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Gavriil Marinakis

Gavriil Marinakis (Greek: Γαβριήλ Μαρινάκης, c. 1826 - 1866) was the hegumenos of Arkadi Monastery and a fighter of the Cretan Revolution of 1866. He was killed in November 1866 during the siege of the monastery by the Ottoman forces.

Hegumen

Gavriil Marinakis
Native name
Γαβριήλ Μαρινάκης
Bornc. 1826
Margarites, Rethymno, Crete, Ottoman Empire
Died9 November 1866
Arkadi Monastery, Crete, Ottoman Empire (now Greece)
Buried
Courtyard of Arkadi Monastery
Allegiance Kingdom of Greece
Service/branch Cretan Revolutionaries
Battles/warsCretan revolt (1866–1869)

Biography edit

Gavriil Marinakis was born in Margarites, Rethymno round 1826.[1] In 1856 he was elected hegumenos of Arkadi Monastery. From that position, he took important initiatives for the reconstruction of the monastery. He was quite active at the management of monastic property making sure the monastery land was properly registered. He also donated numerous olive trees to the monastery land.[2]

When the Cretan Revolution of 1866 broke out, Gabriel decided to participate. On 1 October 1866 he participated in the General Assembly of the revolutionaries in Fres, a village near Chania, as chairman of the Revolutionary Committee of Rethymno.[3] Through the General Assembly they tried to appeal to the consuls of the Great Powers in Crete, in order to ensure that a general massacre of women and children by the Ottoman troops would be avoided. At the end of the same month, he participated in a war council held at Arkadi Monastery. There, together with other monks and the chieftain Georgios Daskalakis he disagreed with the proposal of colonel Panos Koronaios to abandon Arkadi, because it was not strong enough for effective defense in a possible Turkish attack. At the same time, he rejected another proposal of Koronaios to destroy the stables and the mill that could provide a bridgehead for enemy forces. However, that was a significant mistake, as Koronaios’ fears proved to be well founded.[4]

On 6 November 1866, a powerful force of Ottoman troops encircled the monastery. In the monastery there were about 950 people, of which only 300 were armed.[5] Two days later the hostilities began. The hostilities led to the fall of the monastery on 9 November. Gabriel took part in the battle not only by carrying munitions, but also by encouraging the fighters and fighting along their side.[6] Most historians speculate that Gabriel was killed on the last day of the siege. It seems that he either committed suicide to avoid being captured or that he was shot in the stomach. Ottoman soldiers cut off his head, after stripping his dead body of his clothes. Afterwards, they carried his severed head as a trophy and displayed it in different regions of Crete. The day after the monastery's capture, Gabriel’s decapitated body was buried in the courtyard of the monastery.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Στυλιανός Καλλονάς, Η Κρήτη Ολοκαύτωμα (1866 - 1869), 1963, p. 119.
  2. ^ Θεοχάρης Ευστρατίου Δετοράκης - Αλέξης Καλοκαιρινός (edit.), Πεπραγμένα του Θ' διεθνούς Κρητολογικού συνεδρίου, Εταιρεία Κρητικών Μελετών, 2005, vol.2, Νεότερη περίοδος - Λαογραφία, γλώσσα και λογοτεχνία, σύμμεικτα κείμενα, p. 167, 170, 175.
  3. ^ Η μεγάλη Κρητική Eπανάσταση 1866-1869, Ένθετο εφημερίδας Πατρίς, Δεκέμβριος 2008, vol. 1 (Α’), p. 42, 52.
  4. ^ Κάρολος Ε. Μωραΐτης, Ιωάννης Δημακόπουλος (1833-1866) - Ο ηρωικός φρούραρχος της Ιεράς Μονής Αρκαδίου, εκδόσεις Πελασγός, 2007, p. 14 - 15.
  5. ^ Κάρολος Ε. Μωραΐτης, 2007, p. 20.
  6. ^ Ιωάννης Π. Λιονής, Απομνημονεύματα Παρθενίου Περίδου - Η Κρητική Επανάστασις του 1866, Εν Αθήναις 1900, p.120.
  7. ^ Κάρολος Ε. Μωραΐτης, 2007, p.40 - 42.

gavriil, marinakis, greek, Γαβριήλ, Μαρινάκης, 1826, 1866, hegumenos, arkadi, monastery, fighter, cretan, revolution, 1866, killed, november, 1866, during, siege, monastery, ottoman, forces, hegumen, national, historical, museum, greece, native, nameΓαβριήλ, Μ. Gavriil Marinakis Greek Gabrihl Marinakhs c 1826 1866 was the hegumenos of Arkadi Monastery and a fighter of the Cretan Revolution of 1866 He was killed in November 1866 during the siege of the monastery by the Ottoman forces HegumenGavriil MarinakisGavriil Marinakis National Historical Museum of Greece Native nameGabrihl MarinakhsBornc 1826Margarites Rethymno Crete Ottoman EmpireDied9 November 1866Arkadi Monastery Crete Ottoman Empire now Greece BuriedCourtyard of Arkadi MonasteryAllegianceKingdom of GreeceService wbr branchCretan RevolutionariesBattles warsCretan revolt 1866 1869 Holocaust of Arkadi Monastery Biography editGavriil Marinakis was born in Margarites Rethymno round 1826 1 In 1856 he was elected hegumenos of Arkadi Monastery From that position he took important initiatives for the reconstruction of the monastery He was quite active at the management of monastic property making sure the monastery land was properly registered He also donated numerous olive trees to the monastery land 2 When the Cretan Revolution of 1866 broke out Gabriel decided to participate On 1 October 1866 he participated in the General Assembly of the revolutionaries in Fres a village near Chania as chairman of the Revolutionary Committee of Rethymno 3 Through the General Assembly they tried to appeal to the consuls of the Great Powers in Crete in order to ensure that a general massacre of women and children by the Ottoman troops would be avoided At the end of the same month he participated in a war council held at Arkadi Monastery There together with other monks and the chieftain Georgios Daskalakis he disagreed with the proposal of colonel Panos Koronaios to abandon Arkadi because it was not strong enough for effective defense in a possible Turkish attack At the same time he rejected another proposal of Koronaios to destroy the stables and the mill that could provide a bridgehead for enemy forces However that was a significant mistake as Koronaios fears proved to be well founded 4 On 6 November 1866 a powerful force of Ottoman troops encircled the monastery In the monastery there were about 950 people of which only 300 were armed 5 Two days later the hostilities began The hostilities led to the fall of the monastery on 9 November Gabriel took part in the battle not only by carrying munitions but also by encouraging the fighters and fighting along their side 6 Most historians speculate that Gabriel was killed on the last day of the siege It seems that he either committed suicide to avoid being captured or that he was shot in the stomach Ottoman soldiers cut off his head after stripping his dead body of his clothes Afterwards they carried his severed head as a trophy and displayed it in different regions of Crete The day after the monastery s capture Gabriel s decapitated body was buried in the courtyard of the monastery 7 References edit Stylianos Kallonas H Krhth Olokaytwma 1866 1869 1963 p 119 8eoxarhs Eystratioy Detorakhs Ale3hs Kalokairinos edit Pepragmena toy 8 die8noys Krhtologikoy synedrioy Etaireia Krhtikwn Meletwn 2005 vol 2 Neoterh periodos Laografia glwssa kai logotexnia symmeikta keimena p 167 170 175 H megalh Krhtikh Epanastash 1866 1869 En8eto efhmeridas Patris Dekembrios 2008 vol 1 A p 42 52 Karolos E Mwraiths Iwannhs Dhmakopoylos 1833 1866 O hrwikos froyrarxos ths Ieras Monhs Arkadioy ekdoseis Pelasgos 2007 p 14 15 Karolos E Mwraiths 2007 p 20 Iwannhs P Lionhs Apomnhmoneymata Par8enioy Peridoy H Krhtikh Epanastasis toy 1866 En A8hnais 1900 p 120 Karolos E Mwraiths 2007 p 40 42 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gavriil Marinakis amp oldid 1152356921, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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