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Alexandros Mavrokordatos

Alexandros Mavrokordatos (Greek: Αλέξανδρος Μαυροκορδάτος; 11 February 1791 – 18 August 1865) was a Greek statesman, diplomat, politician and member of the Mavrocordatos family of Phanariotes.

Alexandros Mavrokordatos
Αλέξανδρος Μαυροκορδάτος
President of the Executive Provisional Administration of Greece
In office
15 January 1822 – 26 April 1823 (o.s.)
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byPetrobey Mavromichalis

Prime Minister of Greece
In office
12 October 1833 – 31 May 1834 (o.s.)
MonarchOtto
Preceded bySpyridon Trikoupis
Succeeded byIoannis Kolettis
In office
24 June 1841 – 10 August 1841 (o.s.)
Preceded byOtto
Succeeded byOtto
In office
30 March 1844 – 4 August 1844 (o.s.)
Preceded byKonstantinos Kanaris
Succeeded byIoannis Kolettis
In office
16 May 1854 – 29 October 1855 (o.s.)
Preceded byKonstantinos Kanaris
Succeeded byDimitrios Voulgaris
Personal details
Born(1791-02-11)11 February 1791[1]
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire (now Istanbul, Turkey)
Died18 August 1865(1865-08-18) (aged 74)
Aegina, Kingdom of Greece
Resting placeFirst Cemetery of Athens
NationalityGreek
Political partyEnglish Party
SpouseChariklia Argiropoulos
RelationsMavrokordatos family
Cantacuzino family
Caradja family
RelativesAlexander Mavrokordatos (great-great-grandfather)
Nicholas Mavrocordatos (great-grandfather)
Șerban Cantacuzino (great-grandfather)
Nicholas Caradja (grandfather)
John Caradja (uncle)
Charilaos Trikoupis (nephew)
EducationPhanar Greek Orthodox College
Alma materUniversity of Padua
OccupationRevolutionary
Politician
Military service
Allegiance First Hellenic Republic
Kingdom of Greece
Branch/service Hellenic Army
Battles/wars

Biography edit

In 1812, Mavrokordatos went to the court of his uncle John George Caradja, Hospodar of Wallachia, with whom he passed into exile in the Austrian Empire (1818), where he studied at the University of Padua. He was a member of the Filiki Eteria and was among the Phanariot Greeks who hastened to Morea on the outbreak of the War of Independence in 1821.[2] At the time of the beginning of the revolution, Mavrokordatos was living in Pisa with the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley and his wife Mary Shelley, and upon hearing of the revolution, Mavrokordatos headed to Marseilles to buy arms and a ship to take him back to Greece.[3]

Mavrokordatos was a very wealthy, well educated man, fluent in seven languages, whose experience in ruling Wallachia led many to look towards him as a future leader of Greece.[3] Unlike many of the Greek leaders, Mavrokordatos, who had lived in the West, preferred to wear Western clothing, and looked towards the West as a political model for Greece.[4] The American philhellene Samuel Gridley Howe described Mavrokordatos:

"His manners are perfectly easy and gentlemanlike and though the first impression would be from his extreme politeness and continual smiles that he was a good-natured silly fop, yet one soon sees from the keen inquisitive glances which involuntarily escape from him, that he is concealing, under an almost childish lightness of manner, a close and accurate study of his visitor... His friends ascribe every action to the most disinterested patriotism; but his enemies hesitate not to pronounce them all to have for their end his party or private interest... Here, as is often the case, truth lies between the two extremes".[3]

Mavokordhatos, a crafty, intelligent man was the best politician thrown up by the Greek struggle and he dominated directly or indirectly the various assemblies that endeavoured to establish a government for Greece.[5] He was active in endeavouring to establish a regular government, and in January 1822 he was elected by the First National Assembly at Epidaurus as the "President of the Executive", making him in effect Greece's leader.[6] The Epidaurus assembly was largely Mavrokordatos's triumph as he wrote the first Greek constitution and become the new national leader.[7] Reflecting the fact that the Greek government had little power, Mavrokordatos was more interested in defending his power base in West Rumeli (Continental Greece), going first to the island of Hydra to secure the support of the Hydriots' warships and then to Missolonghi, where he supervised the building of the defensive works while using his wealth to create a network of patronage designed to secure him support from the western Rumeliot clans.[8] Mavrokordatos did not play the part of a national leader, and had created a deliberately complicated constitution largely to ensure that no one else could become a successful leader while he was off securing his power base in West Rumeli.[9] One observer commented about Mavrokordatos's tactics: "He imitates the cunning of the hedgehog who, they say, flattens his needles and makes himself thin to enter his burrow, and once inside fluffs them out again and becomes a ball of prickles to stop anyone else getting in".[9]

 
Alexandros Mavrokordatos by Peter von Hess.

He commanded the advance of the Greeks into western Central Greece the same year, and suffered a serious defeat at Peta on 16 July, but retrieved this disaster somewhat by his successful resistance to the First Siege of Missolonghi (November 1822 – January 1823).[2] At Peta, Mavokordatos wanted a victory by his philhellene units and his Greek soldiers trained by the German philhellene Karl von Normann-Ehrenfels to show the advantages of professional military training to the Greeks.[10] Mavorkordatos appointed Normann-Ehrenfels, formerly a captain in the Württemberg army his chief of staff.[10] At the Argos assembly in 1823, Mavrokordhatos did not seek office again, but had himself appointed as general secretary of the Executive, which made him responsible for the flow of paperwork both to and from the Executive.[11] In 1823, Mavokordatos supported the Senate in its dispute with the Executive dominated by supporters of his rival Theodoros Kolokotronis.[12] In 1824, Mavrokordatos welcomed Lord Byron to Greece and tried to persuade him to lead an attack on Navpaktos.[13] In 1824, Mavorokordhatos backed a plot by the American philhellene George Jarvis and the Scottish philhellene Thomas Fenton to murder his rival Odysseas Androutsos and Androutsos's brother-in-law Edward John Trelawny.[14]

Mavorokordhatos's English sympathies brought him, in the subsequent strife of factions, into opposition to the "Russian" party headed by Demetrius Ypsilanti and Kolokotronis; and though he held the portfolio of foreign affairs for a short while under the presidency of Petrobey (Petros Mavromichalis), he was compelled to withdraw from affairs until February 1825, when he again became a Secretary of State. The landing of Ibrahim Pasha followed, and Mavrocordatos again joined the army, barely escaping capture in the disaster at Sphacteria, on 9 May 1825, on board the ship Ares.[2]

After the fall of Missolonghi (22 April 1826) he went into retirement, until President John Capodistria made him a member of the committee for the administration of war material, a position he resigned in 1828. After Kapodistria's murder (9 October 1831) and the resignation of his brother and successor, Augustinos Kapodistrias (13 April 1832), Mavrocordatos became Minister of Finance. He was Vice-President of the National Assembly at Argos (July 1832), and was appointed by King Otto as his Minister of Finance, and in 1833 Premier.[2]

From 1834 onwards, he was Greek envoy at Munich, Berlin, London and, after a short interlude again as Premier of Greece in 1841, he was appointed envoy to Constantinople. In 1843, after the 3 September uprising, he returned to Athens as Minister with no portfolio in the Metaxas cabinet, and from April to August 1844 was head of the government formed after the fall of the Russian party. Going into opposition, he distinguished himself by his violent attacks on the Kolettis government. In 1854-1855 he was again head of the government for a few months.

He died in Aegina on 18 August 1865.[2]

Family tree edit

Alexander Mavrocordatos
Nicholas Mavrocordatos
Sultana Chrysoscoleo
Alexandros Mavrocordatos
Panayotakis Stavropoleos
Smaragda Stavropoleou
Nicholas Mavrocordatos
Constantin Cantacuzino
Șerban Cantacuzino
Helena Basarab
Smaragda Cantacouzena
Maria
Alexandros Mavrokordatos
Nicolae Caradja
Smaragda Caradja

References edit

  1. ^ Note: Greece officially adopted the Gregorian calendar on 16 February 1923 (which became 1 March). All dates prior to that, unless specifically denoted, are Old Style.
  2. ^ a b c d e   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Mavrocordato s.v. Prince Alexander Mavrocordato". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 917.
  3. ^ a b c Brewer 2011, p. 127.
  4. ^ Brewer 2011, pp. 127–128.
  5. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 128.
  6. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 130.
  7. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 133.
  8. ^ Brewer 2011, pp. 133–134.
  9. ^ a b Brewer 2011, p. 134.
  10. ^ a b Brewer 2011, p. 146.
  11. ^ Brewer 2011, pp. 184–185.
  12. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 191.
  13. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 207.
  14. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 266.

Works cited edit

  • E. Legrand, Généalogie des Mavrocordato (Paris, 1886).
  • Brewer, David (2011). The Greek War of Independence : the struggle for freedom from Ottoman oppression. New York, NY: Overlook. ISBN 978-1-59020-691-1. OCLC 706018492.


Political offices
New title President of the Executive
15 January 1822 – 26 April 1823 (o.s.)
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Greece
12 October 1833  – 31 May 1834 (o.s.)
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Greece
24 June  – 10 August 1841 (o.s.)
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Greece
30 March – 4 August 1844 (o.s.)
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Greece
16 May 1854 – 29 September 1855 (o.s.)
Succeeded by


alexandros, mavrokordatos, this, article, about, 19th, century, greek, statesman, ottoman, dragoman, alexander, mavrokordatos, 1636, 1709, greek, Αλέξανδρος, Μαυροκορδάτος, february, 1791, august, 1865, greek, statesman, diplomat, politician, member, mavrocord. This article is about the 19th century Greek statesman For the Ottoman dragoman see Alexander Mavrokordatos 1636 1709 Alexandros Mavrokordatos Greek Ale3andros Mayrokordatos 11 February 1791 18 August 1865 was a Greek statesman diplomat politician and member of the Mavrocordatos family of Phanariotes Alexandros MavrokordatosAle3andros MayrokordatosPresident of the Executive Provisional Administration of GreeceIn office 15 January 1822 26 April 1823 o s Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byPetrobey MavromichalisPrime Minister of GreeceIn office 12 October 1833 31 May 1834 o s MonarchOttoPreceded bySpyridon TrikoupisSucceeded byIoannis KolettisIn office 24 June 1841 10 August 1841 o s Preceded byOttoSucceeded byOttoIn office 30 March 1844 4 August 1844 o s Preceded byKonstantinos KanarisSucceeded byIoannis KolettisIn office 16 May 1854 29 October 1855 o s Preceded byKonstantinos KanarisSucceeded byDimitrios VoulgarisPersonal detailsBorn 1791 02 11 11 February 1791 1 Constantinople Ottoman Empire now Istanbul Turkey Died18 August 1865 1865 08 18 aged 74 Aegina Kingdom of GreeceResting placeFirst Cemetery of AthensNationalityGreekPolitical partyEnglish PartySpouseChariklia ArgiropoulosRelationsMavrokordatos familyCantacuzino familyCaradja familyRelativesAlexander Mavrokordatos great great grandfather Nicholas Mavrocordatos great grandfather Șerban Cantacuzino great grandfather Nicholas Caradja grandfather John Caradja uncle Charilaos Trikoupis nephew EducationPhanar Greek Orthodox CollegeAlma materUniversity of PaduaOccupationRevolutionaryPoliticianMilitary serviceAllegianceFirst Hellenic Republic Kingdom of GreeceBranch service Hellenic ArmyBattles warsGreek War of Independence Battle of Peta First Siege of Missolonghi Battle of Sphacteria Contents 1 Biography 2 Family tree 3 References 3 1 Works citedBiography editIn 1812 Mavrokordatos went to the court of his uncle John George Caradja Hospodar of Wallachia with whom he passed into exile in the Austrian Empire 1818 where he studied at the University of Padua He was a member of the Filiki Eteria and was among the Phanariot Greeks who hastened to Morea on the outbreak of the War of Independence in 1821 2 At the time of the beginning of the revolution Mavrokordatos was living in Pisa with the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley and his wife Mary Shelley and upon hearing of the revolution Mavrokordatos headed to Marseilles to buy arms and a ship to take him back to Greece 3 Mavrokordatos was a very wealthy well educated man fluent in seven languages whose experience in ruling Wallachia led many to look towards him as a future leader of Greece 3 Unlike many of the Greek leaders Mavrokordatos who had lived in the West preferred to wear Western clothing and looked towards the West as a political model for Greece 4 The American philhellene Samuel Gridley Howe described Mavrokordatos His manners are perfectly easy and gentlemanlike and though the first impression would be from his extreme politeness and continual smiles that he was a good natured silly fop yet one soon sees from the keen inquisitive glances which involuntarily escape from him that he is concealing under an almost childish lightness of manner a close and accurate study of his visitor His friends ascribe every action to the most disinterested patriotism but his enemies hesitate not to pronounce them all to have for their end his party or private interest Here as is often the case truth lies between the two extremes 3 Mavokordhatos a crafty intelligent man was the best politician thrown up by the Greek struggle and he dominated directly or indirectly the various assemblies that endeavoured to establish a government for Greece 5 He was active in endeavouring to establish a regular government and in January 1822 he was elected by the First National Assembly at Epidaurus as the President of the Executive making him in effect Greece s leader 6 The Epidaurus assembly was largely Mavrokordatos s triumph as he wrote the first Greek constitution and become the new national leader 7 Reflecting the fact that the Greek government had little power Mavrokordatos was more interested in defending his power base in West Rumeli Continental Greece going first to the island of Hydra to secure the support of the Hydriots warships and then to Missolonghi where he supervised the building of the defensive works while using his wealth to create a network of patronage designed to secure him support from the western Rumeliot clans 8 Mavrokordatos did not play the part of a national leader and had created a deliberately complicated constitution largely to ensure that no one else could become a successful leader while he was off securing his power base in West Rumeli 9 One observer commented about Mavrokordatos s tactics He imitates the cunning of the hedgehog who they say flattens his needles and makes himself thin to enter his burrow and once inside fluffs them out again and becomes a ball of prickles to stop anyone else getting in 9 nbsp Alexandros Mavrokordatos by Peter von Hess He commanded the advance of the Greeks into western Central Greece the same year and suffered a serious defeat at Peta on 16 July but retrieved this disaster somewhat by his successful resistance to the First Siege of Missolonghi November 1822 January 1823 2 At Peta Mavokordatos wanted a victory by his philhellene units and his Greek soldiers trained by the German philhellene Karl von Normann Ehrenfels to show the advantages of professional military training to the Greeks 10 Mavorkordatos appointed Normann Ehrenfels formerly a captain in the Wurttemberg army his chief of staff 10 At the Argos assembly in 1823 Mavrokordhatos did not seek office again but had himself appointed as general secretary of the Executive which made him responsible for the flow of paperwork both to and from the Executive 11 In 1823 Mavokordatos supported the Senate in its dispute with the Executive dominated by supporters of his rival Theodoros Kolokotronis 12 In 1824 Mavrokordatos welcomed Lord Byron to Greece and tried to persuade him to lead an attack on Navpaktos 13 In 1824 Mavorokordhatos backed a plot by the American philhellene George Jarvis and the Scottish philhellene Thomas Fenton to murder his rival Odysseas Androutsos and Androutsos s brother in law Edward John Trelawny 14 Mavorokordhatos s English sympathies brought him in the subsequent strife of factions into opposition to the Russian party headed by Demetrius Ypsilanti and Kolokotronis and though he held the portfolio of foreign affairs for a short while under the presidency of Petrobey Petros Mavromichalis he was compelled to withdraw from affairs until February 1825 when he again became a Secretary of State The landing of Ibrahim Pasha followed and Mavrocordatos again joined the army barely escaping capture in the disaster at Sphacteria on 9 May 1825 on board the ship Ares 2 After the fall of Missolonghi 22 April 1826 he went into retirement until President John Capodistria made him a member of the committee for the administration of war material a position he resigned in 1828 After Kapodistria s murder 9 October 1831 and the resignation of his brother and successor Augustinos Kapodistrias 13 April 1832 Mavrocordatos became Minister of Finance He was Vice President of the National Assembly at Argos July 1832 and was appointed by King Otto as his Minister of Finance and in 1833 Premier 2 From 1834 onwards he was Greek envoy at Munich Berlin London and after a short interlude again as Premier of Greece in 1841 he was appointed envoy to Constantinople In 1843 after the 3 September uprising he returned to Athens as Minister with no portfolio in the Metaxas cabinet and from April to August 1844 was head of the government formed after the fall of the Russian party Going into opposition he distinguished himself by his violent attacks on the Kolettis government In 1854 1855 he was again head of the government for a few months He died in Aegina on 18 August 1865 2 Family tree editAlexander MavrocordatosNicholas MavrocordatosSultana ChrysoscoleoAlexandros MavrocordatosPanayotakis StavropoleosSmaragda StavropoleouNicholas MavrocordatosConstantin CantacuzinoȘerban CantacuzinoHelena BasarabSmaragda CantacouzenaMariaAlexandros MavrokordatosNicolae CaradjaSmaragda CaradjaReferences edit Note Greece officially adopted the Gregorian calendar on 16 February 1923 which became 1 March All dates prior to that unless specifically denoted are Old Style a b c d e nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Mavrocordato s v Prince Alexander Mavrocordato Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 917 a b c Brewer 2011 p 127 Brewer 2011 pp 127 128 Brewer 2011 p 128 Brewer 2011 p 130 Brewer 2011 p 133 Brewer 2011 pp 133 134 a b Brewer 2011 p 134 a b Brewer 2011 p 146 Brewer 2011 pp 184 185 Brewer 2011 p 191 Brewer 2011 p 207 Brewer 2011 p 266 Works cited edit E Legrand Genealogie des Mavrocordato Paris 1886 Brewer David 2011 The Greek War of Independence the struggle for freedom from Ottoman oppression New York NY Overlook ISBN 978 1 59020 691 1 OCLC 706018492 Political officesNew title President of the Executive15 January 1822 26 April 1823 o s Succeeded byPetros MavromichalisPreceded bySpyridon Trikoupis Prime Minister of Greece12 October 1833 31 May 1834 o s Succeeded byIoannis KolettisPreceded byKing Otto Prime Minister of Greece24 June 10 August 1841 o s Succeeded byKing OttoPreceded byKonstantinos Kanaris Prime Minister of Greece30 March 4 August 1844 o s Succeeded byIoannis KolettisPreceded byKonstantinos Kanaris Prime Minister of Greece16 May 1854 29 September 1855 o s Succeeded byDimitrios Voulgaris Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexandros Mavrokordatos amp oldid 1209437643, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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