ΑΠΟΚΑΛΥΨΗ!!!Η ΕΛΛΑΔΑ ΑΝΗΚΕΙ ΣΤΟΥΣ ΑΛΒΑΝΟΥΣ!!!ΜΕ ΓΕΡΜΑΝΙΚΗ ΧΟΡΗΓΙΑ ΚΑΙ ΕΛΛΗΝΟΦΩΝΟΥΣ ΣΥΝΕΡΓΑΤΕΣ ΔΟΜΕΙΤΑΙ Ο ΑΛΒΑΝΙΚΟΣ ΝΑΖΙΣΜΟΣ!!!ΔΙΑΒΑΣΤΕ ΟΛΑ ΤΑ ΟΝΟΜΑΤΑ!!!
Από
το 2009 ετοιμάζουν τον εφιάλτη οι Γερμανοί που ποτέ δεν ξεχνούν τους
διαχρονικούς συμμάχους τους, όπως είδαμε στην σφαγή της Γιουγκοσλαβίας
και στο Κοσυφοπέδιο.
Έχουν συγκεντρώσει μεθοδικά κάθε φράση
από βιβλία, διαδίκτυο, δηλώσεις ώστε να στοιχειοθετήσουν πως “Η Ελλάδα
ανήκει στους Αλβανούς”, ώστε να δώσουν ιδεολογικό μανδύα στη νέα
ναζιστική θηριωδία. Γεγονός
που παίρνει άλλες διαστάσεις μετά τις σφαγές των Ουτσεκάδων σε Ίσθμια
και Δίστομο, αλλά και το παρ’ ολίγον μακελειό με τις χειροβομβίδες κατά
γυναικών και παιδιών στην αγορά του Περιστερίου.
Αλήθεια, πως βρίσκουν με τέτοια ευκολία βαρύ οπλισμό οι “ρακένδυτοι” δραπέτες; Ποιός κάθεται καιαφιερώνει
ώρες έρευνας για να μαζέψει την κάθε παρόλα που “αποδεικνύει” ότι οι
“ουρανοκατέβατοι” Έλληνες δεν υπάρχουν αλλά είναι παραπλανημένοι Αλβανοί
που ζούσαν εδώ “από πάντα”;
Ποιοί είναι αυτοί οι ελληνόφωνοι που
αναφέρονται ονομαστικά στην μελέτη και ρίχνουν νερό στον μύλο του
ναζισμού; Το κάνουν από αφέλεια;
Πότε επιτέλους το ελληνόφωνο κρατίδιο
θα ασχοληθεί σοβαρά με αυτούς που ονειρεύονται νέα ναζιστικη κατοχή στην
χώρα και εξόντωση του γηγενούς πληθυσμού (“τοπικούς πληθυσμούς”
ονομάζει τους Έλληνες πολίτες ο Καμίνης)
Διαβάστε με προσοχή, έχει όλα τα ονόματα:
DAS ALBANISCHE ELEMENT IM MODERNEN GRIECHENLAND
1. “The [Greek] claim to southern
Albania rests entirely on the assumption that the majority of the
population is Greek. The Greeks are stated to number 120,000 and
Albanians 80,000. But who are the ´Greeks´? At least five sixths of
them, if not more are Christian Albanians of the Orthodox faith,
Albanians in sentiment and language, who because they acknowledge the
Patriarch of Constantinople are declared to be Greek in point of
´national consciousness´.”
(“The Nineteenth Century and After XIX-XX a
Monthly Review”, founded by James Knowles, Vol. LXXXVI, July-December
1919, page 645.)
2. “Did the Greeks constitute a race
apart from the Albanians the Slavs and the Vlachs? Yes and no. High
school students were told that the ´other races´, i.e. the Slavs the
Albanians and the Vlachs ´having been Hellenized with the years in terms
of mores and customs, are now being assimilated into the Greeks´.”
(“Greece in the 20th Century”, Editors Theodore A. Couloumbis, Theodore Kariots, Fotini Bellou, page 24.)
3. “The Turkish village which formally
clustered around the base of the Acropolis [old Athens] has not
disappeared: it forms a whole quarter of the town.
An immense majority of the population in this quarter is composed of Albanians.”
(“Greece and the Greeks of the Present Day”, by Edmund About, page 160.)
4. “Through the end of the revolution
in 1830, Greeks, including most of the nineteenth-century nationalists,
seemed to have had a vague but firm sense of continuity from ancient to
modern Greece, though this was not articulated in racial terms but on
the basis of a common language, history and consciousness. In effect at
this time, whoever called themselves a Greek was a Greek. It is because
of this that many Greek-speaking Albanians, Slavs, Rumanians and Vlachs
were easily assimilated and indeed became important players in Greek
patriotism at the time.” (“The Empty Cradle of Democracy”, by Alexandra
Halkias, page 59.)
5. “The first Greek who had a plan for insurrection and for a liberated Greece was Rhigas of Valestino.
Rhigas was the author of poems, revolutionary proclamations and a constitution…
In
this document he spoke of a sovereign people of the proposed state as
including ´without distinction of religion and language – Greeks,
Albanians, Vlachs, Armenians, Turks and every other race´.
It seems that in their minds the distinction between ´Greek´ and ´Orthodox´ was still blurred.”
(“Appleton´s Annual Cyclopedia and register of important events 1901″, Third Series Volume VI, page 113.)
6. “There cannot be an Athenian alive
today who can trace a direct line of descent from classical times to the
present day without leaving Athens. Because of numerous and protracted
foreign occupations, true Athenians were a relatively small minority
even in the Age of Pericles. In a later period, the city was suffering
from severe depopulation and was re-stocked with Albanians. At the time
of Greek independence in 1834, Athens was a miserable village with a
population of only 6,000.” (“Insight Guides Athens Greece Series”, page
42.)
7. “It is one of a group made famous in
the Greek revolution of 1821 by the bravery of its Albanian settlers,
in defense of a country which they had never adopted for their own till
this moment of danger came.
They brought to it moreover, the hoarded
wealth of many years. Albanian captains, Albanian ships and Albanian
gold became the strength of the Greek and the dread of the Turk. The
successful close of the revolution found them as firmly allied with the
Greek nationality as they have been previously alien to it, and there
are now no names more honoured and beloved in Athens, no families more
influential in its polite circles, than those of the Albanian leaders in
the war of 1821, the Tombazis, the Miaulis the Condouriottis.”
(“The Atlantic Monthly: A magazine of literature, science, art and politics Vol. XLIX, January 1882, page 31.)
8. “Among the numerous islands of the
Egian, arise several barren rocks, some of which are however gifted by
nature with small and commodious heavens. Of this number are Hydra,
Spezzia and Ipsara, the first two close to the Eastern shore of the
Peloponnesus, and the latter not far from Scio, on the Asiatic coast.
Tyranny and Want had driven some families, whose origin, like that of
nearly all the peasants, who inhabited proper Greece, was Albanian, to
take refuge on these desolate crags, where they built villages and
sought a precarious existence by fishing.”
(“The Greek Revolution; in origin and progress”, by Edward Blaquiere Esq., page 21.)
9. “In reality however, just before the
Greek war of independence, most Greeks still referred to themselves as
´Romans. Vlachavas, the priest rebel leader who rose against the
Ottomans, declared, ´A Romneos I was born a Romneos I will die.”
(“Bloodlines from the Ethnic Pride to Ethnic Terrorism”, by Vamik Volkan, page 121.)
10. “Constantinople and all continental
Greece were for centuries ruled and occupied by the Romans, and during
many subsequent centuries invaded and colonized by Slavs. The Crusades
and the Latin conquest brought a large influx of western Europeans,
commonly called Franks, and, in later times, extensive Albanian
settlements were made in Greek districts. Clearly, the modern Greek must
be of very mixed blood.”
(“Turkey in Europe” by Sir Charles Elliot, page 267.)
11. “But it has been argued that since
the modern day Greeks are not the descendents of the ancient Greeks:
´The Star of Vergina is not a Greek symbol, except in the sense that it
happens to have been found in the territory of the present-day Greek
state…´.”
(“Experimenting with Democracy Regime change in the Balkans”, edited by Geoffrey Pridham and Tom Gallagher, page 271.)
12. “Contemporary historians state the
Emperor Basilius also was a Sclavonian; many cities bearing Sclavonian
appellations still exist in Greece, as, for instance, Platza, Stratza,
Lutzana,…”
(“The Foreign Quarterly Review Vol. XXVI”, published in October M. DCCC. XL., 1841, page 73.)
13. “By the fourteenth century Orthodox
Christian Arvanites had made their way into the Greek thema of the
Byzantine Empire, which largely comprised the land that now constitutes
Greece. They first came to Attica as early as 1883…They did not complete
their immigration until 1759, when Sultan Murat III offered them land
in Athens…Thus the Arvanites were already inhabiting Athens when the
city became the capital of Greece in 1834.”
(“Fragments of Death Fables of Identity An Athenian Anthropography” by Nani Panourgia, page 27.)
14. “I have already said, and I will
repeat it, that not one-fifth of the present population can with justice
be called Greeks. The remainder are Slavonians, Albanians and Turks,
with a slight infusion of Venetian blood.”
(“Travels in Greece and Russia”, by Bayard Tailor, 1872, page 262.)
15. “It should be stressed, however,
that the Greeks as an ethnic community during this period [1840´s]
included many Grecophone or Hellenized Vlachs, Serbs or Orthodox
Albanians.”
(“Greece and the Balkans Identities, Perceptions and
Cultural Encounters since the Enlightenment”, edited by Dimitris
Tziovas, page6.)
16. “All Greek soldiers are required to
be able to read and write, and if a conscript on joining has not
acquired those rudiments of education, he is put to school. Not
withstanding, the educational efforts of the government, as many as 30
percent proven fifteen years or so ago to be completely illiterate,
while not more than 25 per cent had advanced beyond the ´three R´s´.
This may be partly accounted for by the fact that these conscripts
included both Albanians from the settlements in Attica and other parts
of the Kingdom and pastoral Koutso-Vlachs, all of whom habitually speak
their own dialects and learn Greek only as a foreign tongue.”
(“Greece of the Hellenes”, by Lucy M. J. Garnett, 1914, pages 33 and 34.)
17. “I could speak Turkish, and the
Macedonian dialect, besides my own Greek tongue, and as a curious boy in
the holidays I had been here and there, wishing to know more of the
world round me and the people who lived in other villages than mine.
Being
neither Turkish nor Greek, we called them Bulgarian, but their language
is not Bulgarian, but the Macedonian dialect, and I found lovable
people among them, honest, hospitable and kind.”
(“When I was a Boy in Greece” by George Demetrios, pages 131 and 132.)
18. “The migration of the Albanians is the best attested and in many ways the most instructive of migrations into Greece….
We
had difficulty staying because they were rather suspicious of us, but
we stayed with a man who talked Greek as his main language, although he
talked to his wife in Albanian…
The ancestors of these people
probably came to the Epidaurus in the fourteenth or fifteenth century,
but they were still talking Albanian as their mother tongue in 1930….
Albanian
was the language they talked among themselves, but they could also talk
Greek. This was their second language although they lived in Greece….
The one in Epirus which was still Albanian in its customs and its language had probably been there since about 1400…
A
group of 10,000 Albanians with their families and their flocks appeared
there, and asked if they could be admitted to the Peloponnesus. They
were accepted by Theodore, who was the principle ruler of the
Peloponnesus…”
(“Greece Old and New”, by Nicholas Hammond, edited by Tom Winnifrith and Penelope Murray, Pages 39 to 44.)
19. “…so, in the Middle Ages, these
Albanian mountaineers have brought both war like spirit, bright costume,
and beauty of person, to refresh the Hellenic race. There are still,
even in Attica, districts where Albanian is the common language; there
are Albanian names famous in Greek annals, especially in the great war
of independence (1821-1831) and even among the sailors of Hydra, so
famed for their commercial enterprise and their deeds of war, the chief
families were Albanian in origin.”
(“Greek Pictures drawn with pen and pencil” by J. P. Mahaffy, M.A. D.D., 1890, pages 20 and 21.)
20. “Groups of men in stately Albanian
costume, with their grand walk and graceful air, stalk up and down with
eastern impassibility, price an article, call for a ´fotia´ (brazier of
coals for lighting cigarettes) , at the cafés, or converse in the
strange patois of Greece about the last conclusion of the ´vouli´ or
house of delegates.”
(“Greek Vignettes a sail in the Greek Seas, Summer of 1877″, by James Albert Herrison, page 148.)
21. “In the 1770´s a fiery Orthodox
preacher, the monk Kosmas of Aetolia, tried to stem the tide of mass
conversions to Islam in the Northern Greek lands by founding Greek
schools in a score of villages in Thessaly, Epirus and Macedonia, where
the language had long been abandoned for Albanian, Vlach or Slav, and
obliged peasants to speak only Greek.”
(“Greece the Modern Sequel from 1821 to the Present”, by John S. Koliopoulos and Thanos M. Veremis, page 159.)
22. “…following the alleged discovery
of Slavic buildings by the German excavator at Olympia. The claims were
answered by Paparrigopoulos himself, by reinstating his 1843 position
that there was indeed a Slavic presence in the Peloponnesus in the
Middle Ages, but that the Greeks need not worry because the Slavs were
culturally absorbed…”
(“The Nation and its Ruins”, by Yannis Hamilakis, page 115.)
23. “In 1358 the Albanians overran Epirus, Acarnania and Anatolia and established two principalities under their leaders…
Naupactas fell into their control in 1378…
Other
Albanians and Vlachs invaded the Catalan principality of Boeotia and
Attica, and a great many Albanians settled there as peasant-farmers in
1368 and later….
The penetration of the Greek mainland which we have described occurred during the hundred or more years after 1325.”
(“Migrations and Invasions in Greece and Adjacent Areas”, by Nicholas G. L. Hammond, page 59.)
24. “When arriving by airplane at
Athens, one lands at the new airport at Spata. Spata is a town situated
in the Messogia region that bears and Arvanite name that means ´axe´ or
´sword´ (in Greek ´spaps´, spaya from which derives the Albanian Spata).
The term ´Arvanite´ is the medieval equivalent of ´Albanian´. It is
retained today for the descendants of the Albanian tribes that migrated
to the Greek lands during the period covering two centuries, from the
thirteenth to the fifteenth.”
(“Hellenism Culture, Identity, and Ethnicity from Antiquity to Modernity”, edited by Katerina Zacharia, page 230.)
25. “With them it would be a
resurrection, accomplished, no doubt, after vast pains and many
troubles, the more so since the Greeks are a composite people among whom
the descendents of the veritable Greeks of old are in great minority.
The majority are of Albanian and Suliot blood, races which even the
Romans found untamable.”
(“In Greek Waters: a story of the Grecian War of Independence (1821-1827), by G. A. Henty, 1893, page 40.)
Author:Arbëri [ Fri Mar 11, 2011 11:40 pm ]
Post subject:Re: DAS ALBANISCHE ELEMENT IM MODERNEN GRIECHENLAND
26. “Where are we to look for the
descendents of the Greeks of old? Travelers tell us that, as late as the
sixteenth century, Athens was but a castle with a small village; and
that Sparta, divided by two tribes of the Slavi, the Ezeriti and the
Milingi, had not only lost her ancient name, but it was impossible to
recognize the site in which she had stood of old.”
(“History of the Island of Corfu” by Henry Jervis-White Jervis ESQ., page 250.)
27. “General interest was first aroused
by a controversy as to the racial derivation of modern Greeks. The war
of Independence had won the sympathy of Europe; and it was a rude shock
both to Greece and to her champions when Fallmerayer announced that her
inhabitants were virtually Slavs. The race of the Hellenes he declared
in his ´History of the Morea´ was routed out, and Athens was unoccupied
from the sixth to the tenth century. Only its literature and a few ruins
survived to tell that the Greek people had ever existed. What the Slavs
had began the Albanians completed.”
(“History and Historians in the Nineteenth Century”, by G. P. Gooch, 1918, page 491.)
28. “There were few Muslims here; the
inhabitants largely of Albanian stock, were only imperfectly assimilated
into the Greek nation…” (“Politics in Modern Greece”, by Keith R. Legg,
page 48.)
“The term ´Greek´ differentiates the language spoken by
inhabitants of modern Greece from the languages of the surrounding
countries; but there is disagreement on what the Greek language was, is,
or should be. At the time of independence, the range of local dialects
was significant; substantial portions of the population spoke Albanian.”
(“Politics in Modern Greece”, by Keith R. Legg, page 86.)
29. “…followed by violence, recourse
was had to arms, and the two elder brothers united against Vely, the
offspring of a slave; who being forced to expatriate himself, embraced
the perilous profession of those Albanian knights errant, more commonly
known by the appellation of kleftes or brigands.”
(“The Life of Ali Pasha of Jannina, 1823, page 26.)
30. “There is the case of Karamanlides,
a predominantly Turkish-speaking Christian Orthodox people, who were
forced to go to Greece although they did not necessarily identify
´ethnically´ with the Greeks. At the time of the exchange they numbered
as many as 400,000.”
(“Mediating the Nation News, Audiences and the Politics of Identity”, Mirca Madianou, page 31.)
31, “Morea…as Fallmerayer traces it
back to the Slavic word ´more´, the sea which nearly encircles the
Morea. The Morea forms the most southern part of the Kingdom of Greece
and is divided into the monarchies of Argolis, Corinth, Lakonis,
Messenia, Archadia, Achaea and Elis.
Overrun by the Goths and
Vandals, it became prey, in the second half of the 8th c. to bands of
Slavic invaders who found it wasted by war and pestilence.”
(“International Cyclopedia a Compendium of Human Knowledge”, American Editor-in-Chief Richard Gleason Green, 1890, page 204.)
32. “This point is made in almost all
publications on Albanian nationalism (e.g. Skendi 1967 and 1980). In the
nineteenth century, the Greek historian Constantinos Paparrigopoulos
considered the Albanians a ´race´ that could be acculturated into
Hellenism. His viewpoint was greatly influenced by the considerable
Albanian contribution to the Greek war of independence (1821-1828).”
(“Nationalism Globalization and Orthodoxy” by Victor Roudometof, page 156.)
33. “Rhigas of Valentino….author of poems, revolutionary proclamations and a constitution…
In
this document he spoke of a sovereign people of the proposed state as
including ´without distinction of religion and language – Greeks,
Albanians, Vlachs, Armenians, Turks and every other race´.”
(“Nations and States”, by Hugh Seton-Watson, page 113.)
34. “As of 2002 more than 98,000
foreign pupils were enrolled in Greek schools, accounting for almost 9
percent of the overall school population. As regards nationality, 72
percent are from Albania.
Clearly, Albanians are not unknown to
Greeks and the new relationships emerging from the contemporary
migratory context can be seen as superimposing themselves into a
pre-existing trans-Balkan context.”
(“The New Albanian Migration”, edited by Russell King, Nicola Mai and Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers, page 155.)
35. “Next to them in this respect are
the modern Greeks, who, for the most part, are of Sclavonian origin,
and, where they are not purely Sclavonian, are a cross-breed in which
Sclavonian enters very largely.”
(“The Phrenological Journal and Magazine of Moral Science for the year 1843″, Vol. XIV, page 246.)
36. “The modern Greeks are largely of
Slavic origin. They are not the descendents of the ancient Greeks. That
noble race, greatly mixed with barbarian blood during the middle ages,
was almost completely destroyed in the course of the frequent uprisings
against Turkish rule. Slavic immigrants gradually repopulated the
country.”
(“The Popular Science Monthly”, edited by J. McKeen Cattell”, Volume LXXV, July to December 1909, page 591.)
37. “There was little interest as to
the nationality of the rayahs while Turkish rule was strong. They were
nearly all Christians of the Byzantine type, those in Europe at least,
and were hence regarded as one people, for oriental theocracy cannot
conceive of nationality apart from religion. They themselves knew the
differences in their origins and in such traditions as they had: some
were Slavs, some Vlachs and some Albanians…”
(“Political Science Quarterly” edited by the faculty of science of Columbia University, Volume twenty-third, 1908, page 307.)
38. “Since the Christian era, as we
have said, a successive downpour of foreigners from the north into
Greece has ensued. In the sixth century came the Avars and the Slavs,
bringing death and disaster. A more potent and lasting influence upon
the country was probably produced by the slower and more peaceful
infiltration of the Slavs into Thessaly and Epirus from the end of the
seventh century onward.
The most important immigration of all is
probably that of the Albanians, who, from the thirteenth century until
the advent of the Turks incessantly overran the land.”
(“The Races of Europe a Sociological Study”, by William Z. Ripley PhD, 1910, page 408.)
39. “When the Macedonians became rulers
of Greece, Athens had twenty-one thousand citizens, ten thousand
resident aliens and four-hundred thousand slaves.”
(“Race or Mongrel”, by Alfred P. Schultz, page 86.)
“The resident aliens were mainly Aryan-Hemitic-Semetic-Egyptian-Negroid mongrels.”
(“Race or Mongrel”, by Alfred P. Schultz, page 87.)
“In
the course of time the Hellenic blood was corrupted to a still greater
extent. In 146 BC the Romans conquered Greece…When Mummius took
Corinth…All the men were killed, the women and children were sold into
slavery. Later the Goths invaded Greece…laid waste the land, and
expelled or exterminated the inhabitants.”
(“Race or Mongrel”, by Alfred P. Schultz, pages 88 and 89.)
“The
only difference between modern Greeks and the other Balkanacs lies in
the fact that the environment of the modern Greeks is the environment of
the Hellenes. The environment, however, has no power whatsoever to
change the mongrel into a race, and the Greeks have not been changed by
it.” (“Race or Mongrel”, by Alfred P. Schultz, page 93.)
40. “The ethnographic record certainly
shows that Rhigas could have identified as both Vlach and Greek, and
even preferred one over another in different circumstances. The
Koutsovlach contribution to Greek independence is well attested.”
(“Modern Greece a Cultural Poetics”, by Vangelis Calotychos, page 44.)
“He
consequently never traveled to Greece to implement the second part of
his plan. Like many Philhellenes and Diaspora figures Rhigas never did
set foot in Greece, which was fitting for one whose image of the place
bore many characteristics of a European discourse located and produced
outside of the Greek mainland.”
(“Modern Greece a Cultural Poetics”, by Vangelis Calotychos, page 47.)
41. “In the last year of the 15th
century, and the opening years of the 16th, when the Morea was again the
battlefield of the Turks and Venetians, the occupants of the plain of
Argos and portions of Attica were practically exterminated, and Albanian
colonists began to reoccupy the lands.”
(“The Customs and Lore of Modern Greece”, by Rennell Rodd, 1892, page 17.)
42. “Modern Greece is so flimsy and
fragile, that it goes to pieces entirely when confronted with the
roughest fragment of the old. But there is very little of it, and if you
choose you may see exactly what the Greeks of the 5th century saw, and,
the people of Athens are, of course, no more Athenian than I am.”
(“In Byron´s Shadow Modern Greece in the English and American Imagination”, by David Roessel, page 163.)
43. “This revival also allowed the
Byzantines to re-colonize the Greek mainland. The success of that effort
would prove crucial to the survival of Greek culture in future
centuries, after the other lands had fallen away. Having overrun nearly
all the Greek mainland, the cities, and the islands by the tenth century
the Slavs in Greece have been converted to Orthodox Christianity and
thoroughly Hellenized.”
(“Sailing from Byzantium How a Lost Empire Shaped the World”, by Colin Wells, page 184.)
44. “The Vlachs, on the contrary,
descendents of the Romanized people of the Balkan peninsula, live in
considerable numbers in the mountains of northern and central Greece.”
(“The Scottish Geographical Magazine”, volume XIII, 1897, page 370.)
45. “Europe´s affinity with ancient
Greece left the newborn nation of Greece in an awkward double bind.
Identifying ancient Greece as the ´childhood of Europe´ Winkelmann gave
the patrimony of Greece to western Europe, leaving only more modern
sights of heritage to the modern Greeks. Michael Herzfeld suggests that
´the west supported the Greeks on their implicit assumption that the
Greeks would reciprocally accept the role of living ancestors of
European civilization´.”
(“Possessors and Possessed”, by Wendy M. K. Shaw, page 66.)
46. “It is simply not plausible to
suggest that the bulk of Greek speaking Roman citizens in the Middle
Ages, let alone the former Turkish subjects of 19th century Greece,
´lived like, ancient Greeks.”
(“Macedonia and Greece the Struggle to Define a New Balkan Nation”, by John Shea, page 95.)
47. “Not less remarkable than the small
size of Hellas was the small size of the Hellenes themselves. But it is
much more easy to trace the boundaries of the one upon the modern map
than it is to trace the blood of the other in the bodies of the modern
inhabitants.
We have no accurate record of the proportions of free
citizens who alone constituted the true Hellenes, but they were at most a
small minority among the large population of helots and slaves.”
(“The Nineteenth Century a Monthly Review”, edited by James Knowles, Vol. VI, July-December 1879, page 932.)
48. “The Albanians of Hydra and
Spatsae, many of whom could not even speak Greek, regarded themselves as
Greek because their allegiance was with the Orthodox Church.”
(“That Greece Might Still be Free”, by William St. Clair, page 9.)
49. “Here is the ultimate Greek
tragedy: that of a country forced to treat everything familiar at the
time of the nation-state´s foundation as ´foreign´ while importing a
culture largely invented – or at least – redesigned by German
classicists of the late eighteenth early nineteenth centuries. For many
decades, and almost without interruption, Greeks were forced to put
aside music, art and language that were deemed too tainted by the
´oriental´ influences of Ottoman, Arab, Slavic and Albanian culture; to
forget the partially Albanian roots of Athens and its environs…”
(“The Body Impolitic” by Michael Herzfeld, page 9.)
50. “The philhellenes – the word means
´the admirers of the Greeks´ – who began to lobby for Greek freedom were
struck by the contrast between the idea of ancient Greek freedom and
the servitude of the modern Greeks, who were usually assumed to be
direct descendents of Pericles and company. Philhellenes generally moved
at a distance from reality: they were concerned only with the myth of
Athens and were capable of ignoring anything which tended to tarnish the
glamour.”
(“Athens from Ancient Ideal to Modern City”, by Robin Waterfield, page 296.)
Author:Arbëri [ Fri Mar 11, 2011 11:49 pm ]
Post subject:Re: DAS ALBANISCHE ELEMENT IM MODERNEN GRIECHENLAND
51. “There were, however, several
magnificent specimens of Greek palicars, who added to the advantage of
soldier like, but rather swaggering carriage, all the accessories of
their picturesque costume. Nine or ten of them performed the Albanian
national dance, to the sound of a bad fiddle and a jingling guitar
played with a quill for the amusement of her majesty, who did not seem
enchanted with this exhibition.
And these men, who were exposing
themselves in this absurd manner, were the far-famed Colocotroni,
Nikitas, surnamed the Turkofagos, or Turk eater, Makryani, Vasso of
Montinegro, Nota Botsaris, and other equally celebrated.”
(“Blackwood´s Edinburgh Magazine”, Vol. XLIII, January – June 1838)
52. “When Athens was chosen as the site
for the modern capital of the new nation, and its (re)construction was
planned along lines of Hellenic purity, the unsettling evidence of
Greece´s Ottoman heritage along with local vernacular forms had to be
confronted, all the more so when situated in the immediate vicinity of
remains of classical antiquity. Early nineteenth-century Athens was
viewed as a ´disgraceful site´ (Boyer 1996: 163) full of imperfections,
ranging from the city´s physical aspect to the spoken language that
called for, ´filtering-out´ interventions.”
(“Contested Landscapes Movement, Exile and Place”, Edited by Barbara Bender and Margot Winer, page 23)
53. “In 1851, at the time of her
enfranchisement, Greece possessed about one million inhabitants, of whom
a quarter were Albanians or Walachians. The population was a residue of
invaders of all peoples, and notable of Slavs. For centuries the Greeks
properly so called had disappeared from Greece. From the time of the
Roman conquest, Greece was regarded by every adventurer as a nursery of
slaves, which everyone might have recourse to with impunity.”
(“The Psychology of Socialism”, by Gustav Lo Bon, page 206)
54. “The Greek influence which has
partially Hellenized the Vlachs of Macedonia to-day can hardly date from
before the Turkish conquest. It is the work not of the Byzantine Empire
but of the modern Church, and seems to have reached its height during
the eighteenth century.”
(“Macedonia its races and the future”, by H. N. Brailsford , page 181)
55. “Greek statesman said Albanian was
not a language – it had no literature, not even an alphabet – it is a
mere patois, and would die out in a generation, and the children of the
Albanian soldiers and sailors would all be good Greeks.”
(“The
Catholic Presbyterian an International Journal Ecclesiastical and
Religious”, vol. II, July – December 1879, edited by Professor W. G.
Blaikie D.D., L.L.D., F.R.S.E., page 319).
56. ” We have many instances of the
daring of these Greek robbers, one of which I shall here relate, as
received from their chief, no less a personage than Colocotroni, who was
in our service, and has since, as may be remembered, made himself
conspicuous in Greece. He is an Albanian, and, as he acknowledges, a
kleftis (robber).”
(“Selections from my Journal during a residence in the Mediterranean”, pages 110 and 111)
57. “…the historical absurdity of
declaring Hellenic civilization the expression of a culture
uncontaminated by foreign elements can be explained by a simple fact
that tends to be disregarded – namely, that Hellenic civilization that
we know it was in effect the invention of the ´Science of Antiquity´, of
Classics. As such, it could have been (and was) endowed with whatever
signification the discipline found useful.”
(“Dream Nation Enlightenment, Colonization and the Institution of Modern Greece”, by Stathis Gourgouris, page 134)
58. “After successive treaties, (London
1913, Bucharest 1913), Greece acquired much of Macedonia, Epirus, Crete
and the north-eastern islands of the Aegean. Greek land increased by 70
percent and the population almost doubled from 2,800,000 to 4,800,000
some of whom were Slavs and Turks.”
(“Entangled Identities Nations and Europe”, Edited by Atsuko Ichijo and Willfried Sohn, page 112)
59. “Yet so much of the Sclavonian
element had been infused into the latter that the modern Greeks are
found to differ widely from their remote ancestors.”
(“Foreign Quarterly Review”, Vol. XXVI, 1841, page 73)
60. “…the question of Greece´s
political and ethnic status generated a considerable amount of debate in
western Europe. As Michael Herzfeld argues in ´Ours once more:
Folklore, Ideology and the Making of Modern Greece´: ´to be a European,
was in ideological terms, to be a Hellene´ (1982: 15). Many Europeans of
the time, however, believed the contemporary Greeks to be an
adulterated version of the Classical Greeks – ´Byzantine Slavs…”
(“Grafting Helen The Abduction of the Classical Past”, Matthew Gumpert, pages 239 and 240)
61. “…since the Greeks are a composite
people among whom the descendents of the veritable Greek of old are in a
great minority. The majority are of Albanian and Solute blood, races
which even the Romans found untamable.”
(“In Greek Waters: a Story of the Grecian War of Independence (1821-1827)”, By G.A. Henty, 1893, page 40)
62. “General interest was first aroused
by a controversy as to the racial derivation of modern Greeks. The War
of Independence had won the sympathy of Europe; and it was a rude shock
both to Greece and her champions when Fallmerayer announced that her
inhabitants were virtually Slavs. The race of the Hellenes, he declared
in his ´History of Morea´, was routed out and Athens was unoccupied from
the sixth to the tenth century. Only its literature and a few ruins
survived to tell that the Greek people ever existed. What the Slavs had
begun the Albanians had completed.”
(“History and Historians in the Nineteenth Century”, by G.P. Gooch, pages 490 and 491)
63. “Old Corinth passed through its
various stages, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Turkish. After the War of
Independence it was again Greek, and, being a considerable town, was
suggested as the capital of the new Kingdom of Greece. The earthquake of
1858 leveled it to the ground with the exception of about a dozen
houses. A mere handful of the old inhabitants remained on the site. But
fertile fields and running water made it attractive; and outsiders
gradually came in. At present, it is an untidy poverty-stricken village
of about 1,000 inhabitants, mostly of Albanian Blood.”
(“The Encyclopedia Britannica” Eleventh edition, Vol. VII, 1910, page 148)
64. “The modern Greeks possess none of
the qualities which make nations great. Their existence is due to the
battle of Navarino, for in the autumn of 1827 Greece was unquestionably
conquered by the arms of the Grand Vizier Reshid Mehmed and by Ibrahim
Pasha of Egypt, and again the ´untoward event´ of Navarino could only
occur at a time when Phil-Hellenism was a sort of social disease, caused
by hallucinations and by the illusion of finding in the present a
mongrel inhabitants of the Morea and Attica the descendents of the
ancient Hellenes.”
(“The Syrian War and the decline of the Ottoman Empire (1840-1848)”, by Byron Augustus Jochmus, page 100)
65. “The notion of a ´Greek´ identity
in the modern sense is itself in large part the creation of the movement
towards statehood. It was not until the nineteenth century that the
term came to describe a homogenous ethnic group in the modern sense.
Instead, the people of the Peloponnesos, including Argolida, made up an
intricate mosaic of ethnicities and languages. In Argolida dialects of
Albanian, Greek, Turkish and other local languages were spoken
(Andromedas 1976).”
(“Blood and Oranges Immigrant Labour and European Markets in Rural Greece”, by Christopher M. Lawrence, page 12)
66. “…Greek national feeling was
already quite strong at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Even
the Albanian-speaking Orthodox did not regard themselves only as Rum
(members of the religious community or Orthodox Christian millet) but
also as real Greeks.”
(“From Geopolitics to Global Politics”, editor Jacques Levy, page 174)
67. “…he devoted his personal attention
exclusively to the latter, assigning Joannina to his son-in-law, Thomas
Preliubovich, in 1367, and Aetolia and Akarnania to two Albanian
chiefs, belonging to the clan Boua and Liosa – a name still to be found
in the plans of Attica. Thus, about 1362, all north-west Greece was
Albanian…”
(“The Latins in the Lavant a History of Frankish Greece (1204-1566), by William Miller M.A., 1908, page 294)
68. “Overrun by the Goths and Vandals,
it became a pay, by the second half of the 8th c., to bands of Slavic
invaders, who found it wasted by war and pestilence. Gradually however,
these barbarians were subdued and Grecianized by the Byzantine Emperors.
Nevertheless the numerous names of places, Rivers, etc., in the Morea
of Slavic origin, prove how firmly they had routed themselves, and that
the Moreotes are anything but pure Greeks.”
(“The International Encyclopedia a Compendium of Human Knowledge”, edited by Richard Gleeson Green, 1890, page 204)
69. “…between a cheer and a whine, and
presently their Imperial Majesties of Greece, cantered up the hill
attended by four dignitaries, and as many equerries. The queen was
dressed in a dark green riding-habit, black beaver with drooping
feather, and veil. King Otho wore the Albanian costume of crimson, gold
embroidered jacket and legs, white fustanela, with a richly chased saber
belted over his shoulder.”
(“Scampavians from Gibil Tarek to Stamboul”, by Harry Gringo, 1857)
70. “There was little interest as to
the nationality of the Rayahs while Turkish rule was strong. They were
nearly all Christians of the Byzantine type, those in Europe at least,
and were hence regarded as one people, for oriental theocracy cannot
conceive nationality apart from religion. They themselves know the
difference in their origins and in such traditions as they had: some
were Slavs, some Vlachs and some Albanians…; they were all non-Muslims,
all Rayahs, and in a sense all Greeks.”
(“Political Science Quarterly”, Columbia University, 1908, page 307)
71. “The revolution of 1821 has
restored the ancient appellation ´Elines´, but as it is used chiefly by
the inhabitants of Bavarian Greece, who perhaps don´t constitute more
than one fourth of the Greek nation, it may safely be said that the mass
of the people still call themselves ´Romaii´ and their language
´Romaiki´.”
(“A Romaik Grammar”, by E.A. Sophocles, 1842, page iv)
72. “From their manners, their features
and their names of many of their neighbouring places, I should be
tempted to regard them [Mainiotes] proceeding of Sclavonian blood: many
travelers pretend, however, to have discovered in these barbarous hordes
traces of a Spartan origin.”
(“Recollections of a Classical Tour
through various parts of Greece, Turkey and Italy made in the years 1818
and 1819″, by Peter Edmund Laurent, 1821, page 182)
73. “The Greeks have not taken much
interest in their past until Europeans became enthusiastic discoverers
and diggers of their ruins. And why should they have cared? The Greeks
were not Greek but rather the illiterate descendents of Slavs and
Albanian fishermen who spoke a debased Greek dialect and had little
interest in the broken columns and temples except as places to graze
their sheep. The true philhellenists were the English – of whom Byron
was the epitome – and the French, who were passionate to link themselves
to the Greek ideal.”
(“The Pillars of Hercules” by Paul Thereoux, page 316)
74. “…Neohellenic Enlightenment
sanctioned a selective tradition, with particular emphasis upon an
imaginary classical antiquity, and sought to suppress what was deemed to
be a ´non-significant tradition´, mainly the Byzantine and Ottoman
legacy. Through this ideological management of the past, it achieved the
displacement of a substance part of the history, memory and experience
of those it sought to shape into modern Greeks.”
(“Tormented by History Nationalism in Greece and Turkey”, by Umut Oskirimu and Spiros A. Sofos, page 24)
75. “There are two other difficulties
involved in the history of the Turkish period. In tracing the movements
of merchandise and men in the Balkan peninsula it is extremely difficult
to differentiate the various races involved. Western travelers knew
little, Turkish authorities cared less. Even the polyglot Vlachs
themselves knew nor cared a great deal and until the rise of national
conciousness at the end of the eighteenth century were probably quite
happy with the label of Greek, which was good enough for outside
observers.”
(“The Vlachs the History of a Balkan People”, by T.J. Winnifrith, pages 124 and 125)
Author:Arbëri [ Sat Mar 12, 2011 2:41 pm ]
Post subject:Re: DAS ALBANISCHE ELEMENT IM MODERNEN GRIECHENLAND
76 Ethnographische Karte des Peloponnes (ethnographic map of the Peloponnese)
by Dr. Alfred Philippson, Petermanns Mitteilungen, 1890.
77. GREECE, OLD AND NEW by Tom Winniwrith
78. Mediating the Nation – Mirca Madinou
(Anmerkung: Fakt 30. wurde ebenso aus diesem Werk übernommen)
[img]http://i149.photobucket.com/albums/s43/truemacedonian/mediatingthenation30.png
[/img]
79.Elgin Marble Argument in a New Light
By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN
Published: June 23, 2009
ATHENS — Not long before the new
Acropolis Museum opened last weekend, the writer Christopher Hitchens
hailed in this newspaper what he called the death of an argument.
Britain used to say that Athens had no
adequate place to put the Elgin Marbles, the more than half of the
Parthenon frieze, metopes and pediments that Lord Elgin spirited off
when he was ambassador to the Ottoman Empire two centuries ago. Since
1816 they have been prizes of the British Museum. Meanwhile, Greeks had
to make do with the leftovers, housed in a ramshackle museum built in
1874.
So the new museum that Bernard Tschumi,
the Swiss-born architect, has devised near the base of the Acropolis is
a $200 million, 226,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art rebuttal to
Britain’s argument.
From certain angles it has all the
charm and discretion of the Port Authority terminal in Manhattan.
Neighbors have been complaining all the way to the bank, housing values
having shot up because of it.
Inside, however, it is light and airy,
and the collection is a miracle. Weathered originals from the Parthenon
frieze, the ones Elgin left behind, are combined with plaster casts of
what’s in London to fill the sun-drenched top floor of the museum,
angled to mirror the Parthenon, which gleams through wraparound windows.
The clash between originals and copies makes a not-subtle pitch for the
return of the marbles. Greece’s culture minister, Antonis Samaras, on
the occasion of the opening last week, said what Greek officials have
been saying for decades: that the Parthenon sculptures, broken up, are
like a family portrait with “loved ones missing.” Mr. Samaras’s boss,
Greece’s president, Karolos Papoulias, spoke less metaphorically: “It’s
time to heal the wounds of the monument with the return of the marbles
which belong to it.”
Don’t bet the British will agree.
Inside the museum visitors ascend as if
up the slope of the Acropolis via a glass ramp that reveals, underfoot,
ancient remains excavated during the building’s construction. (They
will eventually be opened to the public.) It’s a nice touch. On the
second floor archaic and early classical statues mill about a big
gallery like a crowd in an agora, a curatorial and architectural whimsy
that risks visitors missing works like the “Kritios Boy,” which nearly
hides to one side.
As for the caryatids from the
Erechtheion and the sculptural remains of the Temple of Athena Nike,
including the sexy “Sandal Binder,” works of textbook import, they look a
bit stranded on a balcony and in a passageway because the museum, save
for the Parthenon floor, doesn’t have regular spaces. Free circulation
puts everything on equal footing (this is the birthplace of democracy,
after all), but the flip side of this layout is the failure to make
priorities clear, which art museums exist to do.
That said, Athens needs new modern
landmarks. The city is choked by slapdash buildings thrown up after the
junta fell during the early 1970s. Public monuments ape ancient palaces,
badly. Nikos Dimou, a prominent writer here, recalled that when a show
of the British modern sculptor Henry Moore arrived years ago: “People
complained about bringing monstrous forms to the land of beauty. Ninety
percent of cultured Greeks even today live with this classical
sensibility.”
A generation or two of well-traveled,
environmentally conscious, globally wired Greeks has since come of age,
and the Elgin Marbles debate now represents a kind of luxury that Greece
has earned. It began with the actress Melina Mercouri during the 1980s,
her publicity campaign coinciding with the rise of a populist leader,
Andreas Papandreou, whose slogan was “Greece for the Greeks.” It has
evolved into a less glamorous tangle of diplomatic and legal
maneuverings, with Greece lately recovering some 25 antiquities from
various countries, including some additional stray fragments from the
Parthenon.
“This issue unifies us,” Dimitris
Pandermalis, the Acropolis Museum’s director, said the other day, never
mind that surveys show how few of them actually bother to visit the
Acropolis past grade school.
As to whether Elgin had legal authority
to remove the marbles, the Ottomans being the ruling power, as the
British maintain, Mr. Pandermalis paused. “The problem is not legal,” he
decided. “It’s ethical and cultural.” George Voulgarakis, a former
culture minister, wasn’t so circumspect when asked the same question. He
said, “It’s like saying the Nazis were justified in plundering
priceless works of art during the Second World War.”
“I understand what museums fear,” Mr.
Voulgarakis added. “They think everything will have to go back if the
marbles do. But the Acropolis is special.”
That’s what the Greeks have insisted
for years when arguing why the marbles belong to Greece, but they also
say the marbles belong to the world when pointing out why they don’t
belong to the British. The marbles in fact belonged to the Parthenon, a
building here and nowhere else, the best argument for repatriation,
except the idea now is not to reattach them where they came from but to
move them from one museum to another, from the British Museum to the new
Acropolis Museum, albeit next door — a different matter, if not to the
Greeks.
“It’s the fault of a German,” Mr. Dimou
said about Greek pride in this cause. He was referring to Johann
Winckelmann, the 18th-century German art historian whose vision of an
ancient Greece “populated by beautiful, tall, blond, wise people,
representing perfection,” as Mr. Dimou put it, was in a sense imposed on
the country to shape modern Greek identity.
“We used to speak Albanian and call
ourselves Romans, but then Winckelmann, Goethe, Victor Hugo, Delacroix,
they all told us, ‘No, you are Hellenes, direct descendants of Plato and
Socrates,’ and that did it. If a small, poor nation has such a burden
put on its shoulders, it will never recover.”
This myth required excavators on the
Acropolis during the 19th century to erase Ottoman traces and purify the
site as the crucible of classicism. The Erechtheion had been a harem,
the Parthenon a mosque. “But Greek archaeology has always been a kind of
fantasy,” Antonis Liakos, a leading Greek historian, noted the other
day. The repatriation argument, relying on claims of historical
integrity, itself distorts history.
For their part, the British also point
out that the marbles’ presence in London across two centuries now has
its own perch on history, having influenced neo-Classicism and
Philhellenism around the globe. That’s true, and it’s not incidental
that the best editions of ancient Greek texts are published by British,
French, Americans and Germans, not Greeks. But imperialism isn’t an
endearing argument.
So both sides, in different ways, stand
on shaky ground. Ownership remains the main stumbling block. When
Britain offered a three-month loan of the marbles to the Acropolis
Museum last week on condition that Greece recognizes Britain’s
ownership, Mr. Samaras swiftly countered that Britain could borrow any
masterpiece it wished from Greece if it relinquished ownership of the
Parthenon sculptures. But a loan was out.
Pity. Asked whether the two sides might
ever negotiate a way to share the marbles, Mr. Samaras shook his head.
“No Greek can sign up for that,” he said.
Elsewhere, museums have begun
collaborating, pooling resources, bending old rules. The British Museum,
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Louvre and other great public
collectors of antiquity have good reason to fear a slippery slope if the
marbles ever do go back, never mind what the Greeks say.
At the same time the Acropolis Museum
plays straight to the heart, sailing past ownership issues into the
foggy ether of a different kind of truth. It’s the nobler, easier route.
Looting antiquities obviously can’t be
tolerated. Elgin operated centuries ago in a different climate. The
whole conversation needs to be reframed. As Mr. Dimou asked, “If they
were returned, would Greeks be wiser, better? Other objects of
incredible importance are scattered around Greece and no one visits
them.” Mr. Liakos put it another way: “It’s very Greek to ask the
question. Who owns history? It’s part of our nationalist argument. The
Acropolis is our trademark. But the energy spent on antiquity drains
from modern creativity.”
The new museum finally casts Melina Mercouri’s old argument in concrete.
The opportunity is there.
Author:Arbëri [ Sat Mar 12, 2011 2:48 pm ]
Post subject:Re: DAS ALBANISCHE ELEMENT IM MODERNEN GRIECHENLAND
80. THE ARVANITES
greekhelsinki.gr
So, some have estimated that, when the
Ottomans conquered the whole Greek territory in the XV century, some 45%
of it was populated by Albanians (Trudgill, 1975:6). Another wave of
Muslim Albanian migrations took place during the Ottoman period, mainly
in the XVIII century (Trudgill, 1975:6; Banfi, 1994:19).
81. Greece and the Greeks of the present day By Edmond About
Athens
This question has been asked
several times, and should be addressed properly once and for all. While I
will agree that pockets of Romaic-speakers lived in what were to become
the domains of the modern ‘Hellenic’ state and elsewhere in the
Balkans, particularly where it concerns the main trading areas (where as
it so happens the Romaic tongue was the lingua franca of trade) and
cities, the number of these people steadily increased in other areas due
to the prohibition of Slavic and Latin languages in churches and
schools from the second half of the 18th century. So it is not suprising
that come the 19th century western travellers and writers speak about
so-called ‘Greeks’ forming large bulks of the population in the region,
although the people of other ‘origins’ were not by and large ignored
either, as they are so blindly today.
In the early 19th century John Cam
Hobhouse, quoted by John Freely, wrote that “the number of houses in
Athens is supposed to be between twelve and thirteen hundred; of which
about four hundred are inhabited by the Turks, the remainder by the
Greeks and Albanians, the latter of whom occupy above three hundred
houses.”
During the mid 19th century, Edmond
About wrote that “Athens, twenty-five years ago, was only an Albanian
village. The Albanians formed, and still form, almost the whole of the
population of Attica; and within three leagues of the capital, villages
are to be found where Greek is hardly understood………Albanians form about
one-fourth of the population of the country; they are in majority in
Attica, in Arcadia, and in Hydra….”
82.History of the Greek Revolution
by George Finlay, Published by W. Blackwood and sons, 1861
Author:Arbëri [ Sat Mar 12, 2011 2:58 pm ]
Post subject:Re: DAS ALBANISCHE ELEMENT IM MODERNEN GRIECHENLAND
88. Die Anfaenge Des Griechischen Nationalstaates, 1833-1843
Irmgard Wilharm
“The first modern Greek national
government, established in 1833, had certain unique attributes. Even
though the ”Greeks” had themselves conducted a bitter revolutionary war
against the Ottoman, the three great powers — Russia, Britain and France
— were responsible for the establishment of a political system in 1833
in which ”Greek” nationals (mostly Albanians) occupied non of the major
government positions.
Instead the newly independant country
was organized as an absolte monarchy, under the rule of the 18 year old
Bavarian Prince, Othon, with three Bavarian regents hold the real power
in the new state… In addition, the ”Greek” (i.e., Albanian) forces were
disbanded and the chief military prop of the government was a foreign
mercenary army of thirty five hundred men recruited in the German states
…”
89.The Greek Revolution of 1821
On March 13th 1821, twelve days before
the official beginning of the War of Independence, the first
revolutionary flag was actually raised on the island of Spetses by
Laskarina Bouboulina. Twice widowed with 7 children but extremely rich
she owned several ships. On April 3rd Spetses revolted, followed by the
islands of Hydra and Psara with a total of over 300 ships between them.
Bouboulina and her fleet of 8 ships sailed to Nafplion and took part in
the seige of the impregnable fortress there. Her later attack on
Monemvasia managed to capture that fortress. She took part in the
blockade of Pylos and brought supplies to the revolutionairies by sea.
Bouboulina became a national hero, one of the first women to play a
major role in a revolution. Without her and her ships the Greeks might
not have gained their independence. What is less well known is that she
was Albanian.
And according to some Kolokotronis created the flag, another Albanian!
90. EDINBURGH REVIEW or CRITICAL JOURNAL for: July-October 1902
91.ROMANISM AND COSTES PALAMAS
John S. Romanides
First published in Greek 1976
Made and printed in Greece by
George Papageorgiou Printing Co., Thessaloniki
Romans, Hellenes and the constitutions
Аccording
to the early constitutions of 1822-1832 the Hellenic nations is not a
nation already in existence with a part of it in revolt and a part not
in revolt.
Hellenes are the native born provincials of the old Roman province of Hellas.
In other words the provincial name became the national name.
The right to become Hellene was given
to the Romans in revolt in other places, but only on condition that they
come and settle permanently in Hellas, Therefore, the Romans outside of
Hellas are not considered constitutionally Hellenes because they
fought, but only if and when they come and settle in Hellas[33].
It must be appropriately noted that the
other Romans were not much disturbed at the fact that the Hellenes of
Hellas constitutionally named only themselves Hellenes, since this was a
provincial and . They were rather scandalized by the fact that
followers of Koraes worked fanatically to pull the nails out of and
dissolve Romanism and to separate the self-created new Church of Hellas
from the Ecumenical Patriarchate, as though it were not right for
Hellenes to belong to a Roman Patriarch.
…
Romanism bilingual till today
The
Franks, as well as Europeans and Russians who followed were not able to
understand how it was possible for Romans to become Hellenes and for
Hellenes to become Romans with both being fused into one nation with
Hellenic Civilization and with two language instead of one, as
approximated in the case of Switzerland today.
It is known that Romanism had two
official languages, Latin and Greek. Latin is called Romaika and Greek
came to be known as Romaika[43]. The same with one iota means Latin and
with two iota means Hellenic ; thus the same name signifies the two
languages of Romanism.
But Romanism is still bilingual today.
This is so because the Vlachic language spoken in Greece is Neo-Latin or
Neo Romaika and the Arvanitic (Albanian) language spoken in Greece is
approximately 50% Latin and 25-30% Hellenic. Some years ago it was
common for Romans in the Balkans to be bilingual and many times
trilingual. The Romaik language was prevalent.
The largest group of revolutionaries of 1821 were the Arvanite (Albanian) Romans of whom many did not even know Greek.
92.Albania, rise of a Kingdom von J.Swire, New York 1971
πηγη Volkano times magazine
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