Dimitris Glinos | |
Birth Date: | September 2, 1882 |
Birth Place: | Smyrna, Aidin Vilayet, Ottoman Empire |
Death Date: | December 26, 1943 (aged 61) |
Death Place: | Athens, Greece |
Occupation: | Teacher |
Spouse: | Anna Dim. Chroni |
Parents: | Alexandros Glinos |
Nationality: | Greek |
Dimitris Glinos (Greek, Modern (1453-);: Δημήτρης Γληνός, September 2, 1882 – December 26, 1943) was a Greek educator, philosopher and politician.[1]
Glinos was born in Smyrna, the eldest of twelve children of Alexandros Glinos. After graduating from the Smyrna Evangelical School, he went to Athens in 1899 and enrolled in the Philosophy Department of the University of Athens. He graduated in 1905 and proceeded to study philosophy, pedagogy, and experimental psychology in Germany at the University of Jena (under Rudolf Eucken from 1908 to 1909), and at the University of Leipzig (under Wilhelm Wundt from 1909 to 1911). In Germany, he was acquainted with Georgios Skliros[2] who introduced Glinos to socialist ideology and had decisive effect on his later career.
He married Anna Chroni in September 1908.
Upon his return to Greece, he submitted a proposal for an educational reform to the government in 1913. He proposed introduction of, and changes to:
Glinos eventually became Secretary-General of the Ministry of Education in 1917 under prime minister Eleftherios Venizelos and began to introduce the proposed reforms. His efforts were stopped, and his reforms undone when Venizelos lost power in 1920, and Glinos began publishing under the pseudonym "A. Gabriel, teacher". He re-introduced the reforms after he was reinstated when Venizelos regained power in 1922, but dampened again when Theodore Pangalos took power in 1925.
In 1930 he began his active involvement in politics, being elected as an MP with the Communist Party of Greece in the 1936 elections. After the establishment of the Metaxas Regime, along with many other Communists and other political dissidents, he was sent to internal exile on the island of Agios Efstratios. During the Axis Occupation of Greece, Glinos became actively involved in the founding of the Communist-led National Liberation Front (EAM), and wrote its political manifesto, What is the National Liberation Front, and what does it want (Τί είναι και τί θέλει το ΕΑΜ) in September 1942. At the same time, in December 1942, he was elected a member of the Politburo of the KKE, in whose ranks he had been a member since 1935.
Glinos died during Christmas of 1943, after an operation and while he was preparing to move to Free Greece, in order to participate in the foundation of the "Mountain Government" and possibly take the position of its President.[3]