READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM |
THE GREEK REVOLUTION.
CHAPTER X.
FALL OF ATHENS — DEFEAT OF
DRAMALI—FALL OF NAUPLIA.
“The strong warrant of an oath
Marked with a blot, damned in the book of Heaven.”
—Richard II.
The state of his relations with Russia, and the
destruction of Ali Pasha’s power, enabled Sultan Mahmud, in 1822, to make his
first great effort for reconquering Greece. The success of his measures in
suppressing the revolutionary movements over Macedonia, Thessaly, and Epirus,
persuaded him that the task would not be difficult. The plan of campaign which
he adopted was well devised.
The Greeks were blockading Nauplia,
the strongest fortress in the Morea. Its relief was to be the first object of
the campaign. A large army was assembled at Larissa, under the venerable
Khurshid, seraskier of Romelia. A second army under
Omer Vrioni, the pasha of Joannina, was instructed to
co-operate with the movements of the principal force. We have already seen that
Omer Vrioni was entirely occupied during the whole
year by the Suliots and the affairs of Acarnania. The army of Khurshid was
ordered to force the Isthmus of Corinth and advance to Nauplia,
where it was to be joined by the Othoman fleet. After receiving the necessary
supplies of provisions and military stores, it was to march on to Tripolitza, and establish its headquarters in the great Arcadian
plain. It was supposed that, the fleet having thrown reinforcements into the
fortresses of Coron, Modon, and Patras, the army
would find no difficulty in establishing communications between these positions
and the central camp; and the Morea being thus cut up into several sections,
and the population deprived of reciprocal support, would have been reduced to
lay down their arms before winter arrived. The sultan overlooked the
insuperable difficulties which the corruption of the Othoman administration
presented to the execution of any plan which required activity and honesty on
the part of many officials. The self-interest of each pasha suggested some
modification in the execution of his instructions, and the subordinate officers
sought to evade the performance of their duties, unless it was in their power
to render the execution a means of gain.
As soon as the horses of the Othoman cavalry had eaten
green barley in spring, according to the immemorial custom of the Turkish timariots, the seraskier ordered Dramali to advance into the valley of the Sperchius, and review the army. Before this was effected,
the Greeks made an attempt to destroy the Turkish troops in Zeituni.
The Areopagus of Eastern Greece acted as a kind of
executive committee of the central government. In the month of April 1822, it
collected considerable supplies of provisions and ammunition, assembled about
eight thousand men near Thermopylae, and hired thirty small vessels to act as
transports in the Gulf of Zeituni. Odysseus was
appointed commander-in-chief, and all the local chiliarchs and captains of municipal contingents either joined the army or held themselves
ready to act as a reserve.
The central government at Corinth decreed that three
thousand Peloponnesians should march to reinforce the Romeliot troops. But the central government made no arrangements for carrying its decree
into execution; for the attention of Mavrocordatos was then absorbed by the
preparations necessary for his own campaign as commander-in-chief in Western
Greece. Only about seven hundred Moreots, under the command of Niketas, marched to join Odysseus.
The Greek army in Eastern Greece was divided into two
bodies. The first division, under Odysseus and Niketas,
embarked at Paleochori, on the shore at the foot of
Mount Knemis, and, crossing the gulf, occupied the villages of Stelida and Aghia Marina. Instead
of pushing rapidly forward to attack the Turks, they wasted their time in
idleness, without even throwing up proper fieldworks at Stelida.
The Turks were more active : they marched down from Zeituni to attack their enemies, and compelled the Greeks to abandon Stelida, and concentrate their whole force at Aghia, where they constructed an earthen redoubt, and
remained inactive behind its mud walls for a fortnight.
The second division marched by land to Patradjik (Hypata), but only
gained possession of about one half of the town, and from this they were
expelled by reinforcements from Zeituni.
Odysseus, finding that he could not venture to advance
beyond his lines at Aghia Marina, proposed to abandon
that position. Niketas approved of his resolution,
but the members of the Areopagus who accompanied the expedition opposed the
evacuation of this useless post. An unseemly public discussion between Drosos Mansolas, a patriotic
pedant, who knew nothing of military matters, and Odysseus, who, though he had
no patriotism, had a good deal of military experience, took place on the deck
of one of the transports. But the imprudence and the inutility of keeping a considerable force in the lagoons at Aghia Marina were so manifest that the Areopagus was compelled to yield. It had persisted,
however, so long as to destroy its authority in the army. The soldiers asserted
that it wished to abandon them to be attacked by the whole Othoman army, and
they were eager to punish those who wished them to win the glory and the
immortality of Leonidas. The members of the Areopagus saved themselves, and the
troops were relanded on the coast of Locris.
When the supplies of provisions collected by the Areopagus
were exhausted, the soldiers ceased to receive either pay or rations, and the
army rapidly melted away. A few of the military chieftains who commanded as
captains of districts, according to the system of armatoliks as it had existed in the Othoman empire, alone kept their contingents together,
and took up their stations on the line of mountains which runs from Mount (Eta
along the channel of Euboea.
The members of the Areopagus attempted to remove
Odysseus from his command in Eastern Greece. He immediately resigned his
commission as chiliarch in the army, and remained at the head of his troops as
an independent chieftain. The central government sent officers to supersede
him, but he took no notice of its proceedings, and maintained his men by compelling
the ephors of districts and the demogeronts of
villages to supply him with rations and money from the national revenues and
public taxes.
Mavrocordatos and his partisans were guilty of a very
mean intrigue, which brought discredit on their counsels, while it roused just
animosities among their rivals. They elected Prince Demetrius Hypsilantes president of the legislative body. He possessed not one single qualification
for the office, and he felt that the object was not to honour him, but to
render him either useless or ridiculous. The prince was a brave soldier, and
his rival was evidently desirous to exclude him from military employment, where
it was certain he would not lose honour, and where he might recover power.
Hypsilantes quitted the proffered office, and joined the army in Eastern Greece
as a volunteer. On his way he acted with his usual imprudence, displaying the
standard of the Hetairia, and not the flag of the
Greek state adopted by the national assembly of Epidaurus. He also issued
orders in his own name, as if he still arrogated power to himself from being
the lieutenant-general of the Hetairia, in defiance
of the executive government of Greece. These pretensions involved him in
quarrels with the central authorities, and induced him to contract alliances
with Odysseus, Niketas, and other military chiefs.
Hypsilantes was a man of a very dull mind, and extremely slow in penetrating
men’s characters; he never could persuade himself that the Hetairia was already a vision of the past; nor could he believe that the Russian government
was not on the eve of assisting the Greeks, and of assuming the direction of
the Greek Revolution.
It is difficult to trace the mazes of the intrigues
carried on by the principal men in Greece at this time. There were many actors;
every actor had many projects, and each actor modified his plans and his conduct
as circumstances and his personal views changed. Mavrocordatos, Hypsilantes, Kolokotrones, and Odysseus were pursuing adverse schemes.
Every subaltern officer and secondary politician had his own ends to gain. No
one in office seemed to watch the storm that was gathering in Thessaly; nor did
any one appear to take any measures to ward off the blow which the Turks were
about to strike at the independence of Greece.
Mavrocordatos chose this ill-timed moment to make
efforts to extend the arbitrary power of the central government, and his
efforts were so ill-judged that the contests he awakened were contests of
persons, and not of principles. John Kolettes was
acting as minister of war, and he employed in that office the lessons he had
learned at Ali Pasha’s court, working with imperturbable gravity and cunning to
form a party which would require his assistance. His gravity and his portly
figure gave him the appearance of a sagacious and honest man. To Mavrocordatos
and his colleagues in the public administration he pointed out the evils of the
Albanian military system, with which no man was better acquainted. To the
captains and military chieftains with whom he transacted business as minister
of war, he made himself appear as a personal friend and defender. Negris, who
was chief secretary of state, concealed the slow action of Kolettes by thrusting himself forward as the champion of the central power.
To destroy the authority of Odysseus in Eastern Greece
was the first object of the executive body.
Alexis Noutzas and Christos Palashas were sent to supersede him in the chief command, which he
continued to exercise. These men were the friends of Kolettes,
and were nominated by his influence. Noutzas was a
man of considerable talent, and having been secretary of Ali Pasha, exercised
some authority over many Greeks who had served at Joannina. Palaskas was the Suliot whose defection has been mentioned,
and who had subsequently served both England and Russia. In the English service
he attained the rank of captain; and when the Greek light infantry was
disbanded in 1818, he settled at Joannina. Alexis Noutzas was now named civil governor of Eastern Greece by the central executive, and
intrusted with the control over the finances and commissariat. Palaskas was destined to replace Odysseus in his military
command. These appointments were kept secret, but Odysseus was perfectly
informed of the intentions of government to remove him from his command, and
his suspicious nature persuaded him that Mavrocordatos and Kolettes had resolved to assassinate him. Noutzas and Palaskas, who were versed in the policy of Ali Pasha,
seemed fit agents for this design. The two commissioners arrived at the camp of
Odysseus at Drakospelia when they believed that chief
was absent at Dadi. He had been duly informed of their movements, and he met
them with polished hypocrisy, assuring them of a hearty welcome. After a
banquet, they retired to sleep in a small chapel. The next morning was fixed
for holding a conference at the headquarters of Odysseus. During the night Noutzas and Palaskas were both
murdered. The assassins and their patron were well known. The crime spread
alarm over all Greece. The report that Odysseus was about to join the Turks was
generally believed. The members of the Areopagus sought refuge at Solona, where the spirit of the Galaxidhiots placed a check on the tyranny of Panouria.
Hypsilantes was summoned by the government to return to the Peloponnesus, and
obeyed the order.
Public attention was diverted from the crimes of
Odysseus, and the anarchy which these crimes produced in Eastern Greece, by the
conquest of Athens. The capitulation of the Acropolis was an event of great
moral and military importance to the Greek cause at this moment. The name of
Athens magnified the success throughout the whole civilised world, and the
possession of a fortress on the flank of the Turks, who might venture to invade
the Peloponnesus, would enable the Greeks to embarrass their enemies.
Omer Vrioni had relieved the
Acropolis in the autumn of 1821. Before leaving Attica he supplied the garrison
with provisions and military stores. But the besieged neglected to take proper
precautions for securing a supply of water. They did not clean out their
cisterns during the winter, and they trusted to the imperfect enclosure of the Serpendjee for the defence of the only good well they
possessed. The winter proved extremely dry. The Greeks drove the Turks from the Serpendjee; so that when the supply of water in the
cisterns was exhausted, the garrison was forced to capitulate.
The capitulation was signed on the 21st of June 1822.
The Turks surrendered their arms, and the Greeks engaged to convey them to Asia
Minor in neutral ships. The Turks by the treaty were allowed to retain one-half
of their money and jewels, and a . portion of their movable property. The
bishop of Athens, a man of worth and character, who was president of the
Areopagus, compelled all the Greek civil and military authorities to swear by
the sacred mysteries of the Oriental Church that they would observe strictly
the articles of the capitulation, and redeem the good faith of the nation
stained by the violation of so many previous treaties.
The Mussulmans in the Acropolis consisted of 1150
souls, of whom only 180 were men capable of bearing arms, so obstinately had
they defended the place. After the surrender of the fortress, the Mussulman
families were lodged in extensive buildings within the ruins of the Stoa of
Hadrian, formerly occupied by the voevode. Three days
after the Greeks had sworn to observe the capitulation, they commenced murdering
their helpless prisoners. Two ephors, Andreas Kalamogdartes of Patras and Alexander Axiottes of Corfu, had been
ordered by the Greek government to hasten the departure of the Turks. They
neglected their duty. The Austrian and French consuls, Mr Gropius and M. Fauvel, on the other hand, did everything in their power to
save the prisoners. They wrote to Syra during the
negotiations to request that the first European man-of-war which touched at
that port should hasten to the Piraeus. Unfortunately, before any ship of war
arrived, the news reached Athens that the Othoman army had forced the pass of
Thermopylae. Lekkas, an Attic peasant, whose courage
had raised him to the rank of captain, but who remained a rude Albanian boor,
excited the Athenian populace to murder their Turkish prisoners, as a proof of
their patriotic determination never to lay down their arms. The most
disgraceful part of the transaction was, that neither the ephors nor the demogeronts made an effort to prevent the massacre. They
perhaps feared the fate of the moolah of Smyrna. A scene of horror ensued, over
which history may draw a veil, while truth obliges the historian to record the
fact. The streets of Athens were stained with the blood of four hundred men,
women, and children. From sunrise to sunset, during a long summer day, the
shrieks of tortured women and children were heard without intermission. Many
families were saved by finding shelter in the houses of the European consuls.
But the consuls had some difficulty in protecting the fugitives; their flags
and their persons were exposed to insult; and the Greeks were threatening to
renew the massacre, when two French vessels, a corvette and a schooner, entered
the Piraeus and saved the survivors.
Three hundred and twenty-five persons who had found an
asylum in the French consulate were escorted to the Piraeus by a party of
marines with loaded muskets and fixed bayonets. The party was surrounded by
Greek soldiers on quitting the town, who brandished their arms and uttered vain
menaces against the women and children whom the French protected, while crowds
of Athenian citizens followed the soldiers shouting like demoniacs. When this
party of prisoners was safely embarked and the French vessels sailed, the
Greeks appeared suddenly to become sensible of the baseness of their conduct.
Shame operated, and all the Turks who remained in the Austrian and Dutch
consulates were allowed to depart unmolested. England, being only represented
by a Greek, was helpless on this occasion. Lekkas,
who was the first to urge this massacre, was taken prisoner by the Turks
visiting Attica as a spy, after the capitulation of the Acropolis in 1827, and
was impaled at Negrepont.
Sultan Mahmud invested Dramali with the command of the army destined to invade Greece, and to increase his
authority he created him seraskier. This promotion
displeased the veteran Khurshid, who desired to retain the supreme direction of
the whole Othoman force as the only
commander-in-chief, and from the moment that Dramali was elevated to an equal rank and held an independent command, he became
indifferent to the fate of his rival. Khurshid has been reproached with not
giving the army of the Morea sufficient support; but we must remember that Dramali marched from Thessaly at the head of a force amply
sufficient for all the objects of the campaign. All Eastern Greece submitted to
his authority, and he had it in his power to take proper measures for keeping
open his communications with Zeituni and Larissa. The
envy of Khurshid did not cause the negligence of Dramali.
The Othoman army, when it mustered on the banks of the Sperchius, amounted to more than twenty thousand men.
Of these about eight thousand were cavalry, composed chiefly of feudal militia,
under the command of five pashas and several Sclavonian Mussulman beys of Macedonia and Thrace. A considerable portion of the infantry
had served at the siege of Joannina. Abundant supplies of provisions and military
stores were collected at Zeituni, and ample means of
transport were provided. A member of the great feudal house of Kara Osman Oglou was appointed to superintend the commissariat.
The army moved from Zeituni in the beginning of July 1822; and since the day when Ali Kumurgee crossed the Sperchius to reconquer the Morea from the
Venetians in 1715, Greece had not witnessed so brilliant a display of military
pomp. But in the century which had elapsed the strength of the Othoman empire
appeared to have melted away. Ali Kumurgee was
attended by a corps of military engineers, who opened roads for his artillery,
and who constructed bridges for his ammunition-waggons. Dramali moved only with such baggage as could be
transported over rugged limestone paths on the backs of mules and camels. Ali Kumurgee enforced the strictest discipline Dramali could not prevent every Albanian buloukbasli from laying waste the country.
The ill-timed disputes of the central government with
Odysseus left Eastern Greece without defence. Even the troops sent to guard the
passes over Mount Geranion fell back and fled from
the great derven before the Turks arrived. The
defence of the Acrocorinth had been intrusted to a
priest named Achilles Theodorides, because he
belonged to the faction of the Notaras family, not
because he had the slightest knowledge of military matters. He murdered the
Turkish prisoners in his hands, and abandoned the impregnable fortress of which
he was the commandant, though it was amply supplied with provisions. On the
17th of July, Dramali took up his quarters in Corinth,
where he was joined by Yussuf Pasha from Patras.
The Turkish leaders held a council of war to decide on
their future operations. The seraskier was a man of a
sanguine disposition and haughty character, ignorant of mountain warfare, and
full of contempt for the Greeks. The ease with which he had marched through
Eastern Greece and the flight of the garrison of Corinth increased his
confidence. The terror which his presence seemed to have inspired, the facility
with which he had obtained forage for his cavalry, and the certainty, as he
supposed, of being joined by the Othoman fleet at Nauplia,
induced him to believe that he was destined to overrun the Morea with as much
ease as Ali Kumurgee. He proposed, therefore, to
march with his whole army to Nauplia. The pashas
under his immediate orders, who looked to him for promotion, warmly supported
his opinion. The beys who commanded the feudal cavalry agreed to this plan, as it
promised a speedy termination of the campaign.
Two men alone maintained a different opinion. Yussuf Pasha, and Ali Pasha, a great landlord of Argos,
both knew the country and the enemy. They proposed making Corinth the
headquarters of the Othoman army, and forming large magazines of provisions and
military stores under the protection of its impregnable citadel. A Turkish
squadron already commanded the Gulf of Lepanto ; by fortifying Kenchries a second squadron might be maintained in the
Saronic Gulf. The insurgents in the Morea would then be cut off from all
communication with the armatoli in Romelia. They then recommended dividing the
Othoman army into two divisions. The main body under the seraskier would be amply sufficient to relieve Nauplia and
recover possession of Tripolitza. The second division
would march along the Gulf of Lepanto, supported by the Turkish ships which had
brought Yussuf to Corinth. It would compel the
inhabitants of Achaia to submit to the sultan, and secure for the Turks all the
profits of the currant crop, and of the custom-duties
on the exportation of Greek produce. These divisions of the army, when
established firmly at Tripolitza and Patras, could
then concert their ulterior movements in co-operation with the garrisons of Coron and Modon, and with the Turkish fleet. This judicious
plan was rejected, and the seraskier advanced without
even waiting to form magazines at Corinth.
The direct road from Corinth to Nauplia and Argos passes through a narrow defile called the Dervenaki (anciently Tretos), but there is another difficult
road parallel to this at a short distance to the east. There are also two other
roads,—one making a circuit to the west by Nemea and the village of St George,
and the other passing considerably to the east by Aghionoros and the pass of Kleisura. Dramali passed the defile of the Dervenaki without encountering opposition; and with inconceivable rashness and stupidity
he left no guard to keep possession of the pass, and neglected to occupy the
villages of St George and Aghionoros, to secure his
flanks, and prevent his communications with Corinth from being interrupted. He
established his headquarters in the town of Argos on the 24th of July, having
sent forward Ali Pasha, attended by 500 cavalry, to assume the command of the
garrison of Nauplia, immediately on entering the
plain.
Had the Greeks acted with good faith, they would have
gained possession of Nauplia before Dramali reached Argos. At the end of June, the garrison was
reduced to such extremities by hunger, that they signed a capitulation, saying
that it was better to be quickly massacred than to die slowly. This
capitulation stipulated that the Turks should surrender the fortress, and
deliver up their arms and two- thirds of their movable property, on condition
that the Greeks should allow them to hire neutral vessels to transport them to
Asia Minor, and supply them with provisions until the arrival of these vessels.
Hostages were given by both sides for the exact fulfilment of the treaty, and
the Greeks were put in possession of the small insular fort that commands the
port called the Burdjee.
The Greek government immediately sent secretaries into Nauplia to register the property of the Turks, and
these officials were accused of behaving like Bobolina and the agents of Kolokotrones at Tripolitza.
Both parties soon considered it for their advantage to retard the execution of
the capitulation. The members of the Greek government contrived to make large
sums of money by secretly purchasing the property of the Turks, by selling them
provisions, and promising to aid them in escaping with their families. After
Mavrocordatos had abandoned the presidency of Greece to play the general in
Epirus, the members of the executive body and the Greek ministers enjoyed
little confidence. When they pretended that no money could be raised to pay the
freight of the neutral vessels necessary for transporting the Turks in Nauplia to Asia Minor, the allegation was considered a mere
pretext for enabling their secretaries in the fortress to make larger profits
by their bargains with the wealthy families in the place. It was well known
that, when the Turks signed the capitulation, they were so anxious to escape
that they would have deposited the sum necessary to pay the freight of neutral
vessels within twenty four hours. But when they obtained regular rations from
the Greek government, and succeeded in purchasing supplies of every necessary
from private persons, they endeavoured to prolong their stay until the arrival
of Dramali’s army, which was known to be on its march
to relieve them. They also expected that the place would be revictualled by the
Othoman fleet.
Things were in this state when Ali of Argos entered Nauplia to assume the command. His first care was to secure
all the hostages, and arrest the secretaries sent into the place by the Greek
government. He asserted that the Greek government had repudiated the treaty by
neglecting to fulfil its conditions, and he retained the hostages as pledges
for the safety of the Turkish hostages in the hands of the Greeks. In this
case, self-interest induced both parties to listen to the voice of humanity.
Ali’s next object was to prepare for a long defence, but Dramali had conducted his operations with such improvidence that he could obtain only
scanty supplies from the Othoman commissariat. The fate of Nauplia depended on the fleet, and all hopes of
immediate assistance from that quarter were destroyed by the news that it had
passed round the Morea, in order to take on board Mehemet, the new capitan-pasha, who was then at Patras. The convoy destined
for Nauplia, which it was escorting, could not be
expected for some weeks.
This proceeding of the Othoman fleet entailed ruin on
the expedition of Dramali. Common prudence required him to remain at Corinth until he was informed
that the fleet had landed supplies for his army in Nauplia.
When he found himself at Argos without provisions, it was so evident that he
could not advance farther into the Morea that he ought immediately to have
fallen back on Corinth, and sent to Patras for a few transports to proceed up
the gulf and replenish his magazines. He could throw no supplies of provisions
into Nauplia, yet he wasted his time uselessly at
Argos, ashamed to admit that he would have done well to have listened to the
counsels of Yussuf Pasha.
The conduct of the Greek government was not wiser than
that of the seraskier. Some of its political leaders,
particularly the Zinzar Vallachian, Kolettes, and the Ionian exile Metaxas, were men whose
names in future years were connected with the worst party proceedings that
stained the Revolution. They now showed themselves utterly unfit for their high
station. Greece at this conjuncture was saved by the constancy and patriotism
of the people, not by the energy of the government or the valour of the
captains. The members of the government fled from Argos as the advanced-guard
of Dramali issued from the Dervenaki.
In their hurried flight, the ministers abandoned the national archives and a
large quantity of plate which had just been collected from churches and
monasteries for the public service. The military followers of ministers and
generals, who had swarmed into Argos to share the plunder of Nauplia, took advantage of this moment of confusion to
plunder their countrymen.
The reign of anarchy was established. During the
night, cries of alarm were raised, and firearms were discharged in the quarter
of Argos near the road that leads into the town from Corinth. Atan shouted that the Turks were entering the place.
Thousands of the inhabitants, particularly the refugees from Smyrna, Kydonies, and Chios, rendered more timid than others by the
calamities they had witnessed, rushed from their houses in frantic terror,
leaving all their property behind. The roads to Lerna and Tripolitza exhibited scenes of confusion and of
misery which would fill a volume. Crowds pressed blindly forward without
knowing what direction they had taken; family followed family for hours in sad
procession; men hurried along carrying bundles snatched up at the moment of
flight, or bending under the weight of sick parents; women and children,
suddenly roused from sleep and half clad, strove to keep up with the crowd of
fugitives, but many sank exhausted by the roadside, weeping, praying, and
awaiting death at the hands of their imaginary pursuers.
In the meantime the houses they quitted were plundered
with remorseless rapacity. Horses, mules, and working oxen were carried off
from the stables of the peasants, and laden with booty at the houses of the
citizens. The residence of the executive body, the property of the members of
the legislative assembly, and most of the private dwellings in the town, were
sacked by bands of Greek klephts before the Turks entered it. The small but
choice library of Theodore Negris, the secretary of state, was carried off on a
stolen horse by a Maniat soldier. The horse fell lame;
the Maniat then sold it for two dollars to an officer
who bought it to carry water to his soldiers, who were posted on the hill above Lerna; to his surprise he found himself in possession
of a library. Some days after, the books came into the possession of Captain
Hastings, who informed Negris of the fate of his library; but that restless
politician never expressed a wish to repossess them, perhaps never afterwards
had a place where he thought them safe.
Amidst these disorders, some of the local magistrates of the Albanian population of Argolis took prompt and prudent measures for defending their country. Before they retreated, they burned all the grain and forage which they could not carry off, and filled up some of the wells. Nikolas Stamatepopulos, the brother of Niketas, who had commanded the principal body of troops employed in the long blockade of Nauplia, distinguished himself as much by his judgment at this period as he had previously done by his personal valour. He retired to the eastward, and took up his post in the plain of Iri When Dramali established his
headquarters in Argos, he had about ten thousand men under his immediate
orders, and nearly one-half of this force consisted of cavalry. While the
ministers, senators, and the chieftains of Greece were escaping on board the
vessels anchored at Lerna, and their followers were
plundering the town, a body of volunteers threw themselves into the ruined
castle on the Larissa, where the ancient acropolis of Argos stood. The
patriotic conduct of these men during the general panic was so meritorious that
the name of every one ought to be handed down to the gratitude of Greece. They
defended the exposed position they occupied with great firmness, and their
success revived the courage of the troops who had posted themselves at Lerna, and emboldened them to return and occupy the line of
the Erasmus.
On this occasion Prince Demetrius Hypsilantes regained
the esteem of his countrymen by displaying unwonted activity in addition to his
usual courage.
The members of the legislative body, from mean
jealousy, summoned him to take his place on board the ship in which they had
sought refuge, and act as their president. He despised the summons of the
cowards, and remained among the people, where they ought to have been. Though
he had personal reasons for being dissatisfied with the conduct of Kolokotrones, who had treated him with rudeness and
insolence after the taking of Tripolitza, he now
hastened to confer with that influential chieftain, in order to urge him to immediate
action. The energy and patriotism of Hypsilantes electrified everybody he
addressed. Petrobey, the nominal commander-in-chief
in the Peloponnesus, and Krevatas, a primate of Mistra, caught something of his enthusiasm. The
Peloponnesian Senate stepped forward and assumed the duties of government which
the executive body had abandoned. The people had flown to arms without waiting
for the call of their official leaders. Captains and primates were carried
along by the general impulse. The patriotism of Greece was completely roused.
Hypsilantes returned to the mills of Lerna, where, finding that the body of volunteers in the
Larissa was hard pressed, he boldly threw himself into the castle, accompanied
by several young chiefs. The force in the Larissa was now increased to one
thousand men, but it was scantily supplied with provisions and water. The Turks
kept the place closely invested, and defeated two attempts of the Greeks at Lerna to throw in additional supplies. But the object of
the volunteers who first occupied the place was gained. The progress of the
Othoman army had been arrested until the delay had given time to a Greek force
to assemble strong enough to meet it in the field. Hypsilantes and the greater part
of the garrison of the Larissa withdrew, therefore, in the night, but a few of
the original band of its defenders determined to keep possession of the place
until they had finished their last loaf. Their escape then became extremely
difficult, but on the night of the 1st of August they succeeded in forcing
their way through the Turkish line of blockade. A Maniat officer, Athanasios Karayianni, boasted of being the
first to enter the place, and the last who quitted it.
The position of the Greeks was now improving rapidly,
while that of the Othoman army was becoming untenable. Upwards of five thousand
troops were assembled at the mills of Lerna. The
position was fortified by low walls, and flanked by the artillery of several
Greek vessels. The Erasinus, which issues in a large
stream from a cavern about two miles from Argos, confines the road leading to Lerna and Tripolitza between a
rocky precipice and several dilapidated artificial channels formed to conduct
the water to turn mills, or to irrigate plantations of maize and cotton. Lower
down, towards the sea, the plain is intersected with ditches and planted with
vineyards. The line of the Erasinus consequently
offered ground well suited to the operations of the irregular infantry of the
Greeks, and almost impracticable for the Turkish cavalry. On this line numerous
skirmishes took place, and the Greeks at last gained a decided superiority.
Other strong bodies of Greeks assembled on all the
mountains which overlook the plain of Argos. The season was singularly dry. The
Turkish horsemen found great difficulty in procuring forage, and they were
often obliged to skirmish with their enemy while watering their horses.
Provisions grew scarce, and the soldiers dispersed in the vineyards, and
devoured grapes and unripe melons. Disease soon weakened the army, and before Dramali had occupied Argos a fortnight, he found himself
compelled to fall back on Corinth.
On the 6th of August he sent forward the first
division of his army to occupy the passes. The Greek force in the field now
exceeded the Othoman army in number. About eight thousand men, nominally under
the command of Kolokotrones, who had been elected
generalissimo or archistrategos, but really under the
immediate orders of a legion of chiefs, occupied the hills from Lerna to the Dervenaki. Another
corps of two thousand men had established itself at Aghionoros under Niketas, the archimandrite Dikaios,
and Demetrius Hypsilantes; and a third body of about two thousand sturdy
Albanians from Kranidi, Kastri,
and Poros, had joined the troops of Nikolas Stamatepopulos,
and advanced to watch Nauplia. The want of system
which reigned wherever Kolokotrones commanded, or
pretended to command, prevented the Greeks from occupying permanent stations
and erecting redoubts, which would have compelled the army in Argos to submit
to any conditions the Greeks might have thought fit to impose. Had Kolokotrones possessed any military capacity, he might have
cut off Dramali's retreat, and secured the immediate
surrender of Nauplia. Every hour added to the numbers
of the Greeks. Almost every village sent a contingent of armed men to the spot
which some local chief considered the best position for cutting off a portion
of the seraskier’s baggage.
The advanced-guard of the Othoman army consisted of
one thousand Albanians. These men, who had studied the country as they advanced
with the instinct of warlike mountaineers, took the western road by the plain
of Nemea, and kept so good a look-out that they contrived to pass the troops of Kolokotrones, stationed at St George, without even a
skirmish. It is difficult to ascertain whether the Moreots mistook these Albanians
for a body of Greek troops on account of the similarity of their dress, or
whether they avoided an encounter with veteran warriors, and allowed them
purposely to pass unmolested.
A body of Dramali’s cavalry,
sent forward about the same time to occupy the Dervenaki,
found the Greeks intrenched in the pass. The first division of the Turks,
therefore, took the road by Aghio-Sosti. The leading
horsemen had almost gained the open valley below the village of St Basili, when Niketas, who had
hastened to meet them from Aghionoros, fell on their
flank, and threw himself into the valley before them. Niketas seized a position commanding the junction of the road of Aghio-Sosti with that issuing from the Dervenaki. The rest of the
Greek troops who followed Niketas, under Dikaios and Hypsilantes, attacked the right flank of the
Turks. The Othoman cavalry charged boldly to the front, but recoiled under the
steady fire of the select body of marksmen on the low eminence occupied by Niketas. The little hill overlooked a ravine, through
which the Turks were forced to pass. A fierce struggle took place at this spot.
The Delhis attempted to force their way onward with desperate
valour, but the Greeks encumbered the passage through the ravine by shooting a
number of horses, and then heaping over them the bodies of their riders. The
attack was renewed several times, and at last such numbers pressed forward from
behind that retreat became impossible. A desperate body of wellmounted horsemen then dashed past the Greeks, and, gaining the open ground in the plain
of Kortessa, reached Corinth without further
opposition. Above the ravine the scene of slaughter was terrible. Confusion
spread along the whole Turkish line. The Greeks who attacked it in flank
covered the road with dead and wounded. Their principal object was to cut off
the baggage, shoot baggage-mules, and secure the booty. The Turks fled in every
direction, leaving their baggage to arrest the pursuit of their enemy. Few
could make much progress up the side of a rugged mountain, and armed men seemed
to spring up out of every bush to attack them. Many abandoned their horses, and
succeeded in finding their way to Corinth during the night. Long trains of
baggage-mules and camels, and a number of richly-caparisoned horses, were
captured. The booty gained was immense.
The conduct of Niketas on
this occasion received well-merited praise. He executed a judicious manoeuvre
with rapidity and courage. He also gained the prize of personal valour in the
combat, by rushing sword in hand on a body of Turkish infantry which was
endeavouring to form a mass in order to attack his position. His soldiers gave
him the name of Turkophagos (the Turk-eater), as the
legionaries of Rome saluted their general Imperator; and the title was adopted
by all the Greeks. Kanaris, Miaoulis, Marco Botzares, and Niketas, were men
whose valour and patriotism raised them above envy.
This defeat stupefied Dramali:
he remained a whole day inactive. But as it was impossible to continue in the
plain of Argos, he moved forward on the 8th of August by the road of Aghionoros. This road was guarded by the archimandrite Dikaios. As the Turks slowly wound their way up the steep
ascent of the Kleisura, the archimandrite opposed them
in front, and Niketas and Hypsilantes, who had
marched to support him from Aghio-Sosti and Aghio-Basili, assailed them on their left flank. The Turks
were soon thrown into confusion. The Greeks on this occasion directed their
attention exclusively to gaining possession of the baggage; and while they
were occupied in cutting it off from the line of retreat, a chosen troop of Delhis succeeded by a brilliant charge in clearing the
front, and enabled Dramali, with the main body of the
cavalry, to escape to Corinth. But the seraskier purchased his personal safety by abandoning his military chest and the whole
baggage of his army to the Greeks.
Had the Greeks combined their movements with skill,
not a man of the Turkish army could have escaped. The seraskier’s retreat was foreseen several days before it commenced, and each leader took measures
for securing to himself and his followers as large a share of booty as possible;
but no general measures were adopted for destroying the Turkish army, and no
information was transmitted of the enemy’s movements from one corps to another.
The honours of victory are often obtained by those who have little share in the
fight. In the present case, though the troops under the immediate orders of Kolokotrones had no share in the glories of the two days'
combat, they gained a considerable share of the booty, and Kolokotrones,
because he was generalissimo, was supposed to be the conqueror of Dramali. Thousands of Moreots returned to their native
villages enriched with the spoil they had gained, who attributed their good
fortune to the generalship of Kolokotrones.
The imaginary tactics of the old klepht were said by his ignorant partisans to
have caused the destruction of a mighty army of thirty thousand men. History,
which is too often the record of party passions and national prejudices, has
repeated the fable.
The great success of the Greeks on this occasion, like
the great disaster at Petta, increased the popular
aversion to military discipline, and strengthened the general conviction that
patriotism could conduct military operations as well as science. Tactics were
supposed to be useless against the Turks, whom the orthodox believed God had
delivered into their hands.
The remains of Dramali’s army melted away at Corinth. The seraskier himself
died in December 1822.
Nauplia had now nothing to rely on but the Othoman fleet. The Greeks retained
possession of the small insular fort called the Burdjee,
while Dramali’s army occupied Argos, and after his
departure they made some efforts to gain possession of the fortress. A French
officer, Colonel Jourdain, offered to burn all the houses in the town with
incendiary balls fired from the guns in the Burdjee.
The destruction of the houses in which the wealthy Turks had accumulated
considerable stores of provisions during the armistice, would have compelled
the garrison to surrender in a short time. There were, however, still some
officers and soldiers in the Greek army who opposed this measure, because they
thought it would diminish their share of the long-expected plunder to be
obtained when the fortress surrendered.
When Ali of Argos entered Nauplia and assumed the command of the garrison, there were only about twenty Albanians
of Kranidi in the Burdjee,
and their captain was a boatman, ignorant of the very elements of gunnery.
Colonel Jourdain was ordered by the Greek government to enter the place and put
his plan into execution. He contrived to excuse himself from remaining in it,
but Captain Hastings, assisted by two young artillery officers—Hane, an Englishman, and Animet,
a Dane—volunteered to make the attempt to burn Nauplia with the colonel’s combustible balls. A noisy cannonade was kept up between the
batteries of Nauplia and this little insular fort,
which was situated under the guns of the fortress, and ought to have been
knocked into a heap of broken stones and mortar in six hours. The firing on
both sides continued for several days without inflicting much loss on either
party. Jourdain’s balls, when thrown into the town, made a vast deal of smoke,
but set nothing on fire. The Turkish shot generally flew past the Burdjee without hitting it. But what with the stray shots
that did not miss, and the concussion of the artillery in the place, the walls
were so shaken that it became dangerous to fire the heaviest guns, which were
alone of any effect against Nauplia. Fortunately,
just as things reached this state, the retreat of Dramali’s army induced the garrison of Nauplia to stop their
fire. The Kranidiots then intimated to Hastings and
his companions that their presence was no longer necessary; that they could not
expect a share of the booty in Nauplia; and that no
rations would in future be supplied to them. Hastings was not a man to remain
in a place where there was no danger, when his presence was considered
unnecessary.
On the 20th September, the Othoman fleet, consisting
of eighty sail, including transports, was descried from the beacon of Hydra,
and on the following morning the capitan-pasha stood
in towards the island of Spetzas with a fair wind,
and the gulf of Nauplia open before him. The Greek
fleet, consisting of sixty sail, chiefly brigs of from eight to fourteen guns,
stood out to engage the Turks. A distant cannonade ensued; but it was in the
power of the capitan-pasha to have sent on his
transports to Nauplia under the escort of his
corvettes and brigs, while with his heavy ships he opposed the Greeks. The
weather was fine, the wind very light, and the capitan-pasha
both fool and coward. The Christians acted with timidity as well as the Turks,
and the firing was carried on at such a distance that neither party sustained
any damage. In the evening the wind died away.
For three days the Othoman fleet remained manoeuvring
idly off Spetzas. The capitan-pasha
did not venture to approach near enough to the Christians to use his heavy guns
with effect. The Albanians of Hydra and Spetzas showed neither skill nor daring in the employment of their fire-ships. Kanaris
was not present. On the night of the 23d the wind blew into the gulf, a
circumstance rather rare at this season of the year; but the capitan-pasha, instead of pressing all sail, hove to during
the night. At the time there was not a single Greek ship near enough to prevent
the transports from reaching Nauplia. The cowardice
of the capitan-pasha prevented him from profiting by
this favourable opportunity. On the morning of the 24th the Othoman fleet
proceeded up the gulf with a light breeze.
The Greek fleet was then nine miles distant, hugging
the island of Spetzas. Twenty-three men-of-war and
five fire-ships were in advance. The breeze freshened, and had the Turks done
their duty, Nauplia would have been relieved without
difficulty or danger. But the capitan-pasha sent
forward only an Austrian merchantman, without the escort of a single man-of-
war. He appears to have trusted to the protection of the Austrian flag. A Greek
vessel detached near the head of the gulf issued from her place of concealment
and captured this hired transport. After this abortive attempt the capitan-pasha made no further effort to throw supplies into Nauplia. He quitted the gulf, and sailed for Suda on the 26 th of September.
The series of naval skirmishes in the Gulf of Nauplia was disgraceful to the Turks, and by no means
honourable to the Greek navy. The Albanian seamen of Hydra and Spetzas showed very little enterprise on this trying
occasion. Their exertions were probably paralysed by their ignorance of naval
tactics, and by their fear to move far from their own islands, which they had
neglected to put in a proper state of defence. The captains of a few ships
displayed some boldness, but in general the crews were neither steady nor obedient.
In spite of the incapacity of the Turks, the only serious loss sustained by the
Othoman fleet was the result of accident. An Algerine frigate bore down on a
Greek fire-ship, mistaking it for a brig of war. The crew set fire to the train
before taking to their boats, and the flames burst out as the Algerine ran
alongside to board it. The sails of the frigate caught fire, and fifty men
perished before the flames could be extinguished and the fire-ship set
adrift.
The approach of the capitan-pasha
so terrified the Kranidiot garrison in the Burdjee that the fort was abandoned, and for nearly
forty-eight hours that fort was only occupied by a Hydriot who had served in the French artillery, by a Spetziot sailor, and by Hane, the young English artillery
officer, who had returned a few days before. After this interval, twenty
Ionians arrived to replace the Kranidiots, and
shortly after the garrison was reinforced by a party of Albanian Christians
from the Chimariot mountains, under the command of an
officer who had served in the Albanian regiment of Naples. On the 24th of
September, when the Turks in Nauplia felt sure of
immediate relief from the capitan-pasha, they opened
a heavy fire on the Burdjee from every gun which
could be brought to bear on it; but when the Othoman fleet retired, their fire
ceased, and was never again renewed.
The defence of Nauplia was
now prolonged only from fear of treachery on the part of the Greeks. In the
beginning of December children were frequently found dead in the streets; women
were seen wandering about searching for the most disgusting nourishment, and
even the soldiers were so weak from starvation that few were fit for duty. The
fortress on the high rock of Palamedes, which towers above the town, was
abandoned by its garrison. No one could carry up provisions. The soldiers
descended to obtain food, and were too weak to remount the long ascent. The
Greeks, hearing of their retreat, entered the place before daybreak on the 12th
December 1822.
The conquest of the Palamedes was announced to the
Greek troops, who guarded the passes towards Corinth, by volleys of the whole
artillery of the place. Kolokotrones soon arrived;
other captains quickly followed. A negotiation was opened with the Turks in the
town, and a capitulation was at last concluded. The Greeks engaged to transport all the Mussulmans
in Nauplia to Asia Minor, and to allow them to retain
a single suit of clothes, a quilt for bedding, and a carpet for prayer. Kolokotrones and the captains hindered all soldiers, except
their own personal followers, from entering the place. To the mass of the
soldiers who clamoured for admittance, they pleaded the orders of the Greek
government, and the necessity of preventing a repetition of the massacres of
Monemvasia, Navarin, Tripolitza, and Athens. The
soldiers replied that Kolokotrones paid no attention
to the orders of government unless when it suited his purpose; that the
previous massacres had been caused by the faithlessness and avarice of the
captains who cheated the troops; and they declared that they would not allow Kolokotrones and his confederates to appropriate to
themselves everything valuable in Nauplia. Large
bodies of soldiers assembled before the landgate,
and threatened to storm the place, murder the Turks, and sack the town. The
avarice and faithlessness of Kolokotrones and the
military chiefs had done more to make the Greek army a mere rabble than the
absence of all military discipline.
On this occasion Greece was saved from dishonour by
the arrival of an English frigate on the 24th of December. The Cambrian was
commanded by Captain Hamilton, who was already personally known to several of
the Greek chiefs then present. His frank and decided conduct won the confidence
of all parties. He held a conference with Kolokotrones and the Moreot chieftains, whose Russian prejudices induced them to view the
interference of an English officer with great jealousy. He was obliged to tell
them in strong language, that if, on this occasion, they failed to take
effectual measures for the honourable execution of the capitulation, they would
render the Greek name despicable in civilised Europe, and perhaps ruin the
cause of Greece. The chiefs respected Hamilton’s character; the wild soldiers
admired his martial bearing and the frankness with which he spoke the whole
truth. He took advantage of the feeling he had created in his favour to act
with energy. He insisted on the Greek government immediately chartering vessels
to embark the Turks, and to facilitate their departure he took five hundred on
board the Cambrian. He thus saved the Greeks from the dishonour of again
violating their plighted faith, but he inflicted a great sacrifice on England.
Sixty-seven of the Turks embarked on board the Cambrian died before reaching
Smyrna. The typhus fever, which they brought on board, spread among the crew,
and several fell victims to the disease. Captain Hamilton was the first public
advocate of the Greek cause among Englishmen in an influential position, and he
deserves to be ranked among the greatest benefactors of Greece.
Ali of Argos and Selim were the two pashas who
commanded in Nauplia, and as both refused to sign the
capitulation, they were detained as prisoners by the Greeks.
Public opinion among the Greeks at this time was not
generally favourable to Captain Hamilton’s conduct, though the contrary has
been subsequently asserted. The journal of a Philhellene who was at Tripolitza observes that the Greeks were in great choler
against the English for having insisted on the immediate embarkation of the
Turks. Captain Hastings confirms this also in his journal.
The capitan-pasha, after
remaining a short time at Suda, sailed through the
Archipelago unmolested, and anchored between Tenedos and the Troad. The contingents of the Greek fleet from the Albanian
islands remained inactive in the ports of Hydra and Spetzas,
and neglected to take advantage of the well-known inactivity and cowardice of
Mehemet Pasha. But another brilliant exploit of Kanaris threw a veil over their
shortcomings. By his persuasion, the community of Psara fitted out two
fire-ships.
On the 10th of November 1822 the Othoman fleet was
riding at anchor without a suspicion of danger. At daybreak, Kanaris and his
companion approached without exciting any attention. Two line-of-battle ships
were anchored to windward of the rest of the fleet. Kanaris undertook the more
difficult task of burning the leeward ship. The breeze which brought up the
Greek fire-ships had hardly reached the Turks, who, under the influence of the
current of the Hellespont flowing through the channel of Tenedos, were not
swinging head to wind. Kanaris, with his cool sagacity, observed this
circumstance, and ran his enemy aboard abaft the fore-chains on the larboard side.
The fire-ship was to windward, the sails nailed to the masts, the yards were
secured aloft by chains, and everything was saturated with turpentine, so that
in an instant the flames blazed up higher than the main-top of the
seventy-four, and enveloped her deck in a whirlwind of fire. There was no time
for the crew to escape. Those who leaped into the sea perished before they
could reach the distant shore. The ships at anchor cut their cables and made
sail. The loss of the Turks is said to have reached eight hundred men.
The flag-ship of the capitan-pasha,
which Kanaris had left as a sure prey to his companion, escaped. It was already
swinging to the breeze when the Greek ran his fire-ship under its bowsprit. In
consequence of this ill-judged position, the fire-ship fell off and drifted
away to leeward. The employment of fireships seems to have required the cool
judgment and unflinching determination of Kanaris to insure success. The
Othoman fleet, which dispersed in its first access of terror, soon reassembled
at the Dardanelles; but one corvette went on shore on Tenedos, and another was
abandoned by its crew, and found floating a complete wreck in the Archipelago.
Constantine Kanaris and the crews of the two fire-ships returned safely to
Psara in their boats. The hero was received by his countrymen with universal
enthusiasm. Envy for once was speechless in Greece. By the hand of one man, the
sultan had lost two line-of-battle ships and nearly two thousand men during the
year 1822. Yet the naval operations of the year revealed to a scientific
observer like Frank Hastings that the Greek navy, in its actual state, was
unable to continue a prolonged contest with the Othoman fleet.
The sultan could not send to sea a more incapable officer than Mehemet
Pasha; nor was it likely that worse manned ships would ever quit the port of
Constantinople than those he commanded. Yet, under these disadvantages, the
Othoman fleet had thrown supplies into the fortresses of Coron,
Modon, Patras, and Lepanto, and had twice navigated the Archipelago, without
sustaining any loss which could not be easily repaired. Sultan Mahmud had obtained
the conviction, that all the skill and enterprise of the Greeks could not
secure for their light vessels any decided advantage over the inert masses of
the Turkish ships. A prolonged naval war must therefore exhaust the resources
of Greece, while it would be sure to improve the efficiency of the Turkish
seamen. Some modification in the naval forces of the Greeks was evidently
necessary to give them a decided victory. Hastings urged them to adopt the use
of steam, and heavy artillery and shells fired horizontally, in order to
confound their enemy with new engines and new tactics. His advice was rejected
by the men of influence among the Greeks, who believed that their own
fire-ships would secure them the victory. But this could only have happened if
every Greek fire-ship had found a Kanaris to command it, and if every Othoman
fleet should be sent to sea with a capitan-pasha as
incapable as Mehemet.
The greatest losses inflicted on the Turks this year
were by the desultory expeditions of the Psarians and Kasiots.
The Psarians cruised incessantly along the coast of Asia Minor, from the
Dardanelles to Rhodes. The Kasiots infested the
coasts of Karamania, Syria, and Egypt. Hardly a
single Turkish coaster could pass from one part to another. On one occasion all
the vessels in the port of Damietta were plundered, and three ships laden with
rice, which were on the eve of sailing to supply the pasha’s fleet at
Alexandria, were carried off to Kasos. These daring
exploits, however, only enriched the captains and crews of the privateers
engaged, and they weakened the Greek navy, by alluring some of the best ships
and sailors to seek their private gain instead of serving the public cause.
The misconduct of the central government and the
crimes of Odysseus left Eastern Greece in a state of anarchy during the summer
of 1822. Even at Athens order was not established, though the social condition
of the inhabitants afforded peculiar facilities for organising a regular
administration. There were no primates in Attica who exercised an influence
like Turkish beys or Christian Turks—no men who, like Zaimes and Londos in Achaia, could waste the national revenues
in maintaining bands of armed followers far from the scene of actual
hostilities ; nor was there any military influence powerful enough to reduce
the province to the condition of an armatolik. The
Greek population of the city of Athens was unwarlike. The Albanian population
of Attica served in several bands under local captains of no great distinction.
Many of the native soldiers, both citizens and peasants, were small landed
proprietors, who had a direct interest in opposing the introduction of the
irregular military system, to which Greece was rapidly tending. They united
with the local magistrates and the well-disposed civilians in striving to
organise a local militia capable of preserving order. Power was very much
divided, and administrative talent utterly wanting. Every man who possessed a
little influence aspired at command, and was indifferent to the means by which
he might acquire it. Athens, consequently, became a hotbed of intrigue; but it
would be a waste of time to characterise the intriguers and to describe their
intrigues. Something must nevertheless be told, in order to explain the result
of their folly and selfishness.
An Athenian citizen employed by the central government
to collect the public revenues was murdered by the soldiery, who wished to
seize the national resources, and make Attica a capitanlik of armatoli. An Athenian captain gained possession of the Acropolis, and
displayed more insolence and tyranny than had been recently exhibited by any
Turkish disdar. He was driven from power by another
Athenian; but against the authority of his successor constant intrigues were
carried on. The shopkeepers of the city at last imagined that, like the Turkish
janissaries at Constantinople, they could unite the occupations of hucksters
and soldiers, and under this delusion they undertook to garrison the Acropolis
themselves, instead of forming a corps of regular troops. As might have been
foreseen, each man did what seemed good in his own eyes, anarchy prevailed, and
the persons possessing anything to lose sent a deputation to Prince Demetrius
Hypsilantes, inviting him to come and take the command of the Acropolis. He
arrived at Megara, but the soldiery in the Acropolis refused to receive him as
their leader, and in order to secure a powerful patron, they elected Odysseus
as their general, and offered to put him in possession of the fortress. He
hastened to seize the prize, and hurrying to Athens with only a hundred and
fifty men, was admitted into the Acropolis on the 2d of September 1822. The
authority of Odysseus was recognised by the Athenians as the speediest way of
putting an end to a threatening state of anarchy.
Attica was thus lost to those who, from their opinions
and interests, were anxious to employ its resources in consolidating civil
order and a regular central administration, and was thrown into the scale of
the Albanian military system, which soon extended its power over all liberated
Greece.
As soon as Odysseus found himself firmly established
as captain of Attica, he persuaded the people of Eastern Greece to form a
provincial assembly at Athens, where he held the members under his control.
This assembly dissolved the Areopagus, and appointed Odysseus
commander-in-chief in Eastern Greece. Without waiting for his confirmation by
the central executive, he assumed the administration of the revenues of Attica,
and compelled the municipality of Athens to sell the undivided booty surrendered
by the Turks at the taking of the Acropolis. This money he employed in paying
his followers, and in laying up stores of provisions and ammunition in the
Acropolis, which all parties had hitherto neglected. He subsequently added a
strong angular wall to the Acropolis, in order to enclose a well situated below
the northern wing of the Propylaea.
But while he was making these prudent arrangements, he
also gratified his malicious disposition by a cruel as well as a vigorous use
of his power. Three persons were brought before him accused of treasonable
correspondence with the Turks. The truth was, that they favoured the government
party; but the accusation afforded Odysseus a pretext for revenging private
opposition. He remembered the lessons of his old patron, Ali of Joannina. Two
of the accused were hung, and the third, who was a priest, was built up in a
square pillar of stone and mortar. As the mason constructed the wall which was
to suffocate him, the unfortunate man solemnly invoked God to witness that he
was innocent of the crime laid to his charge.
The defeat of Dramali did
not cause Khurshid Pasha to relax his efforts for reconquering Greece, but the
disasters of the Othoman army in the Morea produced so much discontent in
Macedonia, that he could only send forward about eight thousand to occupy Zeituni and secure the line of the Sperchius.
A portion of this force advanced to Salona by the road of Gravia without encountering any serious resistance from Panouria.
Mehemet Pasha, who commanded the Turks, after burning a part of Salona fell back
to Gravia, in order to form a junction with a body of
Albanians which had endeavoured to penetrate to Salona by Daulis and Delphi.
A skirmish took place between the Greeks and Turks
near Gravia on the 13th of November, which ended in
the defeat of the Greeks. Odysseus lost several officers, and was in danger of
falling into the hands of the Albanians in the Othoman army. The season was
fortunately too far advanced for Mehemet Pasha to profit by his victory. The
country between Gravia and Thebes had been laid
waste, and was abandoned by the inhabitants. The Greek troops, however, who
knew the places to which the people had retired with their cattle, would have
hung on the flanks of the Turks, and cut off their communications with Zeituni. Odysseus was nevertheless terrified lest Mehemet
Pasha should push boldly forward into Attica, trusting to obtain supplies of
provisions from Negrepont. Such a movement might have
induced the garrison of the Acropolis to join with the citizens in electing a
new commander-in-chief.
From this difficulty Odysseus extricated himself with
his usual perfidy. He sent his secretary to Mehemet Pasha to propose an
armistice, offering to make his submission to the sultan on condition that he
should be recognised as captain of armatoli, and he engaged to persuade the
other captains in Eastern Greece to submit on the same conditions. Mehemet had
as little intention of executing these conditions as Odysseus, but he accepted
them, because they afforded him a pretext for returning to Larissa, where the
death of Khurshid rendered his presence necessary.
The long and not inglorious career of Khurshid Pasha
had been suddenly terminated by a sentence of death, and his honourable service
could not save him from falling a victim to Sultan Mahmud’s determination to
sweep away every man of influence who adhered to the traditional system and
supported the administrative organisation, which he was resolved to destroy.
At the end of November 1822 the Turks withdrew all
their troops from Eastern Greece, south of Thermopylae, and took up their
winter quarters in Zeituni. The peasantry commenced
sowing their fields, with the expectation of reaping their crops before their
enemy could return. The armistice concluded by Odysseus saved them from ruin;
and, as they knew nothing of its conditions, they approved highly of his
proceedings, and became generally attached to his party.
It is curious to observe by what accidents two men so
depraved and morally worthless as Kolokotrones and
Odysseus became the objects of hero-worship to the Greeks. The temple of fame
is not always “a palace for the crowned truth to dwell in.”
CHAPTER XI.THE CONDITION OF GREECE AS AN INDEPENDENT STATE.
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