and Turkey, comprising the southern flank<br />

of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). In the meantime,<br />

it has continued to control important sea routes, northwards to the Black<br />

Sea and across the Mediterranean. In particular, there is an important<br />

air and naval base of the United States in Suda Bay, Crete. See also<br />

AEGEAN SEA; ATHENS; CENTRAL GREECE; CYCLADES;<br />

DODECANESE; EPIRUS; IONIAN REPUBLIC; MOUNT ATHOS;<br />

PELOPONNESUS; THESSALONIKI; THRACE.<br />

GEORGE I (1845–1913). Born in Copenhagen, George I was the second<br />

king of modern Greece. Like his predecessor, Otto, he reigned<br />

for a long period, during which he faced several upheavals, including<br />

a humiliating military defeat by the Ottomans in 1897 and a popular<br />

military uprising in 1909 that imposed an extensive revision of the<br />

Constitution. During his reign, Greece grew economically and demographically<br />

and experienced the beginnings of industrialization.<br />

In his later years, George I became a popular king, thanks to Greece’s<br />

territorial expansion.<br />

Mild and cautious, King George I allowed for the development of<br />

the parliamentary system of government and treaded carefully between<br />

the military weakness and the fierce irredentism of the Greece<br />

of his age. Thus, unlike his predecessor, George I was not overthrown<br />

and the dynasty he founded continued to rule Greece until 1974. Nevertheless,<br />

his life abruptly ended in newly liberated Thessaloniki in<br />

March 1913 when he was shot by a mentally disturbed person.<br />

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GEORGE II • 77<br />

George was the second son of King Christian XV of Denmark.<br />

Following the ousting of Otto, George was selected as king by the<br />

National Assembly of Greece in 1863 with the support of Great<br />

Britain. A year later, a new constitution, modeled after the liberal<br />

Belgian charter of 1830, introduced the crowned democracy. Finally,<br />

in 1875, on the advice of the young politician Harilaos Trikoupis,<br />

King George accepted the supremacy of Parliament in choosing the<br />

government and the prime minister.<br />

As a gift to the new king, Britain offered Greece the seven Ionian<br />

Islands, which had been in its possession since 1815. Britain continued<br />

to lend its support; at the Congress of Berlin, it secured Thessaly<br />

and Arta for the kingdom of Greece, which were transferred from the<br />

Ottomans in 1881. In 1896, George I inaugurated the first modern<br />

Olympic Games in Athens. A year later, he failed to control the<br />

anti-Turkish fervor caused by the Cretan question and endorsed a<br />

short war that the Ottomans quickly and decisively won. Greece did<br />

not pay a heavy price for its bellicosity; on the contrary, thanks to<br />

Britain’s support, it secured the autonomy of Crete.<br />

Thus, despite widespread antiroyalist feelings, King George survived<br />

the storm and the 1909 military coup that brought a liberal<br />

reformer, Eleftherios Venizelos, to power. The king cooperated<br />

well with his dynamic prime minister. King George’s finest moment<br />

came with the Greek victory in the Balkan War and the conquest of<br />

Macedonia. His assassination, after half a century of ruling Greece,<br />

left a vacuum and brought to the throne his son Constantine, who<br />

quickly proved much less wise and less respectful of the democratic<br />

process.<br />

GEORGE II (1896–1947). Born in Athens, George II was the first son<br />

of King Constantine I and Queen Sophia. He studied at the Greek<br />

and the German Military Academies, and married Elisabeth, princess<br />

of Romania. As an officer of the Greek army, George took part in the<br />

Balkan Wars (1912–1913) and the Greek campaign in Asia Minor<br />

(1921–1922). Together with his father, George was exiled between<br />

1917 and 1920 after having been accused of being pro-German. He<br />

returned to Greece with his father in 1920 and succeeded him in 1923<br />

after his father’s ousting, following the Asia Minor catastrophe. He<br />

did not stay long on the throne, as antimonarchist feelings ran high,<br />

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78 • GONATAS, STYLIANOS<br />

especially among the recently arrived Asia Minor refugees, and<br />

Greece was proclaimed a republic in 1924.<br />

However, royalists retained much of their old support. Following<br />

the infighting and the miscalculations of the Venizelists, George was<br />

recalled to the Greek throne in 1935 after a spurious referendum held<br />

by his loyal adherents with the help of a former Venizelist officer,<br />

Georgios Kondylis.<br />

Faced with a divided Parliament and labor unrest, George II supported<br />

the suspension of the Constitution and the establishment of<br />

a dictatorship by his conservative Prime Minister Ioannis Metaxas.<br />

George II kept Greece allied with Great Britain and, through his<br />

control of the armed forces, exerted some influence on Metaxas’<br />

policies. In October 1940, Greece successfully resisted the attack of<br />

Fascist Italy but, in April 1941, it succumbed to the superior forces<br />

of Nazi Germany. George II and the royal family moved to Egypt<br />

together with the Greek government-in-exile and parts of the Greek<br />

army that continued the fight against the Axis on the North African<br />

front.<br />

During the occupation, the Greek political landscape changed dramatically<br />

as a strong communist-led resistance movement grew and<br />

threatened to take control of the country after the Germans withdrew.<br />

By then, George II was a polarizing figure symbolizing Greece’s<br />

old regime and dependency on Britain. The left fought for him to<br />

stay away but the right, having won the elections of March 1946,<br />

imposed, through a spurious referendum and with strong British<br />

backing, George II’s return in September 1946. He died a year later<br />

in Athens, having seen the outbreak of the devastating Civil War to<br />

which his return contributed. On account of his turbulent reign and<br />

many travails, he is famously reported as saying that “the most important<br />

tool for a Greek king is a suitcase.”<br />

GONATAS, STYLIANOS (1876–1966). Born in Patras in Peloponnesus,<br />

Gonatas belonged to a generation of military men who were<br />

heavily involved in politics, frustrated with the stagnation and corruption<br />

of parliamentarianism, and worried about Greece’s territorial<br />

integrity. Starting with the 1909 revolt in Goudi, the army played<br />

a key part in domestic developments throughout the interwar period<br />

and continued to claim a guardianship role until 1974.<br />

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GOUNARIS, DIMITRIOS • 79<br />

Gonatas completed the Military Academy, after which he enjoyed<br />

a long military career, fighting in the Macedonian struggle in 1904–<br />

1908 (Makedonikos Agonas), participating in the popular uprising<br />

in Goudi in 1909 that was organized by the Military League (Stratiotikos<br />

Syndesmos), and fighting in the Balkan Wars (1912–1913)<br />

and the Asia Minor campaign (1920–1922). After the collapse of<br />

the front and the retreat of the Greek army, Gonatas, together with<br />

Nikolaos Plastiras and Dimitrios Fokas, led a successful military<br />

rebellion that ousted the king and tried and convicted to death six<br />

prominent members of the previous government deemed responsible<br />

for the disaster. A committed Venizelist, he founded a political party<br />

named National Liberals (Ethnikoi Fileleftheroi) after World War<br />

II, followed by an unsuccessful political career. He died in Athens.<br />

GOUDI. A location in a suburb of Athens where its garrison was<br />

traditionally stationed, Goudi became synonymous with the military<br />

interference in politics. On 15 August 1909, a military putsch was<br />

organized there, led by Nikolaos Zorbas and many other dissatisfied<br />

officers, that demanded reforms and brought Eleftherios Venizelos<br />

to power. On 15 November 1922, the six most senior members of<br />

the government at the time of the Asia Minor Catastrophe were<br />

executed there, following a hastily arranged court martial, despite the<br />

international outcry.<br />

GOUNARIS, DIMITRIOS (1867–1922). Born in Patras in Peloponnesus,<br />

Dimitrios Gounaris was a tragic political figure and a prime<br />

minister of Greece who was put to death at Goudi, Athens, following<br />

the Asia Minor catastrophe. He studied at the Law School of<br />

Athens and continued his education in Munich, Paris, and London.<br />

Well educated and cosmopolitan, Gounaris was a member of a new<br />

progressive generation of politicians who aimed to modernize Greece<br />

and better prepare it for war to secure new territories. Elected for the<br />

first time to Parliament in 1902, together with other members, he<br />

formed a political grouping that became known as the “Japanese”<br />

(Omada Iaponon) for its radicalism. The Omada Iaponon demanded<br />

a wiser management of public finances and the rationalization of<br />

public policy. In 1908, Gounaris became a successful minister of<br />

finance in the reformist government of Georgios Theotokis.<br />

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80 • GREAT BRITAIN<br />

Young, proud, and ambitious, Gounaris saw the arrival of Eleftherios<br />

Venizelos to the premiership as a great threat to his personal<br />

political fortunes. The Cretan politician stole the reformist thunder<br />

from all “old politicians.” Gounaris opposed Venizelos, leading the<br />

monarchist camp during the National Schism (Ethnikos Dihasmos)<br />

and was appointed prime minister after Venizelos resigned twice.<br />

His great moment of glory came when he defeated Venizelos in the<br />

polls in 1920 as the head of a united anti-Venizelist opposition. His<br />

victory was bittersweet as he quickly found himself trapped in a military<br />

campaign in Asia Minor that was draining Greek resources, with<br />

no easy end in sight. Reneging on his pacifist preelection promises,<br />

he expanded the war effort, making an already bad situation worse.<br />

After the disaster in Asia Minor, he was the most prominent, wellknown,<br />

and respected leader of the monarchists, and he attracted the<br />

wrath of the returning Venizelists. Together with some of his cabinet<br />

members and the former chief of staff, he was executed in Goudi,<br />

despite some international appeals to spare his life.<br />

GREAT BRITAIN (RELATIONS WITH). Until 1947, no other foreign<br />

power played a larger role in the creation and development of<br />

independent Greece than Great Britain. British espousal of the Greek<br />

cause proved decisive for the success of the Greek Revolution. When<br />

in 1824 Britain lent money to the revolutionaries, it underwrote the<br />

Greek War of Independence and, diplomatically and militarily, saw<br />

to its successful conclusion. In 1827 the British fleet, joined by the<br />

Russian and the French, destroyed the Turkish–Egyptian navy at<br />

Navarino in western Peloponnesus. Greece was granted its independence<br />

with a diplomatic protocol signed in London in 1830. Britain<br />

was recognized as one of the protector powers of the new state and<br />

chose Greece’s young king, Otto. Diplomatic relations were established<br />

between the two nations in 1834.<br />

The essence of British influence in Greek affairs lay in the predominance<br />

of the British navy in the Mediterranean. Often, whenever<br />

Greece attempted to directly confront British interests in the<br />

region, as happened during the Crimean War (1853–1856), in the<br />

beginning of World War I, or in the aftermath of World War II,<br />

the British navy quickly restored British influence and the pro-British<br />

orientation of the Greek foreign policy. For this lopsided alliance—<br />

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GREAT BRITAIN • 81<br />

or, better, patron–client relationship—Greece was rewarded with the<br />

Ionian Islands in 1864, Thessaly and Arta in 1881, escaped lightly<br />

after its defeat by the Ottomans in 1897, and was granted the autonomy<br />

of Crete a year later.<br />

The high point of Greek–British cooperation came in the aftermath<br />

of World War I, when Britain invited Greece to land its forces in<br />

Smyrna (Izmir) in what soon developed into the ill-fated Asia Minor<br />

campaign, with the aim of radically redrawing the map of the Near<br />

East in Greece’s favor. On the eve of World War II, the Greek dictator,<br />

Ioannis Metaxas, despite his former pro-German sympathies,<br />

did not question Greece’s alliance with Britain. Greece entered the<br />

war in October 1940 on Britain’s side, despite the fact that, at the<br />

time, after the capitulation of France and before the entrance of the<br />

Soviet Union and the United States, Britain was left fighting the<br />

Axis alone.<br />

After the departure of the occupying German forces in 1944, Britain’s<br />

political maneuverings and open military intervention ensured<br />

the defeat of the numerically superior Greek communist forces and<br />

helped keep Greece in the West. However, in 1947 as the Civil War<br />

escalated, hard-pressed Britain invited the United States to take the<br />

lead as Greece’s new patron.<br />

Greece’s relations with Britain plummeted in the 1950s as a result<br />

of the Cyprus question and the islanders’ anticolonial quest for their<br />

union with Greece. After much initial hesitation, the Greek government<br />

confronted the British openly in the United Nations General Assembly<br />

to the annoyance of the United States. While the dispute was<br />

temporarily resolved with the independence of Cyprus in 1960, a certain<br />

suspicion that Britain cooperated with Turkey and the Turkish-<br />

Cypriots against Greek interests in Cyprus lingered for years.<br />

In later years, relations between Greece and Britain were gradually<br />

normalized and were put on an equal footing. Trade in goods<br />

between the two nations remains substantial, at around €3 billion a<br />

year. However, services are equally, if not more, important. Around<br />

three million British tourists visit Greece annually; 30,000 Greeks<br />

study in Britain; much of Greek shipping relies on the banking,<br />

insurance, and brokerage services provided by London; and British<br />

Vodafone has made one the largest foreign investments in recent<br />

Greek history.<br />

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82 • GREEK-AMERICANS<br />

In the councils of the European Union (EU) and the North Atlantic<br />

Treaty Organization (NATO), Britain and Greece often stand at<br />

opposite ends of the political spectrum. Britain is traditionally Atlanticist,<br />

suspicious of further European integration, and welcoming of<br />

U.S. influence in Europe while Greece is more of a Eurofederalist.<br />

Recently, however, Athens and London have moved closer in support<br />

of Turkey’s candidacy for membership in the EU, against the<br />

resistance of many other EU member-states.<br />

Overall, since the days of post-Napoleonic philhellenism, Britain’s<br />

involvement in Greece has been crucial. Often criticized and resented<br />

for being heavy-handed, British influence infused Greece with a certain<br />

liberal and democratic spirit in support of representative politics.<br />

It has kept Greece away from the excesses of German romanticism,<br />

Prussian militarism, and Russian authoritarianism and communism<br />

that were popular elsewhere in the Balkans. See also FOREIGN<br />

POLICY.<br />

GREEK-AMERICANS. The total number of U.S. citizens of Greek<br />

origin is hard to calculate but is probably at least one million. The<br />

Greek-American community is diverse in its origin, time of arrival,<br />

social status, and political outlook. It is mainly concentrated in New<br />

York, Boston, Chicago, and parts of Florida. There are third- and<br />

fourth-generation Greek-Americans with ancestors who emigrated in<br />

the late 19th century to escape the poverty caused by the failure of the<br />

currant crop. Upon arrival, many of them found employment in the<br />

booming textile industry of northern Massachusetts. That first wave<br />

of immigration peaked on the eve of World War I but declined in<br />

the early 1920s when the United States imposed strict restrictions on<br />

immigration. After World War II, more Greeks immigrated to the<br />

United States. From the 1960s onward, they included many young<br />

scientists and professionals with a more liberal outlook compared to<br />

the conservatism of older generation Greek-Americans.<br />

Faced with discrimination, Greek-Americans organized themselves<br />

around their local Christian Orthodox Church. A few became<br />

involved in politics, among whom the best known are Michael Dukakis,<br />

a long-term governor of Massachusetts and the Democrats’ presidential<br />

contender in 1988; Spiro Agnew, a governor of Maryland and<br />

vice president to former President Richard Nixon; Paul Sarbanes, a<br />

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GREEK-OTTOMAN WAR • 83<br />

long-term senator from Maryland; Paul Tsongas, a reformist senator<br />

from Massachusetts; Olympia Snow, a senator from Maine; John<br />

Brademas, a New York congressman; Phil Angelides, a treasurer and<br />

gubernatorial candidate in California; and George Stephanopoulos,<br />

a senior advisor to former president Bill Clinton and an influential<br />

TV political talk show host. In recent years, there have been one or<br />

two senators and six or seven congressmen of Greek origin at the<br />

federal level and many more at the state level. Coming mainly from<br />

the northeast, they tend to be Democratic, but overall moderate and<br />

pragmatic.<br />

The Greek-American lobby organized itself following the Turkish<br />

invasion of Cyprus in 1974 and managed to secure a U.S. arms<br />

embargo on Turkey that was imposed in 1975 and lasted until 1978.<br />

The lobby was influential in securing a balance in U.S. aid toward<br />

Greece and Turkey and in maintaining the Greek–U.S. relationship<br />

during the difficult years when Andreas Papandreou and Ronald<br />

Reagan were in power in the 1980s. Weakened by infighting and<br />

a lack of leadership, the Greek–American lobby relies heavily on<br />

a few Greek–American tycoons like Alex Spanos and Angelos<br />

Tsakopoulos. Despite the continued successes of individual Greek-<br />

Americans in business and politics, the lobby appears to be a spent<br />

force, confused and directionless, as Greek foreign policy has moved<br />

away from antagonism and toward the accommodation of Turkey in<br />

recent years.<br />

GREEK–OTTOMAN WAR (1897). In the final decades of the 19th<br />

century, fired by an unyielding irredentism, Greece mobilized<br />

frequently, at great financial cost, against the Ottoman Empire. In<br />

most cases, it refrained from initiating a war against its much bigger<br />

neighbor. Crete provided, once again, the context for one more crisis<br />

in Greek–Ottoman relations that, unfortunately this time, in 1897,<br />

escalated into a war. Greece was quickly and resoundingly defeated.<br />

It was saved from paying too harsh a price by the intervention of the<br />

great powers, mainly Great Britain.<br />

In 1896 an uprising in Crete, which remained under the sultan’s<br />

suzerainty, infuriated the Ottoman authorities. They demanded, under<br />

a threat of war, that Greece withdraw the troops that it had sent to the<br />

island in early 1897. Greek Prime Minister Theodoros Deligiannis,<br />

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84 • HATZIDAKIS, MANOS<br />

a populist nationalist and a staunch supporter of irredentism, the<br />

Megali Idea, and Greece’s territorial expansion, was trapped in the<br />

controversy, disregarding the fact that the Greek armed forces were<br />

totally unprepared and disorganized. The Greek army, commanded<br />

by the future king, Prince Constantine, suffered serious defeats in<br />

Thessaly and retreated southwards. The intervention of the great<br />

powers ended the war and returned the border to more or less where<br />

it was before the start of hostilities.<br />

As a result, Greece was obliged to pay war reparations to Ottoman<br />

Turkey and accept the management of its public finances<br />

by foreigners. While securing revenues from customs and special<br />

duties that went directly to the repayment of Greece’s debts, the international<br />

financial control infringed on Greek sovereignty. On the<br />

positive side, and quite unexpectedly for a loser, the great powers<br />

declared the autonomy of Crete and King George I’s second son,<br />

Prince George, was appointed high commissioner of the island. One<br />

year after the war, in 1898, the last Ottoman troops left Crete, never<br />

to return. The defeat was a political shock that strengthened the reformist<br />

forces within Greece in the beginning of the 20th century. See<br />

also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

– H –<br />

HATZIDAKIS, MANOS (1925–1994). Born in Xanthi in western<br />

Thrace, Manos Hatzidakis was one of the most accomplished artists<br />

and public intellectuals of modern Greece. A gifted composer who<br />

wrote independent works as well as popular scores and songs for<br />

theatrical plays and films, Hatzidakis is compared to Germany’s Kurt<br />

Weil and Italy’s Nino Rota. Like Weil and Rota, Hatzidakis used his<br />

native country’s folk musical traditions to produce new syntheses in<br />

dialogue with European norms. Few artists have had a greater influence<br />

on fostering the contemporary Greek cultural identity, and his<br />

music continues to be very popular. In 1960 he was awarded an Oscar<br />

for his music score in Jules Dassin’s film Never on Sunday.<br />

Hatzidakis belonged to the first postwar generation of many talented<br />

artists. He worked closely with director Karolos Koun, poet<br />

Nikos Gatsos, singer Nana Mouskouri, painter Yannis Tsarouchis,<br />

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choreographer Rallou Manou, and many others. Starting with a<br />

controversial espousal of rebetiko music in a public speech in 1949,<br />

Hatzidakis was never afraid to speak his mind and break from established<br />

truths in support of what he believed to be right. He was quick<br />

to denounce the junta. Despite—or, maybe, because of—his free,<br />

almost anarchic, spirit, he was a close friend of conservative Prime<br />

Minister and President Konstantinos Karamanlis. After the return<br />

of democracy, he served briefly as director of a public radio station<br />

but came into conflict with its bureaucratic practices. In 1989, he<br />

founded the Orchestra of Colours to help spread classical music in<br />

Greece. He died in Athens in 1994.<br />

HOLY MOUNTAIN. See MOUNT ATHOS.<br />

INDUSTRY • 85<br />

– I –<br />

INDUSTRY. Greek industry has been struggling to grow and remains<br />

weak, internationally uncompetitive, underdeveloped, labor intensive,<br />

undercapitalized, and concentrated mostly in small, inwardlooking,<br />

low-technology, family-owned establishments. Comprising<br />

manufacturing, mining, and the production of electricity, gas, and<br />

water, industry constitutes around 14 percent of the gross domestic<br />

product (GDP) of Greece. Manufacturing itself is 10 percent of the<br />

GDP. Industry forms the largest part of the secondary sector of the<br />

economy, with an additional 8 percent of the GDP produced by<br />

construction.<br />

Some initial industrial establishments emerged prior to World<br />

War I, mainly in Athens and Piraeus. The influx of refugees from<br />

Asia Minor during the interwar period boosted industrialization by<br />

providing the skilled and cheap labor needed and expanding domestic<br />

demand. Greek industry soared after the Civil War in the 1950s and<br />

1960s, helped by an interventionist state, urbanization, protectionism,<br />

a favorable tax regime, and low levels of unionization. The 1952<br />

Constitution sanctioned the repatriation of profits, giving an additional<br />

incentive to foreign investment. Refineries, shipyards, power<br />

stations, steel mills, chemical and food processing plants, and textile<br />

factories were built in the two decades that followed.<br />

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86 • IOANNIDES, DIMITRIS<br />

However, the world economic crisis of the 1970s, the increased<br />

labor demands that followed the fall of the junta in 1974, the end of<br />

protectionism after Greece’s entry into the European Community<br />

(EC) in 1981, and the socialist economic mismanagement after 1981<br />

led to a wave of factory closures and deindustrialization. After 1985,<br />

and especially since the mid-1990s, there has been some recovery.<br />

However, overall production in manufacturing has increased less<br />

than 10 percent in the course of the past 30 years.<br />

Greek industry is heavily concentrated in Athens, where some<br />

60 percent of manufacturing is based. Thessaloniki and Thrace<br />

form two secondary industrial centers. Industry employs some<br />

650,000 workers, mostly salaried. Despite recent growth, employment<br />

has remained constant as smaller establishments continue<br />

to close down and automation dampens the demand for jobs.<br />

The largest sectors of Greek industry are food and beverages, oil<br />

products, metals, minerals and cement, chemicals, and textiles.<br />

Car manufacturing and other heavy industrial sectors are virtually<br />

nonexistent. Growth has been provided by new fields such as<br />

cosmetics and designer products, plastics, and electronics. Industry<br />

provides 60 percent of Greek exports of goods, worth approximately<br />

€10 billion in 2006.<br />

Greek prosperity and economic growth have traditionally been<br />

mostly nonindustrially based. The Greek state has tried to provide<br />

some incentives for investing in manufacturing without much success.<br />

Militant unions, an inflexible labor market, a small domestic<br />

market, increased foreign competition, a cumbersome regulatory<br />

regime, bureaucracy, heightened environmental sensitivities, economic<br />

instability, and greater profit opportunities elsewhere in trade,<br />

banking, shipping, tourism, and the broader services sector have<br />

forced Greeks to look for investment opportunities elsewhere and<br />

have kept foreigners away.<br />

IOANNIDES, DIMITRIS. See POLYTECHNIO.<br />

IONIAN REPUBLIC. The seven Ionian Islands in western Greece remained<br />

under Venetian rule until 1797. During the Napoleonic wars,<br />

they changed hands three times before passing to Great Britain in<br />

1815, at which time a free United States of the Ionian Islands under<br />

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IRREDENTISM • 87<br />

British protection was established. British rule, represented by a high<br />

commissioner, lasted until 1864 when the islands were united with<br />

the Kingdom of Greece. Having escaped, to a great degree, Ottoman<br />

rule and having remained under Western influence, the Ionian republic<br />

was the first Greek state in modern times. It flourished as a center<br />

of Greek culture and thus it played a prominent role in the building<br />

of modern Greece.<br />

IRREDENTISM. For most of the first century of its independent<br />

existence, irredentism formed the central core of Greece’s official<br />

ideology and policy. The original kingdom created in 1830 included<br />

only one quarter of all Ottoman Greeks and claimed the Byzantine<br />

Empire as its ancestor. The incorporation of lands that were historically<br />

or demographically Greek, by expanding Greece’s borders to<br />

the detriment of Ottoman Turkey, formed the Great Idea (Megali<br />

Idea) that dominated Greek public life throughout the 19th century.<br />

The Great Idea, in support of the resurrection of a Greek Byzantine<br />

Empire, was originally proclaimed by Ioannis Koletis (1773–1847),<br />

a prominent Greek politician who served as the first constitutional<br />

prime minister of Greece. Speaking to the constituent assembly on 11<br />

January 1844, Koletis defended the constitutional rights of diaspora<br />

Greeks, having been born himself in Ottoman-held Epirus. Koletis<br />

declared that Greece should be where Greeks live, whether it is in<br />

Constantinople, Smyrna, or elsewhere.<br />

Greek irredentism reached the point of being fulfilled with the<br />

Treaty of Sèvres, signed by Eleftherios Venizelos in 1920. The<br />

treaty granted Greece large territories of the Ottoman Empire, defeated<br />

in World War I. However, two years later, the Asia Minor<br />

catastrophe put an end to Greek irredentist dreams once and for all.<br />

Greece continued to claim the Dodecanese, northern Epirus, and<br />

Cyprus. Thanks to the defeat of Italy in World War II, Greece acquired<br />

the Dodecanese in 1947. However, northern Epirus remained<br />

within Albania, and Cyprus was not united with Greece but instead<br />

became independent in 1960. Today, political irredentism remains a<br />

fringe ideology with very little popular support. However, a certain<br />

romantic irredentism for the lost Greek homelands in Anatolia and<br />

elsewhere survives and is cultivated by some politicians, opinion<br />

makers, and church leaders.<br />

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88 • JEWS<br />

– J –<br />

JEWS. See MINORITIES; THESSALONIKI; WORLD WAR II.<br />

JUNTA. The term refers to the military dictatorship established by a<br />

colonels’ coup on 21 April 1967. The coup was orchestrated by a<br />

group of fervently conservative, nationalist, and anticommunist, ambitious<br />

middle-rank officers of low-middle-class and peasant origin.<br />

They were schooled in the unhealthy, conspiratorial, and authoritarian<br />

spirit that grew out of the Civil War. They took the initiative to<br />

violently rebalance Greek politics and preclude the victory of Georgios<br />

and Andreas Papandreou in the forthcoming elections. The<br />

coup was led by a triumvirate of Georgios Papadopoulos, Stylianos<br />

Pattakos, and Nikolaos Makarezos.<br />

The coup itself, in the historical cradle of democracy, constituted<br />

the only democratic reversal in postwar Western Europe. It was a<br />

huge blow to American liberal designs for a stable postwar Greek<br />

democracy closely allied with the United States. It generated widespread<br />

anti-American discontent around the world and within Greece<br />

and formed one more episode in the ongoing Soviet–U.S. Cold War<br />

antagonism.<br />

It is accepted that the colonels preempted a planned royal coup of<br />

generals. In that sense, they succeeded not only against the civilian<br />

authorities of the country but against the military hierarchy as well.<br />

Faced with a weakened and discredited political class after years of<br />

infighting and an isolated king, the junta took control of the country<br />

easily, quickly, and without resistance. However, staying in power<br />

proved much more challenging, despite the favorable economic conditions<br />

internationally.<br />

King Constantine I attempted to overthrow the dictators on 13<br />

December 1967. He failed, left the country, and never returned to his<br />

throne. In May 1973, the navy, which was never close to the colonels’<br />

regime, unsuccessfully conspired against the dictatorship and,<br />

on 25 May 1973, the battleship Velos defected and its crew requested<br />

political asylum in Italy. On 17 November 1973, the army intervened<br />

to quash a growing revolt of students and outsiders in the Polytech-<br />

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JUNTA • 89<br />

nio in downtown Athens. On 25 November 1973, Brigadier Dimitris<br />

Ioannides replaced Papadopoulos with his loyal officers. On 15 July<br />

1973, Ioannides ordered the Greek officers in the Cypriot National<br />

Guard to overthrow President Makarios. On 20 July 1974, Turkey<br />

invaded Cyprus, and on 24 July the junta’s president of Greece,<br />

General Phaidon Gizikis, appointed Konstantinos Karamanlis as<br />

prime minister.<br />

Their lower rank made the colonels more radical in their political<br />

designs, compared to their superiors in the army. In fact, a rift<br />

progressively developed among the conservative and the radical<br />

coup leaders. The conservatives, led by Papadopoulos, temporarily<br />

emerged as the most powerful and attempted a political transition.<br />

However, this attempt failed to secure credible civilian counterparts,<br />

with the exception of Spyros Markezinis, and was met with a strong<br />

public reaction in November 1973, after which it quickly unraveled.<br />

The radicals, led by Ioannides and inspired by nearby Arab military<br />

revolutionaries, pushed out the conservatives in what amounted<br />

to a coup within a coup. Their nationalism and antagonism towards<br />

the Cypriot president, Archbishop Makarios, led them to a self-destructive<br />

foreign adventurism in July 1974. Discredited by the successful<br />

Turkish invasion of Cyprus, the military regime collapsed and<br />

power was handed to Konstantinos Karamanlis.<br />

Karamanlis quickly proclaimed elections, held a referendum that<br />

established a republic, drafted a new constitution and tried, sentenced,<br />

and jailed the coup leaders. Greece is one of only a handful of<br />

countries that punished the violators of its democratic order. The dictators<br />

did not request nor were they granted a pardon. They remained—<br />

and most of them died—in jail.<br />

The junta has had a long-lasting effect on Greek politics. It discredited<br />

anticommunist nationalism as the postwar state ideology and<br />

the democratic restrictions that survived the Civil War. As a result,<br />

a liberal, open, and inclusive democracy was introduced in 1974 as<br />

had never existed in the past. On the negative side, the junta delayed<br />

Greece’s convergence with the European Community (EC), radicalized<br />

Greek politics leading to a populist outbreak in the 1980s, and<br />

corrupted the state’s structure and institutions.<br />

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90 • KAPODISTRIAS, IOANNIS<br />

– K –<br />

KAPODISTRIAS, IOANNIS. See CAPODISTRIAS, IOANNIS.<br />

KARAMANLIS, KONSTANTINOS (1907–1998). Born in the small<br />

town of Küpköy in Ottoman Macedonia, Konstantinos Karamanlis<br />

was a leading Greek politician who served for 10 years as president<br />

of the republic and for 14 years as prime minister. Karamanlis is<br />

widely recognized as a towering figure who dominated Greek postwar<br />

politics and contributed enormously to the modernization of his<br />

nation. Today, Greece is a well-functioning and prosperous democratic<br />

member of the European Union (EU), due, in large part, to<br />

Karamanlis’ vision, determination, and skills.<br />

Karamanlis’ father was a teacher and a tobacco farmer who fought<br />

for the Greek cause in Ottoman Macedonia. His origins from Küpköy,<br />

which is now called Proti, in the district of Serres in Greek<br />

Macedonia influenced Karamanlis’ future course. Karamanlis was<br />

not born into a prominent political family of Athens; his rise carried<br />

a distinct promise of political renewal. Karamanlis was not from<br />

old, southern Greece but came from the new lands of Macedonia in<br />

the north that have traditionally been politically underrepresented<br />

in Athens. He came from a rural district and, having lived through<br />

the ordeals suffered by the Greek farmers, he remained close to the<br />

simple people of Greece. Furthermore, Karamanlis lived and was<br />

traumatized by the National Schism that divided Greece between<br />

royalists and Venizelists. Although himself a progressive, being an<br />

indigenous Greek Macedonian, he entered politics on the side of<br />

the royalists because the newly arrived Greek refugees from Asia<br />

Minor competing for land with the locals sided with the Venizelists.<br />

Throughout his political career, Karamanlis struggled to reconcile his<br />

own radicalism with the conservatism of the political camp to which<br />

he belonged.<br />

After completing his studies at the Law School in Athens, he<br />

practiced law in Serres, entered politics, and was elected to Parliament<br />

in 1935 for the Peoples’ Party. He refused to cooperate with<br />

the dictatorship of Ioannis Metaxas and stayed in Athens working<br />

as a lawyer before escaping to the Middle East in 1944 while Greece<br />

was occupied by the Germans. He ran in the first postwar elections of<br />

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KARAMANLIS, KONSTANTINOS • 91<br />

1946 and entered the government as minister of employment under<br />

the premiership of Konstantinos Tsaldaris. He served in a number<br />

of ministries, including transportation, social welfare, and defense.<br />

Karamanlis established a national reputation for decisiveness and<br />

efficiency as minister of public works in the years between 1952 and<br />

1955 in the government of Alexandros Papagos. He initiated an<br />

extensive program of reconstruction and modernization of the public<br />

infrastructure that was badly damaged during the war years, and<br />

made good use of foreign, mainly American, aid.<br />

When Papagos died, King Paul chose the young minister as his<br />

new prime minister, circumventing the parliamentarians of the ruling<br />

party who would have chosen one of the conservative party’s elders.<br />

It was a wise choice, as Karamanlis brought a renewed dynamism<br />

and determination in resolving Greece’s pressing postwar problems.<br />

Initially a beneficiary of royal favoritism, Karamanlis would later<br />

confront royal interventionism in politics and, in 1974, orchestrated<br />

a referendum that abolished the monarchy altogether.<br />

As a prime minister, Karamanlis devoted his full attention to<br />

economic development and, in his first eight years in power (1955<br />

to 1963), Greece was radically transformed. In foreign policy,<br />

Karamanlis sought and achieved a compromise solution with Great<br />

Britain and Turkey that turned Cyprus into an independent republic.<br />

Karamanlis always associated Greece with the European Community<br />

(EC) and remained, throughout his life, a firm believer in<br />

European integration.<br />

Despite this progress, Karamanlis was obliged to operate within the<br />

restrictive environment created by the Civil War that excluded the<br />

communist left from politics and allowed the monarchy, the armed<br />

forces, and their associates to dictate policy beyond and above the<br />

Parliament. As a result, Karamanlis faced mounting opposition from<br />

the liberal center and the left and a deteriorating relationship with the<br />

king. This led to his resignation and, eventually, to self-imposed exile<br />

in Paris that lasted for 11 years.<br />

Karamanlis opposed the colonels’ dictatorship and discouraged<br />

his allies from cooperating with the junta. Following the Turkish<br />

invasion in Cyprus, he was invited to assume the leadership of the<br />

transitional government of national unity. At a great personal risk<br />

but widely popular, Karamanlis deflated the crisis with Turkey and<br />

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92 • KARAMANLIS, KOSTAS A.<br />

proceeded quickly to democratize Greece. His achievements were<br />

extraordinary. He established a liberal constitution, legalized the<br />

Communist Party of Greece (CPG; Kommounistiko Komma Elladas,<br />

KKE), dismantled old Civil War restrictions, abolished the<br />

monarchy in favor of a republic, and reenergized Greece’s drive to<br />

enter the EC. Karamanlis’ crowning achievement was the signing of<br />

the Athens treaty in May 1979 that allowed Greece to enter the EC<br />

in 1981.<br />

Furthermore, Karamanlis presided over the consolidation of a<br />

post-junta two-party system. In 1980, he was elected president of<br />

the republic. When Andreas Papandreou won the premiership in<br />

October 1981, Karamanlis played a crucial double role. He used his<br />

prestige to steer Papandreou away from his Third-Worldism toward<br />

a more European course of action while assuring conservatives at<br />

home and Greece’s foreign allies abroad that the country’s fundamental<br />

orientation would remain intact. Despite the partnership he<br />

strove to build with his former firebrand rival, Karamanlis resigned<br />

from the presidency when Papandreou reneged on his promise and<br />

withdrew his support for Karamanlis’ reelection.<br />

When the party he founded, New Democracy (ND; Nea Dimokratia),<br />

returned to power in 1990, Karamanlis was reelected by the<br />

Parliament to the presidency. During his second term, Karamanlis’<br />

suffered from deteriorating health and was unable to travel internationally.<br />

As a Greek Macedonian, he was alarmed by the breaking up<br />

of old Yugoslavia and the establishment of an independent Macedonian<br />

republic to the north. He demanded the solidarity of Greece’s<br />

western allies while, behind the scenes, he urged the country’s leaders<br />

to remain cautious and resist the nationalist fever engulfing the<br />

Balkans. Until his death in Athens, he continued to offer his wisdom<br />

to the people he served for 60 years. See also ANENDOTOS; APOS-<br />

TASIA; FREDERIKA, QUEEN <strong>OF</strong> GREECE; PAPANDREOU<br />

GEORGIOS.<br />

KARAMANLIS, KOSTAS A. (1956– ). Born in Athens, Kostas Karamanlis<br />

earned a doctorate in international relations at the Fletcher<br />

School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University. As a nephew<br />

of Konstantinos Karamanlis, Kostas Karamanlis was involved in<br />

post-junta conservative politics and was elected to Parliament, for<br />

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KAZANTZAKIS, NIKOS • 93<br />

the first time, in 1989. In 1997 he assumed the leadership of the New<br />

Democracy (ND; Nea Dimokratia) Party after a prolonged leadership<br />

crisis and took it to power in 2004. He has been the prime minister<br />

ever since, having been reelected in September 2007.<br />

While in office, Kostas Karamanlis has proved prudent in economics<br />

and foreign policy while cautiously attempting to implement<br />

certain public-sector reforms. His style is consensus oriented and he<br />

has avoided major confrontations. As a good reader of public opinion<br />

and international conditions, a superb political tactician, and a formidable<br />

public speaker, Karamanlis has dominated Greek politics in the<br />

current decade and continues to enjoy a personal popularity, more so<br />

than his government or his party.<br />

KARATHEODORI, KONSTANTINOS (1873–1950). Born in Berlin<br />

while his father, Stephanos, was serving as Ottoman ambassador,<br />

Konstantinos Karatheodori was an internationally acclaimed<br />

mathematician and a scientific pioneer of global reach. Better<br />

known as Constantin Caratheodory, he studied and taught in several<br />

German universities, corresponding with some of the greatest<br />

scientists of his time, including Albert Einstein. Due to his love<br />

for his native country, Greece, and his friendship with Eleftherios<br />

Venizelos, Karatheodori spent two years in Izmir (Smyrna) prior<br />

to the Asia Minor Catastrophe organizing the local university.<br />

He died in Munich.<br />

KAZANTZAKIS, NIKOS (1883–1957). Born in Herakleio in Crete,<br />

Nikos Kazantzakis is Greece’s most-read modern writer and philosopher.<br />

He was influenced by Bergson, Nietzsche, Marxism,<br />

Buddhism, and Christianity. He traveled around the world and lived<br />

outside Greece extensively. Kazantzakis struggled with existential<br />

and metaphysical themes that relate to the human condition. In the<br />

process, he antagonized religious conservatives and the Greek Orthodox<br />

Church. His works include the novels Alexis Zorbas, Christ<br />

Recrucified, Captain Michalis, The Last Temptation of Christ, Report<br />

to Greco, Saint Francis, travelogues, and an epic poem The Odyssey.<br />

Films such as Zorba by Michalis Cacoyannis and The Last Temptation<br />

by Martin Scorcese familiarized larger audiences with his work.<br />

He died in Freiburg, Germany. See also LITERATURE.<br />

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94 • KAZANTZIDIS, STELIOS<br />

KAZANTZIDIS, STELIOS (1931–2001). Born in Athens, where he<br />

also died, Stelios Kazantzidis became not only Greece’s most popular<br />

singer but also the voice of a whole era. Orphaned at a young age<br />

and growing up in poverty, Kazantzidis brought to his singing the<br />

anguish and sorrow of the unfortunates of life. He appealed particularly<br />

to the Greek diaspora and the feeling of alienation and longing<br />

for the homeland that postwar immigration produced. Endowed with<br />

an exceptional voice, he was, to the Greeks what Um Kalthoum was<br />

to the Arabs. See also MUSIC.<br />

KOLOKOTRONIS, THEODOROS (1770–1843). Born in Ramavouni<br />

in Messinia in southern Peloponnesus, but with family roots<br />

originally in mountainous Arkadia in central Peloponnesus, Theodoros<br />

Kolokotronis started as a kleftis, or rebel in Ottoman times. He<br />

emerged as the greatest military hero of the Greek revolutionary War<br />

of Independence that broke out in 1821. Three years earlier, he had<br />

joined the Association of Friends (Filiki Eteria) and had already<br />

started preparing for the uprising. In January 1821, Kolokotronis left<br />

the British-held island of Zakynthos and landed in Peloponnesus. In<br />

March 1821, he led the Greek forces into Kalamata, a primary cityport<br />

in southern Peloponnesus, in what was the first major victory for<br />

the revolutionary cause. Throughout the summer, he organized the<br />

siege of Tripolitsa, the capital of the Ottoman province, situated in<br />

central Peloponnesus, and in September his forces captured the city.<br />

His military genius rested on his understanding of the workings of<br />

unconventional warfare against numerically superior Ottoman forces<br />

and of the importance of logistics and supplies in support of the war<br />

effort. Often, he avoided open confrontation, preferring attrition and<br />

cutting off the enemy’s routes of supply. He made sure that his troops<br />

remained well fed and armed. He led with his brave example while<br />

speaking in simple, heartfelt Greek in favor of freedom that deeply<br />

impressed and inspired his troops.<br />

Kolokotronis’ finest moment was his defeat of the army of Dramalis<br />

pasha on 26 July 1822, in Dervenakia, which proved decisive for<br />

the temporary success of the revolution. Although he worked for the<br />

unity of the revolutionary forces, he became involved in the partisan<br />

controversies and civil wars of his time. As a result, he found himself<br />

imprisoned by his opponents. Later, he lent his support to Ioannis<br />

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KOUN, KAROLOS • 95<br />

Capodistrias, the first president of Greece. Following Capodistrias’<br />

assassination, he disagreed with the authoritarianism of the Bavarian<br />

regency, was arrested and sentenced to death. He was pardoned<br />

by King Otto and died of a heart attack after a party at the palace in<br />

Athens.<br />

KORAIS, ADAMANTIOS (1748–1833). Born in Smyrna, Adamantios<br />

Korais studied medicine in France. Korais is considered the best<br />

representative of the Greek Enlightenment, the intellectual movement<br />

that carried the European spirit to the Greek lands and prepared<br />

the Greek Revolution of 1821. Arriving in Paris in 1788 on the eve<br />

of the French Revolution, he witnessed firsthand the revolutionary<br />

turmoil and its excesses. His work was devoted to the education of<br />

the Greek nation as the necessary precondition for its liberation. He<br />

studied and published the works of ancient Greeks and wrote extensively<br />

on Greek affairs. Although he thought of the uprising of 1821<br />

as premature and ill prepared, he supported and promoted the cause<br />

abroad. Later, he opposed Ioannis Capodistrias’ authoritarianism.<br />

Faced with the linguistic dispute between ancient and modern Greek,<br />

Korais proposed a compromise called Katharevousa, a purified and<br />

slightly archaic form of Greek that became the official language of<br />

the new state. He died in Paris in 1833. See also LANGUAGE.<br />

KOSKOTAS, GEORGIOS (1954– ). Georgios Koskotas took Greek<br />

public life by storm in the 1980s as an up-and-coming banker, publisher,<br />

and owner of Greece’s most popular soccer team, Olympiakos.<br />

When evidence emerged that he had embezzled the deposits<br />

of his Bank of Crete, he became the epicenter of a four-year-long<br />

sensational scandal that contributed to the downfall of the Socialist<br />

Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou in 1989. Having escaped to<br />

the United States, he was extradited to Greece, tried, convicted, and<br />

jailed for 12 years. Although some of his ministers were convicted,<br />

Papandreou was acquitted and returned to power in 1993.<br />

KOUN, KAROLOS (1908–1987). Born in Bursa, Turkey, Karolos<br />

Koun was modern Greece’s most acclaimed theater director. Koun<br />

founded the avant-garde Art Theater in 1942. After World War II,<br />

Koun was credited with renewing the tradition of ancient Greek<br />

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96 • LAMBRAKIS, GREGORIS<br />

drama. Together with some of Greece’s most gifted artists, such<br />

as composer Manos Hatzidakis and painter Yannis Tsarouchis,<br />

he staged some memorable performances of ancient tragedies and<br />

Aristophanes’ comedies. In addition, he introduced the Greek public<br />

to masterpieces of modern Western theater and the works of many<br />

modern Greek playwrights. He died in Athens.<br />

– L –<br />

LAMBRAKIS, GREGORIS (1912–1963). Born in the small village<br />

of Kerasitsa in central Peloponnesus, Lambrakis was a physicist who<br />

became involved in postwar leftist and pacifist politics, although he<br />

was not a communist. In 1961 he was elected to Parliament for the<br />

United Democratic Left (UDL; Eniaia Dimokratiki Aristera, EDA).<br />

After a public speech in Thessaloniki in May 1963, he was assassinated<br />

by an anticommunist parastate gang. His death produced a<br />

wave of sympathy and contributed to the downfall of Konstantinos<br />

Karamanlis from the premiership. As a martyr for a democratic<br />

Greece, Lambrakis’ sacrifice became the theme of a popular novel<br />

and a film, and gave rise to an active progressive political movement<br />

called the Lambrakis Youth (Neolaia Lambraki), headed by the eminent<br />

Greek composer Mikis Theodorakis.<br />

LANGUAGE. As it happens with many national movements, but even<br />

more so in this case, Greek nationalism is based on language. A<br />

literary renaissance at the end of the 18th century and the European<br />

Enlightenment provided the foundation for the nationalist surge that<br />

led to the Revolution of 1821. Moreover, language provided the allimportant<br />

link of modern with ancient Greece and its heritage. Thus,<br />

since early in its history, the Greek nation-state building project had<br />

a linguistic question at its core. What language should the new state<br />

endorse? The peoples’ language that varied depending on the region,<br />

or a standardized archaic version?<br />

It should be noted that the Greek language has a long, rich, and<br />

proud history as very few in the world. In Hellenistic times when<br />

Greek culture expanded across the eastern Mediterranean, a simplified<br />

Greek called koine, or common, became the lingua franca of the<br />

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LEGAL SYSTEM • 97<br />

east. Koine was employed in the original writing of the New Testament<br />

and provided the common cultural basis for the spread of Christianity.<br />

Since then, the Greek language had continued to evolve, but<br />

the real break remained between the classical, archaic Greek that was<br />

confined to the Greek lands and the post–Alexander the Great simplified<br />

Greek that was widely spoken in the eastern Mediterranean.<br />

When the matter reemerged during the nationalist surge of the<br />

early 19th century, Adamantios Korais, the most prominent Greek<br />

intellectual at the time, proposed a compromise whereby a purified<br />

version of Greek, called Katharevousa, which encompassed many<br />

archaic forms but was not ancient Greek, should become the official<br />

language of the new state—and so it happened, provoking a controversy<br />

that lasted until the 1970s. Then, the new democratic government<br />

of Konstantinos Karamanlis finally decreed that the demotic<br />

spoken language of the people would be the only state language in<br />

which education, administration, and justice would be exclusively<br />

conducted.<br />

The rivalry between supporters of demotic and Katharevousa<br />

Greek acquired a broader political significance and divided Greeks<br />

between progressives and conservatives, “supporters” and “opponents”<br />

of the people. Unfortunately, due to the polemics involved,<br />

many literary achievements in either the demotic or Katharevousa<br />

Greek were often overlooked.<br />

LEGAL SYSTEM. The Greek system of justice is independent of<br />

the government and, to some degree, self-governed. Greece follows<br />

continental Europe’s legal traditions, especially Germany’s.<br />

Greek civil, penal, commercial, and administrative codes have been<br />

largely imported from Western Europe. Greece has three supreme<br />

courts: Areios Pagos for all civil and criminal cases, the Council of<br />

State (Symvoulio tis Epikratias) for all administrative cases, and the<br />

Congress of Auditors (Elegktiko Synedrio) for all matters pertaining<br />

to state finances. Greece lacks a constitutional court since all Greek<br />

courts are authorized to judicially review laws and administrative<br />

decisions. The Greek legal system suffers from chronic congestion<br />

caused by understaffing, mismanagement, and overlitigation. More<br />

recently, revelations of corruption have shaken the system and led to<br />

the dismissal and prosecution of a few judges.<br />

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98 • LIBERALS<br />

LIBERALS. There is no party today named Liberal in the Greek<br />

Parliament. This was not always the case. Originally founded by<br />

Eleftherios Venizelos in 1910, the Liberals (Party of Liberals,<br />

Komma Fileleftheron) dominated Greek political life for much of the<br />

20th century. The Liberals were the first truly modern party in Greek<br />

history. They built a massive grassroots organization that extended<br />

throughout the country and was based on a fairly cohesive modernizing<br />

and nationalist ideology. The Liberals came in sharp conflict with<br />

King Constantine I in 1915. After the Asia Minor catastrophe,<br />

they imposed a republic. During the interwar period, they attempted<br />

to suppress the rise of a communist party.<br />

In the aftermath of World War II, their support of the government<br />

against the communist insurrection was critical in limiting the<br />

communists’ popular appeal and ensuring its defeat. Throughout the<br />

1950s, the liberals remained divided among several groups. They<br />

regrouped with the creation of the Center Union (Enosis Kentrou) in<br />

1961 and came to power in 1963. After 1974, the old liberal political<br />

center rapidly disappeared. Many party leaders joined the conservatives<br />

of New Democracy (ND; Nea Dimokratia) while most of the<br />

party’s supporters moved leftwards toward the Panhellenic Socialist<br />

Movement (PASOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima). Badly led and<br />

out of touch with the new political realities, the liberals were an easy<br />

prey for the charismatic Andreas Papandreou.<br />

In the 1980s, the new ND leader, Konstantinos Mitsotakis, a<br />

former centrist, reemphasized the liberal credentials of the party and<br />

cultivated a liberal wing. Liberals included the new ND mayor of Piraeus<br />

elected in 1986, Andreas Andrianopoulos, and the ND minister<br />

of national economy in 1992, Stefanos Manos. In the 1993 elections,<br />

ND was defeated, Mitsotakis resigned, and many liberals soon found<br />

themselves marginalized or outside the party. Manos created his own<br />

liberal party in 1999 but was forced to suspend its operations in 2001.<br />

In the 2004 elections, both Andrianopoulos and Manos joined the<br />

electoral list of PASOK. In the 2007 elections, the Liberal Alliance<br />

received 7,514 votes and the Party of Liberals 3,091, or 0.1 percent<br />

and 0.04 percent respectively.<br />

LITERATURE. It is said that Greece is a land of poets. Greek itself<br />

is one of the oldest spoken languages in the world and the medium<br />

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MACEDONIA • 99<br />

in which some of the world’s literary treasures were written. Modern<br />

Greek literature emerged in the late medieval times during the<br />

end of Byzantium. Crete under Venice produced some significant<br />

works of Western influence. Close to Italy and free from the Ottomans,<br />

the Ionian Islands also developed a rich literary tradition.<br />

After independence, Athens in the late 19th century, under the<br />

influence of Kostis Palamas, acquired its own literary school. Following<br />

the Asia Minor catastrophe, a new generation of writers<br />

and poets, the so-called generation of the 1930s, tried to rebalance<br />

Western modernism with Greek tradition. This generation produced<br />

Greece’s two Nobel Prize winners in literature, Georgios Seferis<br />

in 1963 and Odysseas Elytis in 1979. The other two best known<br />

Greek writers of the 20th century have been Constantine Cavafy<br />

and Nikos Kazantzakis. Some of the postwar literature turned<br />

political and became part of a leftist/Marxist discourse. Although<br />

Greek is a language that fewer than 15 million people speak and the<br />

Greeks read much less than the average European, Greece continues<br />

to produce hundreds of novels and poetic works every year. See<br />

also SOLOMOS, DIONYSSIOS.<br />

– M –<br />

MACEDONIA. With a surface area of 34,231 square kilometers and a<br />

population of 2,625,681, Macedonia is the largest and second-most<br />

populous region of Greece. It forms most of northern Greece, bordering<br />

on Albania, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia<br />

(FYROM), and Bulgaria.<br />

Macedonia entered the historical stage under King Philip II<br />

(382–336 BCE), who united all of the Greek city-states under his<br />

command. His son Alexander the Great fought a brilliant campaign<br />

against the Persian Empire and brought the Greek world to India. In<br />

later years, Macedonia became a Roman and then a Byzantine province.<br />

Its capital city, Thessaloniki, fell to the Ottomans in 1430 CE.<br />

Due to its easy access to the north through the Vardar River valley<br />

and the Ottoman demographic policies, Macedonia became mixed<br />

ethnically with Bulgarians, Greeks, Turks, Vlachs, and other smaller<br />

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100 • MACEDONIA<br />

groups living side by side, and after 1492 CE, Thessaloniki acquired<br />

a Jewish majority.<br />

During Ottoman times, all the Christians of Macedonia, irrespective<br />

of their ethnicity, which was not yet politicized, belonged to<br />

the same Christian Orthodox millet, led by the Greek Ecumenical<br />

Patriarch in Istanbul. The distance between the Greeks and the<br />

Slavs of Macedonia began to grow when, after 1870, an independent<br />

Bulgarian Church started countering Greek nationalism by recruiting<br />

the Slav-speaking faithful of Macedonia to the Bulgarian nationalist<br />

cause. In 1878, the San Stefano Treaty, imposed by Russia on the<br />

defeated Ottomans, awarded most of Macedonia, with the exception<br />

of Thessaloniki and Halkidiki, to Bulgaria. The treaty was short-lived<br />

thanks to British intervention, but the dream of a greater Bulgaria,<br />

encompassing all of Macedonia, lived on. This gave rise to a bitter<br />

struggle between Greek and Bulgarian paramilitary forces for the<br />

control of the Macedonian countryside during the last years of the Ottoman<br />

Empire. The turmoil in Ottoman Macedonia and the inability<br />

of the sultan to pacify his province contributed to the Young Turks’<br />

revolution that broke out in Thessaloniki in 1908.<br />

Ottoman Macedonia became the apple of discord among competing<br />

nationalist claims advanced by Bulgarians, Greeks, Serbs, Romanians,<br />

and local Slavic-speaking Macedonians. Greece conquered<br />

half of Ottoman Macedonia during the First Balkan War in 1912 and<br />

defended its gains successfully against Bulgaria in the Second Balkan<br />

War in 1913. During World War I, the royalist government in<br />

Athens lost control of Macedonia, where a rebel government under<br />

Eleftherios Venizelos, allied with the Entente, was established. At<br />

the end of the war, Greece and Bulgaria exchanged most of each other’s<br />

populations. After 1922, Macedonia received the bulk of Greek<br />

refugees from Asia Minor and lost its Turkish population. During<br />

World War II some 97 percent of the Jews of Thessaloniki, and<br />

many Jews of other Macedonian cities, perished in the Holocaust.<br />

After the war, having fought on the side of the communists during the<br />

Civil War who were more supportive of Slav-Macedonian national<br />

rights, many Slav-Macedonians left Greece.<br />

After the disintegration of Yugoslavia in 1991, Macedonia reemerged<br />

as an international concern. In particular, Athens objected<br />

to the independent Republic of Macedonia monopolizing the name<br />

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MACEDONIA, FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC <strong>OF</strong> • 101<br />

“Macedonia.” Apart from the confusion this might create, Athens<br />

remains fearful of Slavic irredentism against Greek Macedonia.<br />

Despite these difficulties, Macedonia is a fairly prosperous province<br />

of Greece. It enjoys a thriving agriculture in the center; rich lignite<br />

fields that fuel half of Greece’s electricity production in the west;<br />

a booming tourist industry in Halkidiki, Pieria, and in the island<br />

of Thassos; and a developed services sector, mainly in education,<br />

health, and trade, based in Thessaloniki. See also ASIA MINOR<br />

CATASTROPHE.<br />

MACEDONIA, FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC <strong>OF</strong> (FY-<br />

ROM), (RELATIONS WITH). During the last decade of the<br />

19th century, a homegrown Slav-Macedonian national movement<br />

emerged in Ottoman Macedonia, in juxtaposition to both Bulgarian<br />

and Greek nationalism. Following the Balkan Wars, half of<br />

Macedonia was awarded to Greece, one third to Serbia, while<br />

Bulgaria, being the loser, was left with the rest. Greek Macedonia<br />

was quickly mostly Hellenized, especially after the exchange of<br />

populations with Turkey, when Muslims left and Greek Christians<br />

arrived. In Serbian Macedonia, the oppression of Slav-Macedonian<br />

rights by Serbia during the interwar period and by Bulgaria during<br />

World War II further reinforced local Macedonian nationalism.<br />

“Macedonianism” was espoused by the rising communists. Josip<br />

Broz Tito, with an eye to reshuffling the balance of power in the<br />

Balkans, proclaimed a Macedonian Republic within the new postwar<br />

Yugoslav Federation.<br />

In Greek Macedonia, frustrated by their treatment at the hands of<br />

the Greek state, which favored the incoming Greek refugees over<br />

the local Slav-Macedonian natives, harassed by the dictatorship of<br />

Ioannis Metaxas in the late 1930s, and energized by international<br />

communism’s promise for an independent and united Macedonia,<br />

many remaining Slav-Macedonians sided with the communist insurgents<br />

during the Greek Civil War in the aftermath of World War II.<br />

Upon their defeat in 1949, they left the country for neighboring Yugoslav<br />

Macedonia. During the Cold War, Belgrade kept a tight leash<br />

on Slav-Macedonian nationalists in Skopje, fearing that otherwise<br />

its relations with Athens could be jeopardized. Similarly, Athens<br />

preferred to deal directly with Belgrade and conveniently ignored<br />

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102 • MACEDONIA, FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC <strong>OF</strong><br />

the occasional irritation of Macedonian nationalism with claims on<br />

Greek territory.<br />

However, upon the disintegration of Yugoslavia, old demons<br />

seemed to reemerge. Greece interpreted the independence of the FY-<br />

ROM as having the potential to reopen the old Macedonian question,<br />

over which Greece had victoriously fought several wars in the first<br />

half of the 20th century. On the other hand, as was the case elsewhere<br />

in former Yugoslavia, the FYROM’s newly discovered independence<br />

gave rise to nationalist and irredentist claims that irritated Greeks<br />

who traditionally identify Macedonia with the heritage of Alexander<br />

the Great and with their northern Greek province.<br />

Somewhat ill-advised and often emotionally driven, Greece decided<br />

to wage a diplomatic campaign to defeat what it considered to<br />

be Macedonian irredentism. For Greece, the very name of Macedonia—monopolized<br />

by a multinational state consisting of Slavs, Albanians,<br />

and others that occupies only a fraction of Ottoman Macedonia<br />

and almost none of historical, ancient Macedonia—implies an irredentist<br />

claim against Greek territory. Faced with much more serious<br />

problems in Bosnia and in Kosovo, and recognizing the peacefulness<br />

of the FYROM’s transition toward independence, Greece’s Western<br />

allies proved reluctant to lend Athens their support. With the exception<br />

of its European partners, most countries, including Russia and<br />

the United States, recognized the FYROM under its constitutional<br />

name. The name FYROM was itself a compromise reached so that<br />

the new state could become a member of the United Nations (UN).<br />

Riddled with anxiety due to the changes brought by the end of<br />

the Cold War and influenced by nationalist and populist politicians,<br />

Macedonia resonated greatly with Greeks, who reacted with an unprecedented<br />

popular mobilization, forcing an uncompromising and<br />

maximalist stance on the country’s leaders. Gradually, however, the<br />

reality of facing the spreading instability in the southern Balkans and<br />

the recognition of mutual benefits derived from their cooperation<br />

calmed both sides.<br />

Currently, relations between Greece and the FYROM are based<br />

on the Interim Agreement the two countries signed with the mediation<br />

of the United States in 1995. The Interim Agreement established<br />

diplomatic relations between Athens and Skopje, satisfied certain<br />

Greek demands, and left the dispute about the name of the newly<br />

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MAKARIOS III • 103<br />

independent republic to be resolved in the future. The agreement<br />

concluded a four-year diplomatic war that included a partial and a<br />

full trade embargo imposed by Greece. It has been followed by the<br />

great expansion of Greek investment in FYROM and the growth in<br />

trade and tourism between the two countries. As the FYROM moves<br />

closer to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the<br />

European Union (EU), where Greece has the power of veto, an opportunity<br />

may arise to resolve the name dispute, based on a mutually<br />

accepted compromise.<br />

MAKARIOS III (1913–1977). Mihalis Christodoulou Mouskos was<br />

born in the western province of Paphos in Cyprus. Known under his<br />

adopted clerical name, Makarios was the archbishop of the Autocephalous<br />

Cypriot Orthodox Church (1950–1977) and the first president<br />

of the Republic of Cyprus (1960–1977). Although originally<br />

a religious leader, Makarios quickly came to head the anticolonial<br />

struggle of the Greek-Cypriots against British rule in the 1950s and<br />

was elected as the first president of the newly independent republic.<br />

Although hated by some Greek nationalists and right-wingers<br />

for supposedly betraying the cause of Cyprus’ union (enosis) with<br />

Greece and for his policy of nonalignment, he remained very popular<br />

among the Greek-Cypriot population. His religious authority added<br />

to his appeal but was viewed with suspicion by Turkish-Cypriots<br />

and Turkey. In his capacity as the leader of the Greek-Cypriots, he<br />

played a significant role in postwar Greek politics, as he often antagonized<br />

the Greek government in Athens.<br />

Makarios was born in poverty in the mountainous village of<br />

Panagia. As was often the case for children of families with limited<br />

resources and prospects, he entered monastic life at a very young<br />

age. Bright and ambitious, he was sent by the powerful and wealthy<br />

Church of Cyprus to Athens where he studied law and theology. With<br />

a scholarship he received from the World Council of Churches, he<br />

continued his education in Boston. At a very young age, Makarios<br />

was elected bishop of Kytio and soon thereafter, in 1950, he became<br />

archbishop of the Autocephalous Cypriot Orthodox Church.<br />

Under the long Ottoman rule, in addition to its spiritual role, the<br />

church had acquired the political leadership of the Greek Orthodox<br />

Christians on the island. When the island passed to the British in<br />

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104 • MAKARIOS III<br />

1878, they attempted to introduce secular institutions representing<br />

the local population. These institutions, however, fell victim to Greek<br />

nationalism and, later, to a rising communist influence. Therefore,<br />

they had limited appeal for the British, who tried to restrict them<br />

and, from time to time, abolish them altogether. Makarios was happy<br />

to step into the vacuum, reclaim the church’s old national role (ethnarhia),<br />

and provide leadership uncontaminated by the communists<br />

toward the struggle for self-government.<br />

In the 1950s, Makarios’ nationalist appeal made him hugely popular<br />

among Greeks and, despite initial resistance, he managed to persuade<br />

the Greek government to bring the matter to the United Nations<br />

(UN), against the wish of Greece’s ally and former protector, Great<br />

Britain. There, Greece was defeated as the United States sided with<br />

Britain. Frustrated by the lack of diplomatic progress, Makarios authorized<br />

a military struggle conducted by the National Organization<br />

of Cypriot Fighters (NOCF; Ethniki Organosis Kyprion Agoniston,<br />

EOKA). Starting on 1 April 1955, the NOCF/EOKA’s fight mostly<br />

involved a terrorist campaign to raise the cost of keeping Cyprus<br />

British. Makarios was briefly exiled to the Seychelles but upon his<br />

return he participated in negotiations for a political settlement. In defense<br />

of a sizeable Turkish-Cypriot minority and its own geostrategic<br />

interests, Turkey’s involvement further complicated matters. Cyprus’<br />

decolonization was agreed upon and regulated in meetings in Zurich<br />

and London in 1959 between the governments of Britain, Greece, and<br />

Turkey. Makarios was present and reluctantly conceded. The Zurich–<br />

London agreements created an independent Cyprus and frustrated<br />

Greek nationalists who demanded enosis, union with Greece, and<br />

Turkish nationalists who argued for the island’s partition, taksim.<br />

Makarios was comfortably elected to power twice. In the 1960s,<br />

hard-pressed by Greek and Turkish nationalists, he followed an independent<br />

course of action, befriending domestically the large communist<br />

party and internationally the Nonaligned Movement. At times,<br />

he tried to balance the unmet aspirations of most Greek-Cypriots<br />

for Cyprus’ union with Greece with the reality of a Turkish-Cypriot<br />

veto and the presence of Turkish troops at home and in the vicinity.<br />

Nevertheless, Makarios felt constrained by the powers granted<br />

to the Turkish-Cypriots and, on 30 November 1963, he unilaterally<br />

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MAKARIOS III • 105<br />

proposed changing the Cypriot Constitution to the detriment of the<br />

Turkish-Cypriot prerogatives. The Turkish-Cypriots walked out of<br />

the republic’s institutions and after some intercommunal fighting<br />

withdrew into a few, restricted ethnic enclaves. For the next 11 years,<br />

Cyprus lived a precarious life under the threat of a Turkish invasion.<br />

The arrival of a UN peacekeeping force in 1964, numerous U.S. diplomatic<br />

initiatives, led first by Dean Acheson and then Cyrus Vance,<br />

and the opening of an intercommunal dialogue in 1968 did not ease<br />

the situation.<br />

The military coup in Greece in 1967 further complicated Makarios’<br />

relationship with Athens while his antagonism with the<br />

United States at the height of the Cold War gradually reduced his<br />

room to maneuver. Finally, he was deposed by a coup of officers of<br />

the Cypriot National Guard, under the direction of the Greek junta<br />

in Athens, on 15 July 1974. The coup plotters tried, but failed, to<br />

kill him. On 20 July 1974, Turkey used the pretext of restoring the<br />

violated constitutional order, granted by the Treaty of Guarantee,<br />

to invade. On 15 August 1974, Turkey further expanded its control<br />

to 36 percent of the island, sending about 200,000 Greek-Cypriots<br />

southwards as refugees, and imposing the partition of the island that<br />

remains divided to the present day. Having denounced Greece at the<br />

United Nations, Makarios returned to Cyprus to inspire his defeated<br />

people, open the economy to accommodate the large number of refugees,<br />

stress “Cypriotness,” and work for the reconciliation with the<br />

Turkish-Cypriot brethren. Within this framework, in 1977 he conceded<br />

to a bizonal, bicommunal federation as the basis for reunifying<br />

the island and resolving the Cyprus question. He died in Nicosia of<br />

a heart attack later that year.<br />

Still revered as a national hero in the Republic of Cyprus where<br />

many streets and squares bear his name and his statue, Makarios’<br />

image, although recognized as a popular and charismatic leader,<br />

has been recently tainted. Critics accuse him of populism and a<br />

certain lack of appreciation of international politics and balances. In<br />

particular, for some, Makarios underestimated Turkish nationalism<br />

and Turkey’s power. At times, he appeared to ignore the Cold War<br />

constraints imposed by the dependence of Greek-Cypriots on Greece,<br />

which remained dependent on the United States.<br />

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106 • MEDIA<br />

MEDIA. Until the late 1980s, all electronic media remained under<br />

state control, although there were a few romantic radio pirates who<br />

challenged the state monopoly. Following the spread of media<br />

technology, the Greek electronic media market was liberalized in a<br />

sudden and haphazard way. In the 1990s, media outlets of all types<br />

mushroomed. Today, there are five major private television channels:<br />

Mega TV, Antenna, Alpha, Star, and Alter. The Greek public television<br />

station, ERT, and its three channels are supported by public fees<br />

but control only 15 percent of the market. There are hundreds of local<br />

low-budget and low-quality TV stations. The radio market is even<br />

less structured, with hundreds of radio stations transmitting locally.<br />

A few, such as Antenna, Sky, and Flash, transmit nationally through<br />

local affiliates.<br />

Greek media is free and aggressive but characterized by commercialism,<br />

extreme sensationalism, and a lack of professionalism.<br />

Successive Greek governments have proved too timid to put order<br />

in the chaotic market and establish some regulations and standards.<br />

Television has a very influential role in Greek politics, turning anchormen<br />

and prominent TV journalists into stars to whom politicians<br />

need to pay close attention. At times, it seems that Greek public life<br />

revolves around the eight o’clock news, which consists less of hard<br />

news and more of impressionistic commentaries by pundits and invited<br />

guests. Populist excesses are fueled by the fierce competition<br />

for market share. Although the market is small and commercials can<br />

only support one or two private TV stations, Greek businessmen, in<br />

search of political influence and a public role, have invested heavily<br />

in unprofitable media outlets.<br />

In the meantime, the Greek press has suffered a steady decline in<br />

circulation and corresponding influence. There are still a few quality papers,<br />

mainly the conservative Kathimerini and the liberal Vima. Popular<br />

papers include Ta NEA, Eleftherotypia, Ethnos, and Eleftheros Typos.<br />

Tabloids have increased their market share. As Internet penetration<br />

increases, blogs, portals, and websites have become the new media for<br />

news and commentary, especially among younger Greeks.<br />

MEDITERANNEAN SEA. Greece is a Mediterranean nation. The<br />

entire country’s 16,000-kilometer-long coastline lies in the Mediterranean.<br />

The Mediterranean has formed and shaped the land, its<br />

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people, and their character. It has endowed the Greek lands with a<br />

temperate climate of mild winters and hot but dry summers. From<br />

ancient times, it has provided Greeks with food and an easy way to<br />

communicate and trade. It turned the Greeks into a maritime nation,<br />

in control of one fifth of the world’s shipping industry today. Together<br />

with other southern European nations, such as Italy and Spain,<br />

Greece shares a certain Mediterranean lifestyle of strong family ties<br />

and high sociability.<br />

The Mediterranean, forming several smaller seas such as the<br />

Aegean and the Ionian, is famous for its crystal clear waters, and<br />

thus provides a major tourist attraction. In recent years, the state has<br />

invested heavily in sewage treatment in an effort to contain urban<br />

pollution and keep coastal waters clean. Similarly, large parts of the<br />

coastline have been turned into protected zones while a few national<br />

sea parks have been created. However, construction, tourism, and<br />

overfishing have taken a heavy toll on the health of Greece’s share<br />

of the Mediterranean.<br />

MEGALI IDEA. See IRREDENTISM.<br />

MERKOURI, MELINA • 107<br />

MERKOURI, MELINA (1920–1994). Born in Athens, Melina<br />

Merkouri was an accomplished actress, singer, political activist, and<br />

politician. Coming from a prominent conservative political family,<br />

she performed memorably in some of Greece’s best remembered<br />

postwar theater productions and films. During the colonels’ junta,<br />

she lived in Paris and actively participated in the international effort<br />

for the return of democracy to its cradle. After 1974, she was elected<br />

to Parliament and in 1981, following the victory of the Panhellenic<br />

Socialist Movement (PASOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima), she<br />

became the minister of culture. She proposed the introduction of an<br />

annual “cultural capital of Europe” and tirelessly campaigned for the<br />

return of the Parthenon marbles to Greece from the British Museum<br />

in London. Emancipated and strong-willed, liberal and outspoken,<br />

immensely gifted and well-endowed with a unique star quality, no<br />

other woman has embodied the spirit of modern Greece as fully as<br />

Melina Merkouri. She died in a hospital in New York and was buried<br />

as a national hero; her funeral was attended by hundreds of thousands<br />

of mourning Greeks.<br />

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108 • METAXAS, IOANNIS<br />

METAXAS, IOANNIS (1871–1941). Born in the island of Ithaca<br />

in western Greece, Ioannis Metaxas came from an aristocratic, if<br />

impoverished, family of the neighboring Ionian island of Cephalo.<br />

He graduated from the Military Academy of Athens and, later, of<br />

Berlin. He had a distinguished military career, starting with the<br />

Greek–Ottoman war in 1897. During the Balkan Wars, he was at<br />

the forefront of the surrender of Thessaloniki in Macedonia and<br />

Ioannina in Epirus, a well-fortified city that resisted the Greek<br />

advance the longest.<br />

In the meantime, Metaxas was closely associated with the royal<br />

family and in 1910, incoming Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos<br />

appointed him his personal military attaché. In that capacity, he<br />

proved a useful link between the liberal premier and the royal family.<br />

However, in 1915 when Venizelos moved to have Greece join<br />

World War I on the side of the Entente, Metaxas disagreed, sided<br />

with his King Constantine I, and resigned from his position in Venizelos’<br />

personal cabinet.<br />

After Venizelos’ departure from power, Metaxas led the anti-<br />

Venizelist paramilitary forces that controlled Greek politics until<br />

1917. Following Venizelos’ return, Metaxas was exiled and, later,<br />

convicted and sentenced to death in absentia. Venizelos lost the<br />

elections in 1920 and Metaxas returned but, despite the pleas of his<br />

fellow monarchists, he refused to be involved in the Asia Minor<br />

campaign as he was convinced that Greece could not win the war.<br />

After Greece’s defeat, he formed his own political party. In 1923,<br />

he participated in a failed coup against the Venizelist military government.<br />

He survived his defeat and accepted the legitimacy of the<br />

new republic.<br />

Metaxas, an idiosyncratic but confident man, participated in all<br />

subsequent elections without much success, something that contributed<br />

to his increased contempt for parliamentary politics. In 1936,<br />

his party gained seven seats in Parliament. However, faced with a<br />

hung Parliament, where the communists held the balance of power<br />

between the Venizelist liberals and the royalists, King George II<br />

appointed Metaxas as his prime minister, with the consent of Parliament,<br />

except for the communists. On 4 August 1936, Metaxas, in<br />

agreement with the king, abolished Parliament altogether and proceeded<br />

to rule dictatorially.<br />

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MINORITIES • 109<br />

Metaxas’ rule was one of repression and he flirted with fascism.<br />

Despite some measures in favor of social protection and the working<br />

class, the Metaxas regime never became popular. His foreign policy<br />

remained oriented toward Great Britain, Greece’s traditional ally.<br />

Metaxas’ great moment of glory, for which he is mostly remembered,<br />

came on 28 October 1940, when he rejected Benito Mussolini’s ultimatum<br />

to allow Italian troops into Greece and brought Greece into<br />

World War II against the Axis. The Greek army, well motivated<br />

and prepared, performed exceptionally well against the Italians, who<br />

were forced to retreat in humiliation into Albania. In the meantime,<br />

Metaxas died of cancer while Greece was attacked and occupied by<br />

Nazi Germany.<br />

MINORITIES. The only minority officially recognized by Greece is<br />

the Muslims of western Thrace. They were exempt from the compulsory<br />

exchange of populations agreed upon by Greece and Turkey in<br />

Lausanne in 1923. This is an agrarian and conservative community<br />

of some 120,000 people that is ethnically comprised of three groups:<br />

the Turks, the Slavic Pomaks, and the Roma. Greece respects the<br />

community’s religious autonomy and cultural rights, including its<br />

partial education in Turkish. Nevertheless, the community fell victim<br />

to the deterioration of Greek–Turkish relations in the past and the<br />

forceful expulsion of the Greeks from Istanbul and the islands of<br />

Imvros and Tenedos. Since 1990, conditions for the minority have<br />

markedly improved, although Greek nationalists remain suspicious<br />

of the community’s true loyalties.<br />

As is the case in many other states, Greece has been fearful that<br />

recognizing minorities and their rights might lead to claims against<br />

its own territorial integrity. Thus, traditionally it has been reluctant<br />

to acknowledge its own partial ethnoreligious diversity. Nevertheless,<br />

Greece is not as homogenous as it often claims. A small Slavspeaking<br />

minority of fewer than 20,000 people still survives in Greek<br />

Macedonia. Religiously, there are a few Catholics, mainly in islands<br />

held in the past by Venice, a small Jewish community that survived<br />

the devastation of World War II, and a much larger community of<br />

Jehovah’s Witnesses and Old Calendarists.<br />

Since 1989, ethnoreligious diversity has increased dramatically<br />

with the arrival of hundreds of thousands of economic immigrants<br />

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110 • MITSOTAKIS, KONSTANTINOS<br />

from Eastern Europe and southern Asia. The largest group by far is<br />

the Albanians, who number more than 600,000 and reside all over<br />

Greece. In many elementary schools, there is already a plurality of<br />

students whose native language is not Greek. The change has been<br />

dramatic, and the bureaucratic and inefficient Greek state has found<br />

it hard to cope. However, Greek society has improvised quite well<br />

and Greece has been more successful in integrating its newly arrived<br />

immigrants than many other European nations.<br />

MITSOTAKIS, KONSTANTINOS (1918– ). Born in Chania in<br />

Crete, Konstantinos Mitsotakis comes from a prominent liberal<br />

family. Eleftherios Venizelos was his uncle. He studied at the University<br />

of Athens and entered Parliament in 1946. He became a<br />

prominent member of the Center Union (Enosis Kentrou) Party led<br />

by Georgios Papandreou. But in July 1965, Mitsotakis led a group<br />

of defectors, in what became known as apostasia, against his own<br />

party leader and prime minister. In the 1967 coup, he was arrested<br />

and imprisoned.<br />

Upon the return of democracy, he failed to be elected to Parliament<br />

in 1974 but succeeded in 1977. In 1978 he joined the New<br />

Democracy (ND; Nea Dimokratia) Party and the government of<br />

Konstantinos Karamanlis, becoming first the minister of coordination<br />

and then of foreign affairs. While in opposition, he was elected<br />

leader of ND in 1984. He lost the 1985 elections against his old-time<br />

rival Andreas Papandreou but managed to retain control of the<br />

party’s leadership. His first victory came in the municipal elections<br />

of 1986 when the candidates he chose were elected mayors in<br />

Greece’s major cities. In the meantime, he energized the party’s base<br />

and organization. In 1989, Mitsotakis gained a plurality and after two<br />

more elections a slim majority in Parliament. In between, he struck<br />

a historic deal and formed a short-lived coalition government with<br />

the Greek left followed by a national unity government that included<br />

Papandreou’s defeated Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK;<br />

Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima).<br />

In April 1990, Mitsotakis became prime minister, fulfilling a<br />

lifelong ambition. He ruled for three and a half turbulent years. His<br />

government was faced with numerous problems resulting from socialist<br />

misrule in the 1980s. He introduced a series of liberal reforms<br />

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MONARCHY • 111<br />

while trying to bring the public deficit under control. He was partially<br />

successful in reforming the pension and the educational system,<br />

the rigid labor laws, and in the privatization and deregulation of the<br />

economy.<br />

However, his government was seriously affected by an international<br />

economic recession, infighting, and the Macedonia controversy.<br />

A year after dismissing his popular, ambitious, and nationalist<br />

foreign minister, Antonis Samaras, Mitsotakis lost his parliamentary<br />

majority, resigned, and called for early elections that he resoundingly<br />

lost. Soon thereafter, Mitsotakis resigned from the party leadership<br />

but remained active in Greek politics.<br />

A formidable public speaker and parliamentary debater, Mitsotakis’<br />

politics were best placed in the liberal political center and have<br />

been marked by his tenacity in the face of formidable obstacles, due<br />

largely to a network of loyal friends. Mitsotakis has been known for<br />

his charm and efficiency as a negotiator, his strong local identification<br />

with his native island of Crete, and for a certain ruthlessness. In<br />

a sense, he has embodied both the age of the old oligarchic politics<br />

of party notables and its passing, as he engaged in fierce power struggles<br />

while espousing a modern, liberal vision for Greece. Two of<br />

his children, Dora Bakoyanni and Kyriakos Mitsotakis, are popular<br />

members of Parliament. Bakoyanni is currently the foreign minister<br />

and is considered one of Greece’s most prominent politicians in her<br />

own right. As several of his grandchildren are said to be contemplating<br />

political careers, Mitsotakis could be considered to be the founder<br />

of a Greek political dynasty, together with the Karamanlises and the<br />

Papandreous.<br />

MONARCHY. For most of its modern history, Greece has been a<br />

monarchy. However, the history of Greek monarchy was turbulent<br />

and ended on 8 December 1974, when the Greek people voted overwhelmingly<br />

to abolish it and establish a republic. The first king of<br />

Greece was Otto, a Bavarian, who ruled from 1832 to 1862, and was<br />

expelled following a coup. He was succeeded by the Danish King<br />

George, who ruled until 1913, when he was assassinated. George<br />

did manage to establish a dynasty. His son Constantine was exiled<br />

twice and was succeeded by his own sons, first Alexander, then<br />

George II, and later Paul. George II was exiled twice but died while<br />

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112 • MOUNT ATHOS<br />

on the throne. His brother Paul had a calmer reign and was smoothly<br />

succeeded by his own son, Constantine II, in 1964. Youthful and<br />

photogenic, Constantine II was thought to embody a young and energetic,<br />

rapidly developing nation. However, Constantine II found<br />

himself entangled in political controversies that cost him his throne<br />

and brought the monarchy to an end.<br />

The monarchy never acquired deep roots in Greece. This was<br />

mainly because it was perceived by many Greeks as the representative<br />

of foreign interests and the interlocutor of the great powers’<br />

neocolonial control over Greece. After all, it was the great powers<br />

that insisted on turning Greece into a monarchy, and it was they who<br />

chose a king and supported him at times of popular discontent. Until<br />

1974, Greece remained divided between opponents and sympathizers<br />

of the monarchy, the latter largely concentrated in Peloponnesus.<br />

Today, the former king and his family enjoy some celebrity status but<br />

his influence on Greek politics is minimal.<br />

MOUNT ATHOS. Forming the easternmost of the three peninsulas of<br />

Halkidiki in northern Greece, Mount Athos is the home of a unique<br />

medieval Christian Orthodox monastic commonwealth, under the spiritual<br />

authority of the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul. Founded in<br />

960 CE by Athanasios of Trabzon, later of Athos, at the height of the<br />

Byzantine Empire with the help of emperors Nikiforos Fokas and Ioannis<br />

Tsimiskis, the self-governed commonwealth has been in existence<br />

for more than a millennium. Comprising 20 monasteries, hundreds of<br />

smaller establishments, and a capital in Karyes, Mount Athos—or the<br />

Holy Mountain, as it is most commonly known—is a world of its own<br />

living under the ancient rules of monasticism.<br />

Although found in the West, monasticism is a distinct religious<br />

practice of oriental Christianity. Monks and nuns have traditionally<br />

enjoyed the respect of laypeople for their devotion and asceticism.<br />

During Byzantine times, monasteries were richly endowed by emperors<br />

and aristocrats, developed into centers of learning, and formed<br />

an important pillar of the sociopolitical establishment. Important<br />

monastic centers grew throughout the eastern Mediterranean, such<br />

as the Meteora community in Thessaly or St. Catherine in the Sinai.<br />

Nowhere, however, has monasticism reached the majesty and scale<br />

it has in Mount Athos.<br />

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MUSIC • 113<br />

In Athos, fortresslike monasteries were built, accumulating invaluable<br />

cultural treasures, manuscripts, and works of art over the centuries.<br />

In addition to the 17 Greek monasteries, there are 3 Russian,<br />

Serbian, and Bulgarian monasteries. No women are allowed in the<br />

territory, a rule that has been recently challenged but is vigorously<br />

enforced. After years of decline and dwindling numbers of monks,<br />

Athos has experienced a revival since the 1980s, as more young<br />

and well-educated men have been attracted to the “garden of Virgin<br />

Mary.” Funding from the European Union (EU) and some heightened<br />

attention from the Greek government have helped to restore<br />

many of the architectural and artistic treasures on the peninsula.<br />

MOUSKOURI, NANA (1934– ). Born in Chania, Crete, Nana<br />

Mouskouri has been Greece’s best-selling vocal artist and its most<br />

internationally acclaimed pop singer. Following her training at the<br />

Athens Music Conservatory, Mouskouri debuted in the late 1950s<br />

with some of Manos Hatzidakis’ great successes. In 1963, she left<br />

Greece and moved to Paris. What followed was a celebrated international<br />

career with such hits as “White Roses from Athens” and “Only<br />

Love” in several languages, including Japanese. It is estimated that<br />

Mouskouri has sold 230 million discs, sung 1,500 songs in 15 different<br />

languages, and recorded 450 albums, half of which became gold<br />

and platinum. See also MUSIC.<br />

MUSIC. Greece continues to produce an abundance of music. Although<br />

much of contemporary Greek music is a cheap, Eastern imitation<br />

of Western pop, the country is proud of a long musical tradition<br />

that was rigorously reinvigorated after World War II. As happened<br />

in literature and poetry, a new generation of gifted composers,<br />

schooled in Western canons but sensitive and receptive to local traditions,<br />

undertook to reinvent Greek music by combining local sounds<br />

with a Western instrumentalization. Mikis Theodorakis and Manos<br />

Hatzidakis were the most successful among an influential group that<br />

left a deep imprint on contemporary Greek cultural identity.<br />

Although small in size, by virtue of its geography, fragmented<br />

space, and a variety of cultural influences, Greece has a multifaceted<br />

musical tradition, encompassing, among many different styles,<br />

the Italian-like Ionian cantatas; the austere, slow, and monotonous<br />

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114 • MUSLIMS<br />

Epirus folk sounds; the joyful Aegean songs; and the manly, almost<br />

polemical, Cretan and Pontian dance music.<br />

As important as all these are, it is rebetiko that has provided the basis<br />

for the development of modern Greek music. Coming from Asia<br />

Minor, and Smyrna in particular, and developed during the interwar<br />

period among refugees and outlaws in Piraeus, the port of Athens,<br />

slow, bitter, sorrow, mellow, and subversive, rebetiko has been justifiably<br />

compared to the blues of the American south. After years of<br />

being an underground and, often, persecuted art form, rebetiko was<br />

acknowledged in the postwar period and provided the launching pad<br />

and the fuel for groundbreaking new syntheses. See also KAZANT-<br />

ZIDIS, STELIOS; MERKOURI, MELINA; MOUSKOURI, NANA;<br />

TSITSANIS, VASSILIS.<br />

MUSLIMS. See MINORITIES; THRACE.<br />

– N –<br />

NATIONAL LIBERATION FRONT (NLF; ETHNIKO<br />

APELEFTHEROTIKO METOPO, EAM). Founded by the Communist<br />

Party of Greece (CPG; Kommounistiko Komma Elladas,<br />

KKE) and other smaller left-wing parties in September 1941 following<br />

Nazi Germany’s attack on the Soviet Union, the NLF/EAM grew<br />

quickly to a massive and broad-based organization that dominated<br />

the resistance during Greece’s occupation by the Axis.<br />

In 1942, the NLF/EAM established its military wing, the National<br />

People’s Liberation Army (NPLA; Ethnikos Laikos Apeleftherotikos<br />

Stratos, ELAS). Commanded by a competent old liberal, antimonarchist<br />

military officer, Stefanos Sarafis, and ruthless rebel captains<br />

like Aris Velouchiotis, the NPLA/ELAS recruited heavily from the<br />

countryside, especially the Greek mountains, and was open to noncommunists<br />

as well. It sporadically and successfully engaged small<br />

German and Italian forces, dominated the Greek mountains, and<br />

contributed to the Allied war effort. In cooperation with the National<br />

Democratic Greek Link (NDGL; Ethnikos Dimokratikos Ellinikos<br />

Syndesmos, EDES) and British agents, under the instruction of<br />

British Brigadier Endy Mayers, their greatest success came on 25<br />

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NATIONAL LIBERATION FRONT • 115<br />

November 1942, with the destruction of the Gorgopotamos Bridge<br />

along the north-south railway line. It was a daring act that divided<br />

Greece in half.<br />

After Italy’s surrender in 1943, the NPLA/ELAS turned against<br />

the other resistance fighters in an effort to monopolize power and,<br />

with the exception of the NDGL/EDES, its largest rival, succeeded<br />

in controlling a large part of Central Greece, where it established a<br />

temporary government, called the Political Committee of National<br />

Liberation (PCNL; Politiki Epitropi Ethnikis Apeleftherosis, PEEA),<br />

which included many high-minded liberals and socialists.<br />

The NLF/EAM succeeded for a number of reasons that had mostly<br />

to do with the conditions of the Axis occupation of Greece. In addition<br />

to the prewar experience of communists in organizing underground<br />

operations, they included the decline and departure abroad<br />

of traditional politicians, the radicalization of much of the Greek<br />

population due to the hardships of the occupation, the increasing<br />

prestige of the Soviet Union, and the open and welcoming policy the<br />

NLF/EAM followed toward liberals and leftists. However, as soon as<br />

the defeat of Germany became a certainty, the NLF/EAM hardened<br />

its position in preparation of dominating postwar Greek politics. The<br />

NLF/EAM eliminated domestic rivals and antagonized the Greek<br />

government-in-exile, which the British supported, but it failed to<br />

secure any substantial Soviet support.<br />

From the start, the NLF/EAM was immersed in controversy for<br />

two reasons: its campaign of resistance was responded to by the<br />

Germans with extremely cruel reprisals against the Greek civilian<br />

population and, despite its broad appeal, it was suspected of being<br />

a front for the communists, who were only interested in monopolizing<br />

power in postwar Greece, as in the rest of Eastern Europe. After<br />

liberation, the NPLA/ELAS’ demobilization and disarmament grew<br />

into a serious political controversy that led to clashes and eventually<br />

to Civil War.<br />

The NLF/EAM and its legacy of resistance and sacrifice became<br />

a central part of the heroic narrative of the left that has dominated<br />

Greek politics since 1974. The effort has been to idealize the NPLA/<br />

ELAS fighters as honest, freedom-loving, if naïve, patriots, following<br />

a long Greek and Balkan partisan tradition of taking up arms<br />

against overly oppressive governments. According to this reading<br />

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116 • NATIONAL PEOPLE’S LIBERATION ARMY<br />

of history, the NPLA/ELAS rank and file should be distinguished<br />

from the CPG’s political motives that had more to do with seizing<br />

power in postwar Greece. Whatever the motives of the NPLA/ELAS<br />

fighters, they suffered persecution bIy the Greek state. The socialists,<br />

after coming to power in 1981, granted the surviving the NLF/EAM<br />

fighters honorary pensions. See also CIVIL WAR; DECEMBER AF-<br />

FAIR; GREAT BRITAIN; MONARCHY; UNITED STATES.<br />

NATIONAL PEOPLE’S LIBERATION ARMY (NPLA; ETH-<br />

NIKOS LAIKOS APELEFTHEROTIKOS STRATOS, ELAS).<br />

See NATIONAL LIBERATION FRONT (NLF; ETHNIKO<br />

APELEFTHEROTIKO METOPO, EAM).<br />

NATIONAL SCHISM (1916–1917; ETHNIKOS DIHASMOS).<br />

The term Ethnikos Dihasmos describes the serious clash between<br />

King Constantine I and Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos over<br />

Greece’s entry into World War I. The clash started as a political<br />

crisis, escalated into a constitutional crisis, and quickly turned into<br />

a quasi Civil War that divided Greece both politically and territorially.<br />

The already antagonistic relationship between the two charismatic<br />

protagonists, the king and his prime minister, deteriorated rapidly<br />

when Venizelos pressed for Greece to side with the Entente and its<br />

traditional ally, Great Britain. For Venizelos, Britain offered the<br />

best assurances of satisfying Greece’s territorial ambitions against<br />

Ottoman Turkey and Bulgaria, both of which sided with the<br />

Central Powers. King Constantine, an admirer of German military<br />

might, married to Kaiser Wilhelm II’s sister Sophia, and sincerely<br />

convinced of Germany’s victory, opposed Greece’s entrance in the<br />

war. He opted for Greek neutrality, a stance that, given the circumstances,<br />

could only be considered pro-German. Constantine’s insistence<br />

forced Venizelos to resign twice from the premiership despite<br />

his success at the polls.<br />

Following the failed Gallipoli campaign in 1915–1916, the Entente’s<br />

pressure on Greece increased. By opening a front in Greek<br />

Macedonia against the Bulgarians and the Austro-Germans, who<br />

were moving south after the collapse of Serbia, the Entente was<br />

already encroaching on Greek sovereignty.<br />

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NATIONAL ORGANIZATION <strong>OF</strong> CYPRIOT FIGHTERS • 117<br />

When Constantine chose to have Greece’s Fourth Army Corps<br />

in Kavala surrender to the Bulgarians rather than fight, Venizelos<br />

moved to Thessaloniki and in August 1916 led the Movement of<br />

National Defense (MND; Kinima Ethnikis Amynis, KEA.) He established<br />

a parallel government based in Thessaloniki, whose authority<br />

extended throughout northern Greece and the Aegean, due to the<br />

help of the Entente’s navy. By 1917, with Athens surrounded by<br />

British and French naval forces, Constantine was forced to abdicate<br />

in favor of his second son, Prince Alexander, and left the country.<br />

Venizelos returned to Athens and declared war on the Central Powers<br />

and their allies.<br />

The ramifications of the Venizelos–Constantine clash proved<br />

long lasting and poisoned Greek politics for the following decades.<br />

For much of the 20th century, Greece was fiercely divided between<br />

royalists and republicans. The limits of the constitutional authority<br />

of the monarchy continued to be debated, and kings came and<br />

went frequently until 1974, when the issue was settled in favor of a<br />

republic in a fair and free referendum conducted by the government<br />

of Konstantinos Karamanlis.<br />

NATIONAL ORGANIZATION <strong>OF</strong> CYPRIOT FIGHTERS<br />

(NOCF; ETHNIKI ORGANOSI KYPRION AGONISTON,<br />

EOKA). A nationalist organization founded in 1954 by a Greek-Cypriot<br />

brigadier of the Greek army, Georgios Grivas, whose nom de<br />

guerre was Digenis. Grivas was an anticommunist nationalist who,<br />

toward the end of World War II, had founded and led the small organization<br />

“X” in Athens. This developed into a notorious anticommunist<br />

paramilitary force that participated actively in the December<br />

Affair (Dekembriana) against the National Liberation Front (NLF;<br />

Ethniko Apeleftherotiko Metopo, EAM) and its sympathizers, and<br />

contributed to the polarization of Greek politics that led to an outright<br />

Civil War.<br />

The NOCF/EOKA’s purpose was the fulfillment of the popular<br />

demand for enosis (unification) of Cyprus with Greece through an<br />

armed struggle against British colonial rule. The NOCF/EOKA’s<br />

military campaign started on 1 April 1955 and targeted the British<br />

military infrastructure. As expected, the British were quick to brand<br />

the NOCF/EOKA a terrorist organization and were successful in<br />

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118 • NEW DEMOCRACY<br />

capturing and killing many of its members. Nevertheless, the NOCF/<br />

EOKA, secretly supported by the Greek government, continued its<br />

struggle until the end of 1959, when Cyprus gained its independence.<br />

The large communist party of Cyprus, the Progressive Party of the<br />

Working People (PPWP; Anorthotiko Komma Ergazomenou Laou,<br />

AKEL), did not participate in the NOCF/EOKA’s struggle. For Cypriot<br />

communists, the union with post–Civil War Greece, where communism<br />

was outlawed and its supporters were persecuted, could not<br />

have been attractive. Apart from British soldiers, the NOCF/EOKA<br />

killed several civilians including Turkish-Cypriots and even Greek-<br />

Cypriots whom the NOCF/EOKA accused of collaborating with<br />

the British but often were only opposed to its politics. Archbishop<br />

Makarios, the political leader of the NOCF/EOKA and the anticolonial<br />

struggle, had great difficulty in controlling Grivas, who became<br />

increasingly popular. However, after independence, Grivas tried but<br />

failed to turn his popularity into a successful political career.<br />

In 1971, Grivas returned to Cyprus and attempted to resurrect an<br />

EOKA B, in support of his long-cherished goal of enosis, which had<br />

remained elusive during the first 11 years of Cyprus’ independence.<br />

Supported by the Greek junta, the EOKA B was an extremist paramilitary<br />

organization opposing Makarios and the PPWP/AKEL. The<br />

EOKA B took part in the coup against Makarios on 15 July 1974,<br />

which led to the Turkish invasion five days later. See also GREAT<br />

BRITAIN.<br />

NEW DEMOCRACY (ND; NEA DIMOKRATIA). Founded in 1974<br />

by Konstantinos Karamanlis, New Democracy (ND) represents the<br />

Greek center-right. It has been in power from 1974 to 1981, 1989 to<br />

1993, and since 2004. The ND was most popular in the 1974, 1990,<br />

and 2004 elections, winning around 40–45 percent of the electorate.<br />

The party combines conservatives, liberals, and nationalists in<br />

a broad coalition. Its electoral appeal is the strongest in Macedonia<br />

and eastern Peloponnesus and the weakest in the working-class<br />

suburbs of Athens and Piraeus, in Crete, the islands, and in western<br />

Greece. Since 1997, the party has been led by Kostas Karamanlis,<br />

who is a nephew of the former Greek president.<br />

Although originally ideologically quite eclectic, ND was forced<br />

to respond to the challenge presented by the rising Panhellenic<br />

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NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION • 119<br />

Socialist Movement (PASOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima) of<br />

Andreas Papandreou in the late 1970s. As an ideological platform,<br />

it endorsed what it calls “radical liberalism.” While being promarket,<br />

ND recognizes the regulatory role of the state, as do fellow European<br />

Christian-Democratic parties. Meanwhile, ND also appealed<br />

to the trade unions, to student and women’s movements spreading<br />

throughout the country, and much of the Greek diaspora. Since<br />

its founding, ND has been at the forefront of Greek politics as the<br />

primary supporter of Greece’s Western orientation, early entry into<br />

the European Community (EC), Greek-Turkish détente, and, more<br />

recently, market reforms.<br />

NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION (NATO). Greece<br />

was not a founding member of NATO. It joined in 1952, three years<br />

after the signing of the founding Washington Treaty. There was some<br />

opposition to Greece’s entry, as the country is not Atlantic, and Great<br />

Britain feared that the American security umbrella was spreading too<br />

thin. However, thanks to Greece’s participation in the Korean War,<br />

the prevalence of Cold War considerations, and the insistence of the<br />

United States, Greece, together with Turkey, joined the alliance.<br />

Greece’s entry was approved by a centrist, liberal government and<br />

was accompanied by the signing of a defense cooperation agreement<br />

with the United States, which provided for the opening of U.S. military<br />

bases in the country.<br />

Greece’s relations with NATO have been rather complicated as<br />

a result of the growing antagonism with Turkey. For most Greeks,<br />

NATO has not done enough to restrain Turkey, due to the latter’s<br />

alleged superior geostrategic significance. Greece has found itself<br />

inside a defensive alliance that cannot protect it from Turkey, which<br />

is both an “ally” and its main enemy. A breakdown came in the summer<br />

of 1974, following Turkey’s invasion of Cyprus. The incoming<br />

broad-based government of Konstantinos Karamanlis withdrew<br />

Greece from NATO’s military command, following France’s example<br />

under President Charles de Gaulle. Greece reentered in the fall<br />

of 1980 but relations remained tense. When Andreas Papandreou<br />

came to power in 1981, he used NATO summits to register his independence<br />

and Third World inclinations. NATO’s bombing of the<br />

Serbs, first in Bosnia in 1995 and then over Kosovo in 1999, further<br />

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120 • OLYMPIAKOS<br />

alienated Greek public opinion. However, officially, Greece gave its<br />

consent and has participated quietly in several NATO operations.<br />

At the NATO summit in April 2008, Greece used its veto power to<br />

block the entry of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia<br />

(FYROM) before a settlement on the name issue is reached. This was<br />

the first time in decades that NATO was favorably received by the<br />

Greek media, although the Greek left continues to demand Greece’s<br />

full withdrawal and the dissolution of the organization itself. See also<br />

FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

– O –<br />

OLYMPIAKOS. Based in Piraeus, the port-city of Athens, in the<br />

state-of-the-art Karaiskaki Stadium, Olympiakos is the most popular<br />

and successful Greek football club. Established in 1925, it has won<br />

the Greek League championship 36 times and the Greek Cup 23<br />

times. With fans all over Greece and in the diaspora, Olympiakos<br />

has traditionally represented the working class, as opposed to its<br />

rival and pro-establishment Panathinaikos. Since 1993, Olympiakos<br />

has been owned and successfully managed by the dynamic telecommunications<br />

tycoon and philanthropist Socrates Kokkalis.<br />

OLYMPIC GAMES. Ancient Greece gave birth to the original Olympic<br />

Games in 776 BCE, the greatest religious and sports festival in<br />

antiquity. With the advance of Christianity, Emperor Theodosios outlawed<br />

the games in 393 CE. The Victorian enthusiasm for sports gave<br />

rise to an international movement, led by the French Baron Pierre de<br />

Coupertin, for the Games’ revival. The first modern Olympic Games<br />

took place in Athens in 1896. Although Greece tried to host the<br />

games on a permanent basis, Coupertin disagreed and prevailed.<br />

In 2004, Greece hosted the 28th Olympiad with the participation<br />

of 10,500 athletes from 202 countries. Faced with the world’s skepticism,<br />

renewed concerns over terrorism, and chronic bureaucratic<br />

mismanagement, Athens—led by the dynamic and powerful Yanna<br />

Angelopoulou—proved an impeccable host and the Games were<br />

praised for their superb organization. Although there was some criticism<br />

for exceeding the budget, the 2004 Olympic Games dramati-<br />

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ORTHODOX CHURH <strong>OF</strong> GREECE • 121<br />

cally improved the self-image of Greece and its reputation abroad<br />

and paved the way for a boom in tourism that continues to this day.<br />

See also DIMAS, PYRROS.<br />

ONASSIS, ARISTOTLE (1906–1975). Aristotle Onassis was born<br />

in Izmir (Smyrna) in Turkey. If Greece is a country of seamen and<br />

shipping tycoons, Onassis stands out as the most famous. Onassis<br />

might be considered the most well-known Greek of modern times<br />

abroad and one of the few whose life became a Hollywood movie.<br />

Having suffered the impoverishment associated with the expulsion<br />

of so many Greeks from Asia Minor, Onassis immigrated to Buenos<br />

Aires where he accumulated his first small fortune. By marrying Tina<br />

Livanou, daughter of an established Greek shipping family, Onassis<br />

climbed socially while consolidating his wealth. Following an aggressive,<br />

risky, but profitable business strategy, Onassis took full<br />

advantage of the postwar expansion in world trade and, in particular,<br />

the need to transport Middle Eastern oil globally, to create a shipping<br />

empire.<br />

Strong-willed, ambitious, and savvy, Onassis knew how to grab<br />

the attention of the world media. A notorious womanizer, Onassis<br />

made the headlines with his romance with opera diva Maria Callas<br />

and his marriage to Jackie Kennedy, wife of the assassinated<br />

president of the United States. Onassis died in Paris; his end was as<br />

dramatic as his life and came quickly after suffering the loss of his<br />

beloved son and heir, Alexandros, who was killed in a plane crash.<br />

He was survived by his daughter, Christina, who was herself survived<br />

by her daughter, Athina. Among his many activities, Onassis founded<br />

Olympic Airways, the national airline of Greece.<br />

Expanding on a Greek tradition of philanthropy, upon his death, he<br />

left half of his vast fortune to the Onassis Foundation, which has built<br />

hospitals and art centers and has supported education and culture<br />

generously in Greece and internationally.<br />

ORTHODOX CHURCH <strong>OF</strong> GREECE. Greece is an overwhelmingly<br />

Christian Orthodox nation and takes great pride in its Orthodox<br />

religious and cultural heritage. Most of the faithful belong to the<br />

Church of Greece, headed by a Holy Synod presided by the archbishop<br />

of Athens. The Church of Greece has been autocephalous of<br />

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122 • ORTHODOXY<br />

the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul (Constantinople) since<br />

the early years of independence in 1833. However, its constitutional<br />

status remains ambiguous. Although the 1975 Constitution protects<br />

freedom of religion and consciousness, Orthodox Christianity is<br />

recognized as the established, but not the official, religion of Greece.<br />

Furthermore, the Church of Greece enjoys a number of special privileges<br />

unlike other religions in the country.<br />

In reality, the Greek territory is fragmented into five distinct religious<br />

regimes, as a result of the gradual expansion of Greece into<br />

formerly Ottoman territory. Most of Greece belongs to the Church<br />

of Greece but in some islands and in northern Greece, the so-called<br />

New Lands, the Patriarchate in Istanbul retains the spiritual authority.<br />

The islands of the Dodecanese belong to the Patriarchate, Crete<br />

has an autonomous church, and Mount Athos is a self-governing<br />

religious commonwealth under the protection of the Greek state and<br />

the Patriarchate’s supervision.<br />

The Church of Greece owns considerable property consisting of<br />

land, buildings, stocks, and other assets. More than its strong economic<br />

and constitutional position, it derives great power from the<br />

hold it has on many Greeks. Politicians have been reluctant to antagonize<br />

the church and even the popular Andreas Papandreou, at<br />

the peak of his power, had to compromise on a number of issues. In<br />

later years, an activist leadership has turned the church into a quasi<br />

political actor, giving rise to voices for the constitutional separation<br />

of church and state. Currently, the Church of Greece is headed by<br />

Archbishop Ieronymos. See also CHRISTODOULOS, ARCHI-<br />

BISHOP; ORTHODOXY.<br />

ORTHODOXY. This is the version of Christianity practiced in Greece<br />

and espoused by the overwhelming majority of its population.<br />

Greece was the first nation in Europe to be evangelized, due to the<br />

missionary work of St. Paul. As the New Testament and much of<br />

the subsequent Christian philosophy were written in Greek, and as<br />

the Greek language and culture provided the medium to universalize<br />

what originally was a small Jewish community of believers, the<br />

Greeks have, historically, claimed a special, orthodox relationship<br />

with Christianity.<br />

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OTTO WITTELSBACH • 123<br />

Orthodoxy rests upon the ecumenical synods convened by the<br />

Byzantine emperors from the fourth to the eight centuries CE. The<br />

synods’ aim was to fend off challenges to the correct and Orthodox<br />

interpretation of the scriptures, the most important of which had to<br />

do with the dual nature of Christ and the trinity of God. Orthodoxy<br />

grew into the official ideology of the great Byzantine Empire, culturally<br />

interwoven with medieval Hellenism. In the meantime, cultural<br />

and political differences brought Greek Christianity into conflict<br />

with Latin Christianity and escalated into the official schism of 1054<br />

CE, with the excommunication of the pope by the patriarch in Constantinople<br />

and vice versa. Through a systematic and multifaceted<br />

campaign, Byzantium attracted most Slavs into its cultural orbit and<br />

version of Christianity. Thanks to the work of two Byzantine missionaries,<br />

Cyril and Methodius, East European Slavs were gradually<br />

converted to Christian Orthodoxy. However, the destruction of the<br />

Byzantine Empire and the rise of the Western world left Orthodoxy,<br />

in power terms, behind.<br />

Unlike the Catholic Church, the Orthodox Church remains fragmented<br />

among many national, self-governed churches, although the<br />

Patriarchate of Constantinople in Istanbul is acknowledged as the ecumenical<br />

and spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox community. In<br />

modern times, Orthodoxy’s relations with nationalism and the state<br />

have been both problematic and controversial. Deeply traumatized<br />

by communism’s antireligious fervor, Orthodoxy began recovering<br />

in the 1990s, helped by the Greek Church as well, which is one of<br />

the richest in the Orthodox world. See also BAVARIAN RULE; OR-<br />

THODOX CHURCH <strong>OF</strong> GREECE; OTTO WITTELSBACH.<br />

OTTO WITTELSBACH (1815–1867). Otto, known in Greek as<br />

Othon, was the first king of modern Greece. He was appointed in<br />

1832, following the assassination of Ioannis Capodistrias the previous<br />

year. His reign was long but turbulent and ended in a popular<br />

revolt in 1862 that led to his ousting. He died in Bamberg, Germany.<br />

He was the second son of King Ludwig I of Bavaria of the House of<br />

Wittelsbach. Greece initiated a process whereby Germany, thanks to<br />

its numerous but weak royal houses that presented no threat to British<br />

or Russian interests, provided many of the rulers of the newly created<br />

Balkan states.<br />

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124 • OTTOMAN EMPIRE<br />

Otto came to Greece as a minor accompanied by a three-member<br />

regency council arranged by his father, together with 3,500 Bavarian<br />

troops. One of the first decisions of his regents was the transfer<br />

of the capital to Athens and the breaking away of the Greek Church<br />

from the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople in Istanbul.<br />

He dismissed his regents when they proved unpopular with the Greek<br />

people and attempted to rule on his own. Following a military revolt<br />

on 3 September 1843, he was forced in 1844 to grant a constitution<br />

that preserved many of his royal prerogatives.<br />

King Otto was entrapped between the poverty and military weakness<br />

of his new country and the extravagant ambitions of Greek<br />

nationalism. He was forced to move cautiously, balancing the competing<br />

interests of the great powers. Occasionally, he failed, as was<br />

the case during the Crimean War (1853–1856) when Great Britain<br />

blockaded Greece to prevent it from allying with Russia. Progressively,<br />

his rule grew more unpopular while the inability to produce<br />

an heir sealed his fate and made him vulnerable to a popular uprising.<br />

Despite the initial reformist drive, Otto’s reign was characterized by<br />

stagnation in most aspects of the life of the new state. Not only did<br />

the Greek kingdom fail to expand, but some of its citizens continued<br />

to seek a better future in the neighboring Ottoman Empire. It would<br />

be another 20 years after his overthrow before Greece was to start<br />

showing signs of economic growth and social progress. See also<br />

BAVARIAN RULE; POLITICAL PARTIES.<br />

OTTOMAN EMPIRE. Greeks came into contact very early with the<br />

emerging Ottoman Empire. The empire started as a frontline warrior<br />

state in the northwestern corner of Turkic, tribal Anatolia, in the 14th<br />

century CE. It expanded first into the Balkans and the Greek lands<br />

before conquering much of the Middle East. Although Constantinople<br />

fell in 1453, the last Greek medieval state survived until the<br />

Ottoman capture of Trabzon in the Black Sea in 1461. Additional<br />

Greek lands were added to the Ottoman dominions, including Cyprus<br />

in 1571 and Crete in 1669. Only the island of Corfu remained<br />

outside Ottoman sovereignty throughout this time.<br />

In running this vast, multicultural empire, the Ottomans allowed a<br />

great degree of self-rule that was mainly institutionalized through a<br />

Christian Orthodox millet led by the Greek Ecumenical Patriarch<br />

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PANHELLENIC SOCIALIST MOVEMENT • 125<br />

in Istanbul and a network of local communities that enjoyed various<br />

levels of autonomy. In later years, the sultan recruited the Fanar<br />

Greeks of Istanbul to man key state positions, including the governorships<br />

of the provinces of Moldavia and Wallachia.<br />

Nevertheless, Greeks were early converts to nationalism and they,<br />

together with the Serbs, were the first to successfully secede from the<br />

Ottoman Empire. After Greek independence in 1830, three quarters<br />

of the Greeks continued to live under the authority of the sultan.<br />

Initially, they saw their status decline as their loyalty was questioned<br />

by the authorities of the Ottoman state, but Ottoman Greeks quickly<br />

benefited from Ottoman reforms in the 19th century. They also took<br />

advantage of the expanding trade opportunities as the empire was<br />

opening and being integrated in the global distribution of labor.<br />

Like other minorities, the Greeks welcomed the Young Turks’<br />

revolution in 1908 in the hope of having their status upgraded. They<br />

organized politically and elected 23, among a total of 275, representatives<br />

in the Ottoman Parliament convened in 1908, comprising<br />

almost half of all non-Muslim deputies. However, the rise of Turkish<br />

nationalism and the Balkan Wars that followed forced many Greeks<br />

to start leaving Ottoman Turkey, especially after the Ottoman Empire’s<br />

dissolution after World War I. See also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

– P –<br />

PANGALOS, THEODOROS (1878–1952). Born in Elefsis outside<br />

Athens, Theodoros Pangalos was a Venizelist military officer and,<br />

for a while, a military dictator in the years 1925–1926. Starting with<br />

his participation in the Goudi revolution, Pangalos belonged to a<br />

generation of officers who became heavily involved in politics, as<br />

Greece faced enormous challenges related to its expansion, territorial<br />

integrity, and the influx of hundreds of thousands of refugees. He<br />

died in Athens at the age of 74.<br />

PANHELLENIC SOCIALIST MOVEMENT (PASOK; PANEL-<br />

LINIO SOSIALISTIKO KINIMA). PASOK was founded by<br />

Andreas Papandreou in 1974 with the “Declaration of the 3rd of<br />

September,” a date chosen to commemorate the constitutional revolt<br />

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126 • PAPADOPOULOS, GEORGIOS<br />

of 1843. PASOK provided a non-Marxist, left-wing political platform<br />

after the fall of the junta and gradually became very popular<br />

among the radicalized Greek electorate. Originally based on the<br />

three principles of national independence, popular sovereignty, and<br />

social liberation, PASOK was innovative and groundbreaking. While<br />

incorporating both the liberal tradition of the old Venizelists and<br />

the leftist tradition of the resistance during World War II, PASOK<br />

was not simply a continuation of old politics. Balancing between<br />

fierce rhetoric and cautionary practice, PASOK satisfied the statedependent<br />

Greek middle class, which often thinks radically but acts<br />

conservatively.<br />

Built around and controlled tightly by the charismatic Andreas<br />

Papandreou, PASOK has provided one of the two poles of the Greek<br />

political party system since 1977. It governed Greece between 1981<br />

and 1989 and from 1993 to 2004. The history of PASOK has been<br />

one of constant adaptation. While originally disdainful of European<br />

social democracy, in later years, PASOK, especially under the leadership<br />

of Kostas Simitis, accepted economic rationality, foreign<br />

policy realism, and European integration. Since 2004, PASOK has<br />

been in opposition and, after years in power has unsuccessfully tried<br />

to renew itself under the leadership of Andreas Papandreous’ son,<br />

Georgios Papandreou.<br />

PAPADOPOULOS, GEORGIOS (1919–1999). Born in the small<br />

village of Elaiohori in Achaea in northern Peloponnesus, Georgios<br />

Papadopoulos was a military officer and the leader of the coup of<br />

21 April 1967 and the military dictatorship it established. A staunch<br />

anticommunist with an inclination to conspiracies and extraparliamentary<br />

politics, Papadopoulos, heading a group of fellow middleranking<br />

officers, took advantage of Greece’s political instability<br />

in the mid-1960s. He overthrew the government and preempted<br />

King Constantine’s own maneuverings in the armed forces. Subsequently,<br />

he became minister, prime minister, regent, and finally,<br />

president of the military regime he helped introduce.<br />

The oppression of the junta made Papadopoulos deeply unpopular.<br />

His public speeches were pedantic and revealed a naïve and provincial<br />

mind. Nevertheless, he had the foresight to try and liberalize the<br />

regime. With the exception of a former minister, Spyro Markezini,<br />

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PAPAGOS, ALEXANDROS • 127<br />

his search for credible civilian partners failed. Following the student<br />

revolt at the Polytechnio, he was deposed on 25 November 1973 by<br />

his former colleague and hard-liner Dimitris Ioannides. Upon his fall,<br />

Papadopoulos was confined to house arrest. He was tried by the incoming<br />

democratic government and condemned to death in 1975, although<br />

his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. He refused<br />

to apply for a pardon and remained in jail until his death, leaving<br />

behind a legacy of old-fashioned authoritarianism and xenophobia.<br />

PAPAGOS, ALEXANDROS (1883–1955). Born in Athens, Alexandros<br />

Papagos was a highly decorated military officer and a prime<br />

minister of Greece. He participated in the Balkan Wars and the Asia<br />

Minor campaign. As a royalist, his career stalled and he quit the army<br />

after the republicans took over power in late 1922. He returned in<br />

1926, and in 1935 he participated in the coup that forced the return<br />

of the monarchy and of King George II to the throne. He was then<br />

promoted to chief of staff of the army and held this position throughout<br />

the dictatorship of Ioannis Metaxas.<br />

His finest moment was in October 1940 when Fascist Italy attacked<br />

Greece. At the helm of the much inferior Greek forces, Papagos<br />

made excellent use of the mountainous terrain and repelled the<br />

Italians into Albania. Later, when the Germans occupied Greece,<br />

Papagos organized a small resistance group; he was arrested and<br />

sent to a concentration camp. He returned to Greece at the end of<br />

World War II. In January 1949, at the height of the Greek Civil<br />

War, Papagos was asked to lead the government forces against the<br />

communist insurgents. By August 1949, thanks to clever tactics and<br />

the good use of the military aid provided by the United States, he<br />

managed to quickly prevail. Three months later, the Greek Parliament,<br />

in an unprecedented move, voted a degree awarding Papagos<br />

the title of Marshal.<br />

Faced with weak, fragmented, and unstable centrist governments,<br />

and capitalizing on his popularity and prestige, Papagos entered politics<br />

in 1951, founding his own party called the Greek Rally (Ellinikos<br />

Synagermos). Despite King Paul’s opposition, who was afraid that<br />

Papagos might undermine the royal control of the military, he won<br />

half of the votes in 1952 and an overwhelming majority of seats in<br />

Parliament. He ruled until his death in Athens in 1955, providing<br />

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128 • PAPANASTASIOU, ALEXANDROS<br />

Greece with its first postwar, single-party, stable government. His<br />

tenure in office was marked by his government’s unsuccessful attempt<br />

to internationalize the Cyprus problem, which led to a rapid<br />

deterioration of Greece’s relations with Turkey. Domestically, he<br />

was more successful in managing the ravaged Greek economy. His<br />

monetary reform in 1953 opened the way for Greece’s economic<br />

takeoff in the following years.<br />

PAPANASTASIOU, ALEXANDROS (1876–1936). Born in Levidi<br />

in Arkadia in central Peloponnesus, Alexandros Papanastasiou was<br />

exceptionally well educated in law and philosophy, mainly in Germany,<br />

and was an early-day progressive in Greek politics. Influenced<br />

by socialist ideas, he joined forces with Eleftherios Venizelos and<br />

his liberal camp where, in later years, he led the center-left faction.<br />

He was elected to Parliament many times and briefly became prime<br />

minister from March to July 1924. While in power, he supervised the<br />

abolition of the monarchy and the introduction of a new republican<br />

constitution. He founded the University of Thessaloniki, currently<br />

Greece’s largest, and contributed to the better organization of Greek<br />

agriculture. He is recognized as a precursor of a non-Marxist Greek<br />

left, which became electorally viable only after 1974 under the<br />

charismatic leadership of Andreas Papandreou. He died of a heart<br />

attack in 1936 in Athens.<br />

PAPANDREOU, ANDREAS (1919–1996). Born in the island of<br />

Chios, where his father Georgios Papandreou was the governor,<br />

Andreas Papandreou had a spectacular political career. He ruled as<br />

Greece’s prime minister from 1981 to 1989 and from 1993 to 1996.<br />

While studying at the Athens Law School, Papandreou became<br />

involved in left-wing politics and was arrested by the secret police<br />

of the dictatorship of Ioannis Metaxas. Thanks to his father and<br />

his own collaboration with the regime, he secured his escape to the<br />

United States. He graduated from Harvard University, served in the<br />

U.S. Army, and embarked on a successful academic career that led<br />

him to become the chairman of the Department of Economics at the<br />

University of California, Berkeley. While living abroad, Papandreou<br />

married twice. He had four children with his second wife, Margarita,<br />

an American.<br />

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PAPANDREOU, ANDREAS • 129<br />

At his aging father’s request, Papandreou was invited back to<br />

Greece in 1961 by then Prime Minister Konstantinos Karamanlis.<br />

Papandreou became an advisor to the central bank and headed a<br />

newly founded economic think tank sponsored by the government.<br />

Inevitably, as the son of a prominent opposition leader, he gradually<br />

became involved in politics and ran for a parliamentary seat in<br />

the 1964 elections in the district of origin of his family, Achaea, in<br />

Peloponnesus. During his father’s brief premiership between 1964<br />

and 1965, Papandreou was appointed minister of administration and<br />

alternate minister of coordination, before resigning following his alleged<br />

involvement in a military conspiracy.<br />

With his strong academic background, cosmopolitan nature, and<br />

American liberal ideas, Papandreou quickly provided a breath of<br />

fresh air to the antiquated Greek politics. However, his ambition to<br />

build a left-of-center power base within his father’s loosely united<br />

party brought Papandreou into conflict with the party’s establishment.<br />

Papandreou understood the changing times and the rising<br />

expectations of the Greek people, and gave voice to their demand for<br />

political and social change. In particular, Papandreou used the problem<br />

of Cyprus to distance himself from his father and the country in<br />

which he had spent half of his life, the United States, while capitalizing<br />

on Greek resentments and nationalist feelings.<br />

Eventually, he succumbed to his father’s pressure and supported<br />

the compromise reached with their right-wing opponents, which was<br />

to lead to new elections in May 1967. However, the coup of 21 April<br />

1967 caught him, and everybody else, by surprise. He was arrested<br />

and imprisoned before he was allowed to leave the country—thanks<br />

to the intervention of the U.S. government. While abroad, Papandreou<br />

formed the Panhellenic Liberation Movement (PLM; Panellinio<br />

Apeleftherotiko Kinima, PAK), which attracted many of those<br />

who were fighting for the fall of the junta. During this period, Papandreou<br />

cultivated his radicalism and consolidated his antiestablishment<br />

credentials.<br />

Papandreou was initially distrustful of the democratic transition of<br />

1974 and unjustly accused the incoming Karamanlis government as<br />

“a changing of the guard.” However, he quickly formed his Panhellenic<br />

Socialist Movement (PASOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima)<br />

and took part in the November 1974 elections with very modest<br />

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130 • PAPANDREOU, GEORGIOS<br />

success. Papandreou distanced himself from the pre-junta political<br />

center. Although he could have, he refused to take the mantle of his<br />

deceased father’s party. He founded a movement rather than a party,<br />

further underlining his intention to avoid traditional party politics.<br />

Papandreou’s political genius rested on his understanding of the<br />

changing times. He took advantage of the communists’ ideological<br />

rigidities and formed, for the first time in Greek history, a successful<br />

non-Marxist left-wing party. In a sense, PASOK revolutionized the<br />

political landscape. PASOK’s use of a fiery rhetoric and eye-catching<br />

hyperboles helped it emerge as the second-strongest party in<br />

Parliament in the 1977 elections. It thus provided a credible governmental<br />

alternative to the right-wing New Democracy (ND; Nea<br />

Dimokratia). Thereafter, Papandreou toned down his anti-Europe and<br />

anti–U.S. rhetoric, winning a landslide victory in 1981 and an easy<br />

reelection in 1985.<br />

Papandreou was successful in introducing some delayed and much<br />

needed social reforms in health care, education, family law, and<br />

church–state relations, among others, while providing the consolidation<br />

of Greek democracy and national reconciliation by bringing the<br />

left back to power. However, his preference for tactical zigzags at<br />

the expense of a long-term strategy and his adventurism abroad and<br />

statism at home marked his premiership negatively. In particular, his<br />

populist overspending and overall economic mismanagement led to<br />

the explosion of the public debt while turning the 1980s into a lost<br />

decade of no economic growth and rising unemployment.<br />

Papandreou lost the elections of 1989–1990 but returned to power<br />

in 1993. He did not avoid using the Macedonian issue to stir up<br />

Greek nationalist passions for his own short-term political benefit,<br />

just as he had done with the Cyprus issue earlier. Weakened by heart<br />

problems but wiser, Papandreou, while in power for a second time,<br />

proved conciliatory on the economy and with Greece’s relations with<br />

Europe and the United States. Finally, after months in hospital in<br />

Athens, he died a very popular, if controversial, leader, leaving behind<br />

a centrist PASOK that stayed in power for another eight years.<br />

See also KOSKOTAS, GEORGIOS.<br />

PAPANDREOU, GEORGIOS (1888–1968). Born in the small village<br />

of Kalentzi in Achaea in Peloponnesus, Georgios Papandreou died<br />

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PAPANDREOU, GEORGIOS • 131<br />

in Athens while Greece was under military rule. His funeral, attended<br />

by a mass of the population, provided an early platform for the<br />

Greek people to register their rejection of the dictatorship. Georgios<br />

Papandreou had a distinguished political career that could be divided<br />

into three phases.<br />

Having studied law in Athens and in Berlin, Papandreou emerged<br />

as a liberal politician loyal to Eleftherios Venizelos. Venizelos<br />

appointed him governor of the islands of Lesvos and then Chios.<br />

During the interwar period, he served as a minister in several posts<br />

and distinguished himself as the reforming minister of education<br />

(1930–1932). However, due to his antiroyalist positions, he was exiled<br />

after 1936 during Ioannis Metaxas’ dictatorship.<br />

During World War II, Papandreou escaped to the Middle East and<br />

helped organize the Lebanon Conference in May 1944 that attempted<br />

to unite all Greeks behind a government of national unity. He was<br />

appointed as prime minister of this government that, later, after the<br />

Germans’ withdrawal, entered Athens in October 1944. His liberal<br />

credentials and political maneuverings contributed to the defeat of the<br />

communists during the December Affair (Dekembriana) of 1944, after<br />

which he resigned. In the years that followed, he served in the centrist<br />

governments in the aftermath of the Civil War, but he allied himself<br />

with Marshal Alexandros Papagos in the 1952 elections and survived<br />

in opposition while Greece was ruled by the conservatives.<br />

In 1961, together with Sofoklis Venizelos and other liberals, Papandreou<br />

formed and headed the Center Union (Enosis Kentrou)<br />

Party. He denounced the 1961 elections as neither free nor fair and<br />

fiercely antagonized the then prime minister, Konstantinos Karamanlis.<br />

He led his centrist forces to power in 1964, having won a<br />

landslide election while fueling popular expectations to unmanageable<br />

levels. In July 1965, he had a strong disagreement with the<br />

inexperienced King Constantine II over the control of the armed<br />

forces. He resigned and led a popular movement against the royally<br />

appointed new government that replaced him in power. The crisis led<br />

to the weakening of Greek democracy. Despite some last-minute efforts<br />

to normalize the situation, a breakdown occurred with the coup<br />

of 21 April 1967.<br />

Originally an interwar liberal who turned into an anticommunist<br />

before becoming an antiright crusader, Georgios Papandreou is best<br />

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132 • PAPANDREOU, GEORGIOS A.<br />

remembered for expressing the popular demand for a less restricted<br />

social and political life in Greece in the 1960s. Probably the best<br />

political orator Greece has seen in modern times, Papandreou was<br />

often hostage to his own rhetoric and a growing distance between<br />

words and deeds.<br />

PAPANDREOU, GEORGIOS A. (1952– ). Born in St. Paul, Minnesota,<br />

Georgios Papandreou has been the leader of the Panhellenic<br />

Socialist Movement (PASOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima), the<br />

main opposition party in Greece, since February 2004. Coming from<br />

the distinguished Papandreou political dynasty, with a grandfather<br />

and father who were prime ministers, Papandreou has struggled to<br />

modernize and revive his father’s party that had ruled Greece for 19<br />

years between 1981 and 2004.<br />

Papandreou was brought up and educated abroad, and entered politics<br />

in 1981 when his father, Andreas Papandreou, won a landslide<br />

victory for PASOK. He served in several posts, advocated a series of<br />

progressive reforms, and excelled as foreign minister between 1999 and<br />

2004. In that post, Papandreou implemented a complete reorientation of<br />

Greek foreign policy toward engagement and friendship with Turkey.<br />

His popularity catapulted him into the party leadership. In 2006, he<br />

was elected president of Socialist International. However, fighting with<br />

the party elders and an unresponsive establishment has proved both<br />

troublesome and frustrating. In the meantime, unlike his distinguished<br />

forefathers, he has often appeared as an elitist, often disconnected with<br />

the average Greek voter and his concerns. Overall, his tenure so far has<br />

been difficult. See also PAPANDREOU, GEORGIOS.<br />

PAPANIKOLAOU, GEORGE (1883–1962). Born in Kyme in Evia,<br />

George Papanikolaou was an eminent doctor and researcher and<br />

Greece’s most famous scientist in the 20th century. While working<br />

in the United States, he invented the Pap smear or Pap test for<br />

the early detection of cervical cancer. He died in New Jersey in the<br />

United States.<br />

PARLIAMENT. The Parliament of Greece, called Vouli, is unicameral<br />

and has 300 members elected for a maximum of a four-year term.<br />

Greece is a parliamentary democracy, which means that the execu-<br />

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PAUL, KING <strong>OF</strong> GREECE • 133<br />

tive needs to enjoy the confidence of a majority of parliamentarians.<br />

Most members of Parliament are elected by the people in districts<br />

that vary greatly in size, as constituencies, with the exception of<br />

Athens and Thessaloniki, coincide, more or less, with administrative<br />

boundaries. Twelve members are elected by national lists depending<br />

on each party’s strength. The electoral law is fairly proportional with<br />

a strong bias in favor of the first party. To enter Parliament, a party<br />

needs to cross a 3 percent threshold in the national vote. Since 1974,<br />

there have been three to five political parties in Parliament, with the<br />

two dominant being New Democracy (ND; Nea Dimokratia) and the<br />

Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko<br />

Kinima) that have alternated in power. Thus, Greece can be described<br />

as a kind of a two- party system. Parliament votes on the legislation,<br />

approves the budget, controls the government, and elects the president<br />

of the republic.<br />

PAUL, KING <strong>OF</strong> GREECE (1901–1964). Born in Athens, King<br />

Paul ascended to the throne in 1947 after the death of his brother,<br />

George II, during the Greek Civil War. He was the third son of King<br />

Constantine I. He was married to Frederika in 1938 and had three<br />

children, the future King Constantine II, Queen Sophia of Spain,<br />

and Princess Irene. He oversaw the successful conclusion of the Civil<br />

War, the establishment of a guarded democracy, and the launching<br />

of the country’s economic program during the 1950s. Mild-mannered<br />

and cautious, Paul was a good reader of politics and well liked.<br />

Nevertheless, he did intervene in politics when he thought it necessary.<br />

He unsuccessfully resisted the entrance into politics of Marshal<br />

Alexandros Papagos, afraid that the latter would be too independent<br />

minded, and twice changed the course of modern Greek history: first,<br />

by appointing the young and dynamic Konstantinos Karamanlis to<br />

the premiership in 1955 following Papagos’ death, circumventing the<br />

elders of Papagos’ party, and second, in 1963, by dismissing Karamanlis<br />

and favoring the coming to power of Georgios Papandreou<br />

and his Center Union (Enosis Kentrou). He gave in to Papandreou’s<br />

repeated requests for early elections, for the appointment of a nonpartisan<br />

government to hold these elections, and, when these elections<br />

proved inconclusive, King Paul agreed to the holding of a second<br />

election in 1964, which Papandreou easily won.<br />

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134 • PELOPONNESUS<br />

PELOPONNESUS. Surrounded by sea and connected with the Greek<br />

mainland by two bridges, one over the canal of Corinth and the other<br />

in Rio at the western entrance of the Bay of Corinth, Peloponnesus is<br />

a large peninsula in the shape of a maple leaf. Located in the southern<br />

part of mainland Greece, Peloponnesus is, in a sense, its historical<br />

cradle. With a total surface area of 21,439 square kilometers and<br />

a population of 1,086,935, Peloponnesus is a region of spectacular<br />

beauty and great physical diversity. It has tall mountains, which in<br />

the Taygetos range reach an altitude of 2,407 meters, small valleys,<br />

coastal fertile plains, large bays, long beaches, and sharp capes.<br />

Divided into seven districts, Peloponnesus’ largest city is Patras,<br />

Greece’s western port to Italy; other urban centers are Tripolis, Kalamata,<br />

Pyrgos, and Corinth.<br />

Ancient civilizations have always flourished in Peloponnesus:<br />

first, the Mycenaean and then the Classical, with Sparta as the military<br />

hegemony that defeated Athens in the famous Peloponnesian<br />

War (431–404 BCE) described by Thucydides. Peloponnesus was<br />

part of the Roman and Byzantine empires. Following the Fourth<br />

Crusade, a small Hellenic kingdom based in Mystras, in the Peloponnesus,<br />

flourished and was ruled by the Palaeologoi family. Before<br />

succumbing to the Turks in 1460, Mystras provided for a short-lived<br />

but interesting Greek renaissance led by the neoplatonic philosopher<br />

Georgios Gemistos, better known as Plethon.<br />

Having developed a tradition of self-government under the Ottomans,<br />

Peloponnesus was the center of the national Revolution<br />

of 1821 and provided the bulk of the revolutionary forces. This is<br />

where all the national revolutionary assemblies took place and where<br />

the provisional government was based. However, after the arrival<br />

of King Otto, the Greek capital was moved northwards to Athens,<br />

although Peloponnesus continued to provide the backbone of the<br />

original kingdom of Greece, prior to its expansion into Macedonia<br />

in 1912. In the late 19th century, currant production and trade<br />

fostered some economic development, but its decline forced many<br />

Peloponnesians to emigrate, mainly to the United States. During the<br />

political crises of the 20th century, Peloponnesus found itself mostly<br />

on the side of the royalists and anticommunists. Nevertheless, since<br />

the 1970s, the Greek socialists of the Panhellenic Socialist Movement<br />

(PASOK; Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima) have had a strong<br />

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POLITICAL PARTIES • 135<br />

hold over the western districts of the region. Today, Peloponnesus<br />

lives mainly through agriculture, tourism, and the remittances of its<br />

people living in Athens and abroad.<br />

PLASTIRAS, NIKOLAOS (1881–1953). Born in Vounesi, currently<br />

known as Morfovouni, in Karditsa in Thessaly, Nikolaos<br />

Plastiras was a military officer who fought bravely in the Balkan<br />

Wars and World War I. He particularly distinguished himself in<br />

the Asia Minor campaign, advancing the furthest eastwards and<br />

then, when the front collapsed, retreating in an orderly manner<br />

with his troops, saving the lives of thousands of fleeing Greeks in<br />

the process. As soon as hostilities ended, he led a military coup demanding<br />

the expulsion of King Constantine I and the punishment<br />

of the culprits of the Asia Minor catastrophe. Having supervised<br />

the establishment of a republic, Plastiras temporarily withdrew<br />

from politics. Fearing that the anti-Venizelists were plotting the<br />

return of the monarchy, he staged a failed coup in 1933 and supported<br />

another one in 1935, after which he was exiled abroad.<br />

Following the December affair in 1944, he was asked to lead<br />

the Greek government in January 1945. During his brief tenure,<br />

he signed the Varkiza Agreement in an attempt to bring peace to<br />

the country. After the Civil War ended in 1949, Plastiras led two<br />

coalition governments between 1950 and 1952. He attempted to<br />

limit political oppression while liberalizing and providing for the<br />

poor. Despite his efforts to overcome the deep wounds of war and<br />

fratricide, he was forced to compromise and had the communist<br />

Nikos Beloyannis executed. Plastiras is generally recognized as a<br />

true patriot who lived spartanly and died in Athens in poverty, an<br />

honest public man of the highest integrity.<br />

POLITICAL PARTIES. Greece is a party democracy. Political parties<br />

permeate all aspects of public life in ways, and to a degree, rarely<br />

found in other mature Western democracies. Greek civil society is<br />

dominated by parties. This is the result of a long historical process<br />

and the specific characteristics of its democratization after 1974. In<br />

one sense, this is also an unexpected development as Greek constitutions<br />

have said very little about parties and have aimed at regulating<br />

the nation’s political life without reference to parties.<br />

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136 • POLITICAL PARTIES<br />

Parties began to form already during the revolution and the War<br />

of Independence in the 1820s. At that time, Greeks were divided into<br />

military and civilian factions or according to their place of origin. After<br />

the establishment of an independent state, three parties came into<br />

existence—the English, the French, and the Russian—sponsored by<br />

the ambassadors of the three powers under whose protection the new<br />

state was established. The English party led by an early constitutionalist,<br />

Alexandros Mavrokordatos, advocated liberal reforms. However,<br />

it was the French party, under the leadership of early populist<br />

Ioannis Kolettis that dominated Greek politics after the constitutional<br />

uprising of 1843. As Greece progressively emancipated itself, the old<br />

parties gave place to new ones. Throughout the 19th century, parties<br />

remained volatile coalitions centered on a strong leader with an<br />

eclectic ideology and a weak national organization.<br />

The first modern party with massive popular support, a strong<br />

national organizational apparatus, and a coherent ideology was the<br />

Liberal Party, founded by Eleftherios Venizelos after 1910. However,<br />

it was their rivals to the right who persevered first as a Peoples’<br />

Party (PP; Laikon Komma, LK), then as the Greek Rally (GR; Ellinikos<br />

Synagermo, ES), the National Radical Union (NRU; Ethniki<br />

Rizospastiki Enosis, ERE), and after 1974, as the New Democracy<br />

(ND; Nea Dimokratia) Party. After the collapse of the Venizelist<br />

republic in the 1930s, the liberal center remained disunited until the<br />

rise of a new center-left under the charismatic leadership of Andreas<br />

Papandreou and his Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK;<br />

Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima), which came to power in 1981.<br />

PASOK has been the embodiment of a catchall party. Thanks to its<br />

flexibility and adaptability, it remained in office for 19 full years.<br />

All these parties have been dominated by strong leaders. The only<br />

exception has been the Communist Party of Greece (CPG; Kommounistiko<br />

Komma Elladas, KKE), which has been driven mainly by<br />

an orthodox and unyielding ideology and a well-structured organization<br />

across the country and most social sectors.<br />

The role of political parties in Greek life has been much debated.<br />

While they have been generally recognized as essential for the functioning<br />

of democracy and the formulation of broad policy consensus,<br />

they have been resented for the suffocating control they exercise<br />

over much of the state machinery, including the civil service and<br />

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PUBLIC POWER COMPANY • 137<br />

the universities. Not even the justice system and the military have<br />

been immune to their influence. Party connections are often more<br />

important than any merit for being hired, promoted, or awarded a<br />

public contract. In recognition of the need to curtail their corrupting<br />

influence, Greek lawmakers have introduced new independent public<br />

agencies with the aim of regulating some aspects of public life without<br />

political interference. Nevertheless, parties continue to be strong<br />

and attract the loyalty of millions of Greeks, who view them as a<br />

quick and easy way toward social or professional advancement. See<br />

also CENTER UNION; COALITION <strong>OF</strong> THE RADICAL LEFT;<br />

LEGAL SYSTEM; PARLIAMENT.<br />

POLYTECHNIO (NATIONAL TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY <strong>OF</strong><br />

ATHENS). The Engineering School of Athens, or Metsovio Polytechnio,<br />

is a prestigious institution of higher learning. Founded in<br />

1836, Polytechnio has provided Greece with its engineering elites.<br />

It is named “Metsovio” to honor its benefactors who came from the<br />

town of Metsovo in Epirus. Politically, it became famous when a<br />

student revolt took place in its downtown campus on 14 November<br />

1973 that was ended by the military junta in a bloodbath three<br />

days later. The revolt signaled the unpopularity of the colonels, the<br />

failure of their efforts at liberalization, and the Greeks’ longing for<br />

freedom and democracy. The student protest had similarities with<br />

student movements in France, Thailand, and elsewhere. Although<br />

leftist in orientation, the communists were initially suspicious of it.<br />

The immediate effect of the revolt was the imposition of martial law<br />

followed, on 25 November 1973, by a hard-liners’ coup within the<br />

coup led by Brigadier Dimitris Ioannides. Ioannides would go on to<br />

organize a coup against President Makarios of Cyprus on 15 July<br />

1974, which led to the Turkish invasion of Cyprus on 20 July 1974.<br />

See also CYPRUS QUESTION.<br />

PUBLIC POWER COMPANY (PPC; DIMOSIA EPIHIRISI<br />

HILEKTRISMOU, DEH). Greece’s public power company and<br />

largest industrial firm, DEH was a monopoly until 2001. DEH’s<br />

stock has recently been floated on the Athens and London stock exchanges,<br />

and the company is struggling to reform in order to respond<br />

to the demands of its shareholders and of its private, foreign, and<br />

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138 • RALLIS, GEORGIOS<br />

domestic competitors. DEH’s spectacular rise in the 1950s signaled<br />

Greece’s determination to industrialize and modernize its archaic<br />

economy. DEH took full advantage of the country’s limited energy<br />

resources, mainly lignite, found in western Macedonia. It expanded<br />

its network throughout Greece, taking over small local producers so<br />

that in less than 20 years, 99.9 percent of the Greek population enjoyed<br />

cheap and reliable electricity.<br />

DEH continues to dominate the Greek market, providing close to<br />

90 percent of domestic electricity consumption, with the rest coming<br />

from private and foreign producers. DEH relies mostly on thermoelectric<br />

production. Around 60 percent of its production comes<br />

from lignite, 20 percent from oil and natural gas, and the rest from<br />

hydropower and a few renewable sources. DEH’s success, despite its<br />

bureaucratic structure and powerful unions, should be attributed to<br />

the abundance of cheap lignite that, for decades, DEH used at no cost<br />

despite the environmental pollution it caused. Today, as new competitors<br />

that use natural gas and state-subsidized renewable sources<br />

enter the market, and pollution fees are imposed, DEH, as an old state<br />

behemoth, is faced with an unprecedented challenge of restructuring<br />

and streamlining.<br />

– R –<br />

RALLIS, GEORGIOS (1918–2006). Born in Athens, Georgios Rallis<br />

came from a very prominent political family. Both of his grandfathers,<br />

Dimitris Rallis and Georgios Theotokis, had been prime ministers,<br />

and so was his uncle, Ioannis Theotokis. His father, Ioannis<br />

Rallis, was the prime minister appointed by the Nazis during the German<br />

occupation of Greece in World War II. After the war, Ioannis<br />

Rallis was convicted and died in prison.<br />

Starting in 1950, Rallis was elected to Parliament on the side of<br />

the conservatives and their several postwar incarnations, first with<br />

the Peoples’ Party (PP; Laikon Komma, LK), then with the Greek<br />

Rally (GR; Ellinikos Synagermo, ES), and finally with the National<br />

Radical Union (NRU; Ethniki Rizospastiki Enosis, ERE). He disagreed<br />

with Konstantinos Karamanlis in 1958 but was reelected in<br />

1961. During the junta, he was arrested, imprisoned, displaced, and<br />

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confined to house arrest. In 1974, he expressed his preference for the<br />

monarchy. After 1974, he became a prominent member of Karamanlis’<br />

government. He introduced major educational reform and, later,<br />

oversaw the final stage of the negotiations for the entry of Greece<br />

into the European Community (EC). In 1980, when Karamanlis left<br />

the premiership and the chairmanship of the New Democracy (ND;<br />

Nea Dimokratia) Party to become the president of the republic, Rallis<br />

was elected to be his successor.<br />

Although suffering from declining popularity, Prime Minister<br />

Rallis distinguished himself for his moderation and liberalism. His<br />

achievements included the wise stewardship of Greece toward membership<br />

into the EC in January 1981. When defeated in October 1981<br />

by the incoming socialists of Andreas Papandreou, he oversaw a<br />

smooth transition of power. In that regard, he contributed greatly to<br />

the consolidation of Greek democracy. Until 1993 he kept his seat<br />

in Parliament. In his later years, his popularity increased and he was<br />

generally recognized as a voice of reason and wisdom. He died in<br />

Athens in 2006.<br />

REBETIKO. See MUSIC.<br />

REFUGEES • 139<br />

REFUGEES. It is often said that Greece is a nation of refugees. It is estimated<br />

that one in four Greeks has family origins from outside present-day<br />

Greece. Ruled by empires for centuries and scattered across<br />

southeastern Europe, the eastern Mediterranean, and the Black<br />

Sea, Greeks both benefited and suffered greatly from the advance<br />

of nationalism. After 1830, a historical process began according to<br />

which the Greek state expanded as the Greek nation contracted. This<br />

led, after a century and a half, to a fairly homogeneous Greek nationstate.<br />

Greeks came to the homeland from a variety of destinations,<br />

including the Slavic lands and Romania to the north and Egypt to the<br />

south. By far, the largest wave of refugees came from Asia Minor after<br />

the defeat of the Greek army in 1922. Despite the initial hardship<br />

of their relocation, refugee Greeks have been fairly well integrated<br />

and have had a great impact on the development of modern Greece.<br />

They shifted Greek politics to the left, provided the skills and the<br />

labor for the industrialization and the overall modernization of the<br />

Greek economy, and cultivated the arts, literature, and culture of<br />

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140 • REPUBLIC<br />

the nation. After the fall of communism and the dissolution of the<br />

Soviet Union in 1991, an additional 150,000 Pontian Greeks from<br />

Georgia and Central Asia arrived.<br />

Despite this history, Greece remains quite unwelcoming to nonethnic<br />

Greek refugees, granting asylum to only a miniscule number each<br />

year. This is due to a restrictive understanding of citizenship on the<br />

basis of traditional jus sanguinis. Greek naturalization law sanctions<br />

ethnicity irrespective of the place of birth. Thus, while overgenerous<br />

to distant Greeks from afar, the Greek law and administrative practices<br />

are very restrictive to any foreigner who seeks to acquire Greek<br />

citizenship, including refugees who need protection.<br />

REPUBLIC. Although the original constitution of the Greek Revolution<br />

provided for a republic, with an elected and not an inherited head<br />

of state, Greece has been a kingdom during most of its modern history.<br />

Since 1974, Greece has been a republic, for a third time. Greeks<br />

voted two-to-one in favor of abolishing the monarchy in a popular<br />

referendum on 8 December 1974. According to the current Constitution,<br />

designed by Konstantinos Karamanlis and introduced on 11<br />

June 1975, the Hellenic republic is headed by a president. The president<br />

is elected indirectly by an enhanced majority in Parliament.<br />

The president has very little authority since most of the power lies<br />

with the prime minister.<br />

Republicanism remains widely popular and, more or less, unchallenged.<br />

This was not always the case. A previous attempt at<br />

consolidating a republic in the interwar period failed. A republic<br />

was introduced in 1924 after the Asia Minor catastrophe for which<br />

King Constantine I and the royalists were largely blamed. However,<br />

a great part of the electorate remained committed to the monarchy.<br />

Following a period of instability, King George II’s throne was<br />

returned to him in 1935. Following World War II, republicanism<br />

remained divisive. While it was strongly supported by the left, the<br />

right—together with Great Britain—lent its support to the monarchy,<br />

believing it to be the best guarantee to keep Greece in the Western<br />

camp. The irony was that it was the colonels—who ruled Greece<br />

dictatorially between 1967 and 1974 and came in conflict with King<br />

Constantine II—who abolished the monarchy and established an<br />

undemocratic republic in 1973.<br />

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REVOLUTION • 141<br />

REVOLUTION. There had been many revolts against Ottoman rule<br />

prior to 1821. They all had a local character and were quickly suppressed.<br />

The most important occurred in 1870 and was instigated by<br />

Catherine the Great of Russia, who sent a naval force to Peloponnesus<br />

led by Theodore and Alex Orlof. The revolt that followed<br />

was quickly put down by Ottoman forces, at a great cost to the local<br />

population and economy.<br />

The national Revolution of 1821 was different in character and<br />

scope. It was prepared well in advance and supported by an extended<br />

organizational network that spread from the Black Sea to Crete, encompassing<br />

most of the Greek world of the time. There were many<br />

factors that led to the revolution and contributed to its final success.<br />

By the early 19th century, the Greek world was agitating as it<br />

was greatly affected by the French Revolution, the Napoleonic wars,<br />

and the spirit of the Enlightenment that they carried to the east. An<br />

emerging Greek trade bourgeoisie, based on a few Aegean islands<br />

and in several diaspora communities in Trieste, Vienna, Odessa, and<br />

elsewhere, together with the old Fanar-based Greek aristocracy of<br />

Istanbul, lent their support toward a modern, secular, and nationally<br />

minded education. This quickly grew into a full-blown nation-state<br />

building program. Moreover, the declining authority of the sultan<br />

and the internal crisis of the Ottoman Empire—proved, for example,<br />

by the rebellion of Ali Pasha of Jannina—created the framework for<br />

the outbreak of what became the first truly national uprising in the<br />

Ottoman east. This uprising formed the first independent successor<br />

nation-state out of the Ottoman Empire, initiating a process that gave<br />

rise to a number of Balkan and Middle East states and continues to<br />

the present day in places like Kosovo, Montenegro, and Cyprus.<br />

After the establishment of the Greek kingdom, revolutions did not<br />

cease to occur. Their goal, however, was no longer the independence<br />

of the Greek nation but rather the reconfiguration of the Greek polity.<br />

Although people did participate, they were often spearheaded by<br />

army units and led by military officers. The first revolution of this<br />

kind took place on 3 September 1843, and demanded a constitution<br />

from King Otto, who until then had insisted on ruling as an absolute<br />

monarch. A following revolution forced Otto to leave Greece on 23<br />

October 1862. On 15 August 1909, military officers proclaimed what<br />

became known as the Goudi revolution that brought Eleftherios<br />

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142 • ROUMELI<br />

Venizelos to power. The most recent revolutionary agitation occurred<br />

in November 1973, during the colonels’ military dictatorship, when<br />

students and sympathizers gathered at the downtown campus of Polytechnio<br />

in defiance of military rule. In recent years, the consolidation<br />

of democracy has diffused the revolutionary fervor, although Greeks<br />

continue to take to the streets, with a characteristic frequency, in support<br />

of various causes. See also ARMED FORCES; JUNTA.<br />

ROUMELI. See CENTRAL GREECE (STEREA ELLADA).<br />

RUSSIA (RELATIONS WITH). The rise of Russia as a major European<br />

power in the 18th century changed the power balance in the<br />

Black Sea and the Balkans, forcing the retreat of the Ottomans<br />

southwards. Russia played a crucial role in the making of modern<br />

Greece. In 1770, Russia, under Catherine the Great, sponsored an<br />

unsuccessful Greek revolt against the Ottomans. With the treaty of<br />

Küçük Kaynarca in 1774, Russia emerged as a protector of Ottoman<br />

Orthodox Christians while the Greeks were allowed to sail unimpeded<br />

under the Russian flag.<br />

Much of the preparation for the Revolution of 1821 took place<br />

in Russia, and Filiki Eteria was founded in Odessa. The revolution<br />

itself broke out first in the Danubian provinces where the Ottoman<br />

army needed Russian permission to enter. Although Russia opposed<br />

this initial disturbance of the post-Napoleonic peace, it participated<br />

in the destruction of the Ottoman–Egyptian fleet in Navarino in 1827<br />

and won the war against the Ottomans two years later, forcing the<br />

sultan to concede to Greek independence. Both leaders of the revolution,<br />

Dimitrios and Alexandros Ypsilantis, and the first governor of<br />

Greece, Count Ioannis Capodistrias, had worked for the czar and,<br />

after independence, a Russian party competed for power against an<br />

English party and a French party.<br />

Until the middle of the 19th century, Russia commanded the widespread<br />

sympathy of Greeks as a fellow Christian Orthodox nation<br />

and the Turks’ worst enemy. However, the presence of the powerful<br />

British fleet in the Mediterranean kept Greece in the British orbit,<br />

as was proven during the Crimean War (1853–1856). In the second<br />

half of the 19th century, Russia supported the national aspirations of<br />

its fellow Slavs in the Balkans, mainly the Bulgarians. After another<br />

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SEFERIS, GEORGIOS • 143<br />

military success against the Ottomans, in 1878 Russia imposed the<br />

creation of a greater Bulgaria, which alarmed the Greeks. The Russian-sponsored<br />

Treaty of San Stefano was not implemented thanks to<br />

British intervention.<br />

In both World War I and World War II, Greece and Russia<br />

fought on the same side. However, the Bolshevik Revolution complicated<br />

the Greek–Russian relationship. Greece sent a small expeditionary<br />

force to Crimea in 1919 during the Russian civil war in support<br />

of the Whites while the Bolsheviks provided Kemal Atatürk and his<br />

nationalists with arms and support in the war against the Greeks. The<br />

newly founded Communist Party of Greece (CPG; Kommounistiko<br />

Komma Elladas, KKE) was under Soviet control, while the Soviet<br />

Union, in the interwar period, lent its support to Macedonianism and<br />

the creation of an independent Macedonia within Greek territory as<br />

well. The prestige of the Soviet Union recovered as a result of the<br />

war against the Germans after June 1941. However, Stalin agreed to<br />

Churchill’s demand in 1944 to keep postwar Greece under British<br />

influence and did not give Greek communists much support in their<br />

insurgency after World War II.<br />

During the Cold War, relations remained cool and started to<br />

warm up only in the 1970s. After the collapse of the Soviet Union,<br />

most of the remaining Soviet Greeks, mainly from the Caucasus<br />

and Central Asia, were repatriated to Greece, having suffered many<br />

hardships. While Russia continues to promote its patriarchate as<br />

the world leader of the Christian Orthodox community, to the detriment<br />

of the Greek-controlled Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul<br />

(Constantinople), Greeks remain sympathetic to Russia as the two<br />

countries share no common border and Greece views Russia as a useful<br />

counterbalance to Turkey and the United States. Today, Greece<br />

is becoming a popular tourist and real-estate investment spot for the<br />

Russian nouveaux riches and increasingly dependent on Russian energy.<br />

See also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

– S –<br />

SEFERIS, GEORGIOS (1900–1971). Born in Smyrna (Izmir), Georgios<br />

Seferis was a distinguished poet and a Nobel laureate (1963). He<br />

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144 • SERBIA<br />

entered the Greek foreign service in 1927 and served in various posts,<br />

including the Greek embassy in London during the upheaval over<br />

Cyprus. He discretely, but unhesitatingly, made public his disagreement<br />

with the military junta in 1969.<br />

Seferis’ poetry takes full advantage of the modern Greek language.<br />

It is more cerebral than emotional and heavy with symbolism<br />

rather than naturalistic imagery. His writing is considered clear but<br />

difficult. Seferis’ work bears the experience of the uprooting from<br />

Asia Minor as well as his cosmopolitanism and foreign influences<br />

from his traveling during his diplomatic career. Seferis opened new<br />

horizons and modernized 20th-century Greek literature by establishing<br />

a firm dialogue with its Western counterparts. He died in Athens<br />

in 1971.<br />

SERBIA (RELATIONS WITH). Traditionally, relations between<br />

Greece and Serbia have been very cordial as the two nations fought<br />

on the same side in both World War I and World War II. In addition,<br />

Greece and Serbia, while sharing a common Christian Orthodox<br />

faith, have currently no common border over which to fight.<br />

Greeks, on the way to their revolution in 1821, were inspired by the<br />

successful revolt of the Serbs against the Ottomans, first in 1804 and<br />

then in 1815, and the creation of a Serbian autonomous principality. In<br />

later years, Greece saw Serbia as a useful counterbalance to expansionist<br />

Bulgaria, especially regarding the division of Ottoman Macedonia.<br />

During the Second Balkan War, Greece and Serbia closely cooperated<br />

in defeating Bulgaria. During the interwar period, both Greece and<br />

Serbia-turned-Yugoslavia were satisfied with the postwar settlement<br />

and were allies in defending the status quo, although at some point<br />

Belgrade demanded free access to the port of Thessaloniki. During<br />

World War II, a strong partisan resistance movement grew in Greek<br />

and Serbian lands. However, after the war, while Greece remained<br />

Western, Serbia/Yugoslavia became communist.<br />

When Yugoslavia started disintegrating in the early 1990s, Greece<br />

remained committed to the preservation of Yugoslav unity, afraid of<br />

any forceful border changes in the region. Soon, however, Greek policy<br />

was increasingly interpreted as supporting Slobodan Milosevic’s<br />

strategy of “Serbianizing” the Yugoslav federation and later with his<br />

bid for a Greater Serbia. Some Westerners became alarmed by what<br />

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SHIPPING • 145<br />

appeared as a Greek–Serbian axis connected to Moscow. Greece,<br />

as a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO),<br />

conceded and participated in the air campaign against Serbian forces,<br />

first in Bosnia in 1995 and then in Serbia proper over Kosovo in<br />

1999. Although Greek public opinion remains deeply sympathetic to<br />

Serbian sensitivities, especially regarding Kosovo, successive Greek<br />

governments have tried to rebalance Greece’s position in the area<br />

taking into account Albanian interests and Western preferences as<br />

well. See also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

SHIPPING. Since ancient times, the Greeks have been a maritime nation,<br />

shaped by and benefiting from the sea. In Ottoman times, under<br />

Russian protection, and later, thanks to the Napoleonic wars, Greek<br />

shipping prospered and provided much of the capital that was needed<br />

for the Revolution of 1821. During the revolutionary war, the Greek<br />

fleet prevented the Ottomans from using the sea to send reinforcements<br />

to their troops fighting the rebels.<br />

After World War II, Greek shipping boomed, helped by American<br />

aid and the growing world trade in oil. Greeks have proved great<br />

masters in what is one of the most competitive, cyclical, and volatile<br />

industries in the world, knowing how to take risks, when to buy<br />

ships, and when to sell them. After the decline in world shipping in<br />

the 1980s, Greek shipping recovered and benefited greatly from the<br />

rise in international cargo rates in the early 2000s.<br />

Today, Greek shipowners control around 16 percent of world shipping,<br />

making Greece the first shipping power in the world. Shipping<br />

earns some 5 percent of Greece’s gross domestic product (GDP) and<br />

employs a total of 160,000 people, or some 3.5 percent of the country’s<br />

total labor force. Only a fraction of them are seamen; the rest are<br />

brokers, insurers, and administrators, based mainly in the port city of<br />

Piraeus, south of Athens. With €14 billion in earnings in 2006, shipping<br />

covered close to one third of the total trade deficit of Greece.<br />

Having amassed great fortunes, many shipowners have turned into<br />

great benefactors. Led by Aristotle Onassis, Stavros Niarchos, Yannis<br />

Latsis, and the Goulandris family, and followed by newer tycoons<br />

such as Panayiotis Tsakos, Vassilis Konstantakopoulos, and Theodoros<br />

Aggelopoulos, they have endowed their Greek homeland with<br />

hospitals, arts centers, museums, and other great works.<br />

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146 • SIMITIS, KOSTAS<br />

SIMITIS, KOSTAS (1936– ). Born in Piraeus, the port city of Athens,<br />

Kostas Simitis became involved in radical politics in the 1960s.<br />

During the junta, he participated in the resistance and later joined an<br />

antiregime group led by Andreas Papandreou. In 1974, he was a<br />

founding member of the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK;<br />

Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima). Representing the Europeanist wing<br />

in PASOK, he did not run in the 1981 elections but was appointed<br />

minister of agriculture in the first government of Papandreou, where<br />

he successfully oversaw the introduction of the Common Agricultural<br />

Policy (CAP) in Greek farming.<br />

In 1985, he was elected to Parliament for the first time and, soon<br />

after, Simitis was appointed minister of national economy, with the<br />

purpose of salvaging public finances. During his two-year tenure,<br />

Simitis succeeded in lowering both the deficit and inflation, while<br />

instigating a small investment boom. He resigned his post after Papandreou<br />

dismissed his income policy in Parliament in December<br />

1987 and when it became clear that Simitis’ frugality was eroding<br />

PASOK’s popularity.<br />

In subsequent years, he remained cautiously critical of the leadership<br />

of Papandreou and positioned himself for his eventual succession.<br />

The opportunity came in January 1996, when a bedridden<br />

Papandreou resigned from the premiership. Against two other contenders,<br />

Simitis succeeded in the second round, with a slim majority,<br />

and was elected as Greece’s new prime minister by PASOK’s<br />

parliamentary group. He went on to win two consecutive elections in<br />

September 1996 and in April 2000.<br />

In his eight years in office, Simitis sought to modernize Greece<br />

and his party. His first term focused on preparing Greece for entry<br />

into the European Monetary Union (EMU) and adopting the euro. A<br />

few mild economic reforms and a tight fiscal and monetary policy<br />

produced a gradual improvement of the economy.<br />

Simitis’ greatest achievement was in foreign policy. Following<br />

two crises with Turkey, one in January 1996 over the Imia islet in<br />

eastern Aegean and the other in February 1999 over the capture of<br />

Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan, Simitis, together with his foreign<br />

minister, Georgios Papandreou, initiated a policy of constructive<br />

engagement with Turkey. He lifted Greece’s veto on Turkey’s<br />

rapprochement with the European Union (EU); signed the Helsinki<br />

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S<strong>OF</strong>OULIS, THEMISTOKLIS • 147<br />

agreement; facilitated trade, investment, and cultural exchanges<br />

between the two neighbors; and secured Cyprus’ entry into the EU.<br />

After decades of rivalry and near-wars, Greece under Simitis moved<br />

decisively and successfully to resolve its strategic problem with Turkey<br />

through Europe.<br />

In his second term, Simitis’ government became entangled in a<br />

number of unpopular controversies, including a failed attempt at<br />

pension reform and a disagreement with the Orthodox Church of<br />

Greece over the elimination of religious affiliation from state-issued<br />

identity cards. Much of his attention was devoted to the successful<br />

preparation of the Athens 2004 Olympic Games, while accusations<br />

of corruption proliferated.<br />

Simitis was faced with two handicaps. Greeks never truly warmed<br />

to him due to his particular professorial stiffness. In addition, he was<br />

never fully accepted by his own party. His modernizing rhetoric and<br />

his Germanic, “uncharismatic” posture were in stark contrast to his<br />

flamboyant predecessor, Andreas Papandreou, and alienated much of<br />

the rank and file of PASOK. On the eve of the 2004 elections, Simitis<br />

handed the presidency of the party to his popular foreign minister,<br />

Georgios Papandreou, in an attempt to contain voters’ discontent.<br />

Simitis was widely respected throughout Europe and recognized<br />

as a hardworking and meticulous manager who oversaw the further<br />

Europeanization of Greece and the transition of Greek politics from<br />

a heroic and populist phase in the past into a more consensus and<br />

result-oriented era in the present.<br />

S<strong>OF</strong>OULIS, THEMISTOKLIS (1860–1949). Born in Vathi in the<br />

island of Samos in the eastern Aegean, Themistoklis Sofoulis left<br />

Samos, which had previously been autonomous under Ottoman<br />

suzerainty, for Greece in 1913, following the Balkan Wars. As a<br />

center-left liberal, he joined forces with Eleftherios Venizelos and<br />

participated in his government. He served, several times, as Speaker<br />

of the House. He was distinguished for his moderation and ability to<br />

speak to all sides, including the communists, despite the polarization<br />

of interwar politics in Greece. During the Greek Civil War, from 7<br />

September 1947 and until his death on 24 June 1949 in Athens, Sofoulis<br />

headed a coalition government of conservatives and liberals.<br />

Despite his old age, his contribution to the victory of the government<br />

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148 • SOLOMOS, DIONYSIOS<br />

forces was essential as his presence and policies while in power undercut<br />

potential liberal and center-left support for the rebels.<br />

SOLOMOS, DIONYSIOS (1798–1857). Born in the Ionian island<br />

of Zakynthos (Zante), Dionysios Solomos is recognized as Greece’s<br />

national poet. Despite his original education in Italian and the fact<br />

that he did not live in independent Greece but in the British-held<br />

Ionian Republic, Solomos was an early literary genius for a nation<br />

that had just begun experiencing independence. He wrote in demotic<br />

Greek, making use of the folk and Cretan literary traditions. In 1823<br />

he composed his most famous Hymn to Liberty, which provided the<br />

lyrics for the Greek national anthem. He died in Corfu.<br />

SOVIET UNION. See RUSSIA.<br />

SPORTS. Athletics were invented in the Greek lands and it is in Crete<br />

where a Minoan mosaic depicts the first scene ever recorded in the<br />

history of sports. In classical times, sports competitions became an<br />

integral part of public life and the Olympic Games grew into the<br />

largest and most celebrated gathering of the ancient Greek world.<br />

In modern times, sports grew slowly due to poverty and lack of<br />

interest and support by the state. Spiros Louis, who won the marathon<br />

in the first modern Olympics in Athens in 1896, was Greece’s<br />

first sports hero. During the interwar period, soccer was firmly<br />

established as Greece’s most popular sport. After World War II,<br />

Greece had some sporadic successes in sailing, wrestling, weightlifting,<br />

and track. The first major Greek victory came when the national<br />

basketball team won the European Championship in Athens in 1987.<br />

Further successes followed as sports grew in popularity in parallel<br />

with the growing prosperity of the country.<br />

As of the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, Greece started winning<br />

several medals and was placed within the top 10 or 20 countries with<br />

the most Olympic medals won. At the Athens Olympics of 2004,<br />

Greece won 16 medals, but only four in Beijing in 2008. In the same<br />

year, Greece won the European soccer championship, the greatest<br />

sports triumph the country has ever experienced.<br />

There have been three major reasons for these successes. As the<br />

country has prospered, Greeks have focused more on an athletic life-<br />

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TERRORISM • 149<br />

style; since the 1980s, the state has taken a more systematic interest<br />

in cultivating sports and champions, not always benevolently, as the<br />

proliferation of doping scandals often shows; and the geopolitical<br />

changes of 1989–1991 brought home many great East European<br />

and expatriate athletes. See also DIMAS, PYRROS; DOMAZOS,<br />

MIMIS; GALIS, NICK.<br />

– T –<br />

TERRORISM. Up until the 1970s, terrorism was largely absent from<br />

Greece. Terrorism as a form of violent political practice appeared<br />

in the aftermath of the fall of the junta in 1974 as a byproduct of<br />

democratization. For a few radicals, the democratic transition was<br />

not genuine; even Andreas Papandreou initially accused the incoming<br />

government led by Konstantinos Karamanlis as “a change of the<br />

guards.” Within this political climate of extreme cynicism and total<br />

opposition to the “establishment,” the use of violence as a way of<br />

facilitating social change was legitimized. It is no coincidence that<br />

Greece, like other societies that have encountered terrorism, including<br />

Germany, Italy, Spain and Japan, had experienced a period of<br />

state oppression in the past.<br />

The best-known Greek terrorist group is November 17th, a small,<br />

closed, secretive, leftist organization, formed in 1973 and, supposedly,<br />

disbanded in 2002 by the police. November 17th was responsible<br />

for 103 attacks and the assassinations of 23 people. Although<br />

it attacked American and Turkish citizens and interests, exploiting<br />

Greek feelings after the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974, the<br />

main targets were Greek businessmen, politicians, and publishers<br />

of the center-right, including an influential member of parliament,<br />

Pavlos Bakoyannis, who was gunned down outside his office on 26<br />

September 1989.<br />

November 17th took its name from the date in 1973 when the military<br />

dictatorship crashed the student revolt in Polytechnio, the Athens<br />

Engineering School. It used a mixture of Marxist, anti-American<br />

and populist rhetoric against the rich and the powerful and tried to<br />

capitalize on the Greeks’ resentments against an unresponsive and<br />

selfish state. The consolidation of democracy, the fall of communism<br />

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150 • THEODORAKIS, MIKIS<br />

and the economic boom of the past decade further weakened the occasional<br />

political support that November 17th enjoyed within a small<br />

part of the Greek public.<br />

On the eve of the Athens 2004 Olympic Games, the Greek police,<br />

after years of failures, mobilized, and arrested many but, certainly<br />

not all, of the members of November 17th. The destruction of the<br />

group, in the summer of 2002, followed years of operational decline<br />

and divergence from the Greek society. It was greeted with relief and<br />

satisfaction by the Greek public and Greece’s allies, especially the<br />

United States.<br />

However, other smaller groups, new and old, with leftist or no ideological<br />

pretensions at all continue to exist and, occasionally, trouble<br />

the authorities. Following the gunning of a Greek youth by a police<br />

officer on 6 December 2008, Greek cities were rocked by two weeks<br />

of demonstrations and riots that caused €100 million in damages.<br />

The inability and unwillingness of the Greek police to secure the<br />

public order has undermined the public’s trust on the Greek state and<br />

demonstrated the popularity that violence continues to enjoy among<br />

many Greeks who feel, rightly or wrongly, disenfranchised by a dysfunctional,<br />

corrupt, and, often, unrepresentative political system.<br />

THEODORAKIS, MIKIS (1925– ). Born in the island of Chios in<br />

the eastern Aegean, Mikis Theodorakis has been Greece’s most<br />

recognized composer and best representative of the cultural revolution<br />

brought by the turbulent 1960s. Using tradition to renew Greek<br />

music, Theodorakis produced many different kinds of works, from<br />

songs and movie scores to symphonies and metasymphonies, some<br />

of which became hugely popular. His syrtaki for the movie Zorba the<br />

Greek was used by the growing tourist industry to define the spirit<br />

of Greece internationally.<br />

Throughout his life, Theodorakis has been a political animal. During<br />

World War II, he fought with the resistance. For much of his<br />

life, he belonged to the left and supported the worldwide oppressed,<br />

while being critical of the foreign policy of the United States, Israel,<br />

and others. He was first elected to Parliament in 1964 and organized<br />

a popular youth movement named after Gregoris Lambrakis, whose<br />

assassination in 1963 shocked Greece. He actively opposed the colonels’<br />

junta. After 1974, Theodorakis and his work became symbols<br />

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THESSALONIKI • 151<br />

of the new free and democratic Greece. In 1989, he joined forces<br />

with the conservatives of New Democracy (ND; Nea Dimokratia).<br />

Theodorakis remains active and popular both in Greece and abroad.<br />

See also CINEMA.<br />

THEOTOKIS, GEORGIOS (1844–1916). Born in Corfu, Georgios<br />

Theotokis distinguished himself as mayor of his native city of Corfu<br />

before becoming minister of the navy and of education and ecclesiastical<br />

affairs with the party of Harilaos Trikoupis. After Trikoupis’<br />

death, Theotokis became the leader of the old faction, heading the<br />

Modernizing Party and becoming a prime minister several times during<br />

the first decade of the 20th century. In many respects, Theotokis<br />

prepared the ground for the future successes of Eleftherios Venizelos<br />

by strengthening the Greek armed forces, public administration,<br />

and the economy. He died in Athens in 1916.<br />

THESSALONIKI. The second-largest Greek city with an approximate<br />

population of 800,000, Thessaloniki was founded by Kassandros, Alexander<br />

the Great’s brother-in-law. It was named after Kassandros’<br />

wife, Alexander’s sister and Philip II’s daughter, Thessaloniki. Well<br />

protected by the long but shallow Thermaikos Bay, situated at the<br />

center of the Macedonian plain on the crossroads of the east-west<br />

Egnatia highway and the northward corridor along the Vardar River<br />

valley, Thessaloniki has always remained an important urban center.<br />

St. Paul visited and preached in the city and wrote two famous letters<br />

to its inhabitants. In the early fourth century CE, the late Roman<br />

coemperor Gallerios endowed the city with a palatial complex, a<br />

hippodrome, and an arch of triumph. During Byzantine times, Thessaloniki<br />

enjoyed the privilege of being the second city of the empire<br />

after Constantinople. In the 13th century CE, under Metropolitan<br />

Grigorios Palamas, Thessaloniki grew into an important religious<br />

center that reinvigorated Greek Orthodox Christianity.<br />

Thessaloniki was seized by the advancing Ottomans in 1430<br />

CE. The city changed dramatically with the arrival of thousands of<br />

Sephardic Jews from Spain after 1492 CE. As the Ottoman age was<br />

coming to a close, Thessaloniki began experiencing great events and<br />

tragedies. The transition from the age of empires to that of nationstates<br />

was particularly traumatic for the city. Thessaloniki is the city<br />

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152 • THESSALY<br />

where Mustafa Kemal, better known as Atatürk, was born in 1881.<br />

In the beginning of the 20th century, Thessaloniki’s Macedonian<br />

hinterland was devastated by the armed conflict between pro-Bulgarian<br />

and pro-Greek paramilitaries. It was in Thessaloniki where the<br />

revolution of the Young Turks took place in 1908 when the Third<br />

Ottoman Army, stationed in the city, revolted against the sultan. This<br />

is also the city to which the previously powerful Sultan Abdul Hamid<br />

was exiled after 1909.<br />

Thessaloniki was taken by the Greeks during the First Balkan<br />

War in October 1912. Five years later, in 1917, a devastating fire<br />

destroyed almost three quarters of the city. During World War I,<br />

Thessaloniki hosted Entente troops, exiled Serbs, and the rebellious<br />

government of National Defense of Eleftherios Venizelos. After the<br />

Asia Minor catastrophe in 1922, Thessaloniki became the home of<br />

thousands of Greek refugees. The cycle of blood peaked and came<br />

to a tragic closure in 1943 when the Nazi Germans gathered and<br />

expelled 97 percent of the city’s Jewish community, sending nearly<br />

65,000 of its inhabitants to their death.<br />

Since World War II, Thessaloniki has grown as a commercial, industrial,<br />

and educational center, hosting Greece’s largest university.<br />

In 1997, Thessaloniki was designated as the cultural capital of Europe.<br />

Since the Cold War ended, Thessaloniki emerged as Greece’s<br />

gateway to its Balkan hinterland, and, with some hesitation, as a<br />

vibrant regional urban center. In particular, the opening of borders<br />

holds the promise of Thessaloniki recovering some of its old status as<br />

a Balkan metropolis, beyond the confinements of nationalism, while<br />

the arrival of East Europeans and other immigrants has revived a certain<br />

multi-cultural tradition that had been lost with World War II.<br />

THESSALY. Surrounded by mountains, Thessaly forms Greece’s<br />

largest plain and its main agricultural region. With a surface area<br />

of 14,036 square kilometers and a population of 740,115, Thessaly<br />

is situated in Central Greece (Sterea Ellada). Prehistoric communities<br />

have been found near the port city of Volos. The Homeric hero<br />

Achilles came from Thessaly.<br />

The region was united with Greece in 1881, following the compromise<br />

reached at the Congress of Berlin, three years earlier, and<br />

Greece became, for the first time since its independence, self-suf-<br />

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THRACE • 153<br />

ficient in cereals and basic foodstuffs. However, the departing Ottoman<br />

landowners quickly sold their large estates, called tsiflikia, to<br />

rich Greeks. Subsequently, the unequal distribution of land caused<br />

rising social tensions. Thessaly’s agrarian question, which radicalized<br />

the local population, was finally solved under the pressure created<br />

by the influx of Asia Minor refugees after 1922. After World<br />

War II, Thessaly prospered as Greece’s breadbasket.<br />

THRACE. Situated in the northeast, Thrace is a region of Greece bordering<br />

Bulgaria to the north and Turkey to the east. It comprises<br />

three districts and has a surface area of 8,578 square kilometers and a<br />

population of 338,147. Greek Thrace is the western part of a broader<br />

historical region. The much larger eastern Thrace lies within Turkey<br />

and is Turkey’s only hold on the continent of Europe.<br />

In antiquity, Thrace remained in the periphery of the Greek world<br />

but in Byzantine times it grew and became Constantinople’s immediate<br />

hinterland. The Macedonian dynasty of the 10th century<br />

CE originally came from Thrace. The Ottoman Turks first landed<br />

in Thrace by conquering Gallipoli in 1354 CE and, soon thereafter,<br />

they made the Thracian city of Adrianople (Edirne) their capital.<br />

Thrace was conquered by Bulgaria in the First Balkan War but its<br />

eastern part was lost to Ottoman Turkey in the Second Balkan War.<br />

Greece took possession of western Thrace with the Treaty of Neuilly<br />

in 1919, following the conclusion of World War I.<br />

A large Muslim minority of around 120,000 people resides in<br />

Thrace. This is the only minority Greece officially recognizes. The<br />

Muslims of Thrace belong to three distinct ethnic groups: Turks, Pomaks,<br />

and Roma. They were exempt from the mandatory exchange<br />

of populations between Greece and Turkey provisioned in the Treaty<br />

of Lausanne of 1923. Following the deterioration of Greek–Turkish<br />

relations in the 1950s and the departure of the Greeks of Istanbul<br />

and the islands of Imvros and Tenedos from Turkey, the Muslims of<br />

Thrace suffered discrimination by the Greek authorities.<br />

Since 1990, the minority’s position has improved greatly although<br />

the Muslims remain a largely agrarian and conservative community<br />

with incomes and education well below the national average. Defined<br />

in religious terms and having escaped the secularizing reforms<br />

of Kemal Atatürk in neighboring Turkey, the Muslims of Greek<br />

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154 • TOURISM<br />

Thrace form the oldest Muslim community in Europe with institutions<br />

and shrines that are centuries old and exhibit a multicultural<br />

tradition that is no longer available elsewhere.<br />

Because of its remoteness, the presence of a large minority, and<br />

Turkey’s close vicinity, the Greek government introduced generous<br />

financial incentives for investors while promoting an ambitious<br />

public works program in Thrace. Today, the region is no longer the<br />

poorer part of Greece. With the accession of neighboring Bulgaria to<br />

the European Union (EU) and Turkey’s aspirations for membership,<br />

Thrace is rapidly developing into a trade and energy hub.<br />

TOURISM. Tourism is Greece’s major industry. Approximately 18<br />

million foreign tourists visit Greece annually, leaving behind €20<br />

billion in revenue. They come mainly from Europe, and especially<br />

Great Britain and Germany. Recently, there has been an increase of<br />

Americans, Eastern Europeans, wealthy Russians, and Asians. Approximately<br />

1 in every 10 Greek workers is employed in the tourism<br />

industry.<br />

Traditionally, Greece has offered three main attractions: its stunning<br />

natural beauty that includes some of the world’s best beaches,<br />

the history of an ancient land filled with famous antiquities, and a<br />

uniquely free-spirited and highly social Mediterranean lifestyle and<br />

culture. More recently, high-class hotels have proliferated, catering<br />

to a more exclusive clientele. The Greek tourist industry took off in<br />

the 1960s, stagnated in the 1980s, and has further expanded in the<br />

2000s, following the success of the 2004 Athens Olympic Games.<br />

Greece’s main tourist spots are Crete, Rhodes, Corfu, Halkidiki, and<br />

the Cycladic Islands. Athens, which used to be a mere transit point,<br />

is growing into a European destination in its own right. Throughout<br />

the year, the city hosts a number of international conferences, owing<br />

to its easily accessible location.<br />

Despite the growth of mass tourism, much of Greece has avoided<br />

the fate of the Spanish coast and remains pristine and unspoiled.<br />

Nevertheless, competition is fierce with countries such as Turkey,<br />

Egypt, and Croatia, which offer lower prices for services of similar<br />

quality. Recently, there has been an effort to diversify Greek tourism<br />

from the high summer season and centered on the sea resorts<br />

to new kinds of tourism including winter, conference, sports, and<br />

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TREATY <strong>OF</strong> LAUSANNE • 155<br />

ecotourism. For example, sailing is an area of much future growth.<br />

Current tourist policy is aimed at quality rather than quantity, attracting<br />

fewer but wealthier tourists. Nevertheless, every summer, Greece<br />

continues to be inundated with young Europeans, whose presence<br />

and interaction with the local population has had a profound effect in<br />

the liberalization of the traditionally conservative Greek culture. See<br />

also ECONOMY.<br />

TRADE. Although external trade remains relatively small—the total<br />

sum of imports and exports in proportion to the gross domestic product<br />

(GDP)—compared with other small European nations, Greece<br />

possesses an open economy, well integrated into the global market.<br />

Protectionist barriers were gradually dismantled after Greece’s entry<br />

into the European Community (EC) in 1981.<br />

However, Greece’s external trade has traditionally suffered a pronounced<br />

asymmetry. In the past, Greek exports of goods were around<br />

40 percent of their imports. Recently, this has fallen below 30 percent,<br />

despite some healthy growth in exports. This is because Greece<br />

has the lowest export rate in the old European Union (EU-15), after<br />

tiny Luxembourg.<br />

The resulting large trade deficit is partially covered by a surplus<br />

in the provision of services, mainly through revenues from shipping<br />

and tourism, and large transfers in the form of EU subsidies. Greek<br />

emigrants’ remittances have declined in relative importance, as diaspora<br />

Greeks’ bonds with the mother country have progressively<br />

weakened.<br />

Greece imports cars and machinery, food products (mainly meat<br />

and dairy), consumer goods, and oil. It exports some agricultural<br />

products (mainly olive oil, fruits, fish, and tobacco), a few minerals<br />

(bauxite and marble), cement, and chemicals. Overall, a high current<br />

account deficit of around 10 percent of the GDP will continue<br />

to persist, as long as the economy grows and demand for imports<br />

remains strong.<br />

TREATY <strong>OF</strong> LAUSANNE. Signed on 24 July 1923, the Treaty of<br />

Lausanne replaced the Treaty of Sèvres, which was never accepted<br />

by Kemal Atatürk’s nationalists. Turkey was the only defeated nation<br />

of World War I that managed to revise a peace treaty to its<br />

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156 • TREATY <strong>OF</strong> SÈVRES<br />

favor, following the successful conclusion of a military struggle<br />

against the Greeks and the Armenians over parts of Asia Minor in<br />

1922.<br />

Turkey won back all of Asia Minor and eastern Thrace, together<br />

with a strip of land from Syria, the two small Aegean islands of Imvros<br />

and Tenedos, and the full control of the demilitarized Straits of<br />

the Dardanelles. With this same treaty, Turkey recognized the loss of<br />

all other Ottoman provinces to its neighbors and the transfer of the<br />

Dodecanese islands to Italy.<br />

A separate agreement between Greece and Turkey regulated the<br />

mandatory exchange of populations between the two nations based on<br />

religious affiliation. As a result, around 1.5 million Turkish citizens<br />

of Greek Orthodox faith, some of whom spoke only Turkish, left<br />

Turkey for Greece; some 600,000 Greek Muslims, some of whom<br />

spoke only Greek, left Greece and moved to Turkey. The human<br />

suffering involved in turning ancient communities into refugees was<br />

considerable but Greece acquired a previously nonexistent homogeneity.<br />

The Greeks of Istanbul (approximately 120,000 people) and<br />

of Imvros and Tenedos (an additional 6,000 people) were excluded<br />

from the transfer, as were the 120,000 Muslims of western Thrace.<br />

Turkey undertook, but failed, to provide self-government rights to<br />

the islands of Imvros and Tenedos, and to respect its minorities and<br />

the Greek Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarchate based in Istanbul.<br />

The Treaty of Lausanne provides the legal basis for Greece’s relations<br />

with Turkey. Despite the evacuation of eastern Thrace where<br />

the Greeks were not militarily defeated, Lausanne was an honest<br />

compromise and competently negotiated by Eleftherios Venizelos,<br />

who represented the Greek side. The treaty is so fundamental that<br />

it is often referred to in the press and forms part of everyday Greek<br />

politics. Much of the postwar Greek–Turkish rivalry has been on<br />

conflicting interpretations of the provisions of the treaty or on issues<br />

the treaty could not have foreseen, such as the delineation of the Aegean<br />

continental shelf. See also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

TREATY <strong>OF</strong> SÈVRES. Signed on 10 August 1920, in the Paris<br />

suburb of Sèvres, the treaty was part of the network of Paris peace<br />

treaties and was supposed to be the last one concluded between the<br />

victors and losers of World War I. Sèvres punished the Ottoman<br />

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TRIKOUPIS, HARILAOS • 157<br />

Empire severely by extracting some four fifths of its territories.<br />

Greece benefited the most by acquiring eastern Thrace (except for<br />

Istanbul [Constantinople]) and the islands of Imvros and Tenedos,<br />

and the right to administer much of western Asia Minor, around<br />

Izmir (Smyrna), for a period of five years, at the end of which the fate<br />

of the territory would be decided by a referendum. The treaty was a<br />

diplomatic triumph for Greek Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos<br />

and the culmination of the Greek irredentist project of Megali<br />

Idea. Although the sultan’s government was forced to concede, the<br />

nationalists under Kemal Atatürk refused and fought against it. The<br />

dismemberment of Asia Minor and the containment of the Turks, the<br />

former masters of an empire, into a small portion of Anatolia stimulated<br />

Turkish nationalism. The resulting war ended with the triumph<br />

of Atatürk and the defeat of the Greeks. For Turkish nationalists,<br />

Sèvres has represented a continuous threat that should never be allowed<br />

to be resurrected. See also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

TRIKOUPIS, HARILAOS (1832–1896). Born in Nafplio in Peloponnesus,<br />

Harilaos Trikoupis died in Cannes in France, where he<br />

withdrew after his electoral defeat the year before. Trikoupis came<br />

from a well-established family of Mesologi in western Greece. His<br />

father, Spyridon, served as prime minister and wrote the seminal history<br />

of the Greek Revolution and the War of Independence. After<br />

his studies, Trikoupis entered the foreign service and worked at the<br />

Greek embassy in London. In 1862, he was elected representative of<br />

the Greek community of London to the constitutional assembly and,<br />

a year later, he helped Greece secure the Ionian Islands from Great<br />

Britain.<br />

In 1865, Trikoupis was elected a member of Parliament for his<br />

native Mesologi and, a year later, he became foreign minister. He<br />

quickly resigned and remained an independent. In 1872, he founded<br />

the liberal and progressive “Fifth Party.” In 1874, he wrote an article<br />

in the press against the monarch and in support of parliamentary<br />

sovereignty that made him famous. A year later, he became prime<br />

minister for a short period.<br />

In reality, he was in power from 1882 to 1895 with a few interruptions<br />

in between. Trikoupis provided Greece, for the first time since<br />

its independence, with governmental stability and a coherent policy.<br />

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158 • TRUMAN DOCTRINE<br />

He was a modernizer who initiated a major program of reforms and<br />

public works. He built Greece’s railway network and the Corinth<br />

canal. Under his stewardship, some industrialization occurred. He<br />

expanded the Greek navy with the acquisition of three battleships.<br />

In foreign policy, he distanced himself from traditional Greek irredentism<br />

and avoided confrontation with the much stronger Ottoman<br />

Empire, preferring to concentrate, unlike many of his opponents, on<br />

domestic development.<br />

Trikoupis’ modernization fell victim to an unreceptive Greek society,<br />

a coalition of vested interests, and the unpopularity of the heavy<br />

taxation he had to impose to find the necessary economic resources.<br />

Eventually, with the public finances in tatters, he declared bankruptcy,<br />

accepted foreign financial supervision, and held elections in<br />

1895, which he lost, failing even to be elected to Parliament himself.<br />

He left Greece for France, where he died a year later.<br />

TRUMAN DOCTRINE. Named after the president of the United<br />

States, Harry Truman, the Truman Doctrine inaugurated a policy of<br />

postwar activism on the part of the United States with the aim of containing<br />

the spread of Soviet influence around the world and of U.S.<br />

interventionism in Greek affairs. Proclaimed at the U.S. Congress on<br />

12 March 1947, the doctrine was the result of Great Britain’s inability<br />

to continue supporting the Greek government against the communist<br />

insurgency and of Joseph Stalin’s growing pressure on Turkey.<br />

By stating that the United States would “support free peoples who are<br />

resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside<br />

pressure,” Truman undertook, with the use of U.S. financial, military,<br />

technological, and political resources, to keep Greece and Turkey<br />

within the Western sphere of influence in the deepening Cold War<br />

with the Soviet Union, while replacing Britain as the dominant force<br />

in the Mediterranean.<br />

TSAROUCHIS, YANNIS (1910–1989). Born in Piraeus, Yannis Tsarouchis<br />

was a talented painter who, toward the end of his life, became<br />

a cultural icon of modern Greece. A student of Photis Kontoglou, he<br />

strove to blend traditional iconography with French impressionism<br />

and Western trends. In 1949, he and other celebrated artists, including<br />

Nikos Engonopoulos, Nikos Hadjikyriakos-Ghikas, and Yannis<br />

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TURKEY • 159<br />

Moralis, established the “Armos” art group. Tsarouchis worked a<br />

lot for the theater and became famous for the homoerotic images of<br />

vulnerable men, in uniforms or nude. He died in Athens.<br />

TSATSOS, KONSTANTINOS (1899–1987). Born in Athens, Konstantinos<br />

Tsatsos was both an eminent scholar in philosophy of law<br />

and a politician. He studied in Heidelberg and joined the faculty of the<br />

University of Athens in 1930. In the following hard years, he was dismissed,<br />

imprisoned, and internally exiled. After the war, he supported<br />

the liberals, but in 1956 he joined the newly formed National Radical<br />

Union (NRU; Ethniki Rizospastiki Enosis, ERE) led by Konstantinos<br />

Karamanlis. Tsatsos became a prominent member of Karamanlis’<br />

cabinet. After the fall of the junta in 1974, Tsatsos chaired the parliamentary<br />

committee that drafted Greece’s new democratic constitution<br />

and in 1975 he became the first elected president of the country’s<br />

Third Republic. He died in Athens in 1987.<br />

TSITSANIS, VASSILIS (1915–1984). Born in Trikala in Thessaly,<br />

Vassilis Tsitsanis is a musical legend of modern Greece. As the<br />

best representative of rebetiko and laiko (popular) music, Tsitsanis<br />

composed and performed songs that became extremely popular and<br />

have become a part of Greece’s postwar cultural identity. His work<br />

rejuvenated Greek music and influenced subsequent artists in their<br />

search for authenticity and originality. He died in London on his 69th<br />

birthday.<br />

TURKEY (RELATIONS WITH). No other country has influenced<br />

the development of modern Greece more than Turkey. It is an irony<br />

that both countries have fought their wars of independence against<br />

each other. Greece emerged from the Turkish Ottoman Empire in<br />

the 1820s while modern Turkey was created through the nationalist<br />

struggle, principally against the invading Greeks, to retain Anatolia<br />

after World War I. Many Greeks’ place of origin lies in modern<br />

Turkey. On a popular and cultural level, the two nations have a lot<br />

in common, such as in cuisine, music, and mentality. However, as<br />

generalizations and ethnic stereotypes go, the Greeks tend to be more<br />

anarchic and passionate while the Turks are more stern, self-disciplined,<br />

and obedient to authority.<br />

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160 • TURKEY<br />

During the first century of its independent existence, Turkey was<br />

Greece’s primary enemy. The young nation remained irredentist and<br />

expansionist to the detriment of Ottoman Turkey, where the majority<br />

of Greeks continued to live. Although Greece paid a heavy price<br />

for its revisionism and lost a war against Ottoman Turkey in 1897,<br />

it did expand several times until the major defeat of 1922 in Asia<br />

Minor. The end of the Greek Megali Idea was followed by a rapprochement,<br />

as the two nations concentrated their efforts on domestic<br />

reconstruction and the containment of Fascist Italy’s revisionism in<br />

the Mediterranean.<br />

The international community is aware of the traditional antagonism<br />

between the two nations. However, there have been periods of<br />

friendship and détente in the past. This was the case from the 1930s<br />

until 1955. Starting with the proclamation of the Truman Doctrine<br />

in 1947, both Greece and Turkey formed a part of the strategy of containment<br />

of the United States against the Soviet Union. Together,<br />

they entered the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)<br />

in 1952, provided military bases to the United States, and formed<br />

NATO’s southeast European flank.<br />

The relationship unraveled because of the Cyprus question. The<br />

first victim was the Greek community of Istanbul (Constantinople),<br />

which suffered a government-sponsored pogrom in September<br />

1955. Tensions increased in the Aegean, where Turkey disputed the<br />

continental shelf of the Greek islands, Greece’s right to expand its<br />

territorial waters and airspace to 12 miles, Greece’s armament of its<br />

islands facing the Anatolian coast, the treatment of the Muslim-Turkish<br />

minority in Greek Thrace and, after 1996, Greek sovereignty<br />

over certain border island formations.<br />

The rivalry with Turkey was intimately linked with domestic<br />

political antagonisms. It was exploited mainly by a recovering left<br />

as a way to question Greece’s Western orientation and alliance with<br />

the United States. In the 1970s, Turkey provided the platform upon<br />

which Andreas Papandreou based much of his meteoric rise to<br />

power.<br />

Despite some previous attempts, Greek–Turkish relations started<br />

recovering truly only after 1999, due to the efforts of modernizing<br />

leaders on both sides. Triggered by repeated crises that risked escalating<br />

into an armed confrontation, Athens decided to complement<br />

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UNITED STATES • 161<br />

its traditional policy of deterrence, based on increased military spending,<br />

with a policy of engagement, based on Turkey’s aspirations for<br />

membership in the European Union (EU).<br />

As a result, although the political problems separating the two nations<br />

remain unresolved, they are currently being benignly neglected<br />

or functionally circumvented. Trade, tourism, investment, and cultural<br />

exchanges are booming as the two largest economies of southeastern<br />

Europe have come closer together. Although Greek public<br />

opinion remains volatile and suspicious of Turkey, the Greek elites<br />

remain committed to the rapprochement as a condition for Greece’s<br />

own modernization, development, and better integration into the EU.<br />

See also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

– U –<br />

UNITED STATES (RELATIONS WITH). Greece is believed to be<br />

one of the most anti-American nations. On the surface, this appears to<br />

be a paradox given the large Greek-American diaspora and the massive<br />

American political and financial investment on postwar Greece.<br />

After all, both countries fought on the same side in all major wars of<br />

the 20th century, while both nations, the “oldest” and the “strongest”<br />

democracy, share a certain liberal and independent-minded predisposition.<br />

The United States was the first country to recognize diplomatically<br />

the independence of Greece after the revolution of 1821.<br />

The United States is blamed for its interventionism and imperialist<br />

tendency. However, overall Greece has benefited greatly from U.S.<br />

interventionism. America’s entry in World War I in 1917 secured<br />

the victory of the Entente and Greece over the Central Powers and<br />

their local allies, including the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria, and<br />

consolidated Greek sovereignty over southern Macedonia and western<br />

Thrace. U.S. involvement in World War II hastened Greece’s<br />

liberation from a brutal triple occupation by Nazi Germany, Fascist<br />

Italy, and nationalist Bulgaria.<br />

The high point of the U.S. engagement with Greece came in March<br />

1947 with the proclamation of the Truman Doctrine. For a brief<br />

moment, Greece occupied the center stage in the unfolding Cold<br />

War drama and took advantage of U.S. aid to defeat a communist<br />

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162 • UNITED STATES<br />

insurgency. In per capita terms, Greece received the largest share<br />

of Marshall Plan aid. Initially, Greece was to become a poster child<br />

for liberal, post–New Deal America and was promoted as a small<br />

and brave democracy worthy of American support. The Americans<br />

remained skeptical of the wisdom of returning the king to the Greek<br />

throne, as the British insisted in 1946, a move that further polarized<br />

Greek politics and accelerated the descent into Civil War. Furthermore,<br />

the Americans favored the centrist liberals over right-wing<br />

conservatives to rule Greece during and in the immediate aftermath<br />

of the Civil War, as the best way to undercut support for the left.<br />

The root of Greek anti-Americanism has been Turkey. Starting<br />

in the 1950s, the growing rivalry between Greece and Turkey over<br />

Cyprus greatly affected Greek–U.S. relations. Turkey was an important<br />

ally of the U.S. policy of containment of the Soviet Union<br />

and Washington appeared, in Greek eyes, to be favoring Turkey over<br />

Greece. When the Greek community of Istanbul (Constantinople)<br />

was unfairly victimized by a government-sponsored pogrom in September<br />

1955, Secretary of State Allen Dulles asked both sides to stay<br />

calm, adopting a policy of equidistance that, in Greek eyes, equated<br />

the victim with the victimizer. When Turkey invaded Cyprus in 1974,<br />

the United States declined to use its political and military power to<br />

stop and then reverse Turkey’s advance southwards.<br />

Although the United States did try to restrain Turkey from invading<br />

Cyprus in 1964 and from starting a war in the Aegean in 1996,<br />

the suspicion was that Greek–Turkish antagonism, if properly managed,<br />

was beneficial to the United States, making both countries<br />

more dependent on Washington. The side effect of this triangular<br />

relationship was the constant erosion of Greek goodwill toward the<br />

United States. For many Greeks, not only leftists, Turkey was an<br />

American pawn and a local agent of U.S. imperialism.<br />

Furthermore, the heavy-handedness of U.S. ambassadors in<br />

Greece in the 1950s and the U.S. toleration, if not tacit support,<br />

of the colonels’ junta between 1967 and 1974, further fed Greek<br />

anti-Americanism. Following Turkey’s invasion of Cyprus, the U.S.<br />

ambassador in Nicosia was assassinated and Greece withdrew from<br />

the military command of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization<br />

(NATO).<br />

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VENIZELOS, ELEFTHERIOS • 163<br />

The restoration of democracy in 1974 and the gradual normalization<br />

of Greek politics that followed witnessed the institutionalization<br />

of a certain anti-Americanism that became almost officially sanctioned.<br />

Every 17 November, massive demonstrations take place at<br />

the U.S. embassy in Athens in remembrance of U.S. support of the<br />

Greek junta. Anti-American protests have been ritualized and take<br />

place often. A few U.S. state employees were assassinated by Greek<br />

left-wing terrorists, and the U.S. embassy and other sites affiliated<br />

with the United States have been victims of bomb explosions and<br />

missile attacks. To this day, the U.S. embassy in Athens remains one<br />

of the most heavily guarded in the world. What was originally envisioned<br />

as an open space, designed by the renowned architect Walter<br />

Gropius, has been turned into a fortress.<br />

The impulsive attitude of opposing U.S. policy and blaming the<br />

Americans for every misfortune that befalls Greece and the world<br />

is actively cultivated by many politicians and journalists. Overall,<br />

Greek anti-Americanism is widespread and cuts across the whole<br />

political spectrum. Recently, it has been fueled by the wars in former<br />

Yugoslavia, turmoil in the Middle East, and globalization, since the<br />

United States is seen as the promoter of wild, aggressive capitalism.<br />

In the meantime, Greeks continue to consume American culture,<br />

adopt American fashion trends and admire American universities<br />

while many American tourists visit every year the country they have<br />

been brought up to believe to be the cradle of Western civilization.<br />

See also FOREIGN POLICY; GREEK-AMERICANS.<br />

– V –<br />

VARKIZA AGREEMENT. See DECEMBER AFFAIR.<br />

VENIZELISM. See VENIZELOS, ELEFTHERIOS.<br />

VENIZELOS, ELEFTHERIOS (1864–1936). Eleftherios Venizelos<br />

was born near Chania in Crete. He is a towering figure in the politics<br />

of postindependent Greece, thanks mainly to his diplomacy and<br />

strategic vision that greatly shaped Greece’s current character and<br />

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164 • VENIZELOS, ELEFTHERIOS<br />

structure. Present-day Greece recognizes Venizelos as its leading<br />

statesman and there is no other name as frequently used for naming<br />

Greek streets, squares, and public buildings.<br />

With a father who fought the Ottoman hold on Crete and following<br />

his law studies at the University of Athens, Venizelos became<br />

involved in the politics of the Cretan question in favor of the<br />

island’s union with Greece. From the start, Venizelos exhibited his<br />

exceptional political skills as he confronted the Ottomans, the great<br />

powers, and Prince George of Greece, who was appointed high commissioner<br />

to Crete. Against all odds, he prevailed and established a<br />

reputation that far surpassed the confines of his island.<br />

After the revolution in Goudi in 1909, the Military League invited<br />

him to Athens, first as a political advisor and then to assume the<br />

premiership. Venizelos’ arrival revolutionized Greek politics. He<br />

founded a new political party, the Liberals, and won one election<br />

after another, starting in 1910. He allowed for new social forces to<br />

be represented in Parliament, far from the ossified partisans of the<br />

past, and gave voice to the demands of an aspiring bourgeoisie for<br />

the modernization of the Greek state. He voted for a number of reforms,<br />

including a radical revision of the 1864 Constitution in 1911.<br />

Although many demanded a republic, he prevailed in preserving<br />

the monarchy, a decision he would come to regret in the years to<br />

come.<br />

Through the reorganization of the Greek armed forces and an active<br />

diplomacy, he favorably positioned Greece on the eve of the Balkan<br />

Wars. When hostilities erupted in the fall of 1912, he insisted on<br />

the fastest possible advance of the Greek army toward Thessaloniki,<br />

the capital of Macedonia, and the much-contested crown jewel of the<br />

Ottomans in Europe. In the negotiations that followed, Venizelos excelled<br />

in securing the maximum possible territorial gains for Greece.<br />

This was his finest moment and helped build his legend.<br />

When World War I erupted, Venizelos—being a supporter of<br />

Great Britain, a firm believer in the superiority of the Entente and<br />

its naval power, and stimulated by the promise of great territorial<br />

gains—maneuvered to have Greece participate. The new king, Constantine<br />

I, a Germanophile, disagreed and preferred to keep Greece<br />

neutral. The rift quickly escalated into a serious constitutional crisis<br />

that turned into a quasi Civil War and is remembered as the National<br />

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VENIZELOS, ELEFTHERIOS • 165<br />

Schism (Ethnikos Dihasmos). In 1915, Venizelos resigned, won the<br />

elections, and was forced to resign again. This time, he and his supporters<br />

abstained from the new elections, since royal interference was<br />

making a mockery of parliamentary politics.<br />

However, following Bulgaria’s attack on Serbia and the Gallipoli<br />

campaign, external pressures on Greece’s joining the Entente<br />

increased. When the Greek Fourth Army stationed in Kavala was<br />

ordered to surrender rather than fight the invading Bulgarians, Venizelos<br />

left Athens, went to Thessaloniki, and organized a rebellious<br />

government of National Defense supported by the Entente troops.<br />

Finally, in 1917, the Entente forces obliged King Constantine I to<br />

abdicate in favor of his second son, Alexander. Venizelos returned<br />

to Athens, assumed the premiership, reunited Greece that had been<br />

divided in two (one part loyal to the government in Athens and the<br />

other to the government in Thessaloniki), and declared war on the<br />

side of the Entente. In the meantime, many of his supporters took<br />

revenge against the outgoing royalists, further deepening the wounds<br />

of the National Schism.<br />

Although Serbia saw its male population decimated in the war<br />

and Bulgaria and Ottoman Turkey suffered heavy casualties, Greece,<br />

joining the war at that late stage, suffered, comparably speaking,<br />

few losses. Nevertheless, its participation in the war effort secured<br />

for Greece a seat on the side of the victors in the postwar peace negotiations<br />

in Paris. Once more, Venizelos excelled. First, he secured<br />

western Thrace with the Treaty of Neuilly in 1919 that forced Bulgaria<br />

to abandon its exit to the Aegean and confined it to the Black<br />

Sea. In May of that year, Venizelos was invited, by the Entente led<br />

by Britain, to land Greek forces in Izmir (Smyrna). This was a major<br />

decision with far-reaching consequences as it prepared the ground<br />

for a permanent Greek hold on parts of western Asia Minor. A year<br />

later, he triumphantly cosigned the Treaty of Sèvres that awarded<br />

additional new lands to Greece at the expense of Ottoman Turkey.<br />

Having secured all these gains, Venizelos called for elections after<br />

years of war and turbulence. Against all odds, although he won<br />

the popular vote, he lost his majority in Parliament, resigned, and<br />

left for Paris, leaving his monarchist opponents to rule the country<br />

at a very crucial moment. The monarchists made their first mistake<br />

by recalling Constantine I to the throne. This infuriated the Entente<br />

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166 • VENIZELOS, S<strong>OF</strong>OKLIS<br />

powers and led to the increasing diplomatic isolation of Greece as the<br />

country was struggling to implement the Treaty of Sèvres, against the<br />

rising tide of Turkish nationalism led by Kemal Atatürk.<br />

After the Greek defeat and the Asia Minor catastrophe in 1922,<br />

Venizelos was asked to lead the Greek efforts for a new peace<br />

treaty with Turkey. He secured the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923,<br />

by which Greece, despite its humiliating military defeat, did manage<br />

to preserve many of its gains from the previous 11 years. Finally,<br />

he returned to power in 1928 and ruled for a full four-year term.<br />

Venizelos’ major achievements during this second period in power<br />

included the signing of a treaty of friendship with Turkey, the acceleration<br />

of the efforts to accommodate and better integrate refugees,<br />

and an ambitious public works program.<br />

However, starting in 1929, his administration suffered greatly<br />

during the international economic crisis and the rising popularity of<br />

communism that was undercutting support for Venizelos’ liberals on<br />

the left. He lost in the 1932 elections to the monarchists. After the<br />

failure of the 1935 proliberal military coup led by Nikolaos Plastiras,<br />

once more, he left Greece and died in exile in Paris a year later.<br />

Venizelos oversaw the expansion, integration, and development<br />

of the modern Greek nation-state. In his extraordinarily rich political<br />

career, it is natural to find some dark shadows. In his own way, Venizelos<br />

contributed to the National Schism and did not have enough<br />

control of his supporters both at the time of victory and of defeat.<br />

His decision to land Greek troops in Asia Minor was a daring gamble<br />

with an uncertain future under the best of circumstances. His decision<br />

to hold elections in 1920 and then leave the country opened the way<br />

for the disaster that followed. And, in his later years, he proved too<br />

ready to suppress the communists and the ethnoreligious minorities<br />

that threatened his liberal, modernizing vision. These issues will continue<br />

to be debated over the years. Nevertheless, if one man has left<br />

the deepest footprint on prewar Greece, he is undoubtedly Venizelos.<br />

See also VENIZELOS, S<strong>OF</strong>OKLIS.<br />

VENIZELOS, S<strong>OF</strong>OKLIS (1894–1964). Born in Chania in Crete,<br />

Sofoklis Venizelos died on board a ship on his way from Crete to<br />

Piraeus days before the landslide victory of his party, the Center<br />

Union (Enosis Kentrou), in the 1964 elections. Venizelos was the<br />

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WAR <strong>OF</strong> INDEPENDENCE • 167<br />

second son of his famous father, Eleftherios Venizelos. He graduated<br />

from the Military Academy but his military career never really<br />

advanced. After his father’s death, he claimed the leadership of the<br />

Liberals.<br />

His first cabinet post was in the government-in-exile during<br />

World War II in 1943. A year later, he became prime minister for a<br />

brief period. In 1945 he was appointed vice-chairman of the Liberals<br />

under Themistoklis Sofoulis. In the early 1950s, Venizelos headed<br />

the government three times and was second-in-command under<br />

Nikolaos Plastiras. After the victory of the conservative Alexandros<br />

Papagos in 1952, he remained in opposition. In 1961 he collaborated<br />

with Georgios Papandreou in founding the Center Union. His death<br />

came at a critical moment in Greek history and allowed Papandreou<br />

to think of himself as the undisputed leader of the soon-to-be victorious<br />

party while it changed the political balance of power in favor of<br />

a more radical Center Union, further distancing itself from the right<br />

and the king.<br />

– W –<br />

WAR <strong>OF</strong> INDEPENDENCE (1821–1828). Prior to 1821, there were<br />

several revolts against Ottoman rule in the Greek lands, although<br />

mostly of a local character. The ideas and success of the French<br />

Revolution greatly affected Greece. The Greek Revolution and War<br />

of Independence were preceded by a Greek Enlightenment, an intellectual<br />

revivalist movement, in concert with European developments<br />

that enjoyed the support of an expanding merchant class.<br />

Thanks to agitators like Rigas Feraios, Filiki Eteria, and others, a<br />

political project for the expulsion of the Ottomans and the establishment<br />

of a Greek national state took shape. The decline of the power of<br />

the Ottoman Empire and the increased infighting between the sultan<br />

and his provincial pashas created new opportunities for an insurrection.<br />

Despite the political hegemony of reactionary conservatism in<br />

post-Napoleonic Europe, which viewed any kind of revolution with<br />

great suspicion, the Greek insurrection broke out on two fronts.<br />

The first front in the Danubian provinces led by Alexandros Ypsilantis<br />

was soon defeated by the Ottoman army in the battle of Dragatsani.<br />

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168 • WAR <strong>OF</strong> INDEPENDENCE<br />

However, the second front that opened in remote Peloponnesus<br />

gathered strength and defeated one Ottoman expeditionary force after<br />

another. Helped by the great distance separating Peloponnesus from<br />

Istanbul (Constantinople), the rough mountainous terrain, and the<br />

sultan’s preoccupation with the rebellious Ali Pasha of Jannina, Peloponnesus<br />

fell quickly into rebel hands. In 1822, Theodoros Kolokotronis,<br />

the revolution’s military genius, achieved a great victory by<br />

destroying the Ottoman army in Dervenakia, on the road between<br />

Corinth and Argos. Simultaneously, the Greek navy consisting of<br />

merchant ships converted to battleships, manned by skilled captains<br />

and experienced crews, contained the Ottoman fleet in the Aegean<br />

away from Peloponnesus.<br />

The initial successes of the revolutionaries were followed by<br />

infighting among various factions for control of political power. In<br />

the meantime, the Ottomans reorganized and invited Mehmet Ali,<br />

governor of Egypt, to help in ending the revolution. Arriving in 1824,<br />

Ibrahim Pasha, son of Mehmet Ali, had, by 1827, most of Peloponnesus<br />

under his control. In 1826, Mesologi in western Greece, under<br />

siege for months, surrendered. However, what might have been a<br />

misunderstanding started a naval battle between the allied fleet of<br />

Great Britain, France, and Russia and the Ottoman–Egyptian<br />

forces stationed in Navarino Bay in southwestern Peloponnesus. The<br />

Ottoman–Egyptian fleet was sunk, the Egyptians left, and Peloponnesus<br />

was, once more, free from Ottoman rule.<br />

A year later, war between Russia and the Ottoman Empire further<br />

strengthened the revolutionaries. The Treaty of Adrianople in 1829,<br />

which ended the Russian–Ottoman war, acknowledged the autonomy<br />

of the Greek state. This state had just started being built under its first<br />

president, Ioannis Capodistrias. A year later, the London Protocol<br />

of 1830 recognized Greece as an independent state.<br />

Greece was the first nation-state to emerge from the Ottoman<br />

Empire and the pioneer of the modern, Western, national ideas in the<br />

East. It was soon followed by many others until the empire was no<br />

more. As poor as the country was, Greece had managed to develop a<br />

merchant class and the commercial networks that connected it to the<br />

West and the Enlightenment.<br />

In addition, despite initial European opposition, the Greek War<br />

of Independence and the atrocities the Ottoman troops committed<br />

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WOMEN • 169<br />

against civilians attracted the sympathy of many Europeans to the<br />

Greek cause. For the Russians, the Greeks were their fellow Christian<br />

Orthodox while, for the British and the French, they were the descendants<br />

of Plato and Aristotle. Philhellenism played an important<br />

role in changing international perceptions of the war. Britain, under<br />

Foreign Minister George Canning, was the first to support the Greek<br />

effort. Judging from the naval battle at Navarino, the support of the<br />

great powers proved crucial in making the revolution prevail. It was<br />

no accident that Greece remained under their tutelage, especially<br />

Britain’s, in the years to come.<br />

For the Greeks, the establishment of an independent kingdom in<br />

the southernmost part of the Balkans was a mixed blessing. Three<br />

quarters of the Greeks continued to live under the sultan’s rule and<br />

many suffered a decline in their fortunes following the revolution.<br />

For many decades after the establishment of a Greek independent<br />

state, Greeks left their homeland in search of a better economic future<br />

offered by the Ottoman Empire in cities such as Izmir (Smyrna) and<br />

Alexandria. Undoubtedly, the war initiated a process of national integration<br />

that continued for 130 years until the Dodecanese in 1947,<br />

but not Cyprus, were brought into the Greek national fold.<br />

WOMEN. Greece used to be a traditional society where women were<br />

discriminated against, stayed at home, raised a family, followed their<br />

husband’s lead, and had few opportunities for personal advancement.<br />

And yet, like other Mediterranean societies, Greece is fairly<br />

matriarchical. Usually, a wife is the head of the household and bears<br />

most, if not the sole, responsibility for the children’s upbringing,<br />

and a mother is usually deferred to by her husband, children, and the<br />

broader family. Since the 1960s, the position of Greek women has<br />

improved dramatically. Nevertheless, Greece has one of the lowest<br />

rates of working women in Western Europe. Only one in two adult<br />

women works, although most young women work today. While the<br />

majority of university students these days are women, the rate of<br />

female illiteracy remains double that of the corresponding male, as<br />

some older women have never gone to school.<br />

Many professions are dominated by women. Although old male<br />

bastions have fallen, few women have made it to the top. In the<br />

1980s, the newly arrived socialists made women’s rights a priority<br />

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170 • WORLD WAR I<br />

under the influence of Andreas Papandreou’s strong-willed and<br />

American-born wife, Margarita. Family law was modernized, adultery<br />

decriminalized, civil marriage introduced, divorce facilitated,<br />

and abortion legalized. But more recently, interest in women’s issues<br />

has declined and there is strong resistance against affirmative action<br />

and preferential treatment in support of women.<br />

From the beginning of modern Greek national life, many women<br />

have distinguished themselves in public life. First there were the revolutionary<br />

heroines Laskarina Bouboulina and Manto Mavrogenous,<br />

then writers such as Penelope Delta, and artists such as Maria Callas<br />

and Melina Merkouri. More recently, some women have acquired<br />

important public positions including Yanna Angelopoulou, who won<br />

the bidding for and successfully organized the Athens 2004 Olympic<br />

Games; Aleka Papariga, the general secretary of the Communist<br />

Party of Greece (CPG; Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE);<br />

Maria Damanaki, president of the Coalition of the Left; Anna Psarouda-Benaki,<br />

president of Parliament; and Dora Bakoyanni, mayor<br />

of Athens and now foreign minister. See also FREDERIKA, QUEEN<br />

<strong>OF</strong> GREECE; MOUSKOURI, NANA.<br />

WORLD WAR I. Greece entered World War I late, in 1917, on the<br />

side of the Entente. Greek forces operated mainly in Macedonia<br />

against the advancing Bulgarians and Germans, following the occupation<br />

of Serbia. Greece suffered few casualties: fewer than 3,000<br />

Greeks died in combat. After the war ended, as a victor, Greece<br />

secured western Thrace from Bulgaria with the Treaty of Neuilly<br />

of 1919. In addition, Greece was awarded large Ottoman territories<br />

under the Treaty of Sèvres in 1920. These gains were later largely<br />

reversed under the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923, following the Greek<br />

defeat by the Turks.<br />

The decision to enter the war divided Greeks into two hostile<br />

camps: the pro-Entente camp led by the democratically elected prime<br />

minister, Eleftherios Venizelos, and the pro-German camp that advocated<br />

Greece’s neutrality, led by the popular King Constantine I.<br />

Twice dismissed in 1915, Venizelos formed a parallel government in<br />

Thessaloniki in 1916 and, with the help of Entente troops, toppled<br />

the king who was forced into exile in 1917. These dramatic events<br />

that, at times, felt like a virtual civil war, generated an enduring hos-<br />

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WORLD WAR II • 171<br />

tility between the royalists and the liberals and destabilized Greek<br />

political life for decades to come. See also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

WORLD WAR II. Greece entered World War II on 28 October 1940,<br />

when it was attacked by Italy on the Albanian border. During the<br />

previous year, Greece had desperately tried to avoid the conflict as<br />

the country was struggling to recover from the misfortunes of the<br />

interwar period, including the influx of hundreds of thousands of<br />

refugees after the Asia Minor catastrophe and the world economic<br />

crisis. Faced with repeated Italian provocations and Benito Mussolini’s<br />

megalomaniac imperialism in the Mediterranean, Greece<br />

reaffirmed its alliance with Great Britain.<br />

Recovering quickly from the surprise Italian attack, the Greek<br />

forces fought bravely and took advantage of the mountainous geography<br />

of Epirus and the adverse weather conditions to force the<br />

Italians into retreat deep into Albania. At the time, together with<br />

Britain, Greece was the only country in Europe fighting the Axis.<br />

The Greek success stunned the world and encouraged the Allies to<br />

continue fighting. However, it did provoke Adolf Hitler to come to<br />

his ally’s rescue. Nazi Germany, together with Bulgaria, attacked<br />

Greece on 6 April 1941. By 27 April 1941, Athens had surrendered.<br />

Nevertheless, it took German elite parachutists another five weeks to<br />

overpower the island of Crete. It is generally assumed that Hitler’s<br />

Greek campaign delayed the attack against Soviet Russia by several<br />

weeks. This delay proved essential as it made it impossible for the<br />

Germans to reach Moscow before the coming of the winter.<br />

During World War II, Greece suffered greatly from the triple occupation<br />

of Bulgarians in the northeast, Germans in Athens and the<br />

larger cities, and Italians in the rest of the country. The economy<br />

collapsed and the few resources of the poor nation were diverted in<br />

support of the German war machine. Greek Jews were persecuted<br />

and old Jewish communities, such as the one in Thessaloniki, were<br />

completely destroyed. Widespread famine spread during the first,<br />

extremely harsh, winter of 1941–1942, fueling a strong resistance<br />

movement.<br />

Coming late and only after the Soviet Union was attacked, the<br />

communists dominated the resistance. They took advantage of the<br />

retreat of the Italians after the surrender of Italy to the Allies in 1943<br />

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172 • YPSILANTIS, ALEXANDROS<br />

and tried to position themselves so they could dominate postwar<br />

Greek politics. As a result, during the last phase of World War II,<br />

a conflict developed between the communists and their adversaries<br />

that later grew into a full-blown Civil War. Furthermore, for every<br />

German loss, the Nazis disproportionately and severely punished the<br />

Greek civilian population, massacring and burning several villages.<br />

After the war’s devastation, Greece’s liberation in the fall of 1944<br />

was quickly followed by the December Affair (Dekembriana) that<br />

plunged the country into violence and chaos. Greece’s recovery<br />

started only after 1949, while the rift between the left and the right<br />

remained alive until the late 1980s and played a great part in postwar<br />

Greek politics. In the meantime, in 1947, Italy was obliged to give<br />

Greece the Greek-populated Dodecanese islands in the southeastern<br />

Aegean. See also FOREIGN POLICY.<br />

– Y –<br />

YPSILANTIS, ALEXANDROS. See REVOLUTION; WAR <strong>OF</strong> IN-<br />

DEPENDENCE.<br />

– Z –<br />

ZAHARIADIS, NIKOS (1903–1973). Born in Adrianople (Edirne),<br />

Turkey, as one of the most controversial figures in modern Greek<br />

history, Nikos Zahariadis was the secretary-general of the Communist<br />

Party of Greece (CPG; Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE)<br />

from 1931 until 1956. Trained in Moscow, he was appointed head of<br />

the Greek communists by Joseph Stalin himself, at a very young age.<br />

Arrested in 1936 and imprisoned in Dachau by the Germans after<br />

1941, he returned to Greece in May 1945. His first move was to denounce<br />

the rebellious Ari Velouhioti, who had rejected the Varkiza<br />

Agreement. Zahariadis is accused as one of the main culprits of the<br />

events that led to an escalation of hostilities and the subsequent Civil<br />

War. With a charming personality but a Stalinist understanding of<br />

politics, he insisted on confronting the government forces conventionally,<br />

leading his party into a crushing defeat and exile in 1949. He<br />

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ZORBAS, ALEXIS • 173<br />

is further criticized for a confrontational post–Civil War attitude in<br />

preserving the CPG/KKE’s fighting spirit, a policy that was used by<br />

Greek governments to suppress the left. During the sixth plenary session<br />

of the CPG/KKE, Zahariadis was purged as an anti-Khrushchev<br />

Stalinist and a year later, he was expelled from the party. He spent his<br />

final years in exile in Siberia, where he committed suicide in 1973.<br />

ZORBAS, ALEXIS. Alexis Zorbas was a real person but was immortalized<br />

as a fictional character featured in a popular movie of 1964,<br />

Zorba the Greek, directed by Michael Cacoyannis and famously<br />

played by the Irish–Mexican actor Anthony Quinn. The film was<br />

based on the novel of Nikos Kazantzakis. The story is about the<br />

encounter of a Cretan with an Englishman. In juxtaposition to the reserved<br />

and introvert Englishman, warm, proud, freedom-loving, rulebreaking,<br />

life-affirming, and womanizing Zorba embodied the Dionysian<br />

spirit of Greece. Mikis Theodorakis wrote the music score<br />

of the syrtaki danced by Zorba in the film’s most memorable scene.<br />

Thanks to Hollywood and the booming tourist industry, Zorba and<br />

the syrtaki have become important parts of modern Greece’s identity.<br />

Today, Greece is littered with various kinds of tourist establishments<br />

named Zorba that play the Zorba the Greek soundtrack as part of an<br />

invented, but much acclaimed, Greek tradition.<br />

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09_152_02_Dictionary.indd 174<br />

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Appendix A: Kings of Greece 1833–1973<br />

Otto (Wittelsbach) 1833–1862<br />

George I (Glücksburg) 1863–1913<br />

Constantine I 1913–1917<br />

Alexander 1917–1920<br />

Constantine I 1920–1922<br />

George II 1922–1924, 1935–1941, 1946–1947<br />

Paul 1947–1964<br />

Constantine II 1964–1973<br />

175<br />

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09_152_03_AA.indd 176<br />

3/26/09 1:07:18 PM


Appendix B: Presidents of Greece 1828–2008<br />

Note: Dictatorial rulers are in parentheses.<br />

Ioannis Capodistrias 1828–1831<br />

Monarchy (see Kings of Greece) 1833–1924<br />

Admiral Pavlos Koundouriotis 1924–1926<br />

(General Theodoros Pangalos) 1926<br />

Admiral Pavlos Koundouriotis 1926–1929<br />

Alexandros Zaimis 1929–1935<br />

Monarchy (see Kings of Greece) 1935–1973<br />

(Colonel Georgios Papadopoulos) 1973<br />

(General Phaidon Gyzikis) 1973–1974<br />

Mikhail Stasinopoulos 1974–1975<br />

Konstantinos Tsatsos 1975–1980<br />

Konstantinos Karamanlis 1980–1985<br />

Christos Sartzetakis 1985–1990<br />

Konstantinos Karamanlis 1990–1995<br />

Konstantinos Stephanopoulos 1995–2005<br />

Karolos Papoulias 2005–<br />

177<br />

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09_152_04_AB.indd 178<br />

3/26/09 1:07:57 PM


Appendix C: Prime Ministers of Modern Greece<br />

1833–2008<br />

Spyridon Trikoupis January 1833–October 1833<br />

Alexander Mavrokordatos October 1833–May 1834<br />

Count Armansberg May 1835–February 1837<br />

Knight Rundhart February 1837–December 1837<br />

Presidency of King Otto December 1837–June 1841<br />

Alexandros Mavrokordatos June 1841–October 1841<br />

Presidency of King Otto October 1841–September 1843<br />

Andreas Metaxas September 1843–March 1844<br />

Alexandros Mavrokordatos March 1844–August 1844<br />

Ioannis Koletis August 1844–September 1847<br />

Kitsos Tzavelas September 1847–March 1848<br />

Georgios Koundouriotis March 1848–October 1848<br />

Konstantinos Kanaris October 1848–December 1849<br />

Antonios Kriezis December 1849–May 1854<br />

Alexandros Mavrokordatos May 1854–September 1855<br />

Dimitrios Voulgaris September 1855–November 1857<br />

Athanasios Miaoulis November 1857–May 1862<br />

Gennaios Kolokotronis May 1862–October 1862<br />

Dimitrios Voulgaris October 1862–February 1863<br />

Zinon Valvis February 1863–March 1863<br />

Diomidis Kyriakou March 1863–April 1863<br />

Roufos Venizelos April 1863–October 1863<br />

Dimitrios Voulgaris October 1863–March 1864<br />

Konstantinos Kanaris March 1864–April 1864<br />

Zinon Valvis April 1864–July 1864<br />

Konstantinos Kanaris July 1864–March 1865<br />

Alexandros Koumoundouros March 1865–October 1865<br />

Epaminondas Deligiorgis October 1865–November 1865<br />

Roufos Venizelos November 1865–June 1866<br />

179<br />

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180 • APPENDIX C<br />

Dimitrios Voulgaris June 1866–December 1866<br />

Alexandros Koumoundouros December 1866–December 1867<br />

Aristotelis Moraitis December 1867–January 1868<br />

Dimitrios Voulgaris January 1868–January 1869<br />

Thrasivoulos Zaimis January 1869–July 1870<br />

Epaminondas Deligiorgis July 1870–December 1870<br />

Alexandros Koumoundouros December 1870–October 1871<br />

Thrasivoulos Zaimis October 1871–December 1871<br />

Dimitrios Voulgaris December 1871–August 1872<br />

Epaminondas Deligiorgis August 1872–February 1874<br />

Dimitrios Voulgaris February 1874–April 1875<br />

Harilaos Trikoupis April 1875–October 1875<br />

Alexandros Koumoundouros October 1875–November 1876<br />

Epaminondas Deligiorgis November 1876–December 1876<br />

Alexandros Koumoundouros December 1876–February 1877<br />

Epaminondas Deligiorgis February 1877–May 1877<br />

Alexandros Koumoundouros May 1877–May 1877<br />

Konstantinos Kanaris May 1877–January 1878<br />

Alexandros Koumoundouros January 1878–October 1878<br />

Harilaos Trikoupis October 1878–October 1878<br />

Alexandros Koumoundouros October 1878–March 1880<br />

Harilaos Trikoupis March 1880–October 1880<br />

Alexandros Koumoundouros October 1880–March 1882<br />

Harilaos Trikoupis March 1882–April 1885<br />

Theodoros Diligiannis April 1885–April 1886<br />

Dimitrios Valvis April 1886–May 1886<br />

Harilaos Trikoupis May 1886–October 1890<br />

Theodoros Diligiannis October 1890–February 1892<br />

Konstantinos Konstantopoulos February 1892–June 1892<br />

Harilaos Trikoupis June 1892–March 1893<br />

Sotirios Sotiropoulos March 1893–October 1893<br />

Harilaos Trikoupis October 1893–January 1895<br />

Nikolaos Diligiannis January 1895–May 1895<br />

Theodoros Diligiannis May 1895–April 1897<br />

Dimitrios Rallis April 1897–September 1897<br />

Alexandros Zaimis September 1897–April 1899<br />

Georgios Theotokis April 1899–November 1901<br />

Alexandros Zaimis November 1901–November 1902<br />

09_152_05_AC.indd 180<br />

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PRIME MINISTERS <strong>OF</strong> MODERN GREECE • 181<br />

Theodoros Diligiannis November 1902–June 1903<br />

Georgios Theotokis June 1903–June 1903<br />

Dimitrios Rallis June 1903–December 1903<br />

Georgios Theotokis December 1903–December 1904<br />

Theodoros Dilligiannis December 1904–June 1905<br />

Dimitrios Rallis June 1905–December 1905<br />

Georgios Theotokis December 1905–July 1909<br />

Dimitrios Rallis July 1909–August 1909<br />

Kyriakoulis Mavromichalis August 1909–January 1910<br />

Stefanos Dragoumis January 1910–October 1910<br />

Eleftherios Venizelos October 1910–February 1915<br />

Dimitrios Gounaris February 1915–August 1915<br />

Eleftherios Venizelos August 1915–September 1915<br />

Alexandros Zaimis September 1915–October 1915<br />

Stefanos Skouloudis October 1915–June 1916<br />

Alexandros Zaimis June 1916–September 1916<br />

Nikolaos Kalogeropoulos September 1916–September 1916<br />

Spyridon Lambros September 1916–April 1917<br />

Alexandros Zaimis April 1917–June 1917<br />

Eleftherios Venizelos June 1917–November 1920<br />

Dimitrios Rallis November 1920–January 1921<br />

Nikolaos Kalogeropoulos February 1921–March 1921<br />

Dimitrios Gounaris March 1921–May 1922<br />

Nikolaos Stratos May 1922–May 1922<br />

Petros Protopapadakis May 1922–August 1922<br />

Nikolaos Triantafillakos August 1922–September 1922<br />

Anastasios Charalambis September 1922–September 1922<br />

Sotirios Krokidas September 1922–November 1922<br />

Stylianos Gonatas November 1922–January 1924<br />

Eleftherios Venizelos January 1924–February 1924<br />

Georgios Kafantaris February 1924–March 1924<br />

Alexandros Papanastasiou March 1924–July 1924<br />

Themistoklis Sofoulis July 1924–October 1924<br />

Andreas Michalakopoulos October 1924–June 1925<br />

Theodoros Pangalos June 1925–July 1926<br />

Athanasios Eftaxias July 1926–August 1926<br />

Georgios Kondylis August 1926–December 1926<br />

Alexandros Zaimi December 1926–July 1928<br />

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182 • APPENDIX C<br />

Eleftherios Venizelos July 1928–May 1932<br />

Alexandros Papanastasiou May 1932–June 1932<br />

Eleftherios Venizelos June 1932–November 1932<br />

Panaghis Tsaldaris November 1932–January 1933<br />

Eleftherios Venizelos January 1933–March 1933<br />

Alexandros Othonaios March 1933–March 1933<br />

Panaghis Tsaldaris March 1933–October 1935<br />

Georgios Kondylis October 1935–November 1935<br />

Konstantinos Demertzis November 1935–May 1936<br />

Ioannis Metaxas May 1936–January 1941<br />

Alexandros Koryzis January 1941–April 1941<br />

Emamanouel Tsouderos April 1941–April 1944<br />

Sofoklis Sofoklis April 1944–April 1944<br />

Georgios Papandreou April 1944–January 1945<br />

Nikolaos Plastiras January 1945–April 1945<br />

Petros Voulgaris April 1945–October 1945<br />

Archbishop-Regent Damaskino October 1945–November 1945<br />

Panayiotis Kanellopoulos November 1945–November 1945<br />

Themistoklis Sofoulis November 1945–April 1946<br />

Panayiotis Poulitsas April 1946–April 1946<br />

Konstantinos Tsaldaris April 1946–January 1947<br />

Dimitrios Maximos January 1947–August 1947<br />

Konstantinos Tsaldaris August 1947–September 1947<br />

Themistoklis Sofoulis September 1947–June 1949<br />

Alexandros Diomidis June 1949–January 1950<br />

Ioannis Theotokis January 1950–March 1950<br />

Sofoklis Venizelos March 1950–April 1950<br />

Nikolaos Plastiras April 1950–August 1950<br />

Sofoklis Venizelos August 1950– October 1951<br />

Nikolaos Plastiras October 1951–October 1952<br />

Dimitrios Kiossopoulos October 1952–November 1952<br />

Alexandros Papagos November 1952–October 1955<br />

Konstantinos Karamanlis October 1955–March 1958<br />

Konstantinos Georgiakopoulos March 1958–May 1958<br />

Konstantinos Karamanlis May 1958–September 1961<br />

Konstantinos Dovas September 1961–November 1961<br />

Konstantinos Karamanlis November 1961–June 1963<br />

Panayiotis Pipinelis June 1963–September 1963<br />

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PRIME MINISTERS <strong>OF</strong> MODERN GREECE • 183<br />

Stylianos Mavromichalis September 1963–November 1963<br />

Georgios Papandreou November 1963–December 1963<br />

Ioannis Paraskevopoulos December 1963–February 1964<br />

Georgios Papandreou February 1964–July 1965<br />

Georgios Athanasiadis-Novas July 1965–August 1965<br />

Ilias Tsirimokos August 1965–September 1965<br />

Stefanos Stefanopoulos September 1965–December 1966<br />

Ioannis Paraskevopoulos December 1966–April 1967<br />

Panayiotis Kanellopoulos April 1967–April 1967<br />

Konstantinos Kollias April 1967–December 1967<br />

Georgios Papadopoulos December 1967–October 1973<br />

Spyridon Markezinis October 1973–November 1973<br />

Adamantios Androutsopoulos November 1973–July 1974<br />

Konstantinos Karamanlis July 1974–May 1980<br />

Georgios Rallis May 1980–October 1981<br />

Andreas Papandreou October 1981– July 1989<br />

Tzannis Tzannetakis July 1989–October 1989<br />

Ioannis Grivas October 1989–November 1989<br />

Xenofon Zolotas November 1989–April 1990<br />

Konstantinos Mitsotakis April 1990–September 1993<br />

Andreas Papandreou September 1993–January 1996<br />

Kostas Simitis January 1996–March 2004<br />

Kostas Karamanlis March 2004–<br />

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09_152_05_AC.indd 184<br />

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Appendix D: National Election Results in Greece<br />

(1946–2007)<br />

National Election 1946<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

United Order of Nationalists, UON 610,995 55.12 206<br />

(Enomeni Parataxis<br />

Ethnikofronon, EPE)<br />

National Political Union, NPU 213,721 19.28 68<br />

(Ethniki Politiki Enosis, EPE)<br />

Liberal Party, LP (Komma 159,525 14.39 48<br />

Fileleftheron, KF)<br />

National Election 1950<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

People’s Party, PP (Laikon 317,512 18.8 62<br />

Komma, LK)<br />

Liberal Party, LP (Komma 291,083 17.24 56<br />

Fileleftheron, KF)<br />

National Progressive Centre Union 277,739 16.44 45<br />

(Ethniki Proodeftiki Enosis Kentrou,<br />

EPEK)<br />

Democratic Socialist Party, DSK 180,185 10.67 35<br />

(Dimokratiko Sosialistiko Komma,<br />

DSK)<br />

Democratic Alignment (Dimokratiki 163,824 9.7 18<br />

Parataxis, DP)<br />

Independent Political Party, IPP 137,618 8.15 16<br />

(Politiki Anexartiti Parataxis, PAP)<br />

185<br />

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186 • APPENDIX D<br />

National Election 1951<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

Greek Rally, GR (Ellinikos 624,316 36.53 114<br />

Synagermos, ES)<br />

National Progressive Centre Union, 401,379 23.49 74<br />

NPCU (Ethniki Proodeftiki Enosis<br />

Kentrou, EPEK)<br />

Liberal Party, LP (Komma 325,390 19.04 57<br />

Fileleftheron, KF)<br />

United Democratic Left, UDL 180,640 10.57 10<br />

(Eniaia Dimokratiki Aristera, EDA)<br />

People’s Party, PP (Laikon Komma, 113,876 6.66 2<br />

LK)<br />

National Election 1952<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

Greek Rally, GR (Ellinikos 783,541 49.22 247<br />

Synagermos, ES)<br />

Liberal Party, LP (Komma 544,834 34.22 51<br />

Fileleftheron, KF)<br />

United Democratic Left, UDL (Eniaia 152,011 9.55 –<br />

Dimokratiki Aristera, EDA)<br />

National Election 1956<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

Democratic Union, DU (Dimokratiki 1,620,007 48.15 132<br />

Enosis, DE)<br />

National Radical Union, NRU 1,594,112 47.38 165<br />

(Ethniki Rizospastiki Enosis, ERE)<br />

Small independent parties and candidates 27,880 0.83 3<br />

09_152_06_AD.indd 186<br />

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NATIONAL ELECTION RESULTS IN GREECE • 187<br />

National Election 1958<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

National Radical Union, NRU (Ethniki 1,583,885 41.16 171<br />

Rizospastiki Enosis, ERE)<br />

United Democratic Left, UDL (Eniaia 939,902 24.42 79<br />

Dimokratiki Aristera, EDA)<br />

Liberal Party, LP (Komma 795,445 20.67 36<br />

Fileleftheron, KF)<br />

Progressive Rural Democratic Union, 408,787 10.62 10<br />

PRDU (Proodeftiki Agrotiki<br />

Dimokratiki Enosis, PADE)<br />

National Election 1961<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

National Radical Union, NRU 2,347,922 50.81 176<br />

(Ethniki Rizospastiki Enosis, ERE)<br />

Center Union/Progressive Party, 1,555,122 33.65 100<br />

CU/PP (Enosis Kentrou/Komma<br />

Proodeftikon, EK/KP) 675,867 14.62 24<br />

Pandemocratic Agrarian Front of<br />

Greece, PAFG (Pandimokratikon<br />

Agrotikon Metopo Elladas, PAME)<br />

National Election 1963<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

Center Union, CU (Enosis 1,962,079 42.04 138<br />

Kentrou, EK)<br />

National Radical Union, NRU 1,837,377 39.37 132<br />

(Ethniki Rizospastiki Enosis, ERE)<br />

United Democratic Left, UDL (Eniaia 669,267 14.34 28<br />

Dimokratiki Aristera, EDA)<br />

Progressive Party, PP (Komma 173,981 3.73 2<br />

Proodeftikon, KP)<br />

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188 • APPENDIX D<br />

National Election 1964<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

Center Union, CU (Enosis Kentrou, 2,424,477 52.72 171<br />

EK)<br />

National Radical Union/ Progressive 1,621,546 35.26 107<br />

Party, NRU/PP (Ethniki Rizospastiki<br />

Enosis/Komma Proodeftikon, KP/ERE)<br />

United Democratic Left, UDL (Eniaia 542,865 11.8 22<br />

Dimokratiki Aristera, EDA)<br />

National Election 1974<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea Dimokratia, 2,669,113 54.37 219<br />

ND)<br />

Center Union/New Forces, CU/NF 1,002,559 20.42 60<br />

(Enosis Kentrou/ Nees Dynamis,<br />

EK/ND)<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement, PSM 666,413 13.58 13<br />

(Panellinio Sosialistikio Kinima,<br />

PASOK)<br />

United Ledt, UL (Enomeni Aristera, 485,700 9.89 8<br />

EA)<br />

National Election 1977<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea 2,146,365 41.84 171<br />

Dimokratia, ND)<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement, PSM 1,300,025 25.34 93<br />

(Panellinio Sosialistikio Kinima,<br />

PASOK)<br />

Union of Democratic Center, UDC 612,786 11.95 16<br />

(Enosi Dimokratikou Kentrou, EDIK)<br />

Communist Party of Greece, CPG 480,272 9.36 11<br />

(Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE)<br />

National Alignment, NA (Ethniki 349,988 6.82 5<br />

Parataxi, EP)<br />

09_152_06_AD.indd 188<br />

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NATIONAL ELECTION RESULTS IN GREECE • 189<br />

National Election 1981<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement, PSM 2,726,309 48.06 172<br />

(Panellinio Sosialistikio Kinima, PASOK)<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea 2,034,496 35.86 115<br />

Dimokratia, ND)<br />

Communist Party of Greece, CPG 620,302 10.93 13<br />

(Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE)<br />

National Election 1985<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement, 2,916,450 45.82 161<br />

PSM (Panellinio Sosialistikio<br />

Kinima, PASOK)<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea 2,599,949 40.85 126<br />

Dimokratia, ND)<br />

Communist Party of Greece, CPG 629,518 9.89 12<br />

(Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE)<br />

Communist Party of Greece (Internal), 117,050 1.84 1<br />

CPG (Kommounistiko Komma<br />

Elladas Esoterikou, KKE Esoterikou)<br />

National Election June 1989<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea 2,887,488 44.3 145<br />

Dimokratia, ND)<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement, 2,551,518 39.1 125<br />

PSM (Panellinio Sosialistikio Kinima,<br />

PASOK)<br />

Coalition of the Left and Progress, 855,944 13.1 28<br />

CLP (Synaspismos tis Aristeras kai<br />

tis Proodou, SYN)<br />

Democratic Renewal, DR (Demokratiki 65,614 1.0 1<br />

Ananeosi, DA)<br />

Fidelity (Embistosini) 34,145 0.5 1<br />

09_152_06_AD.indd 189<br />

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190 • APPENDIX D<br />

National Election November 1989<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea 3,093,479 46.19 148<br />

Dimokratia, ND)<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement, PSM 2,724,334 40.68 128<br />

(Panellinio Sosialistikio Kinima,<br />

PASOK)<br />

Coalition of the Left and Progress, 734,334 10.97 21<br />

CLP (Synaspismos tis Aristeras kai<br />

tis Proodou, SYN)<br />

Ecologists 39,158 0.58 1<br />

Others 1.58 2<br />

National Election April 1990<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea 3,088,137 46.89 150<br />

Dimokratia, ND)<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement,<br />

PSM (Panellinio Sosialistikio Kinima, 2,543,042 38.61 123<br />

PASOK)<br />

Coalition of the Left and Progress, 677,059 10.28 19<br />

CLP (Synaspismos tis Aristeras<br />

kai tis Proodou, SYN)<br />

Ecologists 50,868 0.77 1<br />

Democratic Renewal, DR 44,077 0.67 1<br />

(Demokratiki Ananeosi, DA)<br />

Others (including deputies elected 2.78 6<br />

jointly by PSM/PASOK and CLP/SYN)<br />

National Election 1993<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement, PSM 3,235,017 46.88 170<br />

(Panellinio Sosialistikio Kinima,<br />

PASOK)<br />

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NATIONAL ELECTION RESULTS IN GREECE • 191<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea 2,711,737 39.3 111<br />

Dimokratia, ND)<br />

Political Spring, PS (Politiki Anixi, PA) 336,460 4.88 10<br />

Communist Party of Greece, CPG 313,001 4.54 9<br />

(Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE)<br />

National Election 1996<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement, 2,813,245 41.49 162<br />

PSM (Panellinio Sosialistikio<br />

Kinima, PASOK)<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea 2,584,765 38.12 108<br />

Dimokratia, ND)<br />

Communist Party of Greece, CPG 380,167 5.61 11<br />

(Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE)<br />

Coalition of the Left and Progress, 347,051 5.12 10<br />

CLP (Synaspismos tis Aristeras kai<br />

tis Proodou, SYN)<br />

Democratic Social Movement, DSM 300,671 4.43 9<br />

(Dimokratiko Koinoniko Kinima,<br />

DIKKI)<br />

National Election 2000<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement, PSM 3,007,596 43.79 158<br />

(Panellinio Sosialistikio Kinima,<br />

PASOK)<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea 2,935,196 42.74 125<br />

Dimokratia, ND)<br />

Communist Party of Greece, CPG 379,454 5.52 11<br />

(Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE)<br />

Coalition of the Left and Progress, 219,880 3.20 6<br />

CLP (Synaspismos tis Aristeras kai<br />

tis Proodou, SYN)<br />

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192 • APPENDIX D<br />

National Election 2004<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea 3,359,058 45.4 165<br />

Dimokratia, ND)<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement, 3,002,531 40.5 117<br />

PSM (Panellinio Sosialistikio<br />

Kinima, PASOK)<br />

Communist Party of Greece, 436,573 5.9 12<br />

CPG (Kommounistiko Komma<br />

Elladas, KKE)<br />

Coalition of the Radical Left, 241,539 3.3 6<br />

CRL (Synaspismos Rizospastikis<br />

Aristeras, SYRIZA)<br />

National Election 2007<br />

Parties Votes % Seats<br />

New Democracy, ND (Nea 2,995,479 41.83 152<br />

Dimokratia, ND)<br />

Panhellenic Sociaist Movement, 2,727,853 38.10 102<br />

PSM (Panellinio Sosialistikio Kinima,<br />

PASOK)<br />

Communist Party of Greece, CPG 583,815 8.15 22<br />

(Kommounistiko Komma Elladas, KKE)<br />

Coalition of the Radical Left, CRL 361,211 5.04 14<br />

(Synaspismos Rizospastikis Aristeras,<br />

SYRIZA)<br />

People’s Orthodox Rally, POR 271,764 3.8 10<br />

(Laikos Orthodoxos Synagermos, LAOS)<br />

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Appendix E: Basic Data on Greece<br />

GEOGRAPHY<br />

Location:<br />

Geographic coordinates:<br />

Area:<br />

Area, comparative:<br />

Land boundaries:<br />

Coastline:<br />

Maritime claims:<br />

Climate:<br />

Southern Europe, bordering the Aegean<br />

Sea, Ionian Sea, and the Mediterranean<br />

Sea, between Albania and Turkey<br />

39°00́ N, 22°00́ E<br />

total: 131,940 sq km<br />

land: 130,800 sq km<br />

water: 1,140 sq km<br />

slightly smaller than Alabama<br />

total: 1,228 km<br />

border countries: Albania 282 km, Bulgaria<br />

494 km, Turkey 206 km, former<br />

Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia 246 km<br />

13,676 km<br />

territorial sea: 12 nm<br />

continental shelf: 200 m depth or to the<br />

depth of exploitation<br />

temperate; mild, wet winters; hot, dry<br />

summers<br />

193<br />

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194 • APPENDIX E<br />

Terrain:<br />

Elevation extremes:<br />

Natural resources:<br />

mostly mountains with ranges extending<br />

into the sea as peninsulas or chains of<br />

islands<br />

lowest point: Mediterranean Sea 0 m<br />

highest point: Mount Olympus 2,917 m<br />

lignite, petroleum, iron ore, bauxite, lead,<br />

zinc, nickel, magnesite, marble, salt, hydropower<br />

potential<br />

Land use: arable land: 20.45%<br />

permanent crops: 8.59%<br />

other: 70.96% (2005)<br />

Irrigated land: 14,530 sq km (2003)<br />

Total renewable water 72 cu km (2005)<br />

resources:<br />

Freshwater withdrawal total: 8.7 cu km/yr (16%/3%/81%)<br />

(domestic/industrial/ per capita: 782 cu m/yr (1997)<br />

agricultural):<br />

Natural hazards:<br />

Environment,<br />

current issues:<br />

Geography, note:<br />

severe earthquakes<br />

air pollution; water pollution<br />

strategic location dominating the Aegean<br />

Sea and southern approach to Turkish<br />

Straits; a peninsular country, possessing<br />

an archipelago of about 2,000 islands<br />

09_152_07_AE.indd 194<br />

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BASIC DATA ON GREECE • 195<br />

PEOPLE<br />

Population:<br />

Age structure:<br />

Median age:<br />

Population growth rate:<br />

Birth rate:<br />

Death rate:<br />

Net migration rate:<br />

Sex ratio:<br />

Infant mortality rate:<br />

Life expectancy at birth:<br />

10,722,816 (July 2008 est.)<br />

0–14 years: 14.3% (male 789,137/female<br />

742,469) 15–64 years: 66.6% (male<br />

3,568,101/female 3,575,572) 65 years<br />

and over: 19.1% (male 898,337/female<br />

1,149,200) (2008 est.)<br />

total: 41.5 years<br />

male: 40.4 years<br />

female: 42.6 years (2008 est.)<br />

0.146% (2008 est.)<br />

9.54 births/1,000 population (2008 est.)<br />

10.42 deaths/1,000 population (2008 est.)<br />

2.33 migrants/1,000 population (2008 est.)<br />

at birth: 1.06 male(s)/female<br />

under 15 years: 1.06 male(s)/female<br />

15–64 years: 1 male(s)/female<br />

65 years and over: 0.78 male(s)/female<br />

total population: 0.95 male(s)/female<br />

(2008 est.)<br />

total: 5.25 deaths/1,000 live births<br />

male: 5.77 deaths/1,000 live births<br />

f emale: 4.7 deaths/1,000 live births (2008<br />

est.)<br />

total population: 79.52 years<br />

male: 76.98 years<br />

female: 82.21 years (2008 est.)<br />

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196 • APPENDIX E<br />

Total fertility rate:<br />

Ethnic groups:<br />

Religions:<br />

Languages:<br />

Literacy:<br />

1.36 children born/woman (2008 est.)<br />

population: Greek 93%, other (foreign<br />

citizens) 7% (2001 census)<br />

Note: percents represent citizenship, since<br />

Greece does not collect data on ethnicity<br />

Greek Orthodox 98%, Muslim 1.3%, other<br />

0.7%<br />

Greek 99% (official), other 1% (includes<br />

English and French)<br />

definition: age 15 and over can read and<br />

write<br />

total population: 96%<br />

male: 97.8%<br />

female: 94.2% (2001 census)<br />

School life expectancy total: 17 years<br />

(primary to tertiary male: 17 years<br />

education): female: 17 years (2006)<br />

Education expenditures: 4.4% (2005)<br />

GOVERNMENT<br />

Country name:<br />

Government type:<br />

Capital:<br />

conventional long form: Hellenic Republic<br />

conventional short form: Greece<br />

local long form: Elliniki Dhimokratia<br />

local short form: Ellas or Ellada<br />

parliamentary republic<br />

name: Athens<br />

geographic coordinates: 37°59́ N, 23°44́<br />

E<br />

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BASIC DATA ON GREECE • 197<br />

time difference: UTC+2 (7 hours ahead of<br />

Washington, DC during Standard Time)<br />

daylight saving time: +1hr, begins last<br />

Sunday in March; ends last Sunday in<br />

October<br />

Administrative divisions:<br />

Independence:<br />

51 prefectures (nomoi; singular, nomos)<br />

and 1 autonomous region*: Achaia, Agion<br />

Oros* (Mt. Athos), Aitolia kai Akarnania,<br />

Argolis, Arkadia, Arta, Attiki, Chalkidiki,<br />

Chanion, Chios, Dodekanisos, Drama, Evros,<br />

Evrytania, Evvoia, Florina, Fokidos,<br />

Fthiotis, Grevena, Ileia, Imathia, Ioannina,<br />

Irakleion, Karditsa, Kastoria, Kavala,<br />

Kefallinia, Kerkyra, Kilkis, Korinthia,<br />

Kozani, Kyklades, Lakonia, Larisa, Lasithi,<br />

Lefkas, Lesvos, Magnisia, Messinia,<br />

Pella, Pieria, Preveza, Rethynnis, Rodopi,<br />

Samos, Serrai, Thesprotia, Thessaloniki,<br />

Trikala, Voiotia, Xanthi, Zakynthos.<br />

1830 (from the Ottoman Empire)<br />

National holiday: Independence Day, 25 March (1821)<br />

Constitution: 11 June 1975<br />

Legal system:<br />

Suffrage:<br />

International organization<br />

participation:<br />

based on codified Roman law; judiciary<br />

divided into civil, criminal, and administrative<br />

courts; accepts compulsory ICJ<br />

jurisdiction with reservations<br />

18 years of age; universal and compulsory<br />

Australia Group, BIS, BSEC, CE, CERN,<br />

EAPC, EBRD, EIB, EMU, ESA, EU,<br />

FAO, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICC, ICCt,<br />

ICRM, IDA, IEA, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS,<br />

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198 • APPENDIX E<br />

IHO, ILO, IMF, IMO, IMSO, Interpol,<br />

IOC, IOM, IPU, ISO, ITSO, ITU,<br />

ITUC, MIGA, MINURSO, NAM (guest),<br />

NATO, NEA, NSG, OAS (observer),<br />

OECD, OIF, OPCW, OSCE, PCA, Schengen<br />

Convention, SECI, UN, UNCTAD,<br />

UNESCO, UNHCR, UNIDO, UNIFIL,<br />

UNMEE, UNMIS, UNOMIG, UNWTO,<br />

UPU, WCO, WEU, WFTU, WHO, WIPO,<br />

WMO, WTO, ZC<br />

ECONOMY<br />

GDP (purchasing power<br />

parity):<br />

GDP (official exchange<br />

rate):<br />

GDP, real growth rate:<br />

GDP, per capita (PPP):<br />

$324.6 billion (2007 est.)<br />

$314.6 billion (2007 est.)<br />

4% (2007 est.)<br />

$29,200 (2007 est.)<br />

GDP, composition agriculture: 3.6%<br />

by sector: industry: 24.8%<br />

services: 71.6% (2007 est.)<br />

Labor force:<br />

4.92 million (2007 est.)<br />

Labor force, agriculture: 12%<br />

by occupation: industry: 20%<br />

services: 68% (2004 est.)<br />

Unemployment rate:<br />

8.3% (2007 est.)<br />

Household income or lowest 10%: 2.5%<br />

consumption by<br />

highest 10%: 26% (2000 est.)<br />

percentage share:<br />

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BASIC DATA ON GREECE • 199<br />

Distribution of family 33 (2005)<br />

Income, Gini index:<br />

Inflation rate (consumer<br />

prices):<br />

Investment (gross fixed):<br />

Budget:<br />

Agriculture, products:<br />

Industries:<br />

Industrial production<br />

growth rate:<br />

Current account balance:<br />

Exports:<br />

Exports, commodities:<br />

Exports, partners:<br />

Imports:<br />

Imports, commodities:<br />

3% (2007 est.)<br />

26.2% of GDP (2007 est.)<br />

revenues: $111.8 billion<br />

expenditures: $120.6 billion (2007 est.)<br />

wheat, corn, barley, sugar beets, olives,<br />

tomatoes, wine, tobacco, potatoes; beef,<br />

dairy products<br />

tourism, food and tobacco processing, textiles,<br />

chemicals, metal products; mining,<br />

petroleum<br />

3.2% (2007 est.)<br />

–$43.7 billion (2007 est.)<br />

$23.91 billion f.o.b. (2007 est.)<br />

food and beverages, manufactured goods,<br />

petroleum products, chemicals, textiles<br />

Germany 11.4%, Italy 10.7%, Cyprus<br />

6.5%, Bulgaria 6.4%, UK 5.4%, Romania<br />

4.5%, France 4.2%, US 4.1% (2006)<br />

$80.79 billion f.o.b. (2007 est.)<br />

machinery, transport equipment, fuels,<br />

chemicals<br />

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200 • APPENDIX E<br />

Imports, partners:<br />

Germany 12.9%, Italy 11.7%, Russia<br />

5.6%, France 5.6%, China 5%, Netherlands<br />

5% (2006)<br />

Economic aid, donor: $424 million (2006)<br />

Economic aid, recipient: $8 billion annually from EU (2000–2006);<br />

Greece will receive about $3.8 billion per<br />

year between 2007–2013 under the EU’s<br />

Community Support Funds IV<br />

Reserves of foreign<br />

exchange and gold:<br />

$3.658 billion (31 December 2007 est.)<br />

Debt, external: $86.72 billion (31 December 2007)<br />

Stock of direct foreign<br />

investment, at home:<br />

Stock of direct foreign<br />

investment, abroad:<br />

$43.18 billion (2007 est.)<br />

$18.02 billion (2007 est.)<br />

Market value of publicly $145 billion (2005)<br />

traded shares:<br />

MILITARY<br />

Military branches:<br />

Military service age and<br />

obligation:<br />

Hellenic Army (Ellinikos Stratos, ES),<br />

Hellenic Navy (Ellinikos Polemiko Navtiko,<br />

EPN), Hellenic Air Force (Elliniki<br />

Polimiki Aeroporia, EPA) (2007)<br />

19–45 years of age for compulsory<br />

military service; during wartime the law<br />

allows for recruitment beginning January<br />

of the year of inductee’s 18th birthday,<br />

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BASIC DATA ON GREECE • 201<br />

thus including 17-year-olds; 17 years of<br />

age for volunteers; conscript service obligation,<br />

1 year for all services; women<br />

are eligible for voluntary military service<br />

(2008)<br />

Manpower available for males age 16–49: 2,535,174<br />

military service:<br />

females age 16–49: 2,517,273 (2008 est.)<br />

Manpower fit for military males age 16–49: 2,084,469<br />

service:<br />

females age 16–49: 2,065,956 (2008 est.)<br />

Manpower reaching males age 16–49: 53,858<br />

militarily significant females age 16–49: 50,488 (2008 est.)<br />

age annually:<br />

Military expenditures:<br />

4.3% (2005 est.)<br />

Source: The World Factbook 2008, Washington, D.C.: Central Intelligence<br />

Agency, 2008.<br />

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Appendix F: Economic Statistical Charts<br />

Graph 1. Greece: GDP<br />

203<br />

09_152_08_AF.indd 203<br />

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Graph 2. Greece: GDP per Capita<br />

Graph 3. Greece: Inflation<br />

09_152_08_AF.indd 204<br />

3/26/09 1:16:31 PM


Graph 4. Greece: Public Deficit<br />

Graph 5. Greece: Imports–Exports<br />

09_152_08_AF.indd 205<br />

3/26/09 1:16:32 PM


Graph 6. Greece: Public Debt<br />

09_152_08_AF.indd 206<br />

3/26/09 1:16:34 PM


Bibliography<br />

I. General<br />

A. General Information<br />

B. Journals and Yearbooks<br />

II.<br />

ORGANIZATION<br />

History<br />

A. Before Independence<br />

B. The National Revolution and the 19th Century<br />

C. The 20th Century<br />

III. Politics (Including Public Policy, the Government, Institutions, and<br />

Political Parties)<br />

IV. Foreign Relations (Including Cyprus and the European Union)<br />

V. Diaspora<br />

VI. Economy<br />

VII. Society<br />

A. Family, Village, Class, and Nation<br />

B. Education<br />

C. Religion<br />

VIII. Culture<br />

A. Architecture and Cities<br />

B. Art<br />

C. Literature<br />

D. Music<br />

E. Folklore<br />

IX. Internet Sources<br />

A. General<br />

B. News<br />

C. History<br />

D. Economy and Business<br />

E. Culture<br />

207<br />

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208 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

INTRODUCTION<br />

The study of modern Greece has been overshadowed by its glorious ancestor,<br />

classical Hellas. Whereas Western scholarship has been fascinated<br />

by, and invested heavily in, ancient Greece for centuries, the international<br />

bibliography in general—and in English in particular—on modern Greece<br />

is, by comparison, quite limited.<br />

When dealing with such an ancient land as Greece, the first challenge<br />

with which one is confronted is periodization. Until recently, the question<br />

of dating various periods of Greek history and how to integrate them (or<br />

not) have preoccupied most historians. A conventional and well-established<br />

periodization accepts the end of ancient Greece with the Roman conquest<br />

in 146 BCE and the end of ancient times with the transfer of the imperial<br />

capital from Rome to Constantinople in 330 CE. Some historians mark the<br />

end of the Middle Ages with the fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans in<br />

1453 CE. For others, the medieval era was prolonged in this part of Europe<br />

because of the Ottoman conquest and the control of most of Greek lands<br />

by a premodern, multiethnic, religiously legitimized, agriculturally based,<br />

Near Eastern empire. For most, the eruption of the national Revolution of<br />

1821 marks the beginning of modern, independent, and national Greece.<br />

However, how this modern Greece is related to its medieval and ancient<br />

ancestors is still hotly debated.<br />

For the reader who knows little of modern Greece, a standard and popular<br />

introduction is Richard Clogg’s A Concise History of Greece (1992),<br />

which presents a short, readable, dispassionate, well-balanced, and comprehensive<br />

narrative of an otherwise complicated subject. A more recent work<br />

with similar aspirations is that of John Koliopoulos and Thanos Veremis<br />

entitled Greece: The Modern Sequel—From 1821 to the Present (2003),<br />

which expands into less conventional subject areas such as social and intellectual<br />

history.<br />

Modern Greece has been studied from many different comparative perspectives.<br />

First, as a Balkan nation, modern Greece has been included in<br />

historical studies of the Balkans. When it comes to comparative works, this<br />

is the most dominant approach, traditionally espoused by historians. In that<br />

regard, five works immediately come to mind. First is Lefteris Stavrianos’<br />

The Balkans since 1453 (1965), a masterful tour d’horizon, which despite<br />

its age remains an essential point of reference for the study of the making of<br />

modern Greece. Then, there are the works of Barbara Jelavich, History of<br />

the Balkans, Vol. 1: Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries (1983), History<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 208<br />

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 209<br />

of the Balkans, Vol. 2: Twentieth Century (1983), as well as the book she<br />

coauthored with Charles Jelavich, The Establishment of the Balkan National<br />

States, 1804–1920 (1987), which constitute a good, conventional account<br />

on the late and post-Ottoman Balkans that helps place modern Greece<br />

within a wider historical context. More recently, Mark Mazower has endowed<br />

us with a brief and readable The Balkans: A Short History (2002)<br />

that brilliantly touches upon most of the themes that have preoccupied<br />

modern Balkan historiography. Paschalis Kitromilides’ Enlightenment,<br />

Nationalism, Orthodoxy: Studies in the Culture and Political Thought of<br />

Southeastern Europe (1994) presents the intellectual environment within<br />

which modern Greece and its neighboring nation-states emerged. Finally,<br />

Maria Todorova’s revealing Imagining the Balkans (1997) offers a useful<br />

and well-founded postmodernist critique of the prejudices of Western historiography<br />

with regard to the Balkans, including Greece.<br />

Another approach in studying modern Greece is to view it as a southern<br />

European nation related to Italy and, mostly, to the Iberian states of Spain<br />

and Portugal. This is an approach favored mostly not by historians but by<br />

comparative political scientists and experts in European Union studies. The<br />

reason is that although modern Greece shared a common historical past<br />

with its Balkan neighbors, it has followed a different developmental trajectory<br />

after World War II as it did not experience communist rule. On the<br />

contrary, postwar Greece has been confronted with the challenges of economic<br />

development in the 1950s and 1960s, democratization in the 1970s,<br />

and integration into Europe in the 1980s, just like Spain and Portugal. A<br />

good work in that regard is Richard Gunther, P. Nikiforos Diamandouros,<br />

and Hans-Jürgen Puhle (eds.), The Politics of Democratic Consolidation:<br />

Southern Europe in Comparative Perspective (1995), which analyzes and<br />

compares the democratization trajectories of the southern European countries,<br />

and Loukas Tsoukalis’ The European Community and Its Mediterranean<br />

Enlargement (1981).<br />

A third, and much less developed, approach comes from a post-Marxist<br />

and wider leftist intellectual tradition that attempted to place modern<br />

Greece in the global semiperiphery, somewhere between the underdeveloped<br />

Third World and the developed West. Espoused by sociologists and<br />

other social scientists from the 1960s to the 1980s, today this approach is<br />

in decline following the demise of dependency and other related theories.<br />

Two good examples of works within this paradigm are Nikos Poulantzas’<br />

The Crisis of the Dictatorships: Portugal, Greece, Spain (1976) and, more<br />

recently, Nikos Mouzelis’ Politics in the Semi-Periphery (1986).<br />

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210 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

Apart from all these wider comparative studies, modern Greece has been<br />

studied in its own right. In that regard, there are a few works in English<br />

of exceptional quality, some of which have not even been translated into<br />

Greek and remain accessible only to the English speaker. A good starting<br />

point might be Speros Vryonis’ The Decline of Medieval Hellenism in Asia<br />

Minor and the Process of Islamization from the Eleventh through the Fifteenth<br />

Century (1986), which deals with an understudied and underappreciated<br />

period and a process out of which modern Greece would later start<br />

taking form. Vryonis employs his exceptional intellectual gifts to brilliantly<br />

construct a narrative for the contraction and transformation of Hellenism<br />

into the modern times.<br />

Turning to the pivotal moment of the arrival of nationalism in the<br />

18th century and building upon the work of Konstantinos Th. Dimaras,<br />

Paschalis Kitromilides’ The Enlightenment as Social Criticism: Iosipos<br />

Moisiodax and Greek Culture in the Eighteenth Century (1992) provides<br />

a groundbreaking study of intellectual history and the ideas that paved the<br />

way for the national revolution and the emergence of modern Greece.<br />

Furthermore, John Petropulos’ masterful Politics and Statecraft in the<br />

Kingdom of Greece, 1833–1843 (1968) offers a vivid and comprehensive<br />

account of the making of modern Greece, during and in the immediate<br />

aftermath of the revolution. Deconstructing the national myth of a unified<br />

revolutionary movement, Petropulos delves into the power struggles<br />

among the various constituencies and elites competing for the definition<br />

of modern Greece. Very perceptively, Petropulos identifies the continuities<br />

and discontinuities between Ottoman and independent Greece and many of<br />

the pathologies and their causes of its politics that have survived, to a large<br />

extent, to the present day.<br />

Douglas Dakin has written the definitive account of the process of Greek<br />

state formation in The Unification of Greece 1770–1923 (1972). Although<br />

much smaller than Italy and Germany, it took Greece more than a century<br />

to acquire its present form through the gradual enlargement of the original<br />

small kingdom established in and around Peloponnesus in the 1830s.<br />

Other important works that deal with specific subjects or time periods<br />

after independence include Kostas Vergopoulos’ Le capitalisme difforme<br />

et la nouvelle question agraire: L’example de la Grèce moderne (1977),<br />

which explains the socioeconomic structure of modern Greece as the result<br />

of the workings of a fundamental agrarian question that produced a nation<br />

of small landowners. John Koliopoulos analyzes the phenomenon and social<br />

context of brigandry, which survived well after independence in 19th-<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 210<br />

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 211<br />

century Greece, in Brigands with a Cause (1987) and was extinguished<br />

only after it colonized the Greek state structures. Mark Mazower used the<br />

history of a city, Thessaloniki, to brilliantly discuss the broader issues of<br />

empire, nationalism, and modernity in his Salonica—City of Ghosts: Christians,<br />

Muslims and Jews, 1430–1950 (2004).<br />

In his Stillborn Republic: Social Coalitions and Party Strategies in<br />

Greece, 1922–1936 (1983), George Mavrogordatos analyzes the rise<br />

and fall of the interwar Venizelist republic between the two cataclysms<br />

that defined Greece in the 20th century: the Asia Minor catastrophe and<br />

World War II. Mavrogordatos works his way through a universe of competing<br />

constituencies in what amounted to a profound crisis of national<br />

integration that lasted until recently and had much to do with the new<br />

lands and the new peoples coming into Greece after the Balkan Wars<br />

of 1912–1913. Mark Mazower offers an insightful and sober account<br />

of Inside Hitler’s Greece: The Experience of Occupation, 1941–1944<br />

(1993) while reconnecting social with political history. Jean Meynaud<br />

wrote Les Forces Politiques en Grèce (1965) that successfully explains<br />

the forces and cleavages that shaped Greece’s guarded democracy in the<br />

1950s and 1960s.<br />

Michael Herzfeld in The Poetics of Manhood: Contest and Identity in a<br />

Cretan Mountain Village (1988) offers an in-depth study of rural Greece<br />

that vividly brings together the insights of social anthropology. Nikos Mouzelis’<br />

Modern Greece: Facets of Underdevelopment (1978) is a pioneering<br />

sociological study of the pathologies of modern Greece, especially when<br />

compared with the advanced West. Thanos Veremis wrote The Military<br />

in Greek Politics: From Independence to Democracy (1997), which is an<br />

essential reading for the study of civil–military relations and the democratization<br />

of Greece in the 20th century. Finally, Konstantinos Th. Dimaras<br />

wrote a History of Modern Greek Literature (1974), a year after Linos<br />

Politis did, both of which are essential guides in modern Greece’s rich<br />

literary traditions.<br />

Two Greek politicians have written two influential books on the two<br />

turning points of postwar Greek history. Evangelos Averoff published<br />

By Fire and Axe: The Communist Party and the Civil War in Greece,<br />

1944–1949 (1978) to offer a well-informed, conservative perspective from<br />

the side of the victors of the Civil War. His main argument—which, thanks<br />

to an abundance of evidence, he makes it hard to refute—is that the communists<br />

were defeated not so much because of the U.S. intervention but<br />

because they had gradually lost the hearts and minds of the majority of<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 211<br />

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212 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

Greeks. This was the result of the mistakes they committed by being hostage<br />

to a Stalinist, dogmatic ideology and worldview.<br />

Andreas Papandreou, who revolutionized Greek politics after 1974,<br />

wrote Democracy at Gunpoint: The Greek Front (1971). In it, Papandreou<br />

masterfully brings together the definitive leftist narrative on postwar Greek<br />

history. This is a book that should be read less as history and more as<br />

metahistory by everyone interested in the myths and ideology that have<br />

dominated Greek public life since the fall of the colonels’ junta in 1974.<br />

For Papandreou, postwar Greece has been a victim of U.S. intervention<br />

and imperialism. For him, as for most Greeks in the 1970s and 1980s, the<br />

precondition for the development and democratization of Greece should<br />

be the restoration of the country’s independence. Much of contemporary<br />

Greek historiography is about refuting the simplistic but captivating narrative<br />

that Papandreou promoted.<br />

Contemporary Greek historiography can be grouped in two broad categories.<br />

There are the conventional studies of Greek politics, some of<br />

which are particularly well researched, such as Evanthis Hatzivassiliou’s<br />

Greece and the Cold War—Frontline State, 1952–1967 (2006) and Ioannis<br />

Stefanidis’ Stirring the Greek Nation: Political Culture, Irredentism and<br />

Anti-Americanism in Postwar Greece, 1945–1967 (2007). Then, there are<br />

collective works that bring together different social sciences such as the<br />

book edited by Mark Mazower and entitled After the War Was Over—Reconstructing<br />

the Family, Nation, and the State in Greece (2000).<br />

In regards to more contemporary subject areas, including Greece’s<br />

foreign relations, three edited volumes and a coauthored study stand out<br />

within a plethora of works. First, the one by Harry J. Psomiades and<br />

Stavros Thomadakis entitled Greece, the New Europe, and the Changing<br />

International Order (1993), which, although a bit outdated, offers a rich<br />

collection of essays on Greece in the immediate aftermath of the end of<br />

the Cold War. Then there is Graham Allison and Kalypso Nicolaides’ The<br />

Greek Paradox: Promise vs. Performance (1997), which is a multidisciplinary<br />

collection of essays by some leading social scientists and commentators<br />

on the particular developmental trajectory of modern Greece and its<br />

failure to converge more rapidly with Western Europe. Thirdly, Dimitris<br />

Keridis and Dimitris Triantafyllou brought together analysts from different<br />

sides in Greek–Turkish Relations in the Era of Globalization (2001) in a<br />

refreshing attempt to connect foreign policy with wider international and<br />

domestic developments. Finally, RAND Corporation’s Ian O. Lesser and<br />

his associates, together with the Kokkalis Foundation, produced Greece’s<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 212<br />

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 213<br />

New Geopolitics (2001), which is a dispassionate assessment of Greece’s<br />

current geostrategic position and its role in the world.<br />

Since especially the end of the Cold War, researchers on modern Greece<br />

have attempted to deconstruct national history. Anastasia Karakasidou’s<br />

Fields of Wheat, Hills of Blood: Passages to Nationhood in Greek Macedonia,<br />

1870–1990 (1997) caused a storm when it was published and was<br />

denounced as treacherous by Greek nationalists. More recently, political<br />

scientists in particular have undermined the leftist narrative on postwar<br />

Greece that has been the dominant one since 1974. In that regard, the works<br />

of Stathis Kalyvas are of particular interest.<br />

For further research, one can visit the National Library of Greece, the<br />

Parliament Library, the General State Archives, the Athens Academy, the<br />

Archives of Contemporary Social History, the Gennadius Library, the Diplomatic<br />

Historical Archive of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Center<br />

of Neo-Hellenic Research at the National Research Foundation, the Greek<br />

Literary and Historical Archive (ELIA), the Balkan Studies Foundation,<br />

the Historical and Ethnological Association of Greece, the Center of Asia<br />

Minor Studies, the Directorate of Military History, the Vovolini Archive,<br />

and the Historical Archive of the University of Athens.<br />

In addition, valuable collections are found in institutions established by<br />

Greek statesmen, banks, and museums. First and foremost, they include<br />

the Konstantinos G. Karamanlis Foundation, the Andreas G. Papandreou<br />

Foundation, the Konstantinos Mitsotakis Foundation, and the Eleftherios<br />

Venizelos Foundation, as well as the historical archives of the National<br />

Bank of Greece, the Agricultural Bank of Greece, the Bank of Greece, the<br />

Benaki Museum, and the War Museum.<br />

An extensive collection of books on Greece can also be found in the<br />

Widener Library of Harvard University. Smaller collections exist in other<br />

big universities in the United States, Britain, and elsewhere. Finally, important<br />

research material lies with the historical archives of the Foreign Office<br />

in Britain, the Foreign Ministry of France, other major European powers,<br />

and the United States.<br />

The bibliography that follows is not exhaustive but it is quite extensive.<br />

With few exceptions, it only lists titles of works published in English. They<br />

are grouped in eight broad categories followed by a ninth that includes<br />

some important Internet resources on Greece.<br />

Occasionally, choosing a category in which to place a book presented its<br />

own challenge. For example, Mark Mazower’s Salonica—City of Ghosts:<br />

Christians, Muslims, and Jews, 1430–1950, is about the history of the city<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 213<br />

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214 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

of Thessaloniki and could have been listed in section II (History) or in<br />

section VIII (Culture: Architecture and Cities). Instead, it is being listed<br />

in section VII (Society: Family, Village, Class, and Nation) as its central<br />

theme is the passage from the imperial to the age of nation-states. An extreme<br />

example of this difficulty was placing Martin Bernal’s Black Athena:<br />

The Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization. Although this is a work<br />

that deals with ancient Greece, it has been hotly debated by present-day<br />

nationalists and, more broadly, postmodernist theorists on the construction<br />

of national and modern traditions. Thus, it is included in section VII (Society:<br />

Family, Village, Class and Nation), which lists works on the Greek<br />

nation and nationalism.<br />

Generally speaking, section II includes historical works, section III<br />

works mostly of political science, section IV studies of international relations,<br />

while section VII and VIII anthropological and ethnographic studies.<br />

It is true, however, that in regard to the vast majority of entries, the choice<br />

of category was quite straightforward.<br />

I. GENERAL<br />

A. General Information<br />

Campbell, John, and Philip Sherrard. Modern Greece. London: Ernest<br />

Benn, 1968.<br />

Clogg, Richard. A Concise History of Greece. Cambridge: Cam bridge<br />

University Press, 1992.<br />

———. A Short History of Modern Greece. Cambridge: Cam bridge University<br />

Press, 1979.<br />

Clogg, Richard, and Mary Jo Clogg. Greece. Oxford: Clio Press, 1980.<br />

Colovas, Anthone C. A Quick History of Modern Greece. New York: PublishAmerica,<br />

2007.<br />

Constantopoulou, Photini, ed. The Foundation of the Modern Greek State:<br />

Major Treaties and Conventions, 1830–1947. Athens: Kastaniotis Editions,<br />

1999.<br />

Dimaras, Konstantinos Th., C. Koumarianou, and L. Droulia, eds. Modern<br />

Greek Culture: A Selected Bibliography (in English, French, German,<br />

Italian). 4th rev. ed. Athens: Neo-Hellenic Research Centre of the National<br />

Hellenic Research Foundation, 1974.<br />

Gallant, Thomas W. Modern Greece. London: Hodder Arnold, 2001.<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 214<br />

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 215<br />

Hellander, Paul. Greece. Country Guide. 8th ed. New York: Lonely Planet,<br />

2008.<br />

Koliopoulos, John S., and Thanos M. Veremis. Greece—The Modern Sequel:<br />

From 1821 to the Present. New York: New York University Press,<br />

2003.<br />

Legg, Keith R., and John M. Roberts. Modern Greece: A Civilization on the<br />

Periphery. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1997.<br />

Pantelouris, E. M. Greece: An Introduction. Moffat, Scotland: BlueAcre<br />

Books, 1987.<br />

Todorova, Maria. Imagining the Balkans. New York: Oxford University<br />

Press, 1995.<br />

Woodhouse, Christopher M. Modern Greece: A Short History. London:<br />

Faber & Faber, 2000.<br />

B. Journals and Yearbooks<br />

ANTI. Athens, 1972<br />

Archeion Ekklisiastikis Istorias, Athens, 1911.<br />

Balkan Studies. Thessaloniki, Greece: Institute for Balkan Studies, First<br />

Volume, 1960.<br />

Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies. Oxford, 1975.<br />

Cambridge Papers in Modern Greece (KAMPOS). Cambridge, 1993.<br />

Deltio Kentrou Mikrasiatikon Spoudon. Athens: Center for Asia Minor<br />

Studies, 1977.<br />

Ellinika. Athens, 1928.<br />

Epitheorisis Koinonikon Erevnon: The Greek Review of Social Research.<br />

Athens: Social Science Center, 1969.<br />

Epsilon: Modern Greek and Balkan Studies. University of Copenhagen,<br />

Department of Modern Greek and Balkan Studies, 1987.<br />

Hellenic Review of International Relations. Thessaloniki: Institute of Public<br />

International Law, 1981.<br />

Hellenika: Jahrbuchfuer die Freunde Griechenlands. Ausgaben Neugriechische<br />

Studien Bochum, 1964.<br />

Istorein. Athens: Nefeli, 1999.<br />

Istor., 1990.<br />

Journal of Modem Greek Studies. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University<br />

Press, 1985.<br />

Journal of Modern Hellenism. New York, 1985.<br />

Journal of the Hellenic Diaspora. New York: Pella, 1974.<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 215<br />

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216 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

Kleio. Thessaloniki, 2005.<br />

Makedonika. Thessaloniki: Society for Macedonian Studies, 1940.<br />

Mandatophoros: Bulletin of Modem Greek Studies. Amsterdam: Byzantijns-<br />

Nieuwgrieks Seminarium, University of Amsterdam, 1972.<br />

Mediterranean Quarterly. Washington, D.C.: Duke University Press,<br />

1990.<br />

Mediterranean Historical Review. Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv University, School of<br />

History, 1986.<br />

Mnimon. Athens: Etairia Meletis Neou Ellinismou, 1971.<br />

Modern Greek Society: A Social Science Newsletter. Providence, R.I.,<br />

1973.<br />

Modern Greek Studies Yearbook. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota,<br />

1985.<br />

Scandinavian Studies in Modern Greek. Gothenburg, Sweden, 1977.<br />

The South-East European YEARBOOK. Athens: Hellenic Foundation for<br />

European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP), 1988.<br />

Sudosteuropa Mitteilungen. Munich: Sudosteuropa-Gesellschaft (Southeast<br />

Europe Association), 1975.<br />

Ta Istorika. Athens: Melissa, 1983.<br />

II. HISTORY<br />

A. Before Independence<br />

Boardman, John. The Oxford History of Greece and the Hellenistic World.<br />

Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.<br />

Browning, Robert, ed. The Greek World—Classical, Byzantine, and Modern.<br />

London: Thames & Hudson, 2000.<br />

Cartledge, Paul, ed. The Cambridge Illustrated History of Ancient Greece.<br />

Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.<br />

Clogg, Richard. The Movement for Greek Independence 1770–1821: A<br />

Collection of Documents. London: Macmillan, 1976.<br />

Cotterill, Henry B. Ancient Greece. New York: Frederick A. Stokes,<br />

1913.<br />

Diamandouros, Nikiforos P., J. P. Anton, J. A. Petropulos, and P. Topping,<br />

eds. Hellenism and the First Greek War of Liberation (1821–1830):<br />

Continuity and Change. Thessaloniki: Institute for Balkan Studies,<br />

1976.<br />

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 217<br />

Driault, Edouard, and Michel Lheritier. Histoire diplomatique de la Grèce<br />

de 1821 à nos jours. Paris: Didot, 1925–1926.<br />

Finlay, George. A History of Greece from Its Conquest by the Romans to<br />

the Present Time, 146 BC to AD 1864, Vol. 6. Edited by H. F. Tozer.<br />

Oxford: n.p., n.d.<br />

Hadjiantoniou, George. Protestant Patriarch: The Life of Cyril Lucaris<br />

(1572–1638), Patriarch of Constantinople. London: Epworth Press,<br />

1961.<br />

Kitromilides, Paschalis M. The Enlightenment as Social Criticism: Iosipos<br />

Moisiodax and Greek Culture in the Eighteenth Century. Princeton, N.J.:<br />

Princeton University Press, 1992.<br />

Koumoulides, John A., ed. Greece—The Legacy: Essays on the History of<br />

Greece, Ancient, Byzantine and Modern. Bethesda: University Press of<br />

Maryland, 1998.<br />

Martin, Thomas R. Ancient Greece: From Prehistoric to Hellenistic Times.<br />

New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2000.<br />

Papadopoulos, Theodore. Studies and Documents Relating to the History<br />

of the Greek Church and People under Turkish Domination. Brussels:<br />

1952.<br />

Pomeroy, Sarah B., Stanley M. Burstein, Walter Donlan, and Jennifer Tolbert<br />

Roberts. A Brief History of Ancient Greece: Politics, Society and<br />

Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.<br />

Pratt, Michael. Britain’s Greek Empire: Reflections on the His tory of<br />

the Ionian Islands from the Fall of Byzantium. London: Rex Collings,<br />

1978.<br />

Runciman, Steven. The Fall of Constantinople. Cambridge: Cambridge<br />

University Press, 1965.<br />

———. The Great Church in Captivity: A Study of the Patriarchate of Constantinople<br />

from the Eve of the Turkish Conquest to the Greek War of<br />

Independence. Cambridge: Cambridge Press, 1968.<br />

Stavrianos, L. S. The Balkans since 1453. New York: Holt, Rinehart, &<br />

Winston, 1965.<br />

Toping, Peter W. Studies in Latin Greece, A.D. 1205–1715. London: Variorum,<br />

1977.<br />

Vakalopoulos, Apostolos. The Greek Nation, 1453–1669: The Cultural and<br />

Economic Background of Modern Greek Society. Translated by I. Moles<br />

and P. Moles. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1976.<br />

———. History of Macedonia 1354–1833. Thessaloniki: Institute for Balkan<br />

Studies, 1973.<br />

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218 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

———. A History of Thessaloniki. Thessalon iki: Institute for Balkan Studies,<br />

1972.<br />

———. Origins of the Greek Nation: The Byzantine Period, 1204–1461.<br />

Rev. ed. Translated by I. Marks. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University<br />

Press, 1970.<br />

Vryonis, Speros. The Decline of Medieval Hellenism in Asia Minor and the<br />

Process of Islamization from the Eleventh through the Fifteenth Century.<br />

Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986.<br />

Zakynthinos, Dionysios A. The Making of Modern Greece: From Byzantium<br />

to Independence. Oxford: Blackwell, 1976.<br />

B. The National Revolution and the 19th Century<br />

Bower, Leonard, and Gordon Bolitho. Otto I, King of Greece: A Biography.<br />

London: Selwyn & Blount, 1939.<br />

Brewer, D. The Flame of Freedom: The Greek War of Independence<br />

1821–1835. London: John Murray, 2001.<br />

Carrabott, Philip, ed. Greek Society in the Making, 1863–1913. Hampshire:<br />

Variorum, 1997.<br />

Clogg, Richard, ed. The Struggle for Greek Independence: Essays to Mark<br />

the 150th Anniversary of the Greek War of Independence. London: Macmillan,<br />

1973.<br />

Dakin, Douglas. The Greek Struggle for Independence, 1821–1833. London:<br />

University of California Press, 1973.<br />

———. The Unification of Greece 1770–1923. New York: St. Martin’s<br />

Press, 1972.<br />

Deringil, Selim. The Well-Protected Domains: Ideology and the Legitimation<br />

of Power in the Ottoman Empire, 1876–1909. London: I. B. Tauris,<br />

1998.<br />

Diamandouros, Nikiforos, et al., eds. Hellenism and the First Greek War<br />

of Liberation (1821–1830). Thessaloniki: Insti tute for Balkan Studies,<br />

1976.<br />

Dontas, Domna. Greece and the Great Powers 1863–1875. Thessaloniki:<br />

Institute for Balkan Studies, 1966.<br />

Guthenke, Constanze. Placing Modern Greece: The Dynamics of Romantic<br />

Hellenism, 1770–1840. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.<br />

Economopoulou, Marietta. Parties and Politics in Greece 1844–55. Athens:<br />

1984.<br />

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 219<br />

Hussey, Joan M. The Finlay Papers: A Catalogue. London: Thames &<br />

Hudson, 1973.<br />

Jenkins, Romilly. The Dilessi Murders. London: Longman, 1961.<br />

Kaldis, William P. John Capodistrias and the Modern Greek State. Ann<br />

Arbor, Mich.: Edwards Bros, 1963.<br />

Kofos, Evangelos. Greece and the Eastern Crisis 1875–1878. Thessaloniki:<br />

Institute for Balkan Studies, 1975.<br />

Koliopoulos, John. Brigands with a Cause. Oxford: Clarendon Press,<br />

1987.<br />

Levandis, John. The Greek Foreign Debt and the Great Powers 1821–1898.<br />

New York: Columbia University Press, 1944.<br />

Lidderdale, H. A. The Memoirs of General Makriyannis 1797 –1864 London:<br />

Oxford University Press, 1966.<br />

McGrew, William. Land and Revolution in Modern Greece 1800–1881.<br />

Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1985.<br />

Miller, William. The Ottoman Empire and Its Successors, 1801–1927.<br />

Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1936.<br />

Papadopoulos, G. S. England and the Near East 1896–1898. Thessaloniki:<br />

Institute for Balkan Studies, 1969.<br />

Petropulos, John-Anthony. Politics and Statecraft in the Kingdom of<br />

Greece, 1833–43. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Uni versity Press, 1968.<br />

Prevelakis, Eleftherios. British Policy towards the Change in Dynasty in<br />

Greece 1862–63. Athens: 1953.<br />

Woodhouse, Christopher M. The Battle of Navarino. London: Hodder &<br />

Stoughton, 1965.<br />

———. Capodistria: The Founder of Greek Indepen dence. London: Oxford<br />

University Press, 1973.<br />

———. The Greek War of Independence: Its Historical Setting. London:<br />

Hutchinson, 1952.<br />

———. Rhigas Velestinlis: The Protomartyr of the Greek Revolution.<br />

Limni, Evia: Denise Harvey, 1995.<br />

C. The 20th Century<br />

Alastos, Dams. Venizelos: Patriot, Statesman, Revolutionary. London:<br />

Lund Humphries, 1942.<br />

Argenti, Philip. The Occupation of Chios by the Germans and Their<br />

Administration of the Island: Described in Contempo rary Documents.<br />

Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1966.<br />

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220 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

Augustinos, Gerasimos. Consciousness and History: Nationalist Critics<br />

of Greek Society 1897–1914. Boulder, Colo.: East European Quarterly,<br />

1977.<br />

Auty, Phyllis, and Richard Clogg, eds. British Policy towards Wartime<br />

Resistance in Yugoslavia and Greece. London: Macmillan, 1975.<br />

Averoff, Evangelos. By Fire and Axe: The Communist Party and the Civil<br />

War in Greece, 1944–1949. New York: Aristide Caratzas, 1978.<br />

Baerentzen, Lars, ed. British Reports on Greece. Copenhagen: Museum<br />

Tusculanum Press, 1982.<br />

Baerentzen, Lars, John Iatrides, and Ole Smith, eds. Studies in the History<br />

of the Greek Civil War, 1945–49. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum<br />

Press, 1987.<br />

Barker, Elizabeth. British Policy in South-East Europe in the Second World<br />

War. London: Macmillan, 1976.<br />

Barros, James. The Corfu Incident of 1923: Mussolini and the League of<br />

Nations. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univer sity Press, 1965.<br />

———. The League of Nations and the Great Powers: The Greek-Bulgarian<br />

Incident, 1925. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1970.<br />

Bitzes, John. Greece in World War II to April 1941. Kansas: Sunflower<br />

University Press, 1989.<br />

Buckley, Christopher. Greece and Crete 1941. London: H. M. Stationery<br />

Office, 1952.<br />

Byford-<strong>Jon</strong>es, W. The Greek Trilogy: Resistance—Liberation —Revolution.<br />

London: Hutchinson, 1945.<br />

Calvocovessi, P., Richard Clogg, Douglas Dakin, et al. Greece and Great<br />

Britain during World War I. Thessaloniki: Institute for Balkan Studies,<br />

1985.<br />

Carmacolias, Demetrios. Political Communication in Greece, 1965–1967:<br />

The Last Two Years of a Parliamentary Democ racy. Athens: National<br />

Center of Social Research, 1974.<br />

Cassimatis, Louis. American Influence in Greece 1917–1920. Kent, Ohio:<br />

Kent State University Press, 1988.<br />

Casson, Stanley. Greece against the Axis. London: 1941.<br />

Cervi, Mario. The Hollow Legions: Mussolini’s Blunder, 1940 –1941. London:<br />

Chatto & Windus, 1972.<br />

Chandler, Geoffrey. The Divided Land: An Anglo-Greek Tragedy. London:<br />

Macmillan, 1959.<br />

Clark, Bruce. Twice a Stranger: The Mass Expulsions That Forged Modern<br />

Greece and Turkey. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,<br />

2006.<br />

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 221<br />

Clogg, Richard, ed. Greece 1981–89: The Populist Decade. New York: St.<br />

Martin’s Press, 1993.<br />

———. Greece in the 1980s. London: Macmillan, 1983.<br />

———. Greece under Military Rule. London: Seeker & Warburg, 1972.<br />

Close, David. Greece since 1945. London: Longman, 2002.<br />

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———, ed. Greece and the EEC Integration and Convergence. London:<br />

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V. DIASPORA<br />

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VI. ECONOMY<br />

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VII. SOCIETY<br />

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———. Greek Life in Town and Country. London: George Newnes, 1905.<br />

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———, ed. Contributions to Mediterranean Sociology: Medi terranean Rural<br />

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Sanders, Irwin. Rainbow in the Rock: The People of Rural Greece. Cambridge,<br />

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Stahl, Paul. Household, Village and Village Confederation in Southeastern<br />

Europe. New York: East European Monographs, 1986.<br />

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Tziovas, Dimitris. Greece and the Balkans: Identities, Perceptions and<br />

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Xydis, Stephen. Modern Greek Nationalism. Lon don: University of Washington<br />

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B. Education<br />

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C. Religion<br />

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Hammond, Peter. The Waters of Marah: The Present State of the Greek<br />

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Ware, Timothy. The Orthodox Church. Harmondsworth, En gland: Penguin<br />

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Yannaras, Christos. Elements of Faith: An Introduction to Orthodox Theology.<br />

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Zizioulas, Jean D. Being as Communion. Crestwood, N.Y.: St. Vladimir’s<br />

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VIII. CULTURE<br />

A. Architecture and Cities<br />

Boyer, Christine M., et al. Aris Konstantinidis: The Building and the Land.<br />

Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University, School of Architecture, 1987.<br />

Doumanis, O. B., and Paul Oliver. Shelter in Greece-Oikismoi stin Ellada.<br />

Athens: Architecture in Greece Press, 1979.<br />

Fermor, Patrick L. Roumeli: Travels in Northern Greece. New York: Penguin,<br />

1966.<br />

Korres, Manolis. Athens: From the Classical Period to the Present Day.<br />

Athens: Kotinos, 2004.<br />

Krautheimer, Richard. Early Christian and Byzantine Architec ture. Harmondsworth,<br />

England: Penguin Books, 1965.<br />

Michaelides, Constantine. Hydra: A Greek Island Town—Its Growth and<br />

Form. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1967.<br />

Sarrinikolaou, George. Facing Athens: Encounters with the Modern City.<br />

New York: North Point Press, 2004.<br />

Sicilianos, Dimitrios. Old and New Athens. London: Putnam, 1960.<br />

Torr, Cecil. Rhodes in Modern Times. Oxford: Archaeopress, 2003.<br />

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 243<br />

Tsaktsiras Lambros. Thessaloniki: The City and Its Monuments. Thessaloniki:<br />

Malliares Paideia, 2004.<br />

Waterfield, Robin. Athens, from Ancient Ideal to Modern City. New York:<br />

Basic Books, 2004.<br />

B. Art<br />

Chrestou, Chrysanthos. Modern Greek Engraving. Athens: Ekdotiki Athinon,<br />

1994.<br />

Hadjinicolaou, Nicos. Theophilos, Kontoglou, Ghika and Tsa rouchis: Four<br />

Painters of 20th Century Greece. London: Wildenstein, 1975.<br />

Ioachimides, Christos. Eight Artists, Eight Attitudes, Eight Greeks: Stephanos<br />

Antonakos, Vlassis Caniaris, Chryssa, J. Kounellis, Pavlos, Lucas<br />

Samaras, Takis, Costas Tsoclis (introduction). London: Institute of Contemporary<br />

Art, 1975.<br />

Lidderdale, H. A. The War of Independence in Pictures: Copies by Demetrios<br />

Zographos from Originals by His Father Panayiotis Zographos<br />

Commissioned by General Makriyan nis and Presented to Her Majesty,<br />

Queen Victoria through Her Minister at Athens Sir Edmund Lyons 1839.<br />

Birming ham: University of Birmingham Centre for Byzantine Stud ies,<br />

1976.<br />

Lydakis, Stelios. Geschichte der Griechischen Malerei des 19ten Jahrhunderts<br />

[A History of Greek Painting in the 19th Century]. Munich: Prestel<br />

Verlag, 1972.<br />

Museum of Modern Art. Cinemythology: A Retrospective of Greek Film.<br />

Athens: Greek Film Center, 1993.<br />

Rice, David Talbot. Art of the Byzantine Era. London: Thames & Hudson.<br />

1963.<br />

Spender, Stephen. Ghika: Paintings, Drawing, Sculpture. London: Lund<br />

Humphries, 1964.<br />

Spiteris, Tony. Introduction à la peinture neo-hellenique [An Introduction<br />

to Modern Greek Painting]. Athens: 1962.<br />

Tsarouchis, Yannis. Theophilos. Athens: Commercial Bank of Greece.<br />

1966.<br />

C. Literature<br />

Alexiou, Margaret. After Antiquity: Greek Language, Myth, and Metaphor.<br />

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244 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

Alexiou, Margaret, and Vassilis Lambropoulos, eds. The Text and Its<br />

Margins: Post-Structuralist Approaches to Twentieth Century Greek<br />

Literature. New York: Pella, 1985.<br />

Barnstone, Willis. Eighteen Texts: Writings by Contemporary Greek Authors.<br />

Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univer sity Press, 1972.<br />

Beaton, Roderick. George Seferis: Waiting for the Angel—A Biography.<br />

New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2003.<br />

———. An Introduction to Modern Greek Literature. Oxford: Oxford University<br />

Press, 1994.<br />

———, ed. The Greek Novel, AD 1–1985. London: Croom Helm, 1988.<br />

Bien, Peter. Constantine Cavafy. New York: Columbia University Press,<br />

1964.<br />

———. Kazantzakis and the Linguistic Revolution in Greek Literature.<br />

Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1972.<br />

———. Nikos Kazantzakis. New York: Columbia University Press, 1972.<br />

Browing, Robert. Medieval and Modern Greek. Cambridge: Cambridge<br />

University Press, 1989.<br />

Calas, Nicolas. Texts on Poetics and Aesthetics (1929–38). New York:<br />

1982.<br />

Cavafy, Constantine P. Collected Poems. Translated by Edmund Keeley<br />

and Philip Sherrard. London: Hogarth Press, 1975.<br />

———. The Complete Poems of Cavafy. Translated by Rae Dalven. New<br />

York: Harcourt, Brace & World. 1961.<br />

———. Passions and Ancient Days. Translated by Edmund Keeley and<br />

George Savidis. London: Hogarth Press, 1975.<br />

———. The Poems of C. P. Cavafy. Translated by John Mavro gordatos.<br />

London: Hogarth Press, 1952.<br />

Dawkins, Richard M. Modern Greek in Asia Minor: A Study of the Dialects<br />

of Silli, Cappadocia and Pharasa, with Grammar, Texts, List Translations<br />

and Glossary. Cambridge: Cam bridge University Press, 1916.<br />

Decavalles, Antonis. Odysseas Elytis: From the Golden to the Silver Poem.<br />

New York: Pella, 1994.<br />

Dimaras, Konstantinos Th. A History of Modern Greek Literature. London:<br />

University of London Press, 1974.<br />

Doulis, Thomas. Disaster and Fiction: Modern Greek Fiction and the Asia<br />

Minor Disaster of 1922. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1977.<br />

———. George Theotokas. Boston: Twayne, 1975.<br />

Elytis, Odysseas. The Axion Esti: An International Poetry Forum Selection.<br />

Translated by Edmund Keeley and George Savidis. Pittsburgh: University<br />

of Pittsburgh Press, 1974.<br />

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 245<br />

———. The Collected Poems of Odysseas Elytis. Translated by J. Carson<br />

and N. Sarris. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998.<br />

———. The Sovereign Sun: Selected Poems. Philadelphia: Tem ple University<br />

Press. 1974.<br />

Friar, Kimon. Landscape of Death: The Selected Poems of Takis Sinopoulos.<br />

Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1979.<br />

———. Modern Greek Poetry: Translation, Introduction, an Essay on<br />

Translation, and Notes. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1973.<br />

Ivask, I. Odysseas Elytis. Norman: Oklahoma University Press, 1975.<br />

Jenkins, Romilly. Dionysios Solomos. Cambridge: Cambridge University<br />

Press. 1940.<br />

Jusdanis, Gregory. Belated Modernity and Aesthetic Culture: Inventing<br />

National Literature. Minneapolis: Minnesota University Press, 1991.<br />

———. The Poetics of Cavafy: Textuality, Eroticism, History. Princeton,<br />

N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1987.<br />

Karanikas, Alexander, and Helen Karanikas. Elias Venezis. New York:<br />

Twayne, 1969.<br />

Kazantzakis, Helen. Nikos Kazantzakis: A Biography Based on His Letters.<br />

Translated by Amy Mims. Oxford: Cassirer, 1968.<br />

Kazantzakis, Nikos. Christ Recrucified. Translated by <strong>Jon</strong>athan Griffin.<br />

New York: Simon & Schuster, 1954.<br />

———. The Fratricides. Translated by Athena Gianakas Dallas. New York:<br />

Simon & Schuster, 1967.<br />

———. Freedom and Death. Oxford: Cassirer, 1956.<br />

———. The Last Temptation. Translated by Peter A. Bien. New York: Simon<br />

& Schuster, 1961.<br />

———. Report to Greco. Translated by Peter A. Bien. Oxford: Cassirer,<br />

1965.<br />

———. Travels in Greece: Journey to the Morea. Translated by E. A. Reed.<br />

Oxford: Cassirer, 1966.<br />

———. Zorba the Greek. Translated by Carl Wildman. New York: Simon<br />

& Schuster, 1953.<br />

Kazhdan, Alexander. Authors and Texts in Byzantium. Aldershot, U.K.:<br />

Variorum, 1993.<br />

Keeley, Edmund. Angelos Sikelianos. London: George Allen & Unwin,<br />

1980.<br />

———. Cavafy’s Alexandria: Study of a Myth in Progress. Princeton. N.J.:<br />

Princeton University Press, 1977.<br />

———. Inventing Paradise: The Greek Journey (1937–47). New York: Farrar,<br />

Straus & Giroux, 1999.<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 245<br />

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246 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

———. Odysseus Elytis: Selected Poems. New York: Viking Press, 1981.<br />

Keeley, Edmund, and Philip Sherrard. Four Greek Poets: C. P. Cavafy,<br />

George Seferis, Odysseus Elytis, Nikos Gatsos. Harmondsworth, England:<br />

Penguin Books, 1966.<br />

———. Six Poets of Modern Greece. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1961.<br />

Klironomos, Martha. “George Theotokas’ Free Spirit: Reconfiguring<br />

Greece’s Path toward Modernity.” Journal of the Hellenic Diaspora 18,<br />

no. 1 (1992): 79–98.<br />

Krikos-Davis, K. Kolokes: A Study of George Seferis’s Logbook III (1953–<br />

55). Amsterdam: Adolf M. Hakkert, 1978.<br />

Lambropoulos, Vassilis. Literature as National Institution: Studies in the<br />

Politics of Modern Greek Criticism. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University<br />

Press, 1988.<br />

Layoun, Mary, ed. Modernism in Greece? Essays on the Literary and Cultural<br />

Margins of a Movement. New York: Pella, 1990.<br />

Levitt, Motton. The Cretan Glance: The World and Art of Nikos Kazantzakis.<br />

Columbus: Ohio State University Press. 1980.<br />

Liddell, Robert. Cavafy: A Critical Biography. London: Duck worth, 1974.<br />

Mackridge, Peter. Dionysios Solomos. Bristol: Bristol Classical Press, 1989.<br />

———. The Modern Greek Language. Oxford: Oxford University Press,<br />

1985.<br />

Maskaleris, Thanasis. Kostis Palamas. New York: Twayne, 1972.<br />

Myrivilis, Stratis. Life in the Tomb. Translated by Peter A. Bien. Hanover,<br />

N.H.: University Press of New En gland, 1977.<br />

———. The Mermaid Madonna. Translated by Abbott Rick. London:<br />

Hutchinson, 1959.<br />

———. The Schoolmistress with the Golden Eyes. Translated by Philip<br />

Sherrard. London: Hutchinson, 1964.<br />

Newton, Brian. Cypriot Greek: Its Phonology and Inflections. The Hague:<br />

Mouton, 1972.<br />

———. The Generative Interpretation of Dialect: A Study of Modern Greek<br />

Phonology. Cambridge: Cambridge Univer sity Press, 1972.<br />

Palamas, Kostis. The Twelve Days of the Gypsy. Translated with an introduction<br />

by George Thomson. London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1969.<br />

———. The Twelve Words of the Gypsy. Translated with an introduction by<br />

Frederic Will. Lincoln: University of Ne braska Press, 1964.<br />

———. The Twelve Words of the Gypsy. Translated by Ph. Theodore,<br />

George Stephanides, and C. Katsimbalis. Memphis, Tenn.: Memphis<br />

State University, 1975.<br />

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 247<br />

Papadiamantis, Alexandros. The Murderess. Translated by George X. Xanthopoulides.<br />

London: Doric, 1977.<br />

Politis, Linos. A History of Modern Greek Literature. Oxford: Clarendon<br />

Press, 1973.<br />

Prevelakis, Pandelis. The Sun of Death. Translated by Philip Sherrard.<br />

London: John Murray, 1965.<br />

———. The Tale of a Town. Translated by Kenneth Johnstone. London:<br />

Doric, 1976.<br />

Raizis, M. Byron. Dionysios Solomos. New York: Twayne, 1972.<br />

Ricks, David. The Shade of Homer: A Study in Modern Greek Poetry. Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge University Press, 1989.<br />

Ritsos, Yannis. Ritsos in Parentheses. Translated with an intro duction by<br />

Edmund Keeley. Princeton, N. J.: Prince ton University Press, 1979.<br />

———. Scripture of the Blind. Translated by Kimon Friar and Kostas<br />

Myrsiades. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1979.<br />

———. Selected Poems. Translated by Nikos Stangos. Harmondsworth,<br />

England: Penguin Books, 1974.<br />

Roberts, R. J. “The Greek Press at Constantinople in 1627 and Its Antecedents.”<br />

Library 22, no. 1 (1967).<br />

Roidis, Emmanuel. Pope Joan. Translated by Lawrence Durrell. London:<br />

Andre Deutsch, 1960.<br />

Roilos, Panagiotis. Amphoteroglossia: A Poetics of the Twelfth-Century<br />

Medieval Greek Novel. Washington, D.C.: Center for Hellenic Studies,<br />

Harvard University, 2006.<br />

Samarakis, Antonis. The Flaw. Translated by Peter Mansfield and Richard<br />

Burns. London: Hutchinson, 1966.<br />

Seferis, George. Collected Poems 1924–1955. Translated by E. Keeley and<br />

P. Sherrard. London: <strong>Jon</strong>athan Cape, 1969.<br />

———. On the Greek Style: Selected Essays in Poetry and Hellenism.<br />

Translated by Rex Warner and Th. D. Frangopou los with an introduction<br />

by Rex Warner. London: Bodley Head, 1966.<br />

———. A Poet’s Journal: Days of 1945–51. Translated by Athan Anagnostopoulos.<br />

Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap, 1974.<br />

Sherrard, Philip. The Marble Threshing Floor: Studies in Modern Greek<br />

Poetry. London: Vallentine, Mitchell, 1956.<br />

Spencer, Terence. Fair Greece! Sad Relic! Literary Philhellenism from<br />

Shakespeare to Byron. London: Weidenfeld & Ni colson. 1971.<br />

Taktsis, Costas. The Third Wedding. Translated by Leslie Finer. London:<br />

Alan Ross, 1967.<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 247<br />

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248 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

Theotokas, George. Argo. Translated by E. Margaret Brooke and Aris<br />

Tsatsopoulos. London: Methuen, 1951.<br />

Trypanis, Constantine. Medieval and Modern Greek Poetry: An Anthology.<br />

Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1951.<br />

———. The Penguin Book of Greek Verse. Harmondsworth, England: Penguin<br />

Books, 1971.<br />

Tsirkas, Stratis. Drifting Cities: A Trilogy. New York: Alfred A. Knopf,<br />

1974.<br />

Tziovas, Dimitris. The Nationism of the Demoticists and Its Impact on<br />

Their Literary Theory (1888–1930). Amsterdam: Hakkert, 1986.<br />

———. The Other Self: Selfhood and Society in Modern Greek Fiction.<br />

Lexington, Mass.: Lexington Books, 2003.<br />

———, ed. Greek Modernism and Beyond. Lanham, Md.: Rowman &<br />

Littlefield, 1995.<br />

Van Dyck, Karen R. Kassandra and the Censors: Greek Poetry since 1967.<br />

Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1998.<br />

D. Music<br />

Butterworth, Katherine, and Sara Schneider, eds. Rebetika: Songs from the<br />

Old Greek Underworld. Athens: Komboloi, 1975.<br />

Holst, Gail. Road to Rebetika: Music from a Greek Subculture: Songs of<br />

Love, Sorrow and Hashish. Athens: Anglo-Hellenic, 1977.<br />

———. Theodorakis: Myth and Politics in Modern Greek Music. Amsterdam:<br />

Adolf M. Hakkert, 1980.<br />

Papaioannou, John. European Music in the Twentieth Century. Edited by<br />

Howard Hartog. Harmondsworth, England: Pen guin Books, 1961.<br />

Pym, H. The Songs of Greece. London: Sunday Times, 1968.<br />

Stasinopoulos, Arianna. Maria: Beyond the Callas Legend. Lon don: Weidenfeld,<br />

1987.<br />

Wellesz, Egon. A History of Byzantine Music and Hymnography. Oxford:<br />

Clarendon Press, 1961.<br />

E. Folklore<br />

Abbott, George F. Macedonian Folklore. Cambridge: Cambridge University<br />

Press, 1969.<br />

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 249<br />

Alexiou, Margaret. The Ritual Lament in Greek Tradition. Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge University Press, 1974.<br />

Alexiou, Margaret, Dimitrios Yatromanolakis, and Panagiotis Roilos. The<br />

Ritual Lament in Greek Tradition. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield,<br />

2002.<br />

Antoniades, Anne Gault. The Anastenaria: Thracian Firewalk ing Festival.<br />

Athens: Thracian Archives no. 36, 1954.<br />

Argenti, Philip. The Folklore of Chios. Cambridge: Cambridge University<br />

Press, 1949.<br />

Beaton, Roderick. Folk Poetry of Modern Greece. Cambridge: Cambridge<br />

University Press, 1980.<br />

Colaclides, Helen. Folktales of Greece (Translation). Chicago: University<br />

of Chicago Press, 1970.<br />

Crosfield, Domini. Dances of Greece. London: Max Parish, 1948.<br />

Dawkins, Richard M. Modern Greek Folktales (Translation). Oxford: Clarendon<br />

Press, 1953.<br />

———. More Greek Folktales (Translation). Oxford: Clarendon Press,<br />

1955.<br />

Herzfeld, Michael. Ours Once More: Folklore, Ideology and the Making of<br />

Modern Greece. New York: Pella, 1986.<br />

Johnstone, Pauline. Greek Island Embroidery. London: 1961.<br />

———. Victoria and Albert Museum: A Guide to Greek Island Embroidery.<br />

Victoria and Albert Museum. London: H. M. Stationery Office, 1972.<br />

Kyriakides, Stilpon. Two Studies on Modern Greek Folklore. Thessaloniki:<br />

Institute for Balkan Studies, 1968.<br />

Kyriakidou-Nestoros, Alke. “Folk Art in Greek Macedonia.” Balkan Studies<br />

4, no.1 (1963).<br />

Lawson, John Cuthbert. Modern Greek Folklore and Ancient Greek Religion:<br />

A Study in Survivals. Cambridge: Cam bridge University Press,<br />

1964.<br />

Megas, Georgios A. Greek Calendar Customs. Athens: Press and Information<br />

Department, Prime Minister’s Office, 1958.<br />

Papadopoulos, S. A., ed. Greek Handicraft. Athens: National Bank of<br />

Greece, 1969.<br />

Petrides, Theodore. Greek Dances. Athens: Lycabettus Press, 1975.<br />

Petrides, Theodore, and Elpida Petridos. Folk Dances of the Greeks;<br />

Origins and Instructions. Folkestone, England: Bailey Bros. & Swinfen,<br />

1974.<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 249<br />

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250 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

IX. INTERNET SOURCES<br />

A. General<br />

www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/gr<br />

U.S. Central Intelligence Agency: The World Factbook—Greece.<br />

www.greekcalendar.com<br />

Calendar of Greek Events.<br />

www.gogreece.com<br />

GoGreece.com, general directory in English to Greek Internet sites on<br />

all topics.<br />

www.mfa.gr<br />

Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Greece.<br />

www.statistics.gr<br />

General Secretariat of National Statistical Service of Greece.<br />

www.worldstatemen.org/Greece.html<br />

World Statesmen: Greece (basic information about Greece, including<br />

chronology, national anthem, flags, maps and constitution).<br />

B. News<br />

www.dolnet.gr<br />

DOL, the Internet website of the Athens media group, including the<br />

English weekly Athens News (www.athensnews.gr).<br />

www.ekathimerini.com<br />

Kathimerini, the electronic edition in English of the Athens spreadsheet.<br />

www.enet.gr<br />

Eleftherotypia, the electronic edition in Greek of the Athens newspaper.<br />

www.e-tipos.com<br />

Eleftheros Tipos, the electronic edition in Greek of the Athens newspaper.<br />

www.flash.gr<br />

Flash.gr, a multimedia newspaper in Greek.<br />

www.hri.org<br />

HR-NET, a news portal.<br />

www.in.gr<br />

in.gr, a news portal.<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 250<br />

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C. History<br />

www.agp.gr<br />

The Andreas G. Papandreou Foundation<br />

www.ascsa.edu.gr/archives/Gennadius<br />

Gennadius Library<br />

www.askiweb.eu<br />

Archives of Contemporary Social History<br />

www.benaki.gr<br />

The Benaki Museum<br />

www.elia.org.gr<br />

The Greek Literary and Historical Archive (E.L.I.A.)<br />

www.gak.att.sch.gr<br />

General State Archives<br />

www.ikk.gr<br />

The Konstantinos G. Karamanlis Foundation<br />

www.ikm.gr<br />

The Konstantinos Mitsotakis Foundation<br />

www.nlg.gr<br />

National Library of Greece<br />

www.parliament.gr<br />

The Parliament Library<br />

BIBLIOGRAPHY • 251<br />

D. Economy and Business<br />

www.amcham.gr<br />

American-Hellenic Chamber of Commerce<br />

www.ase.gr<br />

Athens Stock Exchange<br />

www.ethniki.gr<br />

National Bank of Greece<br />

www.hellasob.com/direct/<br />

Hellas-on-Business<br />

www.ypan.gr<br />

Ministry of Development of Greece<br />

www.ypetho.gr<br />

Ministry of National Economy and Finance<br />

www.worldbank.org<br />

World Bank: Greece<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 251<br />

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252 • BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

E. Culture<br />

www.benaki.gr<br />

Benaki Museum<br />

www.bodossaki-foundation.gr<br />

The Bodossakis Foundation<br />

www.eie.gr<br />

National Hellenic Research Foundation<br />

www.fhw.gr<br />

Foundation of the Hellenic World<br />

www.gfc.gr<br />

Greek Film Center<br />

www.greece-museums.com<br />

Greece Museums Guide<br />

www.greekfestival.gr<br />

Athens Festival<br />

www.hfc.gr<br />

Hellenic Foundation for Culture<br />

www.kokkalisfoundation.gr<br />

The Kokkalis Foundation<br />

www.onassis.gr<br />

Alexander Onassis Public Benefit Foundation<br />

www.snfoundation.org<br />

Stavros Niarchos Foundation<br />

www.yppo.gr<br />

Ministry of Culture of Greece<br />

www.ypepth.gr<br />

Ministry of National Education and Religious Affairs<br />

09_152_09_Bibliography.indd 252<br />

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About the Author<br />

Dimitris Keridis is an associate professor of international politics at the<br />

Department of Balkan, Slavic, and Oriental Studies, at the University of<br />

Macedonia in Thessaloniki, Greece, and a senior associate at the Karamanlis<br />

Foundation in Athens, Greece. His research interests include<br />

foreign policy analysis, European politics, and theories of international<br />

relations, nationalism, and democracy. He has edited several volumes<br />

on Greece and its region, including Greek–Turkish Relations in the Era<br />

of Globalization. His latest book is entitled U.S. Foreign Policy and the<br />

Conservative Counterrevolution: Bush, Terrorism, Iraq, and Islam.<br />

Dr. Keridis has served as the Constantine Karamanlis Associate Professor<br />

in Hellenic and Southeastern European Studies at the Fletcher<br />

School, Tufts University (2005–2007); director of the Kokkalis Foundation<br />

in Athens, Greece (2001–2005); director of the Kokkalis Program<br />

at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University<br />

(1997–2001); and as lecturer of Balkan studies at the John F. Kennedy<br />

School of Government, Harvard University (1998–2001).<br />

He is a graduate of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy (PhD,<br />

1998; MALD, 1994). The subject of his doctoral dissertation was “The<br />

Foreign Policy of Nationalism: The Case of Serbia (1986–1995) and<br />

Greece (1991–1995).” Dr. Keridis also holds a JD from the Law School<br />

of the Aristotelian University of Thessaloniki, Greece (1991).<br />

253<br />

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