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Corfu incident

The Corfu incident (Greek: κατάληψη της Κέρκυρας, romanizedKatalipsi tis Kerkyras, Italian: crisi di Corfù) was a 1923 diplomatic and military crisis between Greece and Italy. It was triggered when Enrico Tellini, an Italian general heading a commission to resolve a border dispute between Albania and Greece, was murdered in Greek territory along with two other officers of his staff. In response, Benito Mussolini issued an ultimatum to Greece and, when it was not accepted in whole, dispatched forces to bombard and occupy Corfu. Mussolini defied the League of Nations and stated Italy would leave if it arbitrated in the crisis, and the Conference of Ambassadors instead eventually tendered an agreement favouring Italy. This was an early demonstration of the League's weakness when dealing with larger powers.

Corfu incident of 1923

Corfu, one of the Ionian Islands
DateAugust 29 – September 27, 1923
Location39°40′N 19°45′E / 39.667°N 19.750°E / 39.667; 19.750
Result Agreement between Italy and Greece under the auspices of the League of Nations
Belligerents
 Italy  Greece
Commanders and leaders
Benito Mussolini
Emilio Solari
Stylianos Gonatas
Strength
2[1]–3 battleships
2[1]–4 cruisers
5[1]–6 destroyers
2 torpedo boats[1]
4 MAS boats[1]
2 submarines[1]
1 airship[2]
Numerous aircraft[3][4][5]
6 batteries of light artillery[6]
5,000[2][7]–10,000[8] troops
150[9] troops
Casualties and losses
None 16 civilians killed, 30 wounded and 2 amputated (per Greek sources)[10]
20 civilians killed and 32 wounded (reported)[2][11]
Corfu
class=notpageimage|
Location within Greece

Background edit

During the Italo-Ottoman war of 1911–12, Italy had occupied the Dodecanese islands whose population was largely Greek. Under the Venizelos–Tittoni agreement of 1919, Italy promised to cede the Dodecanese islands except for Rhodes to Greece in exchange for Greek recognition of the Italian claims to part of Anatolia.[12] However, the Turkish National Movement's victory in the Turkish War of Independence had put an end to all plans for partitioning Asia Minor by 1922, and Mussolini took the view that since the Italians had been forced out of Turkey that cancelled out the obligation to cede the Dodecanese islands to Greece. The Greeks continued to press Mussolini on the Dodecanese issue, and in the summer of 1923, he ordered the Italian garrison in the Dodecanese reinforced as part of his plans to formally annex the islands to Italy, which caused Greece to issue notes of protest.[13]

In May 1923, during a visit to Rome, the British Foreign Secretary, Lord Curzon, told Mussolini that Britain would cede Jubaland and Jarabub to Italy as part of a general settlement of all of Italy's claims, saying that Italians had to settle their disputes with both Yugoslavia and Greece as part of the price of Jubaland and Jarabub.[13] Under the terms of the Treaty of London of 1915, under which Italy entered World War I, Britain had promised to cede Jubaland and Jarabub to Italy, and as Mussolini had founded the Fascist Party in 1919 in part to protest the "mutilated victory" of 1918 as Italy did not obtain all of the territory promised by the Treaty of London, Jubaland and Jarabub had over-sized symbolic importance in Italy far out of proportion to the actual value of these territories.[14] To obtain Jubaland and Jarabub would mean that Italy would have to settle the Fiume dispute with Yugoslavia and the Dodecanese islands dispute with Greece, neither of which Mussolini wanted to compromise on.[13] Though the Milner-Scialoja agreement of 1920 had committed Britain to cede Jubaland and Jarabub to Italy, the British had subsequently tied that to the Italians settling the Dodecanese islands dispute first.[15] Under the Treaty of Lausanne in July 1923, all of the Allied powers abandoned their claims to Turkey, which badly damaged Mussolini's prestige as he promised as an opposition leader to obtain all of the territories the Italians had fought for in World War I including a large chunk of Anatolia.[12] Having denounced his predecessors as weak leaders who had brought about the "mutilated victory" of 1918 and promised that he was a "strong leader" who would undo the "mutilated victory", Mussolini by the summer of 1923 was to face the reality that Italy was simply too weak to achieve all of his promises.[16]

There was a boundary dispute between Greece and Albania. The two nations took their dispute to the Conference of Ambassadors, which created a commission of British, French, and Italian officials[17] to determine the boundary, which was authorized by the League of Nations to settle the dispute. The Italian General Enrico Tellini became the chairman of the commission. From the outset of the negotiations, the relations between Greece and the commission were bad. Eventually the Greek delegate openly accused Tellini of working in favour of Albania's claims.[18]

In July 1923, Mussolini ordered the Regia Marina's admirals to start preparing for Corfu's occupation, which he predicated would happen that summer in response to the "expected provocative acts" by Greece.[19] The Italian Navy minister, Admiral Paolo Thaon di Revel, welcomed the plan to seize Corfu for budgetary reasons, believing a triumph by the Regia Marina would show the Italian people the navy's importance and thus lead to a bigger naval budget.[19] At the same time, Mussolini did not inform the professional diplomats of the Palazzo Chigi about his plans to seize Corfu, expecting them to object, an expectation that was confirmed when Corfu was indeed bombarded.[19]

Tellini's murder edit

 
 
Kakavia
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Location of Kakavia, where Enrico Tellini was murdered.

On 27 August 1923, Tellini and two aides, plus an interpreter and a chauffeur, were ambushed and assassinated by unknown assailants at Kakavia's border crossing, near the town of Ioannina in Greek territory.[20] The five victims were Tellini, Major Luigi Corti, Lieutenant Mario Bonacini, Albanian interpreter Thanas Gheziri and the chauffeur Remigio Farnetti. None of the victims were robbed.[21] The incident occurred close to the disputed border and therefore could have been carried out by either side.[22][23]

According to Italian newspapers and the official statement of the Albanian government, the attack was carried out by Greeks,[24][25] while other sources, including the Greek government and its officials and the Romanian consul in Ioannina, attributed the murder to Albanian bandits.[26][27][28][2][29][30] In April 1945, the British Ambassador to Greece, Reginald Leeper, sent a letter to British Foreign Secretary Sir Anthony Eden that expressed the viewpoint that it was the Cham Albanians who were responsible for General Tellini's murder. The letter stated that Daout Hodja (Daut Hoxha), a Cham Albanian bandit, killed General Tellini and the other officers.[30] Summarising the most recent evidence, the Greek historian Aristotle Kallis wrote:

Much about the incident which resulted in Tellini's assassination remains unclear. There is sufficient evidence to lend credence to the Greek government's argument that the perpetrators had in fact originated from Albania and had crossed the border illegally to ambush the car inside Greece and thus inculpate the Greek side.[19]

Italian and Greek reactions edit

Upon news of the murder, anti-Greek demonstrations broke out in Italy.[31][32][33] The Greek newspapers were reported by Australian newspapers to

condemn unanimously the Tellini crime, and express friendly sentiments towards Italy. They hope that the Cabinet will give legitimate satisfaction to Italy without going beyond the limits of national dignity.[34]

Italy sent an ultimatum to Greece on August 29, 1923, demanding:

  1. a complete official apology at the Italian legation in Athens,
  2. a solemn funeral in the Catholic cathedral in Athens in the presence of the whole of the Greek government,
  3. military honours for the bodies of the victims,
  4. full honours by the Greek fleet to the Italian fleet which would be sent to Piraeus,
  5. capital punishment for the guilty,
  6. an indemnity of 50 million lire[35][36] within five days of receipt of the note and
  7. a strict inquiry, to be carried out quickly with the assistance of the Italian military attaché.[37][38][39]

In addition, Italy demanded that Greece must reply to the ultimatum within 24 hours.[40]

Greece replied to Italy on August 30, 1923, accepting four of the demands which with modifications as follows:

  1. The Piraeus commandant would express the Greek Government's sorrow to the Italian Minister,
  2. a memorial service will be held in the presence of members of the government,
  3. on the same day a detachment of the guard would salute the Italian flag at the Italian legation,
  4. the military would render honors to the remains of the victims when they were transferred to an Italian warship.

The other demands were rejected on the ground that they would infringe the sovereignty and honor of Greece.[41][42][43]

In addition, the Greek government declared its complete willingness to grant, as a measure of justice, an equitable indemnity to the families of the victims, and that it didn't accept an enquiry in the presence of the Italian military attaché but it would be pleased to accept any assistance which Colonel Perone (the Italian military attaché) might be able to lend by supplying any information likely to facilitate the discovery of the assassins.[44][45]

Mussolini and his cabinet were unsatisfied with the Greek government's reply and declared that it was unacceptable.[46] The Italian press, including the opposition journals, endorsed Mussolini's demands and insisted that Greece must comply without discussion.[47][48][49] Mussolini's decision was received with enthusiasm in all of Italy.[50]

Bombardment and occupation of Corfu edit

On August 31, 1923, a squadron of the Italian Navy bombarded the Greek island of Corfu and landed between 5,000[2][7] and 10,000[51] troops.[2] Aeroplanes aided the attack.[3][4][5][52] Italian fire was concentrated on the town's Old Fortress, which had long been demilitarized and served as a shelter for refugees from Asia Minor, and on the Cities Police school at the New Fortress, which was also a refugee shelter.[7] The bombardment lasted 15[53] to 30[54] minutes. As a result of the bombardment 16 civilians were killed, 30 injured and two had limbs amputated,[10] while according to other sources 20 were killed and 32 wounded.[2][11] There were no soldiers reported among the victims, all of whom were refugees and orphans.[2] The majority of those killed were children.[2] The Commissioner of the U.K. based charity, Save the Children Fund, described the Italian bombardment as "inhuman and revolting, unjustifiable and unnecessary".[55]

The Corfu's prefect, Petros Evripaios, Greek officers and officials were arrested by the Italians[56] and detained aboard an Italian warship.[57] The Greek garrison of 150 men[57] did not surrender but retired to the island's interior.[9][58]

Following the landing, the Italian officers feared British citizens may have been wounded or killed, and were relieved to discover that there were no British subjects among the victims.[59] However, the residence of the British officer in charge of the police training school was looted by Italian soldiers.[7][60]

Mussolini in a speech denounced the Greek government for not understanding that "Corfu had been Venetian for four hundred years", before becoming part of Greece in 1864.[61] Throughout the crisis, Mussolini kept stating that Corfu had been ruled by Venice in a manner that suggested he viewed Corfu as rightfully part of Italy rather than Greece under the grounds that Italy was the heir to the Most Serene Republic of Venice.[61] One of the few groups in Italy who did object to the bombardment were the senior diplomats of the Palazzo Chigi who were not informed. Many of them, including Salvatore Contarini, the Permanent Secretary to the Foreign Minister, were on vacation on the day of the bombardment.[19]

During the crisis, Contarini together with Antonio Salandra, the Italian delegate to the League of Nations, and Romano Avezzana, the Italian ambassador to France, emerged as a force for moderation within the Italian government, constantly working to persuade Mussolini to drop his more extreme demands and to accept a compromise.[19] Mussolini who only became prime minister on 28 October 1922, was determined to assert his power by proving that he was an unconventional leader who did not follow the normal rules of diplomacy, and the Corfu crisis was the first clash between Mussolini and the traditional elites in Italy, who while not objecting to imperialistic policies, disliked Il Duce's reckless style.[62] At the time, Italy was engaging in negotiations with Britain for the cession of Jubaland in East Africa and Jarabub in North Africa to the Italian empire.[63] From the viewpoint of the Palazzo Chigi, the success of these negotiations hinged in part on presenting Italy as a responsible partner to Britain, which was threatened by Mussolini's rash behavior such as the occupation of Corfu.[64]

Reactions after the bombardment and occupation of Corfu edit

Following the incident, the Greek government proclaimed martial law throughout Greece.[65] The Greek fleet was ordered to retire to the Gulf of Volos to avoid contact with the Italian fleet.[66] In the Athens Cathedral, a solemn memorial service was held for the people who were killed in the Corfu bombardment, and the bells of all of the churches were tolled continuously. After the service, demonstrations against Italy broke out.[67] All places of amusement were closed as a sign of mourning for the victims of the bombardment.[68]

After the protest of the Italian Minister, the Greek Government suspended for one day the newspaper Eleftheros Typos for characterizing the Italians as "the fugitives of Caporetto" and dismissed the censor for allowing the statement to pass.[68][69] The Greek Government provided a detachment of 30 men to guard the Italian Legation in Athens.[70] Greek newspapers were unanimous in condemning Italy's action.[71]

Italy closed the Straits of Otranto to Greek ships.[68] In addition, Italy suspended all Greek shipping companies sailing for her,[68] and ordered Italian ships to boycott Greece,[72] although the Greek ports were open to Italian vessels.[68] Greek steamers were detained in Italian ports and one was seized by a submarine in the straits of Corfu,[68][73] but on September 2, the Italian Ministry of Marine ordered all Greek ships to be released from Italian ports.[74] Anti-Greek demonstrations broke out in Italy again.[75] The Italian government ordered the Italian reservists in London to hold themselves in readiness for army service.[76] The King of Italy, Victor Emmanuel III, returned to Rome from his summer residence immediately.[77] The Italian military attaché who was sent to inquire into the murder of the Italian delegates was recalled by the Italian legation,[68] and Greek journalists were expelled from Italy.[78]

Albania reinforced the Greco-Albanian frontier and prohibited passage across.[79]

Serbian newspapers declared that Serbia would support Greece,[80] while elements in Turkey advised Mustafa Kemal to seize the opportunity to invade Western Thrace.[81]

Head of the Near East Relief said that the bombardment was completely unnecessary and unjustified.[82] Italy called the American legation to protest against this statement.[82]

Chairman on the League of Nations commissioning assisting deported women and children, who was eyewitness of the bombardment said: "The crime of Corfu was official murder by a civilized nation...I consider the manner in which Corfu occupied as inhuman."[83]

Lord Curzon, wrote that the "terms demanded by Mussolini are extravagant-much worse than the ultimatum after Sarajevo".[84] In a telegram to the Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin, who was vacationing at Aix-les-Bains, Lord Curzon wrote that Mussolini's actions were "violent and inexcusable" and if Britain did not support the Greek appeal to the League of Nations then "that institution may as well shut its doors".[85]Harold Nicolson and Sir William Tyrrell at the Foreign Office wrote a memo calling for "concentrating our efforts to protect Greece through the agency of the League of Nations against an unfair exploitation by Italy".[85] Lord Curzon's initial attempt to end the crisis by referring it to the League of Nations was dropped after Mussolini threatened to leave the League.[86] More importantly, sanctions against Italy would require the approval of the League Council and it was believed that France would veto any sanctions against Italy if the Corfu incident was referred to the League.[87] Within Whitehall, the Treasury objected to sanctions against Italy under the grounds that the United States was not a member of the League and any League sanctions if adopted would be ineffective as the United States would continue to trade with Italy while the Admiralty demanded a declaration of war against Italy as the prerequisite of a blockade.[87] Howard William Kennard, in charge of the British embassy in Rome as the ambassador Sir Ronald Graham was on vacation, wrote in a dispatch to Lord Curzon that Mussolini was possibly insane, a man suffering from a "mixture of megalomania and extreme patriotism".[88] Kennard drew the conclusion that Mussolini was perhaps rash enough to turn the crisis into an all-out war between Italy and Greece as he kept demanding sums of money in compensation that were well beyond Greece's ability to pay.[88] However, Kennard believed that the Fascist regime was the only thing saving Italy from communism, and if Mussolini were defeated in a war, then the Fascist regime would collapse and the Italian Communist Party would take over.[89] As Kennard much preferred Fascism in power in Italy to Communism, this led him to advocate appeasement, saying that Britain must pressure Greece to submit to the Italian terms while trying to persuade Mussolini to lower the compensation amounts as the best way of avoiding a war.[88] Farther afield, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia were more supportive of Greece with both governments condemning Italy's actions.[88]

Resolution edit

 
 
Kakavia
 
Corfu
class=notpageimage|
Kakavia (with red) and Corfu (with green).

On September 1, Greece appealed to the League of Nations, but Antonio Salandra, the Italian representative to the League, informed the Council that he had no permission to discuss the crisis.[17] Mussolini refused to co-operate with the League and demanded that the Conference of Ambassadors should deal with the matter.[90][91] Italy assured that it would leave the League rather than allow the League to interfere.[92]

Britain favored referring the Corfu matter to the League of Nations, but France opposed such a course of action fearing that it would provide a precedent for the League to become involved in the French occupation of the Ruhr.[93]

With the threat of Mussolini to withdraw from the League and lack of French support the matter went to the Conference of Ambassadors. Italy's prestige was safeguarded and the French were relieved from any linkage between Corfu and the Ruhr at the League of Nations.[93]

On September 8 the Conference of Ambassadors announced to both Greece and Italy, as well as to the League of Nations, the terms upon which the dispute should be settled.

The decision was that:

  1. the Greek Fleet shall render a salute of 21 guns at Piraeus to the Italian Fleet, which will enter the port, followed by French and British warships, which shall be included in the salute,
  2. a funeral service shall be attended by the Greek Cabinet,
  3. military honours shall be rendered to the slain upon embarkation at Preveza,
  4. Greece shall deposit 50,000,000 lire in a Swiss bank as a guarantee,
  5. the highest Greek military authority must apologise to the British, French, and Italian representatives at Athens,
  6. there shall be a Greek inquiry into the murders, which must be supervised by a special international commission presided over by the Japanese Lieutenant-Colonel Shibuya, who was a military attaché of the Japanese embassy, and which must be completed by September 27,
  7. Greece must guarantee the commission's safety and defray its expenses and
  8. the conference requested the Greek Government to communicate its complete acceptance immediately, separately, and simultaneously to the British, French, and Italian representatives at Athens.
  9. In addition, the conference requested the Albanian Government to facilitate the commission's work in Albanian territory.[94]

Both Greece, on September 8,[95] and Italy, on September 10, accepted it.[17] The Italians added, however, that they would not evacuate the island until Greece had given full satisfaction.[17]

In Italy the press widely reported satisfaction with the Conference's decision and praised Mussolini.[96]

On September 11 the Greek delegate, Nikolaos Politis, informed the Council that Greece had deposited the 50,000,000 lire in a Swiss bank and on September 15, the Ambassadors Conference informed Mussolini that Italy must evacuate Corfu on the September 27, at the latest.[17][97]

On September 26, before the inquiry had finished, the Conference of Ambassadors awarded Italy an indemnity of 50,000,000 lire, on the alleged ground that "the Greek authorities had been guilty of a certain negligence before and after the crime."[17]

In addition, Italy demanded from Greece 1,000,000 lire per day for the cost of the occupation of Corfu[17] and Conference of the Ambassadors replied that Italy reserved the right of recourse to an International Court of Justice in connection with the occupation expenses.[98]

In Greece there was a general depression over the decision, because Italy obtained practically everything she demanded.[99]

Harold Nicolson, a first secretary in the central department of the Foreign Office said: "In response to the successive menaces of M. Mussolini we muzzled the League, we imposed the fine on Greece without evidence of her guilt and without reference to the Hague, and we disbanded the Commission of Enquiry. A settlement was thus achieved."[100]

Corfu evacuation edit

On September 27 the Italian flag was lowered and the Italian troops evacuated Corfu. The Italian fleet and a Greek destroyer saluted the Italian flag, and when the Greek flag hoisted, the Italian flagship saluted it.[101]

40,000 residents of Corfu welcomed the prefect when he landed, and shouldered him to the prefecture. British and French flags were waved by the crowd which demonstrated enthusiastically in front of the Anglo-French consulates.[102]

The Italian squadron had been ordered to remain anchored till Italy received the 50 million lire.[103]

The 50,000,000 lire deposited in a Swiss bank were at the disposal of The Hague Tribunal and the bank refused to transfer the money to Rome without the authority of the Greek National Bank, which was given on the evening of the same day.[104]

On September 29, Mussolini ordered the return 10 million of the 50 million lire and directed it to be spent on needy Greek and Armenian refugees.[105]

On September 30, the Italian fleet, except one destroyer, departed.[106]

Aftermath edit

The reputation of Mussolini in Italy was enhanced.[107][108][109]

In Corfu during the first quarter of the 20th century, many Italian operas were performed at the Municipal Theatre of Corfu. This tradition came to a halt following the Corfu incident.[110] After the bombardment, the theatre featured Greek operas as well as Greek theater performances by Greek actors such as Marika Kotopouli and Pelos Katselis [el].[111]

Conclusion edit

The ulterior motive for the invasion was Corfu's strategic position at the entrance of the Adriatic Sea.[112][113][7]

The crisis was the first major test for the League of Nations but the League failed it.[100] It showed that the League was weak[114] and couldn't settle disputes when a great power confronted a small one.[115] The authority of the League had been openly defied by Italy, a founding member of the League and a permanent member of the council.[90] The Italian Fascist regime had managed to prevail in its first major international confrontation.[116]

The crisis was also a failure for the policy of Great Britain, which had appeared as the greatest champion of the League during the crisis.[100] As the Greeks became focused on securing the return of Corfu, the Dodecanese islands issue faded into the background, and the Greek government ceased to protest the continued Italian occupation of the islands, which Mussolini formally annexed to Italy in 1925.[117]

In addition, it showed the purpose and tone of Fascist foreign policy.[115] Italy's invasion of Corfu was Mussolini's most aggressive move of the 1920s.[93] The reputation of Mussolini in Italy was enhanced.[118][119][109]

Stamps edit

An Italian Post Office opened on September 11, 1923 in Corfu, issuing a set of 8 Italian stamps overprinted "CORFÙ" which were placed on sale on the 20th. Three additional stamps overprinted in Greek currency arrived on 24th. The third stamp was 2.40 drachma on 1 lire. The Post Office closed at midday on 26 September 1923, only remaining open to dispatch the morning mail. The office had been open for 15 days.

Three further values arrived on the day the Post Office closed, and were never issued. They eventually became available for sale at the postal ministry in Rome. Many used copies of these stamps have forged postmarks, but it is known that the Corfu cancel was applied to hundreds of stamps before the Post Office closed.[120][121]

People in key roles in Greece and Italy edit

Greece edit

Italy edit

  • Benito Mussolini, Prime Minister.
  • Antonio Salandra, Italian representative to the League of Nations.
  • Victor Emmanuel III, King of Italy.
  • General Armando Diaz, Minister of War.
  • Giulio Cesare Montagna, the Italian ambassador in Athens.
  • Colonel Perone di San Martino, the Italian military attaché.
  • Admiral Emilio Solari, commander of the Italian troops in Corfu.
  • Admiral Diego Simonetti, commander of the Italian fleet in Lower Adriatic, he was appointed as Corfu governor during the occupation.
  • Captain Antonio Foschini, chief of the naval staff, the man who presented the ultimatum about the Italian occupation to the Greek prefect.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Gooch, John (December 2007). Mussolini and his Generals: The Armed Forces and Fascist Foreign Policy, 1922-1940. Cambridge University Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0521856027.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "BOMBARDMENT OF CORFU". The Morning Bulletin. Rockhampton, Qld.: National Library of Australia. 1 October 1935. p. 6. Retrieved 30 July 2013.
  3. ^ a b "GREEK FORT AT CORFU SHELLED BY ITALIAN WARSHIPS". Rochester Evening Journal And The Post Express. 4 September 1923. p. 2."Aeroplanes aided in the attack."
  4. ^ a b "CORFU OCCUPIED AFTER BOMBARDMENT; 15 GREEK CIVILIANS KILLED, MANY WOUNDED". Providence News. 1 September 1923. p. 37."As the landing of the Italians was carried out, fire also was opened from planes above the town."
  5. ^ a b "CORFU OCCUPIED AFTER BOMBARDMENT; 15 GREEK CIVILIANS KILLED, MANY WOUNDED". Providence News. 1 September 1923. p. 37."With firing from the fleet and airplanes."
  6. ^ "ITALIAN NAVY GUNS KILLED ARMENIANS ORPHANS IN CORFU". The Montreal Gazette. 5 September 1923. p. 10. "...and six batteries of light artillery."
  7. ^ a b c d e "LEAGUE CHALLENGED". The Argus. Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 6 September 1923. p. 9. Retrieved 21 March 2013. "Eight thousand troops were landed."
  8. ^ "ITALIAN NAVY GUNS KILLED ARMENIANS ORPHANS IN CORFU". The Montreal Gazette. 5 September 1923. p. 10. "...when i left the Italians had landed 10,000 troops"
  9. ^ a b "5000 ITALIAN TROOPS HAVE LANDED AT CORFU GREEK GARRISON FLED". The Barrier Miner. Broken Hill, NSW: National Library of Australia. 3 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  10. ^ a b "Οταν οι Ιταλοί κατέλαβαν την Κέρκυρα το 1923". TO BHMA. 25 April 2010.
  11. ^ a b "American Scores Bombardment Of Corfu Civilians". Meriden Morning Record. 4 September 1923. p. 1. "the number killed reached twenty, nine of these were killed outright and eleven died at the hospital. Thirty-two wounded are now in hospitals and there were perhaps fifty slightly wounded."
  12. ^ a b Kallais, Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism in Italy and Germany 1922-1945, London: Routledge, 2000 p.109.
  13. ^ a b c Axelord, Alan Benito Mussolini Indianapolis: Alpha Books 2002 p.163.
  14. ^ Axelord, Alan Benito Mussolini Indianapolis: Alpha Books 2002 p.162-163.
  15. ^ Kallais, Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism in Italy and Germany 1922-1945, London: Routledge, 2000 p.109-110.
  16. ^ Kallais, Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism in Italy and Germany 1922-1945, London: Routledge, 2000 p.108-109.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g "THE ITALO-GREEK CRISIS". The Register. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 15 October 1923. p. 11. Retrieved 20 March 2013.
  18. ^ Brecher, Michael; Wilkenfeld, Jonathan (1997). A study of crisis. University of Michigan Press. p. 583. ISBN 0-472-10806-9.
  19. ^ a b c d e f Kallis, Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism In Italy and Germany, 1922-1945, London: Routledge, 2000 p.68.
  20. ^ Brecher, Michael; Wilkenfeld, Jonathan (1997). A Study of Crisis. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472108069.
  21. ^ Massock, Richard (2007). Italy from Within. READ BOOKS. ISBN 978-1-4067-2097-6.
  22. ^ Fellows Nick (2012), History for the IB Diploma: Peacemaking, Peacekeeping: International Relations 1918-36, Cambridge University Press, p. 131, ISBN 9781107613911, Although the incident occurred close to the disputed border and could therefore have been carried out by either side, the Italians blamed the Greeks.
  23. ^ Housden Martyn (2014), The League of Nations and the Organization of Peace, Routledge, p. 131, ISBN 9781317862215, Unfortunately he was murdered, most likely by bandits. Although the culprits were never caught, reports were flashed to Mussolini blaming the Greek side
  24. ^ Italy in the last fifteen hundred years: a concise history By Reinhold Schumann page 298 ([1])
  25. ^ "GREEK PLOT ALLEGED". Kalgoorlie Miner. WA: National Library of Australia. 31 August 1923. p. 5. Retrieved 16 March 2013. "The Italian newspapers declare that the murders were the result of deliberate ambuscade by Greeks—natives of Epirus, and will leave an indelible stain. The Albanian Legation in London has received a telegram from Tirana affirming that Greek armed bands were the assassins"
  26. ^ Albania's Captives. Pyrrhus J. Ruches. Argonaut, 1965 p. 120 "He had no trouble recognizing three of them. They were Major Lepenica, Nevruz Belo and Xhellaledin Aqif Feta, alias Daut Hohxa."
  27. ^ "ALBANIANS BLAMED". The Daily News. Perth: National Library of Australia. 31 August 1923. p. 7 Edition: THIRD EDITION. Retrieved 16 March 2013. "The Governor-General of Epirus, the Greek Delegation, and the Roumanian Consul in Janina, attribute the Telini crime to Albanians."
  28. ^ "MURDERED ITALIANS". The Recorder. Port Pirie, SA: National Library of Australia. 17 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 16 March 2013. "The Exchange correspondent at Athens says the Court of Inquiry into the Janiria murders puts forward a suggestion that the Italian delegates were killed as an act of vengeance because during the Italian occupation of Vairona Colonel Tellini as Governor had several Albanians shot, including notables."
  29. ^ Duggan, Christopher (April 2008). The Force of Destiny: A History of Italy Since 1796. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 439. ISBN 978-0618353675. "...the killers (who had never caught) had almost certainly come from Albania,..."
  30. ^ a b Robert Elsie; Bejtullah D. Destani; Rudina Jasini (18 December 2012). The Cham Albanians of Greece: A Documentary History. I.B.Tauris. p. 360. ISBN 978-1-78076-000-1.
  31. ^ "Italians Incensed". The West Australian. Perth: National Library of Australia. 1 September 1924. p. 11. Retrieved 16 March 2013. "Demonstrations against the Greeks are reported from all parts of Italy."
  32. ^ "GREEK FLAG BURNED". The West Australian. Perth: National Library of Australia. 1 September 1923. p. 11. Retrieved 16 March 2013. " Anti-Greek demonstrations continue in the Italian towns, notably in Trieste, where Nationalists and Fascists burned the Greek flag in the public square, and threw it into the sea. In Milan there were noisy scenes in front of the Greek Consulate, and demonstrators carried off a shield which bore a replica of the Greek arms."
  33. ^ "ITALIAN DEMANDS A MINIMUM". The Recorder. Port Pirie, SA: National Library of Australia. 1 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 16 March 2013. "Anti-Greek demonstrations are reported from all over Italy, and the police have been reinforced."
  34. ^ "Greek Press Views". The West Australian. Perth: National Library of Australia. 1 September 1923. p. 11. Retrieved 1 May 2013. "The Greek newspapers condemn unanimously the Telini crime, and express friendly sentiments towards Italy. They hope that the Cabinet will give legitimate satisfaction to Italy without going beyond the limits of national dignity."
  35. ^ GCSE History Notes (PDF). p. 19. "...blamed the Greeks and demanded 50 million lire in compensation"
  36. ^ Burgwyn, James (April 1997). Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period: 1918-1940. Praeger. p. 23. ISBN 978-0275948771. "..., a 50 million lire penalty,..."
  37. ^ "TERMS OF ULTIMATUM". Kalgoorlie Miner. WA: National Library of Australia. 31 August 1923. p. 5. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  38. ^ Burgwyn, James (April 1997). Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period: 1918-1940. Praeger. p. 23. ISBN 978-0275948771. "...demanding of the Greeks an apology, a funeral service for the victims, naval salutes for the Italian flag, a 50 million lire penalty, and a strict inquiry, to be carried out quickly with the assistance of the Italian military attaché."
  39. ^ "ITALY AND AFRICA". The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 29 October 1935. p. 10. Retrieved 17 March 2013. "Two days later the Italian Minister at Athens forwarded to the Greek Government the following demands: An unreserved official apology, the holding of a solemn memorial service in the Catholic cathedral at Athens all the members of the Government to be present, the paying of honours to the Italian flag by the Greek navy, a drastic Inquiry into the assassination in the presence of the Royal Italian military attaché, capital punishment for the authors of the crime, military honours for the bodies of the victims, and an indemnity of 50,000,000 lire within five days of the presentation of the note."
  40. ^ Brecher, Michael; Wilkenfeld, Jonathan (1997). A study of crisis. University of Michigan Press. p. 583. ISBN 0472108069."...demanding compliance within 24 hours."
  41. ^ "THE ALBANIAN MURDERS". The Recorder. Port Pirie, SA: National Library of Australia. 1 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  42. ^ Burgwyn, James (April 1997). Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period: 1918-1940. Praeger. p. 23. ISBN 978-0275948771. "Greece accepted all but the last two parts of the ultimatum, which appeared to violate its national sovereignty."
  43. ^ "GREECE WILL INDEMNIFY BEREAVED". The Recorder. Port Pirie, SA: National Library of Australia. 1 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 17 March 2013. "The Government is ready to express profound sorrow and indemnify the bereaved families, but is not disposed to accept Italy's humiliating conditions."
  44. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-12-14. Retrieved 2013-03-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  45. ^ "Another European War Possible". The Advertiser. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 3 September 1923. p. 9. Retrieved 10 April 2013."The reply adds that it is impossible to accept the demands of capital punishment for those responsible and an indemnity of 500,000 or an enquiry in the presence of the Italian military attaché, but Greece will willingly accept Italian assistance in carrying out the investigations. The Greek Government are prepared to accord a just indemnity to the families of the victims."
  46. ^ "WARLIKE ACT COMMITTED BY ITALY". The Mail. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 1 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 17 March 2013. "Signor Mussolini (the Italian Premier) read the Greek reply to the Italian ultimatum to Cabinet, which declared that it was, unacceptable."
  47. ^ "FRENCH FEELING FAVORS ITALY". The Mail. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 1 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 17 March 2013. "The Italian press, including the opposition journals, enthusiastically endorse Premier Mussolini's demands and insist that Greece must instantly comply without discussion."
  48. ^ "ITALIAN NEWSPAPERS SUPPORT GOVERNMENT". The Recorder. Port Pirie, SA: National Library of Australia. 1 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 17 March 2013. "The newspapers are unanimous in supporting the ultimatum."
  49. ^ Neville, Peter (December 2003). Mussolini. Routledge. p. 93. ISBN 978-0415249904."Even his critic, Luigi Albertini, gave Mussolini full backing in Corriere della Sera."
  50. ^ "TELL WHY CORFU WAS OCCUPIED". Spokane Daily Chronicle. Spokane, Washington. 1 September 1923. p. 12. "Mussolini's decision that the Greek reply could not be accepted, was received everywhere with greatest enthusiasm"
  51. ^ "ITALIAN NAVY GUNS KILLED ARMENIANS ORPHANS IN CORFU". The Montreal Gazette. 5 September 1923. p. 10. "...when i left the Italians had landed 10,000 troops and six batteries of light artillery."
  52. ^ "Italians Bombard Corfu 15 Greeks Are Killed And Many Said To Be Wounded". The Lewiston Daily Sun. 1 September 1923."Fire also was opened from airplanes above the town."
  53. ^ "ITALIAN NAVY GUNS KILLED ARMENIANS ORPHANS IN CORFU". The Montreal Gazette. 5 September 1923. p. 10. "The bombardment lasted 15 minutes..."
  54. ^ "WAR CRISIS IN EUROPE". Aurora Daily Star. 1 September 1923. p. 1. "Fort at Corfu bombard for 30minutes."
  55. ^ William Miller (12 October 2012). The Ottoman Empire and Its Successors, 1801-1927. Routledge. p. 548. ISBN 978-1-136-26039-1.
  56. ^ "Killing Of 15 Greeks, Occupation Of Corfu, Brings Serious Crisis". The Washington Reporter. 1 September 1923. p. 1. "The Prefect and Greek officers who remained in the fort were arrested by the Italians"
  57. ^ a b "BOMBARDMENT OF CORFU CONSIDERED DECLARATION OF WAR". Easton Free Press. 1 September 1923. p. 3. "The governor of Corfu and ten officers are being detained abroad an Italian warship [...] while the garrison of 150 men retired to the interior of the island."
  58. ^ "Killing Of 15 Greeks, Occupation Of Corfu, Brings Serious Crisis". The Washington Reporter. 1 September 1923. p. 1. "The Greek troops which were stationed in the Corfu fortress have been withdrawn to the interior of the island."
  59. ^ "THE CORFU BOMBARDMENT". The Register. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 5 September 1923. p. 9. Retrieved 18 April 2013."The first Italian officer who landed walked along, mopping his brow, to the spot where English and American nurses were attending the wounded. The officer asked, "Were any Britons killed or wounded? "No." was the reply, whereupon he heaved a sigh of relief and said, "Thank God!""
  60. ^ "ITALIAN NAVY GUNS KILLED ARMENIANS ORPHANS IN CORFU". The Montreal Gazette. 5 September 1923. p. 10. "After landing one group of Italian soldiers visited the residence of Captain Sloonan, director of the British police school. Sloonan was away on his vacation. They looted the premises despite protests from the British servants."
  61. ^ a b Kallis, Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism In Italy and Germany, 1922-1945, London: Routledge, 2000 p.50-51.
  62. ^ Kallis, Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism In Italy and Germany, 1922-1945, London: Routledge, 2000 p.68-69.
  63. ^ Kallis, Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism In Italy and Germany, 1922-1945, London: Routledge, 2000 p.109.
  64. ^ Kallis, Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism In Italy and Germany, 1922-1945, London: Routledge, 2000 p.109-110.
  65. ^ "MARTIAL LAW IN GREECE". The Mercury. Hobart, Tas.: National Library of Australia. 3 September 1923. p. 7. Retrieved 21 March 2013. "The Government has proclaimed martial law throughout Greece."
  66. ^ "PLAYING SAFE". The Brisbane Courier. National Library of Australia. 8 September 1923. p. 7. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  67. ^ "MOURNING IN ATHENS". The Daily News. Perth: National Library of Australia. 5 September 1923. p. 7 Edition: THIRD EDITION. Retrieved 25 March 2013. "...on Monday a solemn memorial service was held in the cathedral for 12 people who were killed in the Corfu bombardment. The bells of all of the churches were tolled continuously, and incense was burned in many houses as a sign of mourning. Crowds paraded the streets after the service, crying, Down with Italy,' but the police dispersed them."
  68. ^ a b c d e f g "BALKAN CRISIS STILL GRAVE; MORE GREEK TERRITORY SAID TO BE OCCUPIED BY ITALIANS". The Morning Leader. 3 September 1923. p. 1.
  69. ^ "Newspaper Suspended". The West Australian. Perth: National Library of Australia. 4 September 1923. p. 7. Retrieved 3 May 2013." A Greek newspaper has been suspended for the day for styling the Italians: "The fugitives of Carporetto." The Censor has been dismissed for allowing the publication of the insult."
  70. ^ "SUBMARINE SEIZES GREEK STEAMER". The Daily News. Perth: National Library of Australia. 3 September 1923. p. 9 Edition: THIRD EDITION. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  71. ^ "FEELING IN GREECE". The West Australian. Perth: National Library of Australia. 4 September 1923. p. 7. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  72. ^ "WAR LIKE ACT COMMITTED BY ITALY". The Mail. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 1 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 23 April 2013. "An Italian tramp steamer going to ports in Asia Minor was ordered to boycott Greece."
  73. ^ "WAR LIKE ACT COMMITTED BY ITALY". The Mail. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 1 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 23 April 2013. "A Greek steamer about to depart from Brindisi homeward was stopped and remains in the harbor"
  74. ^ "RELEASE OF GREEK, SHIPS". The Daily News. Perth: National Library of Australia. 3 September 1923. p. 9 Edition: THIRD EDITION. Retrieved 21 April 2013. "According to a Rome message, the Ministry of Marine has ordered all Greek ships to be allowed to leave Italian ports without hindrance."
  75. ^ "GREEK "ARMS" TORN DOWN". The Brisbane Courier. National Library of Australia. 3 September 1923. p. 7. Retrieved 19 April 2013. "During an anti-Greek demonstration at Milan the crowd tore down the Coat of Arms from the Greek Consulate."
  76. ^ "ITALIANS IN LONDON". The Brisbane Courier. National Library of Australia. 3 September 1923. p. 7. Retrieved 19 April 2013. "Italian reservists in London have received orders from the secretary of their Legation to hold themselves in readiness for army service during the next five days, when it will be known whether they are wanted or not."
  77. ^ "KING RETURNING TO ROME". The Examiner. Launceston, Tas.: National Library of Australia. 3 September 1923. p. 5 Edition: DAILY. Retrieved 21 April 2013."A Rome message says that the King is returning to Rome from his summer residence immediately."
  78. ^ "OCCUPATION OF VERA CRUZ BY U.S. CITED BY ITALY IN CORFU BOMBARDMENT". The Bonham Daily Favorite. 3 September 1923. p. 1."Three Greek journalists have been expelled from Italy, one of them being Elefteros Typos."
  79. ^ "THE ALBANIAN FRONTIER". The Examiner. Launceston, Tas.: National Library of Australia. 3 September 1923. p. 5 Edition: DAILY. Retrieved 21 April 2013."It is announced that Albania has reinforced the Greco-Albanian frontier. Guards prohibit passage across the frontier. A Greek courier carrying delimitation commission papers has been prevented passing."
  80. ^ "ANOTHER BALKAN WAR THREATENED". The Recorder. Port Pirie, SA: National Library of Australia. 8 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 26 June 2013. "Serbian newspapers are already declaring that Serbia will support Greece."
  81. ^ "ANOTHER BALKAN WAR THREATENED". The Recorder. Port Pirie, SA: National Library of Australia. 8 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 26 June 2013. "Reports from Turkey show that a section of opinion is already urging Kemal Pasha to seize the opportunity to invade Western Thrace."
  82. ^ a b "Terms Bombardment Of Corfu Unjustified". Reading Eagle. 9 September 1923. p. 14. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
  83. ^ "Doctor Says Corfu Capture Was Marked By Wanton Killing". Toledo Blade. 13 September 1923. p. 8.
  84. ^ Axelord, Alan Benito Mussolini 2002 p.165
  85. ^ a b Yearwood 1986, p. 561.
  86. ^ Axelord, Alan Benito Mussolini, Indianapolis: Alpha Books 2002 p.165
  87. ^ a b Yearwood 1986, p. 564.
  88. ^ a b c d Axelord, Alan Benito Mussolini Indianapolis: Alpha Books 2002 p.166
  89. ^ Axelord, Alan Benito Mussolini Indianapolis: Alpha Books2002 p.166
  90. ^ a b GCSE History Notes (PDF). p. 19.
  91. ^ Todd, Allan (2001). The Modern World. Oxford University Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-0199134250. "Greece asked the League for help, but Mussolini ignored the League as he argued it was a Conference of Ambassabors' matter."
  92. ^ "CORFU INCIDENT". Hawera & Normanby Star. 7 September 1923. p. 5.
  93. ^ a b c Burgwyn, James (April 1997). Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period: 1918-1940. Praeger. p. 23. ISBN 978-0275948771.
  94. ^ "TERMS FOR GREECE". The Argus. Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 10 September 1923. p. 12. Retrieved 20 March 2013.
  95. ^ "Ambassadors' Decisions". The Examiner. Launceston, Tas.: National Library of Australia. 11 September 1923. p. 5 Edition: DAILY. Retrieved 17 March 2013. "Greece has replied to the Note of the conference of Ambassadors, announcing a readiness to conform with the conference's decision."
  96. ^ "Italy Triumphant". The Advocate. Burnie, Tas.: National Library of Australia. 11 September 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 18 March 2013.
  97. ^ "EVACUATION OF CORFU". The Register. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 15 September 1923. p. 15. Retrieved 20 March 2013.
  98. ^ "EVACUATION OF CORFU". Singleton Argus. NSW: National Library of Australia. 29 September 1923. p. 5. Retrieved 20 March 2013. "The award of the Ambassadors' Conference with respect to Janina has been confirmed, and the matter is declared to be settled, except that Italy reserves the right of recourse to an International Court of Justice in connection with the occupa- tion expenses."
  99. ^ "PRACTICALLY UNOBSERVED". The Brisbane Courier. National Library of Australia. 29 September 1923. p. 7. Retrieved 17 March 2013. "The news of the evacuation at Corfu was almost unobserved owing to the general depression through Italy obtaining practically, everything she demanded."
  100. ^ a b c Yearwood, Peter J. "'Consistently with Honour': Great Britain, the League of Nations and the Corfu Crisis of 1923." Journal of Contemporary History 21, no. 4 (1986): 559-79. https://www.jstor.org/stable/260586.
  101. ^ "THE EVACUATION". The Brisbane Courier. National Library of Australia. 29 September 1923. p. 7. Retrieved 20 March 2013. "The Italian flag was lowered and salutes from the Italian fleet and a Greek destroyer. The Italian flagship saluted the Greek flag when it was hoisted."
  102. ^ "EVACUATION OF CORFU". Kalgoorlie Miner. WA: National Library of Australia. 29 September 1923. p. 5. Retrieved 20 March 2013.
  103. ^ "FLEET WAITS FOR PAYMENT". Kalgoorlie Miner. WA: National Library of Australia. 29 September 1923. p. 5. Retrieved 17 March 2013. "The Italians have not completed the evacuation of Corfu. Although the troops have left the Italian squadron has been ordered to remain till Italy actually receives the fifty million lire, payable by Greece."
  104. ^ "EVACUATION OF CORFU". Kalgoorlie Miner. WA: National Library of Australia. 1 October 1923. p. 5. Retrieved 20 March 2013. "The return of the Italian fleet to Corfu was due to the fact that the fifty million lire deposited in a Swiss bank were at the disposal of The Hague Tribunal and the bank refused to transfer the money to Rome without the authority of the Greek National Bank, which was given yesterday evening."
  105. ^ De Santo, V. (September 30, 1923). "Italians Return $500,000 from Greek Indemnity". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 3.
  106. ^ "EVACUATION OF CORFU". Western Argus. Kalgoorlie, WA: National Library of Australia. 2 October 1923. p. 21. Retrieved 20 March 2013. "Corfu, Sept. 30. The Italian fleet, all except one destroyer, has now departed."
  107. ^ Jaques, Tony (November 2006). Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: A Guide to 8,500 Battles from Antiquity through the Twenty-first Century. Greenwood. p. 262. ISBN 978-0313335372. "..., enhancing the reputation of Mussolini, who then annexed Fiume"
  108. ^ Burgwyn, James (April 1997). Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period: 1918-1940. Praeger. p. 24. ISBN 978-0275948771. "Improvised and incoherent, Mussolini's gunboat diplomacy failed to add Corfu to Italy's possession, but it did successfully fulfill demagogic and propagandistic aims within the country."
  109. ^ a b Neville, Peter (December 2003). Mussolini. Routledge. p. 93. ISBN 978-0415249904."There is no doubt that Mussolini's occupation of Corfu had widespread support at home."
  110. ^ Thomopoulos, Elaine (December 2011). The History of Greece. Greenwood. p. 109. ISBN 978-0313375118. "Incensed by Italy's act of aggression, the Corfiots stopped playing Italian operas at their theater."
  111. ^ Municipality of Corfu Official Website. (2008) After 1923, when Italy bombarded Corfu, the Italian operas ceased to appear in Corfu. From that time on Greek operas were called under the direction of the maestros Dionisius Lavrangas, Alexandros Kiparissis, Stefanos Valtetsiotis and others. Since then, dramatic plays were also staged and artists like Marika Kotopouli and Pelos Katselis appeared in Corfu, as well as many operettas of the time"
  112. ^ "The Brisbane Courier". The Brisbane Courier. National Library of Australia. 11 September 1923. p. 4. Retrieved 31 January 2013."... because there is not the slightest doubt that the real cause of trouble is that old disturbing "Adriatic question " which has been the cause of many Balkan troubles, and is likely to be the cause of many more."
  113. ^ "The Register. ADELAIDE: MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1923". The Register. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 24 September 1923. p. 6. Retrieved 31 January 2013. "But, though deprived of a base which would have made her control of the Adriatic more secure,..."
  114. ^ O'Connell, Ciaran. GCSE History Paper 1 Revision Guide. p. 15.
  115. ^ a b Fry, Michael Graham; Goldstein, Erik; Langhorne, Richard (2004). Guide to International Relations and Diplomacy. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 214. ISBN 978-0826473011.
  116. ^ "The Corfu incident". IME.
  117. ^ Axelord, Alan Benito Mussolini Indianapolis: Alpha Books p.2002 p.166-167
  118. ^ Jaques, Tony (November 2006). of Battles and Sieges: A Guide to 8,500 Battles from Antiquity through the Twenty-first Century. Greenwood. p. 262. ISBN 978-0313335372. "..., enhancing the reputation of Mussolini, who then annexed Fiume"
  119. ^ Burgwyn, James (April 1997). Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period: 1918-1940. Praeger. p. 24. ISBN 978-0275948771. "Improvised and incoherent, Mussolini's gunboat diplomacy failed to add Corfu to Italy's possession, but it did successfully fulfill demagogic and propagandistic aims within the country."
  120. ^ "Corfu, Italian Occupation (1923)". Dead Country Stamps and Banknotes. 21 August 2012.
  121. ^ Tony Clayton. "Italian Post Offices - Corfu". italianstamps.co.uk.

Further reading edit

  • Barros, James. "Mussolini's first Aggression : the Corfu ultimatum". Balkan Studies. 2 (2): 257–286.
  • Hearder, Harry (1963). A Short History of Italy. Cambridge University Press. pp. 214–215.
  • Barros, James (1965). The Corfu incident of 1923: Mussolini and The League Of Nations. Princeton University Press.
  • Seton-Watson, Christopher Seton-Watson (June 1979). Italy from liberalism to fascism: 1870-1925. Routledge Kegan & Paul. pp. 670–675. ISBN 978-0416189407.
  • C. C. Jardine (April 1980). Mussolini and Italy (Modern Times). Longman Group United Kingdom. pp. 29–30. ISBN 978-0582204263.
  • Burgwyn, James (April 1997). Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period: 1918-1940. Praeger. pp. 23–24. ISBN 978-0275948771.
  • Brecher, Michael; Wilkenfeld, Jonathan (1997). A study of crisis. University of Michigan Press. pp. 583–584. ISBN 0472108069.
  • Neville, Peter (December 2003). Mussolini. Routledge. pp. 92–93. ISBN 978-0415249904.
  • Goldstein, Erik; Langhorne, Richard (March 2004). "Corfu Incident, 1923". Guide to International Relations and Diplomacy. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 214. ISBN 978-0826473011.
  • Gooch, John (December 2007). Mussolini and his Generals: The Armed Forces and Fascist Foreign Policy, 1922-1940. Cambridge University Press. pp. 45–47. ISBN 978-0521856027.
  • Duggan, Christopher (April 2008). The Force of Destiny: A History of Italy Since 1796. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 439–441. ISBN 978-0618353675.
  • Παπαφλωράτος, Ιωάννης Σ. (2009). Η Ελληνοϊταλική κρίση του 1923 Το επεισόδιο Tellini/ Κέρκυρας [The Greco-Italian crisis of 1923 The incident Tellini / Corfu] (in Greek). Σάκκουλας Αντ. Ν. ISBN 9789601522388.
  • Gilbert, Mark F.; Nilsson, Robert K. (April 2010). The A to Z of Modern Italy. Scarecrow Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-0810872103.
  • Siebert, Diana (2016). Aller Herren Außenposten. Korfu von 1797 bis 1944. Diana Siebert. pp. 144–157. ISBN 978-3-00-052502-5.
  • Yearwood, Peter (October 1986). "'Consistently with Honour': Great Britain, the League of Nations and the Corfu Crisis of 1923". Journal of Contemporary History. 21 (4): 559–579. doi:10.1177/002200948602100404. S2CID 159953390.

External links edit

  • Successes & failures of the League Of Nations, in the 1920s
  • The Corfu incident Foundation of the Hellenic World
  • Corfu, Italian Occupation (1923) Dead Country Stamps and Banknotes
  • Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias 2013-06-25 at the Wayback Machine
  • Athens, 30 August 1923
  • Geneva, 4 September 1923
  • Geneva, 8 September 1923
  • "3.4.5 The Corfu Incident (1923)". GCSE History Notes (PDF). p. 19.
  • "Chapter III-State Practice During the Pre-United Nations Period". . pp. 33–34. Archived from the original on 2015-06-27. Retrieved 2013-03-20.
  • Finney, Patrick Benedict (September 1993). The Relations between the Entente Powers and Greece, 1923-6 (PDF). pp. 186–220.
  • Article in the Greek newspaper "To Vima" (in Greek)
  • Article in the Greek newspaper "Kathimerini" (in Greek)
  • Corfu History (in Greek)
  • The murder of Telini and the occupation of Corfu from the fascist Italy (in Greek)

Videos edit

  • Occupation Of Corfu 1923 From British Pathé
  • Corfu – Italy Seizes Island 1923 From British Pathé
  • The occupation of Corfu From the old Greek TV show "Στον χώρο της ιστορίας" (In the history),1990 (in Greek)

corfu, incident, confused, with, corfu, channel, incident, greek, κατάληψη, της, Κέρκυρας, romanized, katalipsi, kerkyras, italian, crisi, corfù, 1923, diplomatic, military, crisis, between, greece, italy, triggered, when, enrico, tellini, italian, general, he. Not to be confused with Corfu Channel incident The Corfu incident Greek katalhpsh ths Kerkyras romanized Katalipsi tis Kerkyras Italian crisi di Corfu was a 1923 diplomatic and military crisis between Greece and Italy It was triggered when Enrico Tellini an Italian general heading a commission to resolve a border dispute between Albania and Greece was murdered in Greek territory along with two other officers of his staff In response Benito Mussolini issued an ultimatum to Greece and when it was not accepted in whole dispatched forces to bombard and occupy Corfu Mussolini defied the League of Nations and stated Italy would leave if it arbitrated in the crisis and the Conference of Ambassadors instead eventually tendered an agreement favouring Italy This was an early demonstration of the League s weakness when dealing with larger powers Corfu incident of 1923Corfu one of the Ionian IslandsDateAugust 29 September 27 1923LocationCorfu Kingdom of Greece39 40 N 19 45 E 39 667 N 19 750 E 39 667 19 750ResultAgreement between Italy and Greece under the auspices of the League of NationsBelligerents Italy GreeceCommanders and leadersBenito MussoliniEmilio SolariStylianos GonatasStrength2 1 3 battleships2 1 4 cruisers5 1 6 destroyers2 torpedo boats 1 4 MAS boats 1 2 submarines 1 1 airship 2 Numerous aircraft 3 4 5 6 batteries of light artillery 6 5 000 2 7 10 000 8 troops150 9 troopsCasualties and lossesNone16 civilians killed 30 wounded and 2 amputated per Greek sources 10 20 civilians killed and 32 wounded reported 2 11 Corfuclass notpageimage Location within Greece Contents 1 Background 2 Tellini s murder 3 Italian and Greek reactions 4 Bombardment and occupation of Corfu 5 Reactions after the bombardment and occupation of Corfu 6 Resolution 7 Corfu evacuation 8 Aftermath 9 Conclusion 10 Stamps 11 People in key roles in Greece and Italy 11 1 Greece 11 2 Italy 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External links 14 1 VideosBackground editDuring the Italo Ottoman war of 1911 12 Italy had occupied the Dodecanese islands whose population was largely Greek Under the Venizelos Tittoni agreement of 1919 Italy promised to cede the Dodecanese islands except for Rhodes to Greece in exchange for Greek recognition of the Italian claims to part of Anatolia 12 However the Turkish National Movement s victory in the Turkish War of Independence had put an end to all plans for partitioning Asia Minor by 1922 and Mussolini took the view that since the Italians had been forced out of Turkey that cancelled out the obligation to cede the Dodecanese islands to Greece The Greeks continued to press Mussolini on the Dodecanese issue and in the summer of 1923 he ordered the Italian garrison in the Dodecanese reinforced as part of his plans to formally annex the islands to Italy which caused Greece to issue notes of protest 13 In May 1923 during a visit to Rome the British Foreign Secretary Lord Curzon told Mussolini that Britain would cede Jubaland and Jarabub to Italy as part of a general settlement of all of Italy s claims saying that Italians had to settle their disputes with both Yugoslavia and Greece as part of the price of Jubaland and Jarabub 13 Under the terms of the Treaty of London of 1915 under which Italy entered World War I Britain had promised to cede Jubaland and Jarabub to Italy and as Mussolini had founded the Fascist Party in 1919 in part to protest the mutilated victory of 1918 as Italy did not obtain all of the territory promised by the Treaty of London Jubaland and Jarabub had over sized symbolic importance in Italy far out of proportion to the actual value of these territories 14 To obtain Jubaland and Jarabub would mean that Italy would have to settle the Fiume dispute with Yugoslavia and the Dodecanese islands dispute with Greece neither of which Mussolini wanted to compromise on 13 Though the Milner Scialoja agreement of 1920 had committed Britain to cede Jubaland and Jarabub to Italy the British had subsequently tied that to the Italians settling the Dodecanese islands dispute first 15 Under the Treaty of Lausanne in July 1923 all of the Allied powers abandoned their claims to Turkey which badly damaged Mussolini s prestige as he promised as an opposition leader to obtain all of the territories the Italians had fought for in World War I including a large chunk of Anatolia 12 Having denounced his predecessors as weak leaders who had brought about the mutilated victory of 1918 and promised that he was a strong leader who would undo the mutilated victory Mussolini by the summer of 1923 was to face the reality that Italy was simply too weak to achieve all of his promises 16 There was a boundary dispute between Greece and Albania The two nations took their dispute to the Conference of Ambassadors which created a commission of British French and Italian officials 17 to determine the boundary which was authorized by the League of Nations to settle the dispute The Italian General Enrico Tellini became the chairman of the commission From the outset of the negotiations the relations between Greece and the commission were bad Eventually the Greek delegate openly accused Tellini of working in favour of Albania s claims 18 In July 1923 Mussolini ordered the Regia Marina s admirals to start preparing for Corfu s occupation which he predicated would happen that summer in response to the expected provocative acts by Greece 19 The Italian Navy minister Admiral Paolo Thaon di Revel welcomed the plan to seize Corfu for budgetary reasons believing a triumph by the Regia Marina would show the Italian people the navy s importance and thus lead to a bigger naval budget 19 At the same time Mussolini did not inform the professional diplomats of the Palazzo Chigi about his plans to seize Corfu expecting them to object an expectation that was confirmed when Corfu was indeed bombarded 19 Tellini s murder edit nbsp nbsp Kakaviaclass notpageimage Location of Kakavia where Enrico Tellini was murdered On 27 August 1923 Tellini and two aides plus an interpreter and a chauffeur were ambushed and assassinated by unknown assailants at Kakavia s border crossing near the town of Ioannina in Greek territory 20 The five victims were Tellini Major Luigi Corti Lieutenant Mario Bonacini Albanian interpreter Thanas Gheziri and the chauffeur Remigio Farnetti None of the victims were robbed 21 The incident occurred close to the disputed border and therefore could have been carried out by either side 22 23 According to Italian newspapers and the official statement of the Albanian government the attack was carried out by Greeks 24 25 while other sources including the Greek government and its officials and the Romanian consul in Ioannina attributed the murder to Albanian bandits 26 27 28 2 29 30 In April 1945 the British Ambassador to Greece Reginald Leeper sent a letter to British Foreign Secretary Sir Anthony Eden that expressed the viewpoint that it was the Cham Albanians who were responsible for General Tellini s murder The letter stated that Daout Hodja Daut Hoxha a Cham Albanian bandit killed General Tellini and the other officers 30 Summarising the most recent evidence the Greek historian Aristotle Kallis wrote Much about the incident which resulted in Tellini s assassination remains unclear There is sufficient evidence to lend credence to the Greek government s argument that the perpetrators had in fact originated from Albania and had crossed the border illegally to ambush the car inside Greece and thus inculpate the Greek side 19 Italian and Greek reactions editUpon news of the murder anti Greek demonstrations broke out in Italy 31 32 33 The Greek newspapers were reported by Australian newspapers tocondemn unanimously the Tellini crime and express friendly sentiments towards Italy They hope that the Cabinet will give legitimate satisfaction to Italy without going beyond the limits of national dignity 34 Italy sent an ultimatum to Greece on August 29 1923 demanding a complete official apology at the Italian legation in Athens a solemn funeral in the Catholic cathedral in Athens in the presence of the whole of the Greek government military honours for the bodies of the victims full honours by the Greek fleet to the Italian fleet which would be sent to Piraeus capital punishment for the guilty an indemnity of 50 million lire 35 36 within five days of receipt of the note and a strict inquiry to be carried out quickly with the assistance of the Italian military attache 37 38 39 In addition Italy demanded that Greece must reply to the ultimatum within 24 hours 40 Greece replied to Italy on August 30 1923 accepting four of the demands which with modifications as follows The Piraeus commandant would express the Greek Government s sorrow to the Italian Minister a memorial service will be held in the presence of members of the government on the same day a detachment of the guard would salute the Italian flag at the Italian legation the military would render honors to the remains of the victims when they were transferred to an Italian warship The other demands were rejected on the ground that they would infringe the sovereignty and honor of Greece 41 42 43 In addition the Greek government declared its complete willingness to grant as a measure of justice an equitable indemnity to the families of the victims and that it didn t accept an enquiry in the presence of the Italian military attache but it would be pleased to accept any assistance which Colonel Perone the Italian military attache might be able to lend by supplying any information likely to facilitate the discovery of the assassins 44 45 Mussolini and his cabinet were unsatisfied with the Greek government s reply and declared that it was unacceptable 46 The Italian press including the opposition journals endorsed Mussolini s demands and insisted that Greece must comply without discussion 47 48 49 Mussolini s decision was received with enthusiasm in all of Italy 50 Bombardment and occupation of Corfu editOn August 31 1923 a squadron of the Italian Navy bombarded the Greek island of Corfu and landed between 5 000 2 7 and 10 000 51 troops 2 Aeroplanes aided the attack 3 4 5 52 Italian fire was concentrated on the town s Old Fortress which had long been demilitarized and served as a shelter for refugees from Asia Minor and on the Cities Police school at the New Fortress which was also a refugee shelter 7 The bombardment lasted 15 53 to 30 54 minutes As a result of the bombardment 16 civilians were killed 30 injured and two had limbs amputated 10 while according to other sources 20 were killed and 32 wounded 2 11 There were no soldiers reported among the victims all of whom were refugees and orphans 2 The majority of those killed were children 2 The Commissioner of the U K based charity Save the Children Fund described the Italian bombardment as inhuman and revolting unjustifiable and unnecessary 55 The Corfu s prefect Petros Evripaios Greek officers and officials were arrested by the Italians 56 and detained aboard an Italian warship 57 The Greek garrison of 150 men 57 did not surrender but retired to the island s interior 9 58 Following the landing the Italian officers feared British citizens may have been wounded or killed and were relieved to discover that there were no British subjects among the victims 59 However the residence of the British officer in charge of the police training school was looted by Italian soldiers 7 60 Mussolini in a speech denounced the Greek government for not understanding that Corfu had been Venetian for four hundred years before becoming part of Greece in 1864 61 Throughout the crisis Mussolini kept stating that Corfu had been ruled by Venice in a manner that suggested he viewed Corfu as rightfully part of Italy rather than Greece under the grounds that Italy was the heir to the Most Serene Republic of Venice 61 One of the few groups in Italy who did object to the bombardment were the senior diplomats of the Palazzo Chigi who were not informed Many of them including Salvatore Contarini the Permanent Secretary to the Foreign Minister were on vacation on the day of the bombardment 19 During the crisis Contarini together with Antonio Salandra the Italian delegate to the League of Nations and Romano Avezzana the Italian ambassador to France emerged as a force for moderation within the Italian government constantly working to persuade Mussolini to drop his more extreme demands and to accept a compromise 19 Mussolini who only became prime minister on 28 October 1922 was determined to assert his power by proving that he was an unconventional leader who did not follow the normal rules of diplomacy and the Corfu crisis was the first clash between Mussolini and the traditional elites in Italy who while not objecting to imperialistic policies disliked Il Duce s reckless style 62 At the time Italy was engaging in negotiations with Britain for the cession of Jubaland in East Africa and Jarabub in North Africa to the Italian empire 63 From the viewpoint of the Palazzo Chigi the success of these negotiations hinged in part on presenting Italy as a responsible partner to Britain which was threatened by Mussolini s rash behavior such as the occupation of Corfu 64 Reactions after the bombardment and occupation of Corfu editFollowing the incident the Greek government proclaimed martial law throughout Greece 65 The Greek fleet was ordered to retire to the Gulf of Volos to avoid contact with the Italian fleet 66 In the Athens Cathedral a solemn memorial service was held for the people who were killed in the Corfu bombardment and the bells of all of the churches were tolled continuously After the service demonstrations against Italy broke out 67 All places of amusement were closed as a sign of mourning for the victims of the bombardment 68 After the protest of the Italian Minister the Greek Government suspended for one day the newspaper Eleftheros Typos for characterizing the Italians as the fugitives of Caporetto and dismissed the censor for allowing the statement to pass 68 69 The Greek Government provided a detachment of 30 men to guard the Italian Legation in Athens 70 Greek newspapers were unanimous in condemning Italy s action 71 Italy closed the Straits of Otranto to Greek ships 68 In addition Italy suspended all Greek shipping companies sailing for her 68 and ordered Italian ships to boycott Greece 72 although the Greek ports were open to Italian vessels 68 Greek steamers were detained in Italian ports and one was seized by a submarine in the straits of Corfu 68 73 but on September 2 the Italian Ministry of Marine ordered all Greek ships to be released from Italian ports 74 Anti Greek demonstrations broke out in Italy again 75 The Italian government ordered the Italian reservists in London to hold themselves in readiness for army service 76 The King of Italy Victor Emmanuel III returned to Rome from his summer residence immediately 77 The Italian military attache who was sent to inquire into the murder of the Italian delegates was recalled by the Italian legation 68 and Greek journalists were expelled from Italy 78 Albania reinforced the Greco Albanian frontier and prohibited passage across 79 Serbian newspapers declared that Serbia would support Greece 80 while elements in Turkey advised Mustafa Kemal to seize the opportunity to invade Western Thrace 81 Head of the Near East Relief said that the bombardment was completely unnecessary and unjustified 82 Italy called the American legation to protest against this statement 82 Chairman on the League of Nations commissioning assisting deported women and children who was eyewitness of the bombardment said The crime of Corfu was official murder by a civilized nation I consider the manner in which Corfu occupied as inhuman 83 Lord Curzon wrote that the terms demanded by Mussolini are extravagant much worse than the ultimatum after Sarajevo 84 In a telegram to the Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin who was vacationing at Aix les Bains Lord Curzon wrote that Mussolini s actions were violent and inexcusable and if Britain did not support the Greek appeal to the League of Nations then that institution may as well shut its doors 85 Harold Nicolson and Sir William Tyrrell at the Foreign Office wrote a memo calling for concentrating our efforts to protect Greece through the agency of the League of Nations against an unfair exploitation by Italy 85 Lord Curzon s initial attempt to end the crisis by referring it to the League of Nations was dropped after Mussolini threatened to leave the League 86 More importantly sanctions against Italy would require the approval of the League Council and it was believed that France would veto any sanctions against Italy if the Corfu incident was referred to the League 87 Within Whitehall the Treasury objected to sanctions against Italy under the grounds that the United States was not a member of the League and any League sanctions if adopted would be ineffective as the United States would continue to trade with Italy while the Admiralty demanded a declaration of war against Italy as the prerequisite of a blockade 87 Howard William Kennard in charge of the British embassy in Rome as the ambassador Sir Ronald Graham was on vacation wrote in a dispatch to Lord Curzon that Mussolini was possibly insane a man suffering from a mixture of megalomania and extreme patriotism 88 Kennard drew the conclusion that Mussolini was perhaps rash enough to turn the crisis into an all out war between Italy and Greece as he kept demanding sums of money in compensation that were well beyond Greece s ability to pay 88 However Kennard believed that the Fascist regime was the only thing saving Italy from communism and if Mussolini were defeated in a war then the Fascist regime would collapse and the Italian Communist Party would take over 89 As Kennard much preferred Fascism in power in Italy to Communism this led him to advocate appeasement saying that Britain must pressure Greece to submit to the Italian terms while trying to persuade Mussolini to lower the compensation amounts as the best way of avoiding a war 88 Farther afield Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia were more supportive of Greece with both governments condemning Italy s actions 88 Resolution edit nbsp nbsp Kakavia nbsp Corfuclass notpageimage Kakavia with red and Corfu with green On September 1 Greece appealed to the League of Nations but Antonio Salandra the Italian representative to the League informed the Council that he had no permission to discuss the crisis 17 Mussolini refused to co operate with the League and demanded that the Conference of Ambassadors should deal with the matter 90 91 Italy assured that it would leave the League rather than allow the League to interfere 92 Britain favored referring the Corfu matter to the League of Nations but France opposed such a course of action fearing that it would provide a precedent for the League to become involved in the French occupation of the Ruhr 93 With the threat of Mussolini to withdraw from the League and lack of French support the matter went to the Conference of Ambassadors Italy s prestige was safeguarded and the French were relieved from any linkage between Corfu and the Ruhr at the League of Nations 93 On September 8 the Conference of Ambassadors announced to both Greece and Italy as well as to the League of Nations the terms upon which the dispute should be settled The decision was that the Greek Fleet shall render a salute of 21 guns at Piraeus to the Italian Fleet which will enter the port followed by French and British warships which shall be included in the salute a funeral service shall be attended by the Greek Cabinet military honours shall be rendered to the slain upon embarkation at Preveza Greece shall deposit 50 000 000 lire in a Swiss bank as a guarantee the highest Greek military authority must apologise to the British French and Italian representatives at Athens there shall be a Greek inquiry into the murders which must be supervised by a special international commission presided over by the Japanese Lieutenant Colonel Shibuya who was a military attache of the Japanese embassy and which must be completed by September 27 Greece must guarantee the commission s safety and defray its expenses and the conference requested the Greek Government to communicate its complete acceptance immediately separately and simultaneously to the British French and Italian representatives at Athens In addition the conference requested the Albanian Government to facilitate the commission s work in Albanian territory 94 Both Greece on September 8 95 and Italy on September 10 accepted it 17 The Italians added however that they would not evacuate the island until Greece had given full satisfaction 17 In Italy the press widely reported satisfaction with the Conference s decision and praised Mussolini 96 On September 11 the Greek delegate Nikolaos Politis informed the Council that Greece had deposited the 50 000 000 lire in a Swiss bank and on September 15 the Ambassadors Conference informed Mussolini that Italy must evacuate Corfu on the September 27 at the latest 17 97 On September 26 before the inquiry had finished the Conference of Ambassadors awarded Italy an indemnity of 50 000 000 lire on the alleged ground that the Greek authorities had been guilty of a certain negligence before and after the crime 17 In addition Italy demanded from Greece 1 000 000 lire per day for the cost of the occupation of Corfu 17 and Conference of the Ambassadors replied that Italy reserved the right of recourse to an International Court of Justice in connection with the occupation expenses 98 In Greece there was a general depression over the decision because Italy obtained practically everything she demanded 99 Harold Nicolson a first secretary in the central department of the Foreign Office said In response to the successive menaces of M Mussolini we muzzled the League we imposed the fine on Greece without evidence of her guilt and without reference to the Hague and we disbanded the Commission of Enquiry A settlement was thus achieved 100 Corfu evacuation editOn September 27 the Italian flag was lowered and the Italian troops evacuated Corfu The Italian fleet and a Greek destroyer saluted the Italian flag and when the Greek flag hoisted the Italian flagship saluted it 101 40 000 residents of Corfu welcomed the prefect when he landed and shouldered him to the prefecture British and French flags were waved by the crowd which demonstrated enthusiastically in front of the Anglo French consulates 102 The Italian squadron had been ordered to remain anchored till Italy received the 50 million lire 103 The 50 000 000 lire deposited in a Swiss bank were at the disposal of The Hague Tribunal and the bank refused to transfer the money to Rome without the authority of the Greek National Bank which was given on the evening of the same day 104 On September 29 Mussolini ordered the return 10 million of the 50 million lire and directed it to be spent on needy Greek and Armenian refugees 105 On September 30 the Italian fleet except one destroyer departed 106 Aftermath editThe reputation of Mussolini in Italy was enhanced 107 108 109 In Corfu during the first quarter of the 20th century many Italian operas were performed at the Municipal Theatre of Corfu This tradition came to a halt following the Corfu incident 110 After the bombardment the theatre featured Greek operas as well as Greek theater performances by Greek actors such as Marika Kotopouli and Pelos Katselis el 111 Conclusion editThe ulterior motive for the invasion was Corfu s strategic position at the entrance of the Adriatic Sea 112 113 7 The crisis was the first major test for the League of Nations but the League failed it 100 It showed that the League was weak 114 and couldn t settle disputes when a great power confronted a small one 115 The authority of the League had been openly defied by Italy a founding member of the League and a permanent member of the council 90 The Italian Fascist regime had managed to prevail in its first major international confrontation 116 The crisis was also a failure for the policy of Great Britain which had appeared as the greatest champion of the League during the crisis 100 As the Greeks became focused on securing the return of Corfu the Dodecanese islands issue faded into the background and the Greek government ceased to protest the continued Italian occupation of the islands which Mussolini formally annexed to Italy in 1925 117 In addition it showed the purpose and tone of Fascist foreign policy 115 Italy s invasion of Corfu was Mussolini s most aggressive move of the 1920s 93 The reputation of Mussolini in Italy was enhanced 118 119 109 Stamps editAn Italian Post Office opened on September 11 1923 in Corfu issuing a set of 8 Italian stamps overprinted CORFU which were placed on sale on the 20th Three additional stamps overprinted in Greek currency arrived on 24th The third stamp was 2 40 drachma on 1 lire The Post Office closed at midday on 26 September 1923 only remaining open to dispatch the morning mail The office had been open for 15 days Three further values arrived on the day the Post Office closed and were never issued They eventually became available for sale at the postal ministry in Rome Many used copies of these stamps have forged postmarks but it is known that the Corfu cancel was applied to hundreds of stamps before the Post Office closed 120 121 People in key roles in Greece and Italy editGreece edit Stylianos Gonatas Prime Minister Nikolaos Politis Greek representative to the League of Nations Georgios Papandreou Minister of Internal Affairs Italy edit Benito Mussolini Prime Minister Antonio Salandra Italian representative to the League of Nations Victor Emmanuel III King of Italy General Armando Diaz Minister of War Giulio Cesare Montagna the Italian ambassador in Athens Colonel Perone di San Martino the Italian military attache Admiral Emilio Solari commander of the Italian troops in Corfu Admiral Diego Simonetti commander of the Italian fleet in Lower Adriatic he was appointed as Corfu governor during the occupation Captain Antonio Foschini chief of the naval staff the man who presented the ultimatum about the Italian occupation to the Greek prefect References edit a b c d e f Gooch John December 2007 Mussolini and his Generals The Armed Forces and Fascist Foreign Policy 1922 1940 Cambridge University Press p 45 ISBN 978 0521856027 a b c d e f g h i BOMBARDMENT OF CORFU The Morning Bulletin Rockhampton Qld National Library of Australia 1 October 1935 p 6 Retrieved 30 July 2013 a b GREEK FORT AT CORFU SHELLED BY ITALIAN WARSHIPS Rochester Evening Journal And The Post Express 4 September 1923 p 2 Aeroplanes aided in the attack a b CORFU OCCUPIED AFTER BOMBARDMENT 15 GREEK CIVILIANS KILLED MANY WOUNDED Providence News 1 September 1923 p 37 As the landing of the Italians was carried out fire also was opened from planes above the town a b CORFU OCCUPIED AFTER BOMBARDMENT 15 GREEK CIVILIANS KILLED MANY WOUNDED Providence News 1 September 1923 p 37 With firing from the fleet and airplanes ITALIAN NAVY GUNS KILLED ARMENIANS ORPHANS IN CORFU The Montreal Gazette 5 September 1923 p 10 and six batteries of light artillery a b c d e LEAGUE CHALLENGED The Argus Melbourne National Library of Australia 6 September 1923 p 9 Retrieved 21 March 2013 Eight thousand troops were landed ITALIAN NAVY GUNS KILLED ARMENIANS ORPHANS IN CORFU The Montreal Gazette 5 September 1923 p 10 when i left the Italians had landed 10 000 troops a b 5000 ITALIAN TROOPS HAVE LANDED AT CORFU GREEK GARRISON FLED The Barrier Miner Broken Hill NSW National Library of Australia 3 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 23 March 2013 a b Otan oi Italoi katelaban thn Kerkyra to 1923 TO BHMA 25 April 2010 a b American Scores Bombardment Of Corfu Civilians Meriden Morning Record 4 September 1923 p 1 the number killed reached twenty nine of these were killed outright and eleven died at the hospital Thirty two wounded are now in hospitals and there were perhaps fifty slightly wounded a b Kallais Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism in Italy and Germany 1922 1945 London Routledge 2000 p 109 a b c Axelord Alan Benito Mussolini Indianapolis Alpha Books 2002 p 163 Axelord Alan Benito Mussolini Indianapolis Alpha Books 2002 p 162 163 Kallais Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism in Italy and Germany 1922 1945 London Routledge 2000 p 109 110 Kallais Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism in Italy and Germany 1922 1945 London Routledge 2000 p 108 109 a b c d e f g THE ITALO GREEK CRISIS The Register Adelaide National Library of Australia 15 October 1923 p 11 Retrieved 20 March 2013 Brecher Michael Wilkenfeld Jonathan 1997 A study of crisis University of Michigan Press p 583 ISBN 0 472 10806 9 a b c d e f Kallis Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism In Italy and Germany 1922 1945 London Routledge 2000 p 68 Brecher Michael Wilkenfeld Jonathan 1997 A Study of Crisis University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472108069 Massock Richard 2007 Italy from Within READ BOOKS ISBN 978 1 4067 2097 6 Fellows Nick 2012 History for the IB Diploma Peacemaking Peacekeeping International Relations 1918 36 Cambridge University Press p 131 ISBN 9781107613911 Although the incident occurred close to the disputed border and could therefore have been carried out by either side the Italians blamed the Greeks Housden Martyn 2014 The League of Nations and the Organization of Peace Routledge p 131 ISBN 9781317862215 Unfortunately he was murdered most likely by bandits Although the culprits were never caught reports were flashed to Mussolini blaming the Greek side Italy in the last fifteen hundred years a concise history By Reinhold Schumann page 298 1 GREEK PLOT ALLEGED Kalgoorlie Miner WA National Library of Australia 31 August 1923 p 5 Retrieved 16 March 2013 The Italian newspapers declare that the murders were the result of deliberate ambuscade by Greeks natives of Epirus and will leave an indelible stain The Albanian Legation in London has received a telegram from Tirana affirming that Greek armed bands were the assassins Albania s Captives Pyrrhus J Ruches Argonaut 1965 p 120 He had no trouble recognizing three of them They were Major Lepenica Nevruz Belo and Xhellaledin Aqif Feta alias Daut Hohxa ALBANIANS BLAMED The Daily News Perth National Library of Australia 31 August 1923 p 7 Edition THIRD EDITION Retrieved 16 March 2013 The Governor General of Epirus the Greek Delegation and the Roumanian Consul in Janina attribute the Telini crime to Albanians MURDERED ITALIANS The Recorder Port Pirie SA National Library of Australia 17 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 16 March 2013 The Exchange correspondent at Athens says the Court of Inquiry into the Janiria murders puts forward a suggestion that the Italian delegates were killed as an act of vengeance because during the Italian occupation of Vairona Colonel Tellini as Governor had several Albanians shot including notables Duggan Christopher April 2008 The Force of Destiny A History of Italy Since 1796 Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 439 ISBN 978 0618353675 the killers who had never caught had almost certainly come from Albania a b Robert Elsie Bejtullah D Destani Rudina Jasini 18 December 2012 The Cham Albanians of Greece A Documentary History I B Tauris p 360 ISBN 978 1 78076 000 1 Italians Incensed The West Australian Perth National Library of Australia 1 September 1924 p 11 Retrieved 16 March 2013 Demonstrations against the Greeks are reported from all parts of Italy GREEK FLAG BURNED The West Australian Perth National Library of Australia 1 September 1923 p 11 Retrieved 16 March 2013 Anti Greek demonstrations continue in the Italian towns notably in Trieste where Nationalists and Fascists burned the Greek flag in the public square and threw it into the sea In Milan there were noisy scenes in front of the Greek Consulate and demonstrators carried off a shield which bore a replica of the Greek arms ITALIAN DEMANDS A MINIMUM The Recorder Port Pirie SA National Library of Australia 1 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 16 March 2013 Anti Greek demonstrations are reported from all over Italy and the police have been reinforced Greek Press Views The West Australian Perth National Library of Australia 1 September 1923 p 11 Retrieved 1 May 2013 The Greek newspapers condemn unanimously the Telini crime and express friendly sentiments towards Italy They hope that the Cabinet will give legitimate satisfaction to Italy without going beyond the limits of national dignity GCSE History Notes PDF p 19 blamed the Greeks and demanded 50 million lire in compensation Burgwyn James April 1997 Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period 1918 1940 Praeger p 23 ISBN 978 0275948771 a 50 million lire penalty TERMS OF ULTIMATUM Kalgoorlie Miner WA National Library of Australia 31 August 1923 p 5 Retrieved 16 March 2013 Burgwyn James April 1997 Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period 1918 1940 Praeger p 23 ISBN 978 0275948771 demanding of the Greeks an apology a funeral service for the victims naval salutes for the Italian flag a 50 million lire penalty and a strict inquiry to be carried out quickly with the assistance of the Italian military attache ITALY AND AFRICA The Sydney Morning Herald National Library of Australia 29 October 1935 p 10 Retrieved 17 March 2013 Two days later the Italian Minister at Athens forwarded to the Greek Government the following demands An unreserved official apology the holding of a solemn memorial service in the Catholic cathedral at Athens all the members of the Government to be present the paying of honours to the Italian flag by the Greek navy a drastic Inquiry into the assassination in the presence of the Royal Italian military attache capital punishment for the authors of the crime military honours for the bodies of the victims and an indemnity of 50 000 000 lire within five days of the presentation of the note Brecher Michael Wilkenfeld Jonathan 1997 A study of crisis University of Michigan Press p 583 ISBN 0472108069 demanding compliance within 24 hours THE ALBANIAN MURDERS The Recorder Port Pirie SA National Library of Australia 1 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 17 March 2013 Burgwyn James April 1997 Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period 1918 1940 Praeger p 23 ISBN 978 0275948771 Greece accepted all but the last two parts of the ultimatum which appeared to violate its national sovereignty GREECE WILL INDEMNIFY BEREAVED The Recorder Port Pirie SA National Library of Australia 1 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 17 March 2013 The Government is ready to express profound sorrow and indemnify the bereaved families but is not disposed to accept Italy s humiliating conditions Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 12 14 Retrieved 2013 03 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Another European War Possible The Advertiser Adelaide National Library of Australia 3 September 1923 p 9 Retrieved 10 April 2013 The reply adds that it is impossible to accept the demands of capital punishment for those responsible and an indemnity of 500 000 or an enquiry in the presence of the Italian military attache but Greece will willingly accept Italian assistance in carrying out the investigations The Greek Government are prepared to accord a just indemnity to the families of the victims WARLIKE ACT COMMITTED BY ITALY The Mail Adelaide National Library of Australia 1 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 17 March 2013 Signor Mussolini the Italian Premier read the Greek reply to the Italian ultimatum to Cabinet which declared that it was unacceptable FRENCH FEELING FAVORS ITALY The Mail Adelaide National Library of Australia 1 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 17 March 2013 The Italian press including the opposition journals enthusiastically endorse Premier Mussolini s demands and insist that Greece must instantly comply without discussion ITALIAN NEWSPAPERS SUPPORT GOVERNMENT The Recorder Port Pirie SA National Library of Australia 1 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 17 March 2013 The newspapers are unanimous in supporting the ultimatum Neville Peter December 2003 Mussolini Routledge p 93 ISBN 978 0415249904 Even his critic Luigi Albertini gave Mussolini full backing in Corriere della Sera TELL WHY CORFU WAS OCCUPIED Spokane Daily Chronicle Spokane Washington 1 September 1923 p 12 Mussolini s decision that the Greek reply could not be accepted was received everywhere with greatest enthusiasm ITALIAN NAVY GUNS KILLED ARMENIANS ORPHANS IN CORFU The Montreal Gazette 5 September 1923 p 10 when i left the Italians had landed 10 000 troops and six batteries of light artillery Italians Bombard Corfu 15 Greeks Are Killed And Many Said To Be Wounded The Lewiston Daily Sun 1 September 1923 Fire also was opened from airplanes above the town ITALIAN NAVY GUNS KILLED ARMENIANS ORPHANS IN CORFU The Montreal Gazette 5 September 1923 p 10 The bombardment lasted 15 minutes WAR CRISIS IN EUROPE Aurora Daily Star 1 September 1923 p 1 Fort at Corfu bombard for 30minutes William Miller 12 October 2012 The Ottoman Empire and Its Successors 1801 1927 Routledge p 548 ISBN 978 1 136 26039 1 Killing Of 15 Greeks Occupation Of Corfu Brings Serious Crisis The Washington Reporter 1 September 1923 p 1 The Prefect and Greek officers who remained in the fort were arrested by the Italians a b BOMBARDMENT OF CORFU CONSIDERED DECLARATION OF WAR Easton Free Press 1 September 1923 p 3 The governor of Corfu and ten officers are being detained abroad an Italian warship while the garrison of 150 men retired to the interior of the island Killing Of 15 Greeks Occupation Of Corfu Brings Serious Crisis The Washington Reporter 1 September 1923 p 1 The Greek troops which were stationed in the Corfu fortress have been withdrawn to the interior of the island THE CORFU BOMBARDMENT The Register Adelaide National Library of Australia 5 September 1923 p 9 Retrieved 18 April 2013 The first Italian officer who landed walked along mopping his brow to the spot where English and American nurses were attending the wounded The officer asked Were any Britons killed or wounded No was the reply whereupon he heaved a sigh of relief and said Thank God ITALIAN NAVY GUNS KILLED ARMENIANS ORPHANS IN CORFU The Montreal Gazette 5 September 1923 p 10 After landing one group of Italian soldiers visited the residence of Captain Sloonan director of the British police school Sloonan was away on his vacation They looted the premises despite protests from the British servants a b Kallis Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism In Italy and Germany 1922 1945 London Routledge 2000 p 50 51 Kallis Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism In Italy and Germany 1922 1945 London Routledge 2000 p 68 69 Kallis Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism In Italy and Germany 1922 1945 London Routledge 2000 p 109 Kallis Aristotle Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism In Italy and Germany 1922 1945 London Routledge 2000 p 109 110 MARTIAL LAW IN GREECE The Mercury Hobart Tas National Library of Australia 3 September 1923 p 7 Retrieved 21 March 2013 The Government has proclaimed martial law throughout Greece PLAYING SAFE The Brisbane Courier National Library of Australia 8 September 1923 p 7 Retrieved 21 April 2013 MOURNING IN ATHENS The Daily News Perth National Library of Australia 5 September 1923 p 7 Edition THIRD EDITION Retrieved 25 March 2013 on Monday a solemn memorial service was held in the cathedral for 12 people who were killed in the Corfu bombardment The bells of all of the churches were tolled continuously and incense was burned in many houses as a sign of mourning Crowds paraded the streets after the service crying Down with Italy but the police dispersed them a b c d e f g BALKAN CRISIS STILL GRAVE MORE GREEK TERRITORY SAID TO BE OCCUPIED BY ITALIANS The Morning Leader 3 September 1923 p 1 Newspaper Suspended The West Australian Perth National Library of Australia 4 September 1923 p 7 Retrieved 3 May 2013 A Greek newspaper has been suspended for the day for styling the Italians The fugitives of Carporetto The Censor has been dismissed for allowing the publication of the insult SUBMARINE SEIZES GREEK STEAMER The Daily News Perth National Library of Australia 3 September 1923 p 9 Edition THIRD EDITION Retrieved 21 April 2013 FEELING IN GREECE The West Australian Perth National Library of Australia 4 September 1923 p 7 Retrieved 3 May 2013 WAR LIKE ACT COMMITTED BY ITALY The Mail Adelaide National Library of Australia 1 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 23 April 2013 An Italian tramp steamer going to ports in Asia Minor was ordered to boycott Greece WAR LIKE ACT COMMITTED BY ITALY The Mail Adelaide National Library of Australia 1 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 23 April 2013 A Greek steamer about to depart from Brindisi homeward was stopped and remains in the harbor RELEASE OF GREEK SHIPS The Daily News Perth National Library of Australia 3 September 1923 p 9 Edition THIRD EDITION Retrieved 21 April 2013 According to a Rome message the Ministry of Marine has ordered all Greek ships to be allowed to leave Italian ports without hindrance GREEK ARMS TORN DOWN The Brisbane Courier National Library of Australia 3 September 1923 p 7 Retrieved 19 April 2013 During an anti Greek demonstration at Milan the crowd tore down the Coat of Arms from the Greek Consulate ITALIANS IN LONDON The Brisbane Courier National Library of Australia 3 September 1923 p 7 Retrieved 19 April 2013 Italian reservists in London have received orders from the secretary of their Legation to hold themselves in readiness for army service during the next five days when it will be known whether they are wanted or not KING RETURNING TO ROME The Examiner Launceston Tas National Library of Australia 3 September 1923 p 5 Edition DAILY Retrieved 21 April 2013 A Rome message says that the King is returning to Rome from his summer residence immediately OCCUPATION OF VERA CRUZ BY U S CITED BY ITALY IN CORFU BOMBARDMENT The Bonham Daily Favorite 3 September 1923 p 1 Three Greek journalists have been expelled from Italy one of them being Elefteros Typos THE ALBANIAN FRONTIER The Examiner Launceston Tas National Library of Australia 3 September 1923 p 5 Edition DAILY Retrieved 21 April 2013 It is announced that Albania has reinforced the Greco Albanian frontier Guards prohibit passage across the frontier A Greek courier carrying delimitation commission papers has been prevented passing ANOTHER BALKAN WAR THREATENED The Recorder Port Pirie SA National Library of Australia 8 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 26 June 2013 Serbian newspapers are already declaring that Serbia will support Greece ANOTHER BALKAN WAR THREATENED The Recorder Port Pirie SA National Library of Australia 8 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 26 June 2013 Reports from Turkey show that a section of opinion is already urging Kemal Pasha to seize the opportunity to invade Western Thrace a b Terms Bombardment Of Corfu Unjustified Reading Eagle 9 September 1923 p 14 Retrieved 26 June 2013 Doctor Says Corfu Capture Was Marked By Wanton Killing Toledo Blade 13 September 1923 p 8 Axelord Alan Benito Mussolini 2002 p 165 a b Yearwood 1986 p 561 Axelord Alan Benito Mussolini Indianapolis Alpha Books 2002 p 165 a b Yearwood 1986 p 564 a b c d Axelord Alan Benito Mussolini Indianapolis Alpha Books 2002 p 166 Axelord Alan Benito Mussolini Indianapolis Alpha Books2002 p 166 a b GCSE History Notes PDF p 19 Todd Allan 2001 The Modern World Oxford University Press p 55 ISBN 978 0199134250 Greece asked the League for help but Mussolini ignored the League as he argued it was a Conference of Ambassabors matter CORFU INCIDENT Hawera amp Normanby Star 7 September 1923 p 5 a b c Burgwyn James April 1997 Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period 1918 1940 Praeger p 23 ISBN 978 0275948771 TERMS FOR GREECE The Argus Melbourne National Library of Australia 10 September 1923 p 12 Retrieved 20 March 2013 Ambassadors Decisions The Examiner Launceston Tas National Library of Australia 11 September 1923 p 5 Edition DAILY Retrieved 17 March 2013 Greece has replied to the Note of the conference of Ambassadors announcing a readiness to conform with the conference s decision Italy Triumphant The Advocate Burnie Tas National Library of Australia 11 September 1923 p 1 Retrieved 18 March 2013 EVACUATION OF CORFU The Register Adelaide National Library of Australia 15 September 1923 p 15 Retrieved 20 March 2013 EVACUATION OF CORFU Singleton Argus NSW National Library of Australia 29 September 1923 p 5 Retrieved 20 March 2013 The award of the Ambassadors Conference with respect to Janina has been confirmed and the matter is declared to be settled except that Italy reserves the right of recourse to an International Court of Justice in connection with the occupa tion expenses PRACTICALLY UNOBSERVED The Brisbane Courier National Library of Australia 29 September 1923 p 7 Retrieved 17 March 2013 The news of the evacuation at Corfu was almost unobserved owing to the general depression through Italy obtaining practically everything she demanded a b c Yearwood Peter J Consistently with Honour Great Britain the League of Nations and the Corfu Crisis of 1923 Journal of Contemporary History 21 no 4 1986 559 79 https www jstor org stable 260586 THE EVACUATION The Brisbane Courier National Library of Australia 29 September 1923 p 7 Retrieved 20 March 2013 The Italian flag was lowered and salutes from the Italian fleet and a Greek destroyer The Italian flagship saluted the Greek flag when it was hoisted EVACUATION OF CORFU Kalgoorlie Miner WA National Library of Australia 29 September 1923 p 5 Retrieved 20 March 2013 FLEET WAITS FOR PAYMENT Kalgoorlie Miner WA National Library of Australia 29 September 1923 p 5 Retrieved 17 March 2013 The Italians have not completed the evacuation of Corfu Although the troops have left the Italian squadron has been ordered to remain till Italy actually receives the fifty million lire payable by Greece EVACUATION OF CORFU Kalgoorlie Miner WA National Library of Australia 1 October 1923 p 5 Retrieved 20 March 2013 The return of the Italian fleet to Corfu was due to the fact that the fifty million lire deposited in a Swiss bank were at the disposal of The Hague Tribunal and the bank refused to transfer the money to Rome without the authority of the Greek National Bank which was given yesterday evening De Santo V September 30 1923 Italians Return 500 000 from Greek Indemnity Chicago Daily Tribune p 3 EVACUATION OF CORFU Western Argus Kalgoorlie WA National Library of Australia 2 October 1923 p 21 Retrieved 20 March 2013 Corfu Sept 30 The Italian fleet all except one destroyer has now departed Jaques Tony November 2006 Dictionary of Battles and Sieges A Guide to 8 500 Battles from Antiquity through the Twenty first Century Greenwood p 262 ISBN 978 0313335372 enhancing the reputation of Mussolini who then annexed Fiume Burgwyn James April 1997 Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period 1918 1940 Praeger p 24 ISBN 978 0275948771 Improvised and incoherent Mussolini s gunboat diplomacy failed to add Corfu to Italy s possession but it did successfully fulfill demagogic and propagandistic aims within the country a b Neville Peter December 2003 Mussolini Routledge p 93 ISBN 978 0415249904 There is no doubt that Mussolini s occupation of Corfu had widespread support at home Thomopoulos Elaine December 2011 The History of Greece Greenwood p 109 ISBN 978 0313375118 Incensed by Italy s act of aggression the Corfiots stopped playing Italian operas at their theater Municipality of Corfu Official Website 2008 History of the municipal theatre via the Internet ArchiveAfter 1923 when Italy bombarded Corfu the Italian operas ceased to appear in Corfu From that time on Greek operas were called under the direction of the maestros Dionisius Lavrangas Alexandros Kiparissis Stefanos Valtetsiotis and others Since then dramatic plays were also staged and artists like Marika Kotopouli and Pelos Katselis appeared in Corfu as well as many operettas of the time The Brisbane Courier The Brisbane Courier National Library of Australia 11 September 1923 p 4 Retrieved 31 January 2013 because there is not the slightest doubt that the real cause of trouble is that old disturbing Adriatic question which has been the cause of many Balkan troubles and is likely to be the cause of many more The Register ADELAIDE MONDAY SEPTEMBER 24 1923 The Register Adelaide National Library of Australia 24 September 1923 p 6 Retrieved 31 January 2013 But though deprived of a base which would have made her control of the Adriatic more secure O Connell Ciaran GCSE History Paper 1 Revision Guide p 15 a b Fry Michael Graham Goldstein Erik Langhorne Richard 2004 Guide to International Relations and Diplomacy Bloomsbury Academic p 214 ISBN 978 0826473011 The Corfu incident IME Axelord Alan Benito Mussolini Indianapolis Alpha Books p 2002 p 166 167 Jaques Tony November 2006 of Battles and Sieges A Guide to 8 500 Battles from Antiquity through the Twenty first Century Greenwood p 262 ISBN 978 0313335372 enhancing the reputation of Mussolini who then annexed Fiume Burgwyn James April 1997 Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period 1918 1940 Praeger p 24 ISBN 978 0275948771 Improvised and incoherent Mussolini s gunboat diplomacy failed to add Corfu to Italy s possession but it did successfully fulfill demagogic and propagandistic aims within the country Corfu Italian Occupation 1923 Dead Country Stamps and Banknotes 21 August 2012 Tony Clayton Italian Post Offices Corfu italianstamps co uk Further reading editBarros James Mussolini s first Aggression the Corfu ultimatum Balkan Studies 2 2 257 286 Hearder Harry 1963 A Short History of Italy Cambridge University Press pp 214 215 Barros James 1965 The Corfu incident of 1923 Mussolini and The League Of Nations Princeton University Press Seton Watson Christopher Seton Watson June 1979 Italy from liberalism to fascism 1870 1925 Routledge Kegan amp Paul pp 670 675 ISBN 978 0416189407 C C Jardine April 1980 Mussolini and Italy Modern Times Longman Group United Kingdom pp 29 30 ISBN 978 0582204263 Burgwyn James April 1997 Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period 1918 1940 Praeger pp 23 24 ISBN 978 0275948771 Brecher Michael Wilkenfeld Jonathan 1997 A study of crisis University of Michigan Press pp 583 584 ISBN 0472108069 Neville Peter December 2003 Mussolini Routledge pp 92 93 ISBN 978 0415249904 Goldstein Erik Langhorne Richard March 2004 Corfu Incident 1923 Guide to International Relations and Diplomacy Bloomsbury Academic p 214 ISBN 978 0826473011 Gooch John December 2007 Mussolini and his Generals The Armed Forces and Fascist Foreign Policy 1922 1940 Cambridge University Press pp 45 47 ISBN 978 0521856027 Duggan Christopher April 2008 The Force of Destiny A History of Italy Since 1796 Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 439 441 ISBN 978 0618353675 Papaflwratos Iwannhs S 2009 H Ellhnoitalikh krish toy 1923 To epeisodio Tellini Kerkyras The Greco Italian crisis of 1923 The incident Tellini Corfu in Greek Sakkoylas Ant N ISBN 9789601522388 Gilbert Mark F Nilsson Robert K April 2010 The A to Z of Modern Italy Scarecrow Press p 114 ISBN 978 0810872103 Siebert Diana 2016 Aller Herren Aussenposten Korfu von 1797 bis 1944 Diana Siebert pp 144 157 ISBN 978 3 00 052502 5 Yearwood Peter October 1986 Consistently with Honour Great Britain the League of Nations and the Corfu Crisis of 1923 Journal of Contemporary History 21 4 559 579 doi 10 1177 002200948602100404 S2CID 159953390 External links editSuccesses amp failures of the League Of Nations in the 1920s The Corfu incident Foundation of the Hellenic World Corfu Italian Occupation 1923 Dead Country Stamps and Banknotes Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias Archived 2013 06 25 at the Wayback Machine Greek reply to the Italian demands Athens 30 August 1923 Bombardment Of Corfu Geneva 4 September 1923 Bombardment Of Corfu Geneva 8 September 1923 3 4 5 The Corfu Incident 1923 GCSE History Notes PDF p 19 Chapter III State Practice During the Pre United Nations Period US Naval War College pp 33 34 Archived from the original on 2015 06 27 Retrieved 2013 03 20 Finney Patrick Benedict September 1993 The Relations between the Entente Powers and Greece 1923 6 PDF pp 186 220 Article in the Greek newspaper To Vima in Greek Article in the Greek newspaper Kathimerini in Greek Corfu History in Greek The murder of Telini and the occupation of Corfu from the fascist Italy in Greek Videos edit Occupation Of Corfu 1923 From British Pathe Corfu Italy Seizes Island 1923 From British Pathe The occupation of Corfu From the old Greek TV show Ston xwro ths istorias In the history 1990 in Greek Retrieved from https en 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