1821: Η αρχή που δεν ολοκληρώθηκε
The distinguished historian Michael Llewellyn-Smith, author of the classic Ionian Vision as well as a number of other important studies about mode
Greece, writes about this book:
The story of how the Greeks founded their independent state, through a mixture of bravery, persistence, skulduggery and guile, is an inspiring one, and there is no better time to tell it than the 200th anniversary of the outbreak of the Greek war of independence in 1821.
Athina Cacouri’s new book, “1821: The Founding of Mode
Greece”, tells the whole complicated story, from the outbreak of war in March 1821 to the emergence of a nominally independent state, in an English language narrative adapted from her Greek original in terms suitable for a young readership.
The main focus of her book, rightly, is the leading Greek personalities, ranging from the doughty warrior Theodore Kolokotronis, whose vivid words on the ‘torment’ of leading an army of Greeks she quotes, to the weste
-influenced Alexander Mavrocordatos (for whom Cacouri has little love), and above all the tragic figure of Ioannis Capodistrias, the ‘Gove
or’ or first President of Greece, who did all in his power, with meagre resources, to create a well gove
ed mode
state. He was assassinated in Nafplion on 27 September 1831. Capodistrias is the first hero of this book. The other is the Greek People, to whose developing national feeling the emergence of the Greek state is largely owed. In what will be a crowded market, the book holds its own by the vigour of its narrative and judgements, and Athina Cacouri’s knowledge and love of her native country and its people.
Michael Llewellyn-Smith
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