×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Sunday
21
Dec 2025
weather symbol
Athens 14°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> Greece

Dance of Zalongo and the self-sacrifice of Greek women

In order to avoid capture, enslavement & humiliation, the women threw their children off a steep cliff and then while holding hands they jumped to their death one by one

Newsroom December 18 08:20

The Dance of Zalongo is considered to be a monumental act of bravery and defiance against the Ottoman rulers by the women of Epirus, and stands as one of the most colorful pages in Greece’s history.

By the end of 1803, Epirus ruler Ali Pasha wanted to finish once and for all with the Souliotes; the rebel people of Souli who were creating problems for him and the Sultan. His army besieged Souli and forced them to sign a treaty on December 12. The basic condition of the agreement; which was not observed, was for the Souliotes, along with women and children to evacuate their villages, and they would not be harmed. On December 16, the people of Souli; divided into three phalanxes, left their ancestral land behind.

Two days later, the third phalanx, heading south, was attacked in Zalongo by a large body of Turkish-Albanian soldiers. During the violent fight that followed, a group of Souliotes was trapped by the enemy. Among them there were about 60 women, some of them pregnant.

In order to avoid capture, enslavement and humiliation, the women threw their children off a steep cliff and then they held hands and started singing and dancing, with the steps leading to the cliff where they jumped to their death one by one. The incident soon became known across Europe, with the Dance of Zalongo becoming a symbol of heroism and self-sacrifice over the years.

A concrete testimony of the Zalongos Dance comes from Ali Pasha’s officer, Suleiman Aga, an eyewitness of the incident. He told it to the Islamic mercenary Ibrahim Mansour Efendi, who wrote it in his book, which was published in Paris in 1828 as his memoirs of Ali Pasha’s Court.

According to this testimony, women “held hands and started a dance, which was driven by an unusual heroism, with the fear of death emphasizing its rhythm … At the end, exhausted, the women make a permeating and long cry with its echoes extinguished in the depths of a terrifying cliff where they all fall together with their children.”

Prussian diplomat and traveler Jacob Bardoldi (1779 – 1825), is the first to record the event between 1803 and 1804. Fighter of the Greek War of Independence and memoirist Christophoros Perrevos (1773 – 1863), is the first Greek writer who referred to the Dance of Zalongos in the second edition of the “History of Souli and Parga” (1815).

In 1888, scholar and historian Pericles Zerlentis (1852-1925), expressed doubts  about the Dance of Zalongos, following on-the-spot research, without questioning the fact of the Souli women self-sacrifice.

>Related articles

Agricultural unionist of the Malgara roadblock, Kostas Anestidis, under investigation for illegal subsidies of €122,000

At the “Grande Bretagne” with the Executive Chef: The festive menu, the secrets and the stories of the iconic hotel

What the farmers decided in Nikaia: They will close the Tempe tunnels to trucks tomorrow

Many years later, philologist Alexis Politis, a professor at the University of Crete, claimed in an article in “The Politis” (2005), that the song that allegedly accompanied the women’s dance, the well-known “Farewell Poor World”, was mentioned for the first time in 1908.

Despite the fact that some historians doubt whether there was an actual dance and song, the self-sacrifice of the Souli women in order not to fall in the hands of the Ottomans is indisputable.

Source: Philip Chrysopoulos/greekreporter.com

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#dance#greece#Greek War of Independence#history#Ottoman rule#sacrifice#Souli#women#Zalongos
> More Greece

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

Defense and energy at the trilateral Greece–Cyprus–Israel meeting tomorrow in Jerusalem spark “nerves” in Ankara

December 21, 2025

Agricultural unionist of the Malgara roadblock, Kostas Anestidis, under investigation for illegal subsidies of €122,000

December 21, 2025

At the “Grande Bretagne” with the Executive Chef: The festive menu, the secrets and the stories of the iconic hotel

December 21, 2025

What the farmers decided in Nikaia: They will close the Tempe tunnels to trucks tomorrow

December 21, 2025

They set up a rave party on the steps of a church in Lambrini… with the blessings of the Municipality of Athens – See photos

December 21, 2025

Mitsotakis to farmers: Yes to dialogue, but not to the unreasonable – their stance is unconstructive, they should think of our country

December 21, 2025

Closed streets today in Athens for the Athens Santa Run 2025

December 21, 2025

Retailers target turnover to exceed €4.5 billion in December

December 21, 2025
All News

> Greece

Agricultural unionist of the Malgara roadblock, Kostas Anestidis, under investigation for illegal subsidies of €122,000

Kostas Anestidis is at the center of a preliminary investigation being conducted following a prosecutor’s order, as part of inspections by the Directorate for Combating Organized Crime. Discrepancies were identified in 16 agricultural plots in his declarations

December 21, 2025

At the “Grande Bretagne” with the Executive Chef: The festive menu, the secrets and the stories of the iconic hotel

December 21, 2025

What the farmers decided in Nikaia: They will close the Tempe tunnels to trucks tomorrow

December 21, 2025

They set up a rave party on the steps of a church in Lambrini… with the blessings of the Municipality of Athens – See photos

December 21, 2025

Closed streets today in Athens for the Athens Santa Run 2025

December 21, 2025
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2025 Πρώτο Θέμα