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Klepht

Klephts (/klɛfts/; Greek κλέφτης, kléftis, pl. κλέφτες, kléftes, which means "thieves" and perhaps originally meant just "brigand"[2]) were highwaymen turned self-appointed armatoloi, anti-Ottoman insurgents, and warlike mountain-folk who lived in the countryside when Greece was a part of the Ottoman Empire.[2][3] They were the descendants of Greeks who retreated into the mountains during the 15th century in order to avoid Ottoman rule.[4] Klepht bands also included many ethnic Albanians.[5] They carried on a continuous war against Ottoman rule and remained active as brigands until the 19th century.[4][6]

Dimitrios Makris, a Greek klepht chief of the 19th century.[1]

The terms kleptomania and kleptocracy are derived from the same Greek root, κλέπτειν (kléptein), "to steal".[7]

Origins edit

After the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 and then the fall of Mistra in the Despotate of the Morea, most of the plains of present-day Greece fell entirely into the hands of the Ottoman Empire. The only territories that did not fall under Ottoman rule were the mountain ranges (populated by Greeks and inaccessible to the Ottoman Turks), as well as a handful of islands and coastal possessions under the control of Venice. This situation lasted until 1821. However, the newly acquired territories of Greece, such as Macedonia, Thrace and Epirus, were in Turkish hands until the 20th century. This period of time in Greece is known as the Turkocracy.

Ottoman lands were divided up into pashaliks, also called eyalets; in the case of the lands that form present-day Greece, these were Morea and Roumelia. Pashaliks were further sub-divided into sanjaks which were often divided into feudal chifliks (Turkish çiftlik (farm), Greek τσιφλίκι tsifliki). Any surviving Greek troops, whether regular Byzantine forces, local militia, or mercenaries had either to join the Ottoman army as janissaries, serve in the private army of a local Ottoman notable, or fend for themselves. Many Greeks wishing to preserve their Greek identity, Orthodox Christian religion, and independence chose the difficult but liberated life of a bandit. These bandit groups soon found their ranks swelled with impoverished and/or adventurous peasants, societal outcasts, and escaped criminals.

Klephts under Ottoman rule were generally men who were fleeing vendettas or taxes, debts and reprisals from Ottoman officials. They raided travelers and isolated settlements and lived in the rugged mountains and back country. Most klephtic bands participated in some form in the Greek War of Independence. During the Greek War of Independence, the klephts, along with the armatoloi, formed the nucleus of the Greek fighting forces, and played a prominent part throughout its duration. Despite being ineffective, they were the only viable military force for the provisional governments of the 1821–1827 period. During that time period, three attempts were made at creating a regular army, and one of the reasons for their failure was the resistance of the klepht and armatoles leaders.[8] Yannis Makriyannis referred to the "klephtes and armatoloi" as the "yeast of liberty".[9] John Koliopoulos studied the klephts in the 19th century, and stated that the principle of kinship and honour seen in Albanian besa could be seen among the klephts after centuries of contact with Albanian irregulars.[10]

Contrary to conventional Greek history, many of the klephts and armatoles participated at the Greek War of Independence according to their own militaristic patron-client terms. They saw the war as an economic and political opportunity to expand their areas of operation.[8][11] Balkan bandits such as the klephts and armatoles – glorified in nationalist historiography as national heroes – were actually driven by economic interests, were not aware of national projects, made alliances with the Ottomans and robbed Christians as much as Muslims.[12][13]

Songs edit

 
Antonis Katsantonis (Greek klepht) by Theophilos Hatzimihail.

Klephtic songs (κλέφτικα τραγούδια [el]), or ballads, were developed in mainland Greece.[14] They are part of the Greek folk music genre, which includes folk poetry, and are thematically oriented on either the achievements and death of a single klepht or the generic life of the klephts as a group.[14] Klephtic songs are especially popular in Epirus and the Peloponnese. The Czech composer Antonín Dvořák wrote a song-cycle named Three Modern Greek Poems: the first one is entitled "Koljas – Klepht Song" and tells the story of Koljas, the klepht who killed the famous Ali Pasha.

The most famous klephtic and modern Greek folk song is The Battle of Mount Olympus and Mount Kisavos, a ballad based on a musico-poetic motif dating back to classical Greece (specifically to the poetic song composed by Corinna pertaining to a contest between Mount Helicon and Mount Cithaeron).[14]

Cuisine edit

The famous Greek dish klephtiko (or kleftiko), a dish entailing slow-cooked lamb (or other meat), can be translated "in the style of the klephts". The klephts, not having flocks of their own, would steal lambs or goats and cook the meat in a sealed pit to avoid the smoke being seen.

Famous klephts edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Dontas 1966, p. 24: "Born in 1800, Demetrios Makris, a kleftis, had succeeded his father to the kapetaniliki in the district of Zyghos. A simple yet very stubborn man, like Dimo - Tselios he was a great patriot."
  2. ^ a b Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc 1995, p. 564: "Other Greeks, taking to the mountains, became unofficial, self-appointed armatoles and were known as klephts (from the Greek kleptes, "brigand")."
  3. ^ Sowards 1989, p. 75: "Greek irregulars had operated as bandit klephts and anti-Ottoman insurgents since before the Greek War of Independence in the 1820s."
  4. ^ a b Cavendish 2009, p. 1478: "The klephts were descendants of Greeks who fled into the mountains to avoid the Turks in the fifteenth century and who remained active as brigands into the nineteenth century."
  5. ^ Erdem 2007, pp. 224–225: "He commanded the loyalty of the klepht bands, which had life styles similar to those of the Albanians and in fact included many ethnic Albanians."
  6. ^ Encyclopedia Americana 1919, p. 472: "KLEPTHS, klēfts (Greek, "thieves"). Greek bandits who, after the conquest of Greece by the Turks in the 15th century, kept themselves free in the mountains of northern Greece and Macedonia, and carried on a perpetual war against Turkish rule, considering everything belonging to a Turk a lawful prize."
  7. ^ Encyclopedia Americana 1919, "KLEPTOMANIA", p. 472.
  8. ^ a b Davis, D. E. (2003). Irregular Armed Forces and their Role in Politics and State Formation. Cambridge University Press. p. 154.
  9. ^ Vacalopoulos 1961, p. 333: "Οί πυρήνες τών μαχητικών του δυνάμεων είναι οί άρματολοί καΐ οί κλέφτες ... ν'άποτελέσουν τήν «μαγιά της λευτεριάς», όπως παραστατικά λέγει ό άγωνιστής τοϋ 21 Γιάννης Μακρυγιάννης."
  10. ^ Reid, James J. (2000). Crisis of the Ottoman Empire: Prelude to Collapse 1839-1878. Franz Steiner Verlag. p. 114. ISBN 978-3-515-07687-6. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
  11. ^ Cronin, S. (2008). Subalterns and Social Protest: History from Below in the Middle East and North Africa. Routledge. p. 264.
  12. ^ Malesevic, S. (2013). Nation-States and Nationalisms: Organization, Ideology and Solidarity. Polity Press. p. 111.
  13. ^ Hall, J. A.; Malešević, S. (2013). Nationalism and War. Cambridge University Press. p. 258.
  14. ^ a b c Trypanis 1981, "The Klephtic ballads", pp. 592–594: "The Klephtic ballads developed in mainland Greece, and in the eighteenth century represented the final and supreme stage in the evolution of modern Greek folk poetry. They can be separated into two groups, one dealing with the achievements or the death of an individual Klepht and the second with the life of the Klephts in general...Among them is a notable series of songs that deal with battles between mountains, a motif that goes back to antiquity, as we know from a fragment of Corinna found on a second-century papyrus in which Mount Helicon and Mount Cithaeron are fighting. Such battles of mountains in Greek folk songs have survived in Crete and in Karpathos, but the most famous of all is the Pan-Hellenic ballad of The Battle between Mount Olympus and Mount Kisavos."

Sources edit

  • Cavendish, Marshall (2009). World and Its Peoples. Marshall Cavendish. ISBN 978-0-7614-7902-4.
  • Encyclopedia Americana (1919). The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge, Volume 16. New York and Chicago: Encyclopedia Americana Corporation.
  • Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc (1995). The New Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 1. Encyclopædia Britannica. ISBN 0-85229-605-3.
  • Dontas, Domna N. (1966). The Last Phase of the War of Independence in Western Greece (December 1827 to May 1829). Thessaloniki: Institute for Balkan Studies.
  • Erdem, Hakan (2007). ""Perfidious Albanians" and "zealous governors": Ottomans, Albanians, and Turks in the Greek War of Independence". In Antonis Anastasopoulos, Elias Kolovos (ed.). Ottoman Rule and the Balkans, 1760-1850: Conflict, Transformation, Adaptation. Proceedings of an international conference held in Rethymno, Greece, 13-14 December 2003. University of Crete, Department of History and Archaeology. pp. 213–242. ISBN 978-960-88394-4-1.
  • Sowards, Steven W. (1989). Austria's Policy of Macedonian Reform. East European Monographs. ISBN 0-88033-157-7.
  • Trypanis, Constantine Athanasius (1981). Greek Poetry: From Homer to Seferis. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-81316-9.
  • Vacalopoulos, Apostolis (1961). Ιστορία του Νέου Ελληνισμού [History of Neo-Hellenism]. Vol. 2. A.E. Vakalopoulos.

Further reading edit

  • Baud-Bovy, Samuel (1958). Études sur la chanson cleftique, avec 17 chansons cleftiques de Roumelie transcrites d'après les disques des Archives musicales de folklore (in French). Athens: Inst. Francaises d'Athènes.
  • Dupré, Louis (1825). Voyage à Athènes et à Constantinople, ou Collection des portraits, de vues et costumes grecs et ottomans (in French). Paris: Dondey-Dupré.
  • Esenbeck, Nees von; Pauls, J. J.; Gottlieb, C. (1825). Mittheilungen aus der Geschichte und Dichtung der Neu-Griechen; vol. 2: Historische Volksgesänge der Neu-Griechen nach C. Fauriel; part 2: Klephtische und andere historische Gesänge, dann Lieder vom Suliotenkrieg. Mit Fauriel's Einleitungen (in German). Coblenz: Jacob Hölscher.
  • Fauriel, Claude C. (1825). Chants populaires de la Grèce moderne; vol. 2: Chants historiques, romanesques et domestiques (in French). Paris: Firmin Didot.
  • Goethe, Johann Wolfgang (1828). Werke. Vollständige Ausgabe letzter Hand; vol. 3: Gedichte. Aus fremden Sprachen. Neugriechisch-Epirotische Heldenlieder (in German). Stuttgart—Tübingen: J. G. Cotta'sche Buchhandlung. p. 211. Johann Wolfgang Goethe: Gedichte - Neugriechisch-Epirotische Heldenlieder.
  • Karagiannis-Moser, Emmanuelle (1997). Le bestiaire de la chanson populaire grecque moderne (in French). Paris: Presses de l'Université de Paris-Sorbonne. ISBN 978-2-84-050090-2.
  • Kind, Theodor (1861). Anthologie neugriechischer Volkslieder. Im Original mit deutscher Übertragung (in German). Leipzig: Veit & Comp.
  • Legrand, Émile (1876). Chansons populaires grecques, publiées avec une traduction française et des commentaires historiques et littéraires (in French). Maisonnueve et Cie.
  • Passow, Arnold (1860). Τραγούδια Ρωμαίικα. Popularia carmina Graeciae recentioris. Lipsiae [=  Leipzig]: B. G. Teubner.
  • Politis, Nicholas G. (1924) [1914]. Εκλογαί από τα τραγούδια του Ελληνικού λαού [= Selections from the Songs of the Greek People] (in Greek).

klepht, greek, κλέφτης, kléftis, κλέφτες, kléftes, which, means, thieves, perhaps, originally, meant, just, brigand, were, highwaymen, turned, self, appointed, armatoloi, anti, ottoman, insurgents, warlike, mountain, folk, lived, countryside, when, greece, par. Klephts k l ɛ f t s Greek klefths kleftis pl kleftes kleftes which means thieves and perhaps originally meant just brigand 2 were highwaymen turned self appointed armatoloi anti Ottoman insurgents and warlike mountain folk who lived in the countryside when Greece was a part of the Ottoman Empire 2 3 They were the descendants of Greeks who retreated into the mountains during the 15th century in order to avoid Ottoman rule 4 Klepht bands also included many ethnic Albanians 5 They carried on a continuous war against Ottoman rule and remained active as brigands until the 19th century 4 6 Dimitrios Makris a Greek klepht chief of the 19th century 1 The terms kleptomania and kleptocracy are derived from the same Greek root kleptein kleptein to steal 7 Contents 1 Origins 2 Songs 3 Cuisine 4 Famous klephts 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 Further readingOrigins editAfter the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 and then the fall of Mistra in the Despotate of the Morea most of the plains of present day Greece fell entirely into the hands of the Ottoman Empire The only territories that did not fall under Ottoman rule were the mountain ranges populated by Greeks and inaccessible to the Ottoman Turks as well as a handful of islands and coastal possessions under the control of Venice This situation lasted until 1821 However the newly acquired territories of Greece such as Macedonia Thrace and Epirus were in Turkish hands until the 20th century This period of time in Greece is known as the Turkocracy Ottoman lands were divided up into pashaliks also called eyalets in the case of the lands that form present day Greece these were Morea and Roumelia Pashaliks were further sub divided into sanjaks which were often divided into feudal chifliks Turkish ciftlik farm Greek tsifliki tsifliki Any surviving Greek troops whether regular Byzantine forces local militia or mercenaries had either to join the Ottoman army as janissaries serve in the private army of a local Ottoman notable or fend for themselves Many Greeks wishing to preserve their Greek identity Orthodox Christian religion and independence chose the difficult but liberated life of a bandit These bandit groups soon found their ranks swelled with impoverished and or adventurous peasants societal outcasts and escaped criminals Klephts under Ottoman rule were generally men who were fleeing vendettas or taxes debts and reprisals from Ottoman officials They raided travelers and isolated settlements and lived in the rugged mountains and back country Most klephtic bands participated in some form in the Greek War of Independence During the Greek War of Independence the klephts along with the armatoloi formed the nucleus of the Greek fighting forces and played a prominent part throughout its duration Despite being ineffective they were the only viable military force for the provisional governments of the 1821 1827 period During that time period three attempts were made at creating a regular army and one of the reasons for their failure was the resistance of the klepht and armatoles leaders 8 Yannis Makriyannis referred to the klephtes and armatoloi as the yeast of liberty 9 John Koliopoulos studied the klephts in the 19th century and stated that the principle of kinship and honour seen in Albanian besa could be seen among the klephts after centuries of contact with Albanian irregulars 10 Contrary to conventional Greek history many of the klephts and armatoles participated at the Greek War of Independence according to their own militaristic patron client terms They saw the war as an economic and political opportunity to expand their areas of operation 8 11 Balkan bandits such as the klephts and armatoles glorified in nationalist historiography as national heroes were actually driven by economic interests were not aware of national projects made alliances with the Ottomans and robbed Christians as much as Muslims 12 13 Songs edit nbsp Antonis Katsantonis Greek klepht by Theophilos Hatzimihail Klephtic songs kleftika tragoydia el or ballads were developed in mainland Greece 14 They are part of the Greek folk music genre which includes folk poetry and are thematically oriented on either the achievements and death of a single klepht or the generic life of the klephts as a group 14 Klephtic songs are especially popular in Epirus and the Peloponnese The Czech composer Antonin Dvorak wrote a song cycle named Three Modern Greek Poems the first one is entitled Koljas Klepht Song and tells the story of Koljas the klepht who killed the famous Ali Pasha The most famous klephtic and modern Greek folk song is The Battle of Mount Olympus and Mount Kisavos a ballad based on a musico poetic motif dating back to classical Greece specifically to the poetic song composed by Corinna pertaining to a contest between Mount Helicon and Mount Cithaeron 14 Cuisine editThe famous Greek dish klephtiko or kleftiko a dish entailing slow cooked lamb or other meat can be translated in the style of the klephts The klephts not having flocks of their own would steal lambs or goats and cook the meat in a sealed pit to avoid the smoke being seen Famous klephts editAntonis Katsantonis Giorgakis Olympios Odysseas Androutsos Athanasios Diakos Georgios Karaiskakis Theodoros Kolokotronis Dimitrios Makris Nikitas StamatelopoulosSee also editArmatoloi Hajduk Uskok Ottoman GreeceReferences editCitations edit Dontas 1966 p 24 Born in 1800 Demetrios Makris a kleftis had succeeded his father to the kapetaniliki in the district of Zyghos A simple yet very stubborn man like Dimo Tselios he was a great patriot a b Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 1995 p 564 Other Greeks taking to the mountains became unofficial self appointed armatoles and were known as klephts from the Greek kleptes brigand Sowards 1989 p 75 Greek irregulars had operated as bandit klephts and anti Ottoman insurgents since before the Greek War of Independence in the 1820s a b Cavendish 2009 p 1478 The klephts were descendants of Greeks who fled into the mountains to avoid the Turks in the fifteenth century and who remained active as brigands into the nineteenth century Erdem 2007 pp 224 225 He commanded the loyalty of the klepht bands which had life styles similar to those of the Albanians and in fact included many ethnic Albanians Encyclopedia Americana 1919 p 472 KLEPTHS klefts Greek thieves Greek bandits who after the conquest of Greece by the Turks in the 15th century kept themselves free in the mountains of northern Greece and Macedonia and carried on a perpetual war against Turkish rule considering everything belonging to a Turk a lawful prize Encyclopedia Americana 1919 KLEPTOMANIA p 472 a b Davis D E 2003 Irregular Armed Forces and their Role in Politics and State Formation Cambridge University Press p 154 Vacalopoulos 1961 p 333 Oi pyrhnes twn maxhtikwn toy dynamewn einai oi armatoloi kai oi kleftes n apotelesoyn thn magia ths leyterias opws parastatika legei o agwnisths toy 21 Giannhs Makrygiannhs Reid James J 2000 Crisis of the Ottoman Empire Prelude to Collapse 1839 1878 Franz Steiner Verlag p 114 ISBN 978 3 515 07687 6 Retrieved 10 April 2020 Cronin S 2008 Subalterns and Social Protest History from Below in the Middle East and North Africa Routledge p 264 Malesevic S 2013 Nation States and Nationalisms Organization Ideology and Solidarity Polity Press p 111 Hall J A Malesevic S 2013 Nationalism and War Cambridge University Press p 258 a b c Trypanis 1981 The Klephtic ballads pp 592 594 The Klephtic ballads developed in mainland Greece and in the eighteenth century represented the final and supreme stage in the evolution of modern Greek folk poetry They can be separated into two groups one dealing with the achievements or the death of an individual Klepht and the second with the life of the Klephts in general Among them is a notable series of songs that deal with battles between mountains a motif that goes back to antiquity as we know from a fragment of Corinna found on a second century papyrus in which Mount Helicon and Mount Cithaeron are fighting Such battles of mountains in Greek folk songs have survived in Crete and in Karpathos but the most famous of all is the Pan Hellenic ballad of The Battle between Mount Olympus and Mount Kisavos Sources edit Cavendish Marshall 2009 World and Its Peoples Marshall Cavendish ISBN 978 0 7614 7902 4 Encyclopedia Americana 1919 The Encyclopedia Americana A Library of Universal Knowledge Volume 16 New York and Chicago Encyclopedia Americana Corporation Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 1995 The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Volume 1 Encyclopaedia Britannica ISBN 0 85229 605 3 Dontas Domna N 1966 The Last Phase of the War of Independence in Western Greece December 1827 to May 1829 Thessaloniki Institute for Balkan Studies Erdem Hakan 2007 Perfidious Albanians and zealous governors Ottomans Albanians and Turks in the Greek War of Independence In Antonis Anastasopoulos Elias Kolovos ed Ottoman Rule and the Balkans 1760 1850 Conflict Transformation Adaptation Proceedings of an international conference held in Rethymno Greece 13 14 December 2003 University of Crete Department of History and Archaeology pp 213 242 ISBN 978 960 88394 4 1 Sowards Steven W 1989 Austria s Policy of Macedonian Reform East European Monographs ISBN 0 88033 157 7 Trypanis Constantine Athanasius 1981 Greek Poetry From Homer to Seferis Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 81316 9 Vacalopoulos Apostolis 1961 Istoria toy Neoy Ellhnismoy History of Neo Hellenism Vol 2 A E Vakalopoulos Further reading editBaud Bovy Samuel 1958 Etudes sur la chanson cleftique avec 17 chansons cleftiques de Roumelie transcrites d apres les disques des Archives musicales de folklore in French Athens Inst Francaises d Athenes Dupre Louis 1825 Voyage a Athenes et a Constantinople ou Collection des portraits de vues et costumes grecs et ottomans in French Paris Dondey Dupre Esenbeck Nees von Pauls J J Gottlieb C 1825 Mittheilungen aus der Geschichte und Dichtung der Neu Griechen vol 2 Historische Volksgesange der Neu Griechen nach C Fauriel part 2 Klephtische und andere historische Gesange dann Lieder vom Suliotenkrieg Mit Fauriel s Einleitungen in German Coblenz Jacob Holscher Fauriel Claude C 1825 Chants populaires de la Grece moderne vol 2 Chants historiques romanesques et domestiques in French Paris Firmin Didot Goethe Johann Wolfgang 1828 Werke Vollstandige Ausgabe letzter Hand vol 3 Gedichte Aus fremden Sprachen Neugriechisch Epirotische Heldenlieder in German Stuttgart Tubingen J G Cotta sche Buchhandlung p 211 Johann Wolfgang Goethe Gedichte Neugriechisch Epirotische Heldenlieder Karagiannis Moser Emmanuelle 1997 Le bestiaire de la chanson populaire grecque moderne in French Paris Presses de l Universite de Paris Sorbonne ISBN 978 2 84 050090 2 Kind Theodor 1861 Anthologie neugriechischer Volkslieder Im Original mit deutscher Ubertragung in German Leipzig Veit amp Comp Legrand Emile 1876 Chansons populaires grecques publiees avec une traduction francaise et des commentaires historiques et litteraires in French Maisonnueve et Cie Passow Arnold 1860 Tragoydia Rwmaiika Popularia carmina Graeciae recentioris Lipsiae Leipzig B G Teubner Politis Nicholas G 1924 1914 Eklogai apo ta tragoydia toy Ellhnikoy laoy Selections from the Songs of the Greek People in Greek Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Klepht amp oldid 1217127908, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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