How the Greek Revolution Inspired Philhellenism Around the World

“The Reception of Lord Byron at Missolonghi” by Theodoros Vryzakis. Source: Wikipedia

The 1821 Greek Revolution erupted into the world of the early nineteenth century as Europe was being shaken to its roots by riots in many nations which threatened its monarchies.

The Greek Revolution was a cause for concern for the elites, since it threatened Europe’s social and political balance. However, it was greeted with enthusiasm by many ordinary people across Europe and the US, which is undoubtedly partly to do with the Greek origin of so much of the West’s classical heritage.

The uprising quickly become a cause célèbre in the Western world, giving rise to an impressive wave of what came to be known as “philhellenism,” or the love of Greece and its history.

Some wealthy Americans and western European aristocrats, such as the renowned poet Lord Byron and later the physician Samuel Howe, actually took up arms and joined the Greek revolutionaries.

Percy Bysshe Shelley, one of the major English Romantic poets, perfectly captured the overall mood in his poem Hellas. “We are all Greeks. Our laws, our literature, our religion [sic], our art have their roots in Greece. But for Greece … we might still have been savages and idolators.… The Modern Greek is the descendant of those glorious beings.”

The Ottoman massacres of Greeks at Chios in 1822 inspired Eugène Delacroix’s famous painting “Massacre of Chios;” other philhellenic works by Delacroix were inspired by various Byron poems. Lord Byron, the most celebrated philhellene of all, lent his name, his prestige, his wealth — and ultimately his life — to the cause.

“The Combat of the Giaour and Hassan” by Eugène Delacroix (1826, oil on canvas, Art Institute of Chicago). Inspired by Lord Byron’s poem “The Giaour.” Source: Wikipedia

In the summer of 1821, various young men from all over Europe began to gather in the French port of Marseilles to book passage to Greece and join the revolution.

The French philhellene Jean-François-Maxime Raybaud wrote when he heard of the revolution, in March of 1821, “I learnt with a thrill that Greece was shaking off her chains,” and in July 1821, he boarded a ship bound for Greece.

Between the summer of 1821 and the end of 1822, when the French began to inspect ships leaving Marseilles for philhellenes, some 360 volunteers travelled to Greece.

In Germany, Italy and France, many clergyman and university professors gave speeches acknowledging that all of Europe owed a huge debt to ancient Greece.

A young medical student in Mannheim wrote that hearing his professor lecture on the need for Greek freedom went through him like an electric shock, inspiring him to drop his studies and head to Greece. At the same time, a Danish student wrote: “How could a man inclined to fight for freedom and justice find a better place than next to the oppressed Greeks?”

From the United States came the doctor Samuel Gridley Howe and the soldier George Jarvis to fight alongside the Greek people.

The classicist Edward Everett, a professor of Greek at Harvard, was active in championing the Greek cause in the United States.

In November of 1821, he published an appeal from Adhamantios Korais, which read “To the Citizens of the United States, it is your land that Liberty has fixed her abode, so you will not assuredly imitate the culpable indifference or rather the long ingratitude of the Europeans.” Korais went on to call for American intervention in the armed struggle in several American newspapers.

In 1821, the “Greek Committee” in Charleston, South Carolina sent the Greeks 50 barrels of salted meat, while the Greek Committee in Springfield, Massachusetts sent supplies of salted meat, sugar, fish and flour. In New York City, a charity ball hosted by that city’s Greek committee raised the then-princely sum of $8,000.

In Nafplio, the first capital of modern Greece, a monument to honor the philhellenes who died fighting in the war listed 274 names, with one hundred from Germany, forty each from France and Italy, and the rest from Britain, Spain, Hungary, Sweden, Portugal and Denmark.

Lord Byron, replica by Thomas Phillips, oil on canvas, circa 1835, Source; Wikipedia

But of course the biggest casualty of the war among the philhellenes was that of Lord Byron, who is celebrated in Greece as a national hero.

He raised money for the revolution,by selling his estate in England which raised some £11,250 pound sterling, all of which he planned to spend on the Greek cause. In today’s money Byron would have been a millionaire many times over, and the news that a fabulously wealthy British aristocrat known for his generosity in spending money had arrived in Greece made Byron the object of much solicitation in a desperately poor country like Greece.

He joined forces with Greek rebel leaders fighting the Ottomans near Missolonghi. In 1824 he planned to attack the Turkish-held fortress of Lepanto, at the mouth of the Gulf of Corinth, despite his lack of military experience.

Before the expedition could sail, on 15 February 1824, he fell ill and died in Missolonghi on 19 April.

Close to the centre of Athens, outside the National Garden, is a statue depicting Greece in the form of a woman crowning Byron.

The statue is by the French sculptors Henri-Michel Chapu and Alexandre Falguière. Since 2008, the anniversary of Byron’s death, 19 April, has been honoured in Greece as “Byron Day”.


Source: http://greece.greekreporter.com/category/greek-news/tourism/

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