Georgios Christakis-Zografos

Greek politician and only president of Northern Epirus
Georgios Christakis-Zografos
Γεώργιος Χρηστάκης-Ζωγράφος
Georgios Christakis-Zografos, 1914
President of the Autonomous Republic of Northern Epirus
In office
28 February 1914 – 28 October 1914
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Minister for Foreign Affairs (Greece)
In office
7 July 1909 – 15 August 1909
Preceded byGeorgios Baltatzis
Succeeded byKyriakoulis Mavromichalis
In office
25 February 1915 – 10 August 1915
Preceded byEleftherios Venizelos
Succeeded byDimitrios Gounaris
Personal details
Born(1863-03-08)8 March 1863[1]
Paris, France
Died24 June 1920(1920-06-24) (aged 57)
Athens, Greece
NationalityGreek
Alma materUniversity of Paris
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
ProfessionJurist
Member of Parliament
Diplomat

Georgios Christakis-Zografos (Greek: Γεώργιος Χρηστάκης-Ζωγράφος; 1863–1920) was a Greek politician, minister of foreign affairs and president of the Autonomous Republic of Northern Epirus (1914).

Life

Studies and early career

He was the son of the entrepreneur and benefactor Christakis Zografos, from Qestorat, (Lunxhëri) in the Gjirokastër prefecture. Christakis-Zografos studied in Paris and in Munich law and political science. When he returned in Greece, he was involved in agricultural reforms especially according to the large fields his father possessed in Thessaly. During this period he supported the concept that the large feudal estates (called cifliks during the period) of the region should be expropriated and redistributed to those who owned no land. He sold to non-land owners much of his agricultural fields in extremely low prices.

1905–1913

In 1905, he was elected to the Greek Parliament for the Karditsa prefecture. In 1909, he served as Foreign Minister under Dimitrios Rallis.[2] After the First Balkan War, he was appointed Governor General of newly liberated from the Greek Army Epirus region. Christakis-Zografos served as Governor General of Epirus from March 29 (March 16 OS), 1913 until December 31 (December 18 OS) of the same year.

Head of the Provisional Government of Northern Epirus

When the Great Powers decided to award Northern Epirus to Albania, local Greeks formed a provisional government under Christakis-Zografos on February 28, 1914 and declared their autonomy the following day in Gjirokastër. Zografos sent a note to each of the representatives of the Great Powers explaining the eminent situation:[3]

Under these conditions and in the absence of a solution that would suffice to safeguard Epirus, a solution would have been otherwise so easy to discover, the Epirote populace is forced to declare to the Powers that it cannot submit to their decision. It will declare its independence and will struggle for its existence, its traditions and its rights.
But, before it executes this last decision, Epirus turns for the last time to face its judges and pleads with them to modify their decision by which a whole people is condemned.
This people hopes that the Powers will be pleased to make known to it, the sole interested party, their final decision
May Christian and civilized Europe, by this decision, escape the heavy responsibility for the horror of a ruthless struggle.

After a three months period of armed conflicts, the European Powers intervened and asked for negotiations on a new basis. On May 17 the state of Northern Epirus was internationally recognized by the Protocol of Corfu, as an autonomous region inside the borders of Albania. However, this state was short lived and on October 27, when World War I broke out and the Albanian government collapsed, the Greek army re-entered the area with the sanction of the Great Powers.

1914–1920

Christakis-Zografos after the second Greek administration in the area, returned to Greece and was elected at the following elections. He resigned his office at December 1914. A little while later he became executive of the National Bank of Greece, position he retained until September 1917, with a short-term interval (February 25-August 10, 1915) when he became for second time Minister of Foreign Affairs under the cabinet of Dimitrios Gounaris. He supported the entrance Greece on the side of the Triple Entente during World War I, foreseeing that this strategic move could offer to the country several advantages. He retired in 1917 and died three years later from a longtime heart ailment.

Legacy

During the Communist regime in Albania (1945–1992), Georgios Christakis-Zografos and his father Christakis Zografos (notable benefactor and entrepreneur), were stigmatised as 'enemies of the state'. Anyone from his home town who held the name 'Zografos' (whether relatives or not), was therefore persecuted. After 1992 however, the situation has changed. Today, the Zografeio school in Qestorati, founded by his father, has been renovated and has reopened as a museum.[4]

References

  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. ^ "Γενική Γραμματεία της Κυβέρνησης | Γενική Γραμματεία της Κυβέρνησης". Archived from the original on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2009-09-12.
  3. ^ Pyrrhus Ruches. Albanian historical folksongs, 1716-1943: a survey of oral epic poetry from southern Albania, with original texts. Argonaut, 1967 p. 104-105.
  4. ^ http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/16/57/25/PDF/de_Rapper_2005a.pdf ...were stigmatised in Albanian historiography as shovinistë and borgjezë (chauvinist, bourgeois) who had worked to destroy the Albanian nation by pretending that all Orthodox Christians were Greek or should be Greek, and by supporting the opening of Greek schools in Lunxhëri and elsewhere. In consequence of this negative propaganda, the last people who still hold the family name Zografi in their village of origin, Qestorat, were persecuted during communism....its re-opening as a museum of Lunxhëri...

Sources

  • Abbott, G. F. (2008). Greece and the Allies 1914-1922. BiblioBazaar. ISBN 978-0-554-39462-6.
  • Stickney, Edith Pierpont (1926). Southern Albania or northern Epirus in European international affairs, 1912-1923. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804761710.
  • Ruches, Pyrrhus J. (1965). Albania's captives. Argonaut.
Political offices
Preceded by
Georgios Baltatzis
Minister for Foreign Affairs of Greece
7 July – 15 August 1909
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Foreign Affairs of Greece
25 February – 10 August 1915
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Provisional Government of Northern Epirus
28 February – 27 October 1914
Succeeded by
Greek administration
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HistorySociety
and cultureGeography
Ancient: Chaonia, Parauaea
Medieval and modern: Dryinopolis, Kolonia
Settlements1OrganizationsIndividuals2
1 Includes localities with a substantial ethnic Greek population, or otherwise with any kind of cultural or other type of significance, historical or current, for the Greek minority in Albania.
2 Includes individuals not necessarily of Greek ethnicity but with important contributions to Greek civilization.
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President:
Georgios Christakis-Zografos
Seal of the Autonomous State of Northern Epirus
Ministers:
Members:
Captain of Himara:
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First Hellenic Republic
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Kingdom of Greece (Wittelsbach)
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Kingdom of Greece (Glücksburg)
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Second Hellenic Republic
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Kingdom of Greece (Glücksburg)
(1935–1973)
Military Junta
(1967–1974)
Third Hellenic Republic
(since 1974)
§ variously as Chief Secretary/General Secretary of State
officially considered the first foreign minister of independent Greece
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