×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Saturday
20
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
> Culture

How Poetry won Independence for Greece – WSJ

Two hundred years ago, the Greek revolution against Ottoman rule became a European cause thanks to the support of writers and artists

Newsroom April 12 10:24

“All art is propaganda,” wrote George Orwell. This year Greece celebrates the bicentennial of its War of Independence against the Ottoman Empire, won with the help of some of the most powerful propaganda ever written. During a virtual conference on the east Mediterranean last November, New Jersey senator Robert Menendez quoted some of it: “The mountains look on Marathon—/And Marathon looks on the sea;/And musing there an hour alone,/I dream’d that Greece might still be free.”

Lord Byron wrote these lines in his poem “The Isles of Greece” just before the outbreak of the Greek Revolution. Revered today as a Greek national hero, Byron saw in the modern Greeks the flicker of ancient genius fallen on desperate times, and he wasn’t the only one. Percy Shelley and his wife, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, author of “Frankenstein,” were also famously Philhellenes. In Pisa they took Greek lessons from Alexandros Mavrokordatos, a Constantinopolitan Greek who would become the first president of independent Greece in 1822. The literary result of this relationship was Shelley’s verse play “Hellas,” written to help finance the Greek cause, which portrayed the Greeks as re-emerging from antiquity: “The world’s great age begins anew,/The golden years return.”

Educated Europeans and Americans saw “something of their own at stake because they’ve been brought up on Homer and Herodotus and Marathon and Salamis,” said Roderick Beaton, professor emeritus of Byzantine and Modern Greek literature at King’s College London. “It’s not humanitarian, it’s not altruistic…it’s actually the belief that the Hellenic heritage is common to all civilized people and therefore…it’s your own civilization that is threatened by the common enemy.” Small wonder, perhaps, that many hundreds of Europeans paid their way to fight for the Greek cause.

See Also:

Lost ‘golden city’ of Egypt, 3,000 years old, discovered (photos)

Beijing Topples New York To Become The Billionaire Capital (infographic)

>Related articles

The Trump family invited to a Greek house in Davos – Contacts with Greek business leaders and a private dinner at the Cresta hotel

Chain reactions from farmers’ protests – Booking cancellations of up to 50% in Thessaly and Epirus

Rare video shows Domna Samiou teaching Cretan Christmas carols

But it is Byron whose reputation was entirely tied up with Greece. He had traveled there a decade before the revolution and written the first two cantos of his long poem “Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage,” in which his hero calls the Greeks to rebellion: “Hereditary bondsmen! Know ye not/Who would be free themselves must strike the blow?” “Childe Harold” became a publishing sensation in 1812, selling out 10 editions in three years—a record unmatched in English poetry—and propelling Byron to rock star status.

When Byron landed in Messolongi in 1823 to devote his life and fortune to the Greek cause, his arrival “directed the attention of all Europe to the affairs of Greece,” wrote his contemporary and historian of the Greek War of Independence, George Finlay. Upon his death from fever a mere four months later, “wherever the English language was known, an electric shock was felt”.

Read more: WSJ

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#1821#1821 Independence War#200 years of Greek independence#art#culture#greece#history#lord byron#Ottoman Empire#Philhellenes#poetry#world
> More Culture

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

The Trump family invited to a Greek house in Davos – Contacts with Greek business leaders and a private dinner at the Cresta hotel

December 20, 2025

Chain reactions from farmers’ protests – Booking cancellations of up to 50% in Thessaly and Epirus

December 20, 2025

Tsiaras’ statement on farmers’ demands: 74% have already been met, dialogue is a matter of responsibility

December 20, 2025

Rare video shows Domna Samiou teaching Cretan Christmas carols

December 20, 2025

Weather: Rain and drop in temperatures over the weekend – Unstable conditions through Christmas

December 20, 2025

Farmers remain unmoved: Blockades continue through Christmas, toll booths open over the weekend

December 20, 2025

Payment and relief map for 2026: What applies to farmers, pensioners, tenants, landowners and employees

December 20, 2025

Ruthless cartel tactics: Cocaine hidden in tons of manure, submarines, and even rockets attached to passenger ships

December 20, 2025
All News

> Politics

Tsiaras’ statement on farmers’ demands: 74% have already been met, dialogue is a matter of responsibility

Watch live the statements of the Minister of Rural Development & Food, Kostas Tsiaras, regarding the farmers’ demands

December 20, 2025

Code “Maritime Arc”: The US plan that is redrawing the map of Greece from North to South

December 19, 2025

Provocative stance by Pappas over the assault on a journalist: “I raised my hand, but he has no mark. I said, ‘Look at me and look at him’”

December 19, 2025

Mitsotakis: Yes to dialogue with farmers, no to unnecessary hardship for society – We will not give in to maximalism that leads outside the European framework

December 19, 2025

The Greek flag was raised on the frigate “Kimon”: How the first Greek Belharra changes the balance in the Aegean

December 19, 2025
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2025 Πρώτο Θέμα