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Provisional Government of National Defence

The Provisional Government of National Defence (Greek: Προσωρινή Κυβέρνηση Εθνικής Αμύνης, romanized'Prosoriní Kyvérnisi Ethnikís Amýnis), also known as the State of Thessaloniki (Κράτος της Θεσσαλονίκης), was a parallel administration, set up in the city of Thessaloniki by former Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos and his supporters during World War I, in opposition and rivalry to the official royal government in Athens.

Provisional Government of National Defence
Προσωρινή Κυβέρνηση Εθνικής Αμύνης
Κράτος της Θεσσαλονίκης
1916–1917
Flag
StatusVenizelist-dominated government (recognized by the Triple Entente in December 1916 as the lawful Greek government)
CapitalThessaloniki
Common languagesGreek language
Religion
Greek Orthodox
GovernmentProvisional government, Venizelist state
Prime Minister 
• 1916-17
Eleftherios Venizelos
Triumvirate of National Defence 
• 1916-17
Eleftherios Venizelos
Pavlos Kountouriotis
Panagiotis Danglis
Historical eraWorld War I
National Schism
September 1916
• Abdication of Constantine I
June 1917
CurrencyGreek drachma (₯)
French franc
Preceded by
Succeeded by

The establishment of this second Greek state had its origins in the debate over Greece's entry into the war on behalf of the Entente, as advocated by Venizelos, or a Germanophile neutrality as preferred by King Constantine I. This dissension soon began to divide Greek society around the two leaders, beginning the so-called "National Schism". In August 1916, as parts of eastern Macedonia were not defended by the royal government against a Bulgarian invasion, Venizelist officers of the Hellenic Army launched an Entente-supported coup in Thessaloniki. After a brief hesitation, Venizelos and his principal supporters joined the uprising and began the establishment of a second Greek government in the north of the country, which entered the war on the side of the Entente. The National Defence government endured until June 1917, when the Entente powers forced Constantine I to abdicate, and allowed Venizelos to return to Athens as Prime Minister of a unified country. Nevertheless, the establishment of the National Defence government deepened the rift of the National Schism, which would plague Greek political life for over a generation, and contribute to the Asia Minor Catastrophe.

Background: Greece 1914–1916 edit

Greece had emerged victorious from the 1912-1913 Balkan Wars, with her territory almost doubled, but found itself in a difficult international situation. The status of the Greek-occupied eastern Aegean islands was left undetermined, and the Ottoman Empire continued to claim them, leading to a naval arms race and mass expulsions of ethnic Greeks from Anatolia. In the north, Bulgaria, defeated in the Second Balkan War, harbored revanchist plans against Greece and Serbia. The two countries were bound by a treaty of alliance which promised military assistance in case of a Bulgarian attack, but in August 1914, the danger would emerge from a different quarter altogether: the Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand led to the declaration of war by Austria-Hungary on Serbia and the outbreak of the First World War.

 
Arrival of Venizelos in Mytilini, June 1916
 
Proclamation of the Venizelist government in Thessaloniki, September 1916
 
Demonstration
 
The National Defence government: the Triumvirate with collaborators on 29 September 1916 (O.S.)

Greece, like Bulgaria, initially maintained neutrality, but as the war continued, both warring camps began wooing the two countries. At this point the first rifts appeared among the Greek leadership: Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos, at the helm since 1910 of a modernising government looking towards the British and French models, supported entry in the war on the side of the Entente, while King Constantine I, who had been educated in Germany, married to Kaiser Wilhelm II's sister and a deep admirer of Prussian militarism, anticipated a German victory. Aware that Greece was vulnerable to the British Fleet, he advocated a course of neutrality.

In early 1915 the British offered Greece "territorial concessions in Asia Minor" if it would participate in the upcoming Gallipoli Campaign. Venizelos supported this idea, but run into the opposition from the King and his military advisors. As a result, Venizelos submitted his resignation on 6 March [O.S. 21 February] 1915, and was replaced by a royalist-leaning government [el] led by Dimitrios Gounaris. The Liberal Party won the subsequent May 1915 elections and Venizelos again formed a government [el] on 23 August [O.S. 10 August] 1915. When Bulgaria mobilized against Serbia in September 1915, Venizelos ordered a Greek counter-mobilization and called upon the Anglo-French to establish themselves in Thessaloniki (then widely known as Salonica) as to aid Serbia. Indeed, the Allies began landing on 22 September 1915[which calendar?] and started entrenching themselves at the Salonica camp [fr].[a] The King unconstitutionally dismissed Venizelos and the parliament, making the breach between the two men and their followers irreparable. The Liberals boycotted the December 1915 elections. In the same month, the French, with the permission of Venizelos, occupied Corfu, where the remains of the Serbian Army were gathered before being sent to Thessaloniki. In view of these events, a clandestine "Revolutionary Committee of National Defence" was formed in Thessaloniki by a group of prominent Liberals and representatives of all over Macedonia, including Konstantinos Angelakis (mayor of Thessaloniki), Alexandros Zannas [el] and Periklis A. Argyropoulos [fr] (representatives of Thessaloniki), Dimitrios Dingas [el] and Dimitrios Pazis [bg] (representatives of Serres), Nikolaos Manos (representative of Kozani), Panayiotis Grekos (representative of Florina), Georgios Zervos [el] (representative of Drama), Major General Emmanouil Zymvrakakis and others. The group acknowledged Venizelos as its leader, and began approaching officers of the Army and the Cretan Gendarmerie.

During the following year, Greece's official governments were hard-pressed to maintain the country's neutrality. The final straw came when, on 25 May [O.S. 12 May] 1916, the Athens government, succumbing to German pressure, ordered the surrender of the vital Rupel Fortress to the Germans and their Bulgarian Allies. In response, on 3 June [O.S. 21 May] 1916, the pro-Entente Venizelists imposed martial law, effectively abolishing royal sovereignty in all of northern Greece. On 18 August [O.S. 3 August], the Bulgarian invasion of eastern Macedonia commenced, facing little resistance, since the Athens government refused to condone any firm action. As a result, more than 6000 men of IV Corps surrendered to the Germans on 26 August [O.S. 13 August] and were deported to Görlitz in Germany. This surrender of hard-won territories with only token resistance, outraged most Greeks. At the same time, the establishment of the exiled Serbian King and his government in Thessaloniki in April, the presence of 120,000 Serbian troops in the Macedonian Front, accompanied by threats from the Entente that he would install a Serbian prefect in the city, raised fears that the city would be handed over to the Serbians.

Uprising in Thessaloniki edit

Incensed by the successive humiliations and the Bulgarian advance in Macedonia, several Greek officers had flocked to Thessaloniki and volunteered to raise troops and join the Allies. The local Allied commander-in-chief, Maurice Sarrail, welcomed their initiatives, but little headway was made due to the opposition of the Greek government.[1] On 16/29 August, the Lt. Colonel Konstantinos Mazarakis-Ainian tried to seize control of the 11th Infantry Division's mountain artillery battalion, and lead it to the front. This was opposed by Colonel Nikolaos Trikoupis, the chief of staff and acting commander of III Army Corps, who sent two companies to the artillery barracks at Mikro Karabournou that forced Mazarakis to abandon his attempt and withdraw from the barracks.[1]

 
Restaurant "Verdun" in Thessaloniki, decorated in support of Venizelos and the National Defence regime, 1916.

This incident sparked the flame of a wider uprising on the next day, 30 August [O.S. 17 August], by the city's pro-Venizelist officers. Under the command of Lt. Colonel Epameinondas Zymvrakakis, about 600 men of the Cretan Gendarmerie with three volunteer companies under Major Neokosmos Grigoriadis and thirty other officers blockaded the headquarters of III Corps. When a company under Colonel Vagias tried to break through the blockade, shots were fired that killed two gendarmes and wounded three others. In response, the Cretans fired back, killing or wounding three or four soldiers. The firefight was stopped by the intervention of French officers. Sarrail arrived on the scene soon after, and commanded all Greek officers who would not join the newly formed "National Defence Committee" uprising to be shipped to southern Greece. The loyalist troops were disarmed and interned in the hopes that they would join the uprising, but in the event most of them refused and had to be sent to southern Greece as well.[1]

Individual officers from across northern Greece began to flock to Thessaloniki, and on 15 September [O.S. 2 September], the "National Defence" received its first substantial reinforcement, as Colonel Nikolaos Christodoulou arrived in the city with the remnants of IV Corps that had refused to surrender and instead withdrawn via Kavala and Samothrace.[1] Already on 21 September [O.S. 8 September], the volunteers under Major Grigoriadis formed the 1st Battalion of the "Army of National Defence", and departed for the front lines along the Strymon river.[2]

Establishment of the State of National Defence edit

 
Officers Zymvrakakis and Christodoulou inspect troops
 
The 1st Battalion of the Army of National Defence marches before the White Tower on its way to the front.
 
A Greek torpado boat at the port
 
Venizelos inspects Greek troops on the Macedonian front, accompanied by Admiral Kountouriotis and General Sarrail.

Venizelos himself with his closest aides left Athens on 12/25 September, initially for his home island of Crete, and from there via Chios and Lesbos to Thessaloniki, where he arrived on 24 September/7 October. Four days later, on 28 September/11 October, he formed a provisional government under the supreme leadership of a triumvirate comprising himself, General Panagiotis Danglis and Admiral Pavlos Koundouriotis (the "Triumvirate of National Defence", Τριανδρία της Εθνικής Αμύνης).[2]

On 29 September/12 October, Maj Gen Emmanouil Zymvrakakis was appointed Army Minister (replaced on December 6 by Maj Gen Konstantinos Miliotis-Komninos) and on October 3 Nikolaos Politis was appointed Foreign Minister. On 6 October other ministries, euphemistically called "General Directorates" were established:

  • Themistoklis Sophoulis, Interior Minister
  • Miltiadis Negrepontis [el], Finance Minister
  • Thalis Koutoupis, Minister of National Economy
  • Dimitrios Dingas [el], Justice Minister
  • Georgios Averof, Education Minister
  • Alexandros Kassavetis [el], Transport Minister
  • Leonidas Embeirikos [el], Minister for Supply and Food Distribution
  • Spyridon Simos [el], Minister for the Refugees
  • Andreas Michalakopoulos, Minister for Public Estates and Resettlement

The first tasks of the new government were the establishment of an "Army of National Defence" to fight alongside the Allies, and the consolidation of its rule in as much of Greece as possible. The Provisional Government declared war on the Central Powers on 24 November 1916[which calendar?], and set out to recruit divisions for the Macedonian Front, something which was achieved with speed and often ruthlessness. Despite calls by some officers to abolish the monarchy and declare a Republic, Venizelos chose a more moderate path. He had declared: "we are not against the King, but against the Bulgarians".

The State of National Defence established control in Greek Macedonia, Crete and the northern Aegean islands; lands that were just recently liberated during the Balkan Wars. The reluctant and uneasy coexistence of the two Greek states was not destined to last, as the Noemvriana riots against Venizelists in Athens clearly illustrated that a rapprochement was now impossible. Early in 1917, the Venizelist state took also control of Thessaly, after clashes against the royal army of Constantine.

The division of the country lasted for 9 months. On 15 June 1917[which calendar?] an Allied ultimatum forced King Constantine to abdicate in favour of his second-born son, Alexander, and, with the rest of his family, leave the country for Switzerland. Venizelos returned to Athens, as head of a superficially reunified Greece, and led it to victory alongside the Allies in World War I, but also in its entanglement in the subsequent Asia Minor Campaign. As such, the immediate aims of the "National Defence" were met. But the revolution was also an expression of the wide rift between the quasi-Republican, progressive Venizelists and the conservative Royalists/Anti-Venizelists, and its outbreak marks also the beginning of the Greek National Schism which would leave a troublesome legacy to the country, as it continued in various forms up to the 1970s.

In popular culture edit

A popular song of the era celebrating the movement was performed by the musical Estudiantina of Smyrna named Tis aminis ta pedià (the lads of the Defence) or the Macedon.

The song was performed also in the film Rebetiko of Costas Ferris in orchestration of Stavros Xarchakos.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The entrenched camp of Salonica became the location of present-day Zeitenlik Allied military cemetery and memorial park.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Μεγάλη Στρατιωτική και Ναυτική Εγκυκλοπαιδεία. Τόμος Γ′: Δαβατηνός – Ιωσήφ [Great Military and Naval Encyclopedia. Volume III] (in Greek). Athens. 1929. p. 496.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ a b Μεγάλη Στρατιωτική και Ναυτική Εγκυκλοπαιδεία. Τόμος Γ′: Δαβατηνός – Ιωσήφ [Great Military and Naval Encyclopedia. Volume III] (in Greek). Athens. 1929. pp. 496–497.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

External links edit

  • The Great War - Romanian & Greek Weapons of World War 1 feat. C&Rsenal
  • The Great War - Greek Rifles and Pistols of World War 1 feat. C&Rsenal
  • The Great War - A Crucial Test For Unity - Greece in WW1 I THE GREAT WAR Special
  • The Great War - King Constantine I of Greece
  • Serbia Is Invaded Once Again - The Entente Lands in Greece I THE GREAT WAR Week 63
  • Nivelle's Spring Offensive - Royal Conspiracy In Greece I THE GREAT WAR Week 131
  • The Merchant of Death - Basil Zaharoff I WHO DID WHAT IN WW1? -- The Great War
  • Russia's New Offensive - The Russian Women's Battalion of Death I THE GREAT WAR Week 153 -- The Great War

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Provisional Government of National Defence news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Provisional Government of National Defence Greek Proswrinh Kybernhsh E8nikhs Amynhs romanized Prosorini Kyvernisi Ethnikis Amynis also known as the State of Thessaloniki Kratos ths 8essalonikhs was a parallel administration set up in the city of Thessaloniki by former Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos and his supporters during World War I in opposition and rivalry to the official royal government in Athens Provisional Government of National DefenceProswrinh Kybernhsh E8nikhs Amynhs Kratos ths 8essalonikhs1916 1917FlagStatusVenizelist dominated government recognized by the Triple Entente in December 1916 as the lawful Greek government CapitalThessalonikiCommon languagesGreek languageReligionGreek OrthodoxGovernmentProvisional government Venizelist statePrime Minister 1916 17Eleftherios VenizelosTriumvirate of National Defence 1916 17Eleftherios VenizelosPavlos KountouriotisPanagiotis DanglisHistorical eraWorld War INational Schism National Defence coup d etatSeptember 1916 Abdication of Constantine IJune 1917CurrencyGreek drachma French francPreceded by Succeeded byKingdom of Greece Kingdom of GreeceThe establishment of this second Greek state had its origins in the debate over Greece s entry into the war on behalf of the Entente as advocated by Venizelos or a Germanophile neutrality as preferred by King Constantine I This dissension soon began to divide Greek society around the two leaders beginning the so called National Schism In August 1916 as parts of eastern Macedonia were not defended by the royal government against a Bulgarian invasion Venizelist officers of the Hellenic Army launched an Entente supported coup in Thessaloniki After a brief hesitation Venizelos and his principal supporters joined the uprising and began the establishment of a second Greek government in the north of the country which entered the war on the side of the Entente The National Defence government endured until June 1917 when the Entente powers forced Constantine I to abdicate and allowed Venizelos to return to Athens as Prime Minister of a unified country Nevertheless the establishment of the National Defence government deepened the rift of the National Schism which would plague Greek political life for over a generation and contribute to the Asia Minor Catastrophe Contents 1 Background Greece 1914 1916 2 Uprising in Thessaloniki 3 Establishment of the State of National Defence 4 In popular culture 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBackground Greece 1914 1916 editFurther information National Schism Greece had emerged victorious from the 1912 1913 Balkan Wars with her territory almost doubled but found itself in a difficult international situation The status of the Greek occupied eastern Aegean islands was left undetermined and the Ottoman Empire continued to claim them leading to a naval arms race and mass expulsions of ethnic Greeks from Anatolia In the north Bulgaria defeated in the Second Balkan War harbored revanchist plans against Greece and Serbia The two countries were bound by a treaty of alliance which promised military assistance in case of a Bulgarian attack but in August 1914 the danger would emerge from a different quarter altogether the Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand led to the declaration of war by Austria Hungary on Serbia and the outbreak of the First World War nbsp Arrival of Venizelos in Mytilini June 1916 nbsp Proclamation of the Venizelist government in Thessaloniki September 1916 nbsp Demonstration nbsp The National Defence government the Triumvirate with collaborators on 29 September 1916 O S Greece like Bulgaria initially maintained neutrality but as the war continued both warring camps began wooing the two countries At this point the first rifts appeared among the Greek leadership Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos at the helm since 1910 of a modernising government looking towards the British and French models supported entry in the war on the side of the Entente while King Constantine I who had been educated in Germany married to Kaiser Wilhelm II s sister and a deep admirer of Prussian militarism anticipated a German victory Aware that Greece was vulnerable to the British Fleet he advocated a course of neutrality In early 1915 the British offered Greece territorial concessions in Asia Minor if it would participate in the upcoming Gallipoli Campaign Venizelos supported this idea but run into the opposition from the King and his military advisors As a result Venizelos submitted his resignation on 6 March O S 21 February 1915 and was replaced by a royalist leaning government el led by Dimitrios Gounaris The Liberal Party won the subsequent May 1915 elections and Venizelos again formed a government el on 23 August O S 10 August 1915 When Bulgaria mobilized against Serbia in September 1915 Venizelos ordered a Greek counter mobilization and called upon the Anglo French to establish themselves in Thessaloniki then widely known as Salonica as to aid Serbia Indeed the Allies began landing on 22 September 1915 which calendar and started entrenching themselves at the Salonica camp fr a The King unconstitutionally dismissed Venizelos and the parliament making the breach between the two men and their followers irreparable The Liberals boycotted the December 1915 elections In the same month the French with the permission of Venizelos occupied Corfu where the remains of the Serbian Army were gathered before being sent to Thessaloniki In view of these events a clandestine Revolutionary Committee of National Defence was formed in Thessaloniki by a group of prominent Liberals and representatives of all over Macedonia including Konstantinos Angelakis mayor of Thessaloniki Alexandros Zannas el and Periklis A Argyropoulos fr representatives of Thessaloniki Dimitrios Dingas el and Dimitrios Pazis bg representatives of Serres Nikolaos Manos representative of Kozani Panayiotis Grekos representative of Florina Georgios Zervos el representative of Drama Major General Emmanouil Zymvrakakis and others The group acknowledged Venizelos as its leader and began approaching officers of the Army and the Cretan Gendarmerie During the following year Greece s official governments were hard pressed to maintain the country s neutrality The final straw came when on 25 May O S 12 May 1916 the Athens government succumbing to German pressure ordered the surrender of the vital Rupel Fortress to the Germans and their Bulgarian Allies In response on 3 June O S 21 May 1916 the pro Entente Venizelists imposed martial law effectively abolishing royal sovereignty in all of northern Greece On 18 August O S 3 August the Bulgarian invasion of eastern Macedonia commenced facing little resistance since the Athens government refused to condone any firm action As a result more than 6000 men of IV Corps surrendered to the Germans on 26 August O S 13 August and were deported to Gorlitz in Germany This surrender of hard won territories with only token resistance outraged most Greeks At the same time the establishment of the exiled Serbian King and his government in Thessaloniki in April the presence of 120 000 Serbian troops in the Macedonian Front accompanied by threats from the Entente that he would install a Serbian prefect in the city raised fears that the city would be handed over to the Serbians Uprising in Thessaloniki editMain article National Defence coup d etat Incensed by the successive humiliations and the Bulgarian advance in Macedonia several Greek officers had flocked to Thessaloniki and volunteered to raise troops and join the Allies The local Allied commander in chief Maurice Sarrail welcomed their initiatives but little headway was made due to the opposition of the Greek government 1 On 16 29 August the Lt Colonel Konstantinos Mazarakis Ainian tried to seize control of the 11th Infantry Division s mountain artillery battalion and lead it to the front This was opposed by Colonel Nikolaos Trikoupis the chief of staff and acting commander of III Army Corps who sent two companies to the artillery barracks at Mikro Karabournou that forced Mazarakis to abandon his attempt and withdraw from the barracks 1 nbsp Restaurant Verdun in Thessaloniki decorated in support of Venizelos and the National Defence regime 1916 This incident sparked the flame of a wider uprising on the next day 30 August O S 17 August by the city s pro Venizelist officers Under the command of Lt Colonel Epameinondas Zymvrakakis about 600 men of the Cretan Gendarmerie with three volunteer companies under Major Neokosmos Grigoriadis and thirty other officers blockaded the headquarters of III Corps When a company under Colonel Vagias tried to break through the blockade shots were fired that killed two gendarmes and wounded three others In response the Cretans fired back killing or wounding three or four soldiers The firefight was stopped by the intervention of French officers Sarrail arrived on the scene soon after and commanded all Greek officers who would not join the newly formed National Defence Committee uprising to be shipped to southern Greece The loyalist troops were disarmed and interned in the hopes that they would join the uprising but in the event most of them refused and had to be sent to southern Greece as well 1 Individual officers from across northern Greece began to flock to Thessaloniki and on 15 September O S 2 September the National Defence received its first substantial reinforcement as Colonel Nikolaos Christodoulou arrived in the city with the remnants of IV Corps that had refused to surrender and instead withdrawn via Kavala and Samothrace 1 Already on 21 September O S 8 September the volunteers under Major Grigoriadis formed the 1st Battalion of the Army of National Defence and departed for the front lines along the Strymon river 2 Establishment of the State of National Defence edit nbsp Officers Zymvrakakis and Christodoulou inspect troops nbsp The 1st Battalion of the Army of National Defence marches before the White Tower on its way to the front nbsp A Greek torpado boat at the port nbsp Venizelos inspects Greek troops on the Macedonian front accompanied by Admiral Kountouriotis and General Sarrail Venizelos himself with his closest aides left Athens on 12 25 September initially for his home island of Crete and from there via Chios and Lesbos to Thessaloniki where he arrived on 24 September 7 October Four days later on 28 September 11 October he formed a provisional government under the supreme leadership of a triumvirate comprising himself General Panagiotis Danglis and Admiral Pavlos Koundouriotis the Triumvirate of National Defence Triandria ths E8nikhs Amynhs 2 On 29 September 12 October Maj Gen Emmanouil Zymvrakakis was appointed Army Minister replaced on December 6 by Maj Gen Konstantinos Miliotis Komninos and on October 3 Nikolaos Politis was appointed Foreign Minister On 6 October other ministries euphemistically called General Directorates were established Themistoklis Sophoulis Interior Minister Miltiadis Negrepontis el Finance Minister Thalis Koutoupis Minister of National Economy Dimitrios Dingas el Justice Minister Georgios Averof Education Minister Alexandros Kassavetis el Transport Minister Leonidas Embeirikos el Minister for Supply and Food Distribution Spyridon Simos el Minister for the Refugees Andreas Michalakopoulos Minister for Public Estates and ResettlementThe first tasks of the new government were the establishment of an Army of National Defence to fight alongside the Allies and the consolidation of its rule in as much of Greece as possible The Provisional Government declared war on the Central Powers on 24 November 1916 which calendar and set out to recruit divisions for the Macedonian Front something which was achieved with speed and often ruthlessness Despite calls by some officers to abolish the monarchy and declare a Republic Venizelos chose a more moderate path He had declared we are not against the King but against the Bulgarians The State of National Defence established control in Greek Macedonia Crete and the northern Aegean islands lands that were just recently liberated during the Balkan Wars The reluctant and uneasy coexistence of the two Greek states was not destined to last as the Noemvriana riots against Venizelists in Athens clearly illustrated that a rapprochement was now impossible Early in 1917 the Venizelist state took also control of Thessaly after clashes against the royal army of Constantine The division of the country lasted for 9 months On 15 June 1917 which calendar an Allied ultimatum forced King Constantine to abdicate in favour of his second born son Alexander and with the rest of his family leave the country for Switzerland Venizelos returned to Athens as head of a superficially reunified Greece and led it to victory alongside the Allies in World War I but also in its entanglement in the subsequent Asia Minor Campaign As such the immediate aims of the National Defence were met But the revolution was also an expression of the wide rift between the quasi Republican progressive Venizelists and the conservative Royalists Anti Venizelists and its outbreak marks also the beginning of the Greek National Schism which would leave a troublesome legacy to the country as it continued in various forms up to the 1970s In popular culture editA popular song of the era celebrating the movement was performed by the musical Estudiantina of Smyrna named Tis aminis ta pedia the lads of the Defence or the Macedon The song was performed also in the film Rebetiko of Costas Ferris in orchestration of Stavros Xarchakos Notes edit The entrenched camp of Salonica became the location of present day Zeitenlik Allied military cemetery and memorial park References edit a b c d Megalh Stratiwtikh kai Naytikh Egkyklopaideia Tomos G Dabathnos Iwshf Great Military and Naval Encyclopedia Volume III in Greek Athens 1929 p 496 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Megalh Stratiwtikh kai Naytikh Egkyklopaideia Tomos G Dabathnos Iwshf Great Military and Naval Encyclopedia Volume III in Greek Athens 1929 pp 496 497 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link External links editThe Great War Romanian amp Greek Weapons of World War 1 feat C amp Rsenal The Great War Greek Rifles and Pistols of World War 1 feat C amp Rsenal The Great War A Crucial Test For Unity Greece in WW1 I THE GREAT WAR Special The Great War King Constantine I of Greece Serbia Is Invaded Once Again The Entente Lands in Greece I THE GREAT WAR Week 63 Nivelle s Spring Offensive Royal Conspiracy In Greece I THE GREAT WAR Week 131 The Merchant of Death Basil Zaharoff I WHO DID WHAT IN WW1 The Great War Russia s New Offensive The Russian Women s Battalion of Death I THE GREAT WAR Week 153 The Great War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Provisional Government of National Defence amp oldid 1158030555, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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