The Greek Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos (1864-1936) was one of the stars of the Paris Peace Conference, impressing many of the Western delegates, already possessed of a romantic view of 'the grandeur that was Greece', with his charm and oratorical style. He won support for his country's territorial ambitions in Asia Minor, the 'Great Idea' of a revived Hellenic empire controlling the Aegean and stretching to the Black Sea. Venizelos had won this support by bringing Greece into the war on the Allied side, but in doing so he had split his country, and in order to secure his government's position he had to deliver territorial gains at the expense of the Ottoman Empire. It was the Greek occupation of Asia Minor, however, that spurred the Turks to support Mustafa Kemal and resulted not in the creation of a Greater Greece but the modern Republic of Turkey. The conflict between Greece and Turkey began the tension between the two states that has continued for the past 90 years and is most clearly seen in the dispute over the divided island of Cyprus. The Paris Peace Conferences were where the modern Near East, with all its problems of competing nationalisms and ethnic divisions, was created, and Venizelos' Greece was the key player in this process.
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Product Details
Weight: 680g
Dimensions: 15 x 25mm
Publication Date: 31 Aug 2010
Publisher: Haus Publishing
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781905791644
About Andrew Dalby
Andrew Dalby is a historian and linguist who has published a number of biographies of classical figures including Homer Bacchus and Venus. He has also written on the social history of languages and food history including the acclaimed book Siren Feasts: a history of food and gastronomy in Greece (1996) which won the Runciman Prize and has produced numerous academic papers. Professor Alan Sharp is Provost of the Coleraine Campus at the University of Ulster. He joined the History Department at Ulster in 1971 and has been successively Professor of International Studies a post in which he helped to set up degrees in International Studies and later International Politics and Head of the School of History and International Affairs. His major publications include The Versailles Settlement: Peacemaking in Paris 1919 (1991) amongst others.