Navarino massacre explained

Conflict:Siege of Navarino
Place:Navarino, Morea Eyalet, Ottoman Empire (now Messenia, Greece)
Partof:the Greek War of Independence
Result:Greek victory
Combatant2: Ottoman Empire
Combatant1: Greek revolutionaries
Casualties3:Around 3,000 Turkish Civilians killed.
Coordinates:36.912°N 21.691°W
Casualties1:Unknown
Casualties2:Unknown
Date:March - 19 August 1821
Commander1:Konstantinos Pierrakos Mavromichalis
Commander2:Unknown

The siege of Navarino was one of the earliest battles of the Greek War of Independence. It resulted in one of a series of massacres[1] which resulted in the extermination of the Turkish civilian population of the region.

Siege of the fortress

In March 1821 the Greeks began the siege of Neokastro under the leadership of Konstantinos Pierrakos Mavromichalis. Before the fortress capitulated in August, many Turkish families had been compelled by hunger to escape and throw themselves at the mercy of Greeks of the neighbourhood. However, they were massacred. The Turks, who were at the last extremity of starvation, offered to surrender. The Greeks proposed a convention whereby surrendering Turks would be granted secure passage to Egypt. When the capitulation was concluded, the city's Turks gave up all the public property in the fortress and all of their money, plate and jewels.[2] However the Greeks had neither the intention nor even the means of providing that promised secure passage.[3] Using as pretext the death of their leader, Mavromichalis, who was killed during the siege, they failed to keep the terms of the surrender.

One of the Greek negotiators, Poniropoulos, boasted some years later to General Thomas Gordon that he destroyed the copy of capitulation that had been given to the Turks so that no proof would remain of any such transaction having been concluded.[4]

Massacre of Turks

When the gates opened on 19 August (O. S. 7 August) 1821, the Greeks rushed in and around 3,000 number of Turks were killed, with the exception of some who managed to escape.[5]

Historian George Finlay noted that a Greek priest, named Phrantzes, was an eyewitness to the massacres. Based on the descriptions provided by Phrantzes, he wrote:

"Women, wounded with musketballs and sabre-cuts, rushed to the sea, seeking to escape, and were deliberately shot. Mothers robbed of their clothes, with infants in their arms plunged into the sea to conceal themselves from shame, and they were them made a mark for inhuman riflemen. Greeks seized infants from their mother's breasts and dashed them against rocks. Children, three and four years old, were hurled living into the sea and left to drown. When the massacre was ended, the dead bodies washed ashore, or piled on the beach, threatened to cause a pestilence..."[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. William St. Clair, That Greece Might Still Be Free The Philhellenes in the War of Independence, Oxford University Press, London, 1972 p. 40
  2. George Finlay, History of the Greek Revolution, Volume 1. William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh and London, 1861. Online copy p. 262
  3. St. Clair, p. 41
  4. Finlay, p. 262
  5. St. Clair, p. 43
  6. Finlay, p. 263