BBC History - UK (2022-01)

(EriveltonMoraes) #1

B


O


O


K


S


R


E


V


IE


W


S


The Greek
Revolution
by Mark Mazower
Allen Lane, 6 08 pages, £30

In March 1821,
Antonios Oikonomou


  • a sea captain from
    the Aegean island of
    Hydra and a member
    of the revolutionary
    Filiki Eteria, or Friendly Society – was drink-
    ing in a tavern in the port of the island when
    he heard that an uprising to free Greece from
    the control of the Ottoman empire had been
    launched. Springing into action he gathered a
    band of sailors and deposed the representative
    of the Porte, the Ottoman central govern-
    ment. Oikonomou was made sole governor
    but soon lost the upper hand. Forced to flee
    Hydra by rich shipowners, in December 1821
    he was gunned down by hired men.
    Mark Mazower’s book is full of such
    episodes – stories that humanise the long and
    bloody history of the Greek Revolution. It
    reads like a long series of adventure tales, rich
    in heroes, villains, triumphs and betrayals.
    The revolution (1821–29), also known as
    the War of Greek Independence, started as a
    series of local insurgencies. It brought togeth-
    er brigands, sea captains and young men who
    had studied Enlightenment ideas abroad and
    imported them to Greece. But local and class
    rifts soon came to the surface, and the conflict
    became as much a war among Greeks as an
    uprising against the Ottomans.
    Its meaning is still contested among histo-
    rians. Was it an attempt to liberate the ancient
    Hellenes, or a social revolution that brought
    Greece to modernity? For many fighters the
    war was religious – part of the Romeiko, the
    prophesied triumphal return of Orthodox
    Christianity. The main motive of the many
    Philhellenes (predominantly European
    volunteers inspired by their admiration of
    ancient Greece), on the other hand, was to
    fight against the post-Napoleonic reactionary
    restoration. They expected to meet ancient
    heroes but were disappointed. An English
    volunteer reciting Homer to the insurgents
    was met with total incomprehension.
    These tensions, and the huge power


Fight for a nation


COSTAS DOUZINAS on a study of the revolution by which Greece freed itself from the


Ottoman empire and was transformed into a self-ruling nation state


New dawn An allegory of the reawakening of Greek nationalism under Ottoman rule. This was one of a
number of factors that sparked the Greek Revolution of 1821–29, the subject of a new study by Mark Mazower

GREECE

while presenting the heroics and defeats in a
wider context that avoids monocausal expla-
nations. He shows how the revolution swept
away existing institutions, ideologies and
customs and created a new way of thinking
based on nation, faith, capitalism and consti-
tutional representation. And he argues,
compellingly, that the revolution helped
construct a nation rather than regenerate a
pre-existing ancient one, undermining an
article of faith of Greek nationalism.
The stress on the political and cultural
factors perhaps neglects economic pressures
and the preceding implosion of the Ottoman
empire. However, Mazower’s storytelling with
ideas makes this a book that will be enjoyed
equally by lay reader and historian.
He concludes that, though Greek freedom
was achieved, independence took much
longer, and the struggle for national sover-
eignty perhaps “continues to this day” – as the
recent travails of Greece over the national
debt and the refugee crises bear out.

Costas Douzinas is professor of law at
Birkbeck, London BR

ID

GE

M

AN

imbalance, pushed the revolution to the brink
of defeat. Only the victory of the united
British, French and Russian fleets in the battle
of Navarino in 1827 saved it – an episode that
signalled the birth of a new geopolitical order
and what became known as the “international
community”. After this success, and the
formation of Greece, the idea of a nation state
of self-ruling people spread across Europe.
Mazower reviews the conflicting political,
ideological and academic interpretations with
the aloofness that befits an intimate outsider.
He stresses the agency of the people involved

(QTGKIPIJVGTUYCPVKPI


VQOGGVCPEKGPVJGTQGUYGTG


FKUCRRQKPVGF#P'PINKUJ


XQNWPVGGTTGEKVKPI*QOGTVQ


VJGKPUWTIGPVUYCUOGVYKVJ


VQVCNKPEQORTGJGPUKQP

Free download pdf