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READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
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THE
CRETAN INSURRECTION OF 1866-7-8
WILLIAM JAMES STILLMAN
U. S. Consul in Crete
TO THE MEMORY OF LE GRAND LOCKWOOD, OF NEW YORK, IS
DEDICATED, IN RECOGNITION OF THE UNOSTENTATIOUS, UNPROMISED, AND UNRESERVED
LIBERALITY WHICH RENDERED IT POSSIBLE FOR THE AUTHOR TO REMAIN IN CRETE DURING
THE INSURRECTION
INTRODUCTORY. Crete and the Cretans
CHAPTER I. (April, 1866.) Ismael Pasha
CHAPTER II. (May, 1866.) Agitation
CHAPTER III. (July, August, 1866) Days of Terror
CHAPTER IV. (September, 1866) Mustapha Kiritli Pasha
CHAPTER V. (October, 1866) Russian Intervention
CHAPTER VI. (November, 1866) The Convent of Arkadi
CHAPTER VII. (December, 1866) Pym and the Assurance
CHAPTER VIII. (December, 1866) Ignatieff Again
CHAPTER IX. (January, February, 1867) More Disaster
CHAPTER X. (March—May, 1867) Effect of Hellenic
Politics
CHAPTER XI. (June—September, 1867) Hussein Avni
CHAPTER XII. (October, November, 1867.) Sphakian Campaign
CHAPTER XIII. (December, 1867) The Last of the Victims
CHAPTER XIV. (1868) Ali Pasha Fails
CHAPTER XV. The year
after the war
Preface.
In committing to print the subjoined record of the
Cretan revolt of 1866-7-8, I am fulfilling a duty in regard to a series of
events quaeque ipse vidi et quorum pars magna fui,
and which, if not in themselves of importance, are so as a revelation of the
manner in which political influences work in the East, and perhaps still more
as a curious exemplification of the weight which personal accidents, private
intrigue and pique, and the capacity or incapacity of obscure officials, may
have in determining the affairs of great empires.
In taking the position I did with reference to the
insurrection, I was actuated only by a love of justice, and in no wise by
sentimental or religious prejudices; but I hope it may be permitted me to say
that, if I learned how fatal are the defects of the Greek race, its bitterness
in personal rivalry, want of patriotic subordination, and the extravagance of
its political hostilities, I saw also that it possesses admirable qualities,
which the interests of civilization demand the development of; high capacity
for political organization, for patriotic effort and self-sacrifice; and
endurance and equanimity under misfortunes, which few races could endure and
retain any character or coherence. Their amiable and refined personal
qualities, and their private and domestic morality, have, justified in me a
feeling towards them for which I was utterly unprepared on going to the Levant,
and give me a hope that the manifest lesson of the Cretan revolt may not be
lost in their future, either to them or to the friends of the better
civilization. I feel that the Hellenes are less responsible for the vices of their
body politic than their guardian Powers, who interfere to misguide, control to
pervert, and protect to enfeeble, every good impulse and quality of the race,
while they foster the spirit of intrigue, themselves enter into the domestic
politics of Greece in order to be able to control her foreign, and each in
turn, lest Greece should someday be an aid to some other of the contestants
about the bed of the sick man, does all it can to prevent her from being able
to help herself. No just and right-thinking man can make responsible for its
sins or misfortunes, a people which is denied the right to shape its own
institutions without a studied reference to the prejudices of its protectors;
to manage its own affairs without the meddling of foreign ministers, who
dictate who shall be its administrators; to protect even its own constitution
against the violence and usurpation of an irresponsible and incapable head,
without the secret but efficacious intervention of some foreign Power.
A witness of every step of the late diplomatic
intervention in Greek foreign affairs, I saw that in all the corps
diplomatique at Athens Greece had not one friend—every
one helped to push her into the abyss; not one word of real sympathy or
friendly counsel did she find from any foreign representative. The United
States, which had, perhaps, more than any other nation a powerful moral
influence, and could have helped her by wise words and calm and disinterested
moral intervention, had chosen to send as the dispenser of that influence the
most incapable, ignorant, and obsequious diplomat I have ever known in the
service of our Government—a man who was an actual cipher in any political
sense, and who, on arriving in Greece (our first representative there),
hastened to mingle himself with the party intrigues of the country, ranging
himself on the side of the king, against the people, in such a way that his
advent was, to use the words of one of the leading statesmen of Greece spoken
to me at the time, “like a wet blanket” to the hopes of liberalism in Greece.
The Hellenes must learn that they have no friends,
save in the unprejudiced and charitable individuals who know them well enough
to be able to overlook their foibles and petty vices, in view of the solid and
genuine claims which they have to our liking and the support of Christendom. As
one of those, I await the day when Greece shall have been mistress of herself
long enough to prove whether or not she can govern herself wisely, before I
lend my voice to her blame for her failures or her offences.
The Publishers feel bound to inform the reader that
during the delay which has attended the publication of this work, several of
the personages mentioned in it, and some whose character or conduct is severely
criticized, have died. This explanation will relieve the author of the
appearance either of bad taste or of vindictiveness; while to the fact that he
was unable to give his personal supervision to the work in passing through the
press are due the errata which may be discovered, and an occasional want of
uniformity in the spelling of proper names.
New York, February 1, 1874.
INTRODUCTORY.
A STUDENT of classical ethnology, curious to restore
the antique man, can do no better, so far as the Greek variety is concerned,
than to go to Crete and study its people. The Cretan of today preserves
probably the character of antiquity, and holds to his ancient ways of feeling
and believing, and, within the new conditions, as far as possible of acting,
more nearly than would be believed possible, and affords a better field of
investigation into the nature of the classical man than any existing records.
The island is one of those paradisiacal isolations
which facilitate civilization in its early stages, and preserve it from the
encroachments of progress in the later. Its low latitude secures it against
cold in winter, and its insular position against extreme heat, while the range
of high mountains running longitudinally through it gives its climate a salubrity possessed by no section of the world’s
surface so near the sun. The standard summer temperature is from 82° to
86° Fahr., and once only in a residence of
nearly four years I saw it as high as 92º. The minimum was 520. Wild flowers
never are wanting except in midsummer. The almond blooms in February (I have
seen it in blossom on Christmas), and all the known fruits follow it in
succession, each finding some locality and climate suited to it.
The fertility of the plains, and the inaccessibility
of its mountain fastnesses, made prosperity easy and conquest difficult, while
its remoteness from the shore of either continent, made ancient invasion not
easy, and preserved the type of the composite Greek race from the barbaric
innovations of Greece proper, so that we have the Greek race of B.C. 700
undoubtedly more purely preserved than anywhere else.
Only in prosperity and weight in mundane matters, in
comparative consideration, they have passed to the other end of the scale from
that in which Homer could say of their land: “There is a country, Crete, in the
midst of the black sea, beautiful and fertile, wave-washed roundabout, with a
population infinite in number, and ninety cities. The races are different, and
with different languages—there are Achaeans, there are the huger Eteocretans, the Cydonians,
the crest-waving Dorians, and the divine Pelasgi. Theirs is Cnossos, a
great city, and theirs is King Minos, who talked nine years with great Jove”.
This enumeration has evidently no relation to
chronological order, and unfortunately we have no intelligible traditions as to
the order of settlement in Crete. Diodorus Siculus says that “the
first inhabitants of Crete dwelt in the neighborhood of Mount Ida, and were
called the Idaean Dactyls”. But Scylax says that, according to early Greek tradition,
Cydonia (in the western end of the island) was known as “the mother of cities”.
Its position and character of site indicate rather a settlement of Pelasgi coming
from the west.
Spratt finds in the geological record clear evidence
of the Greek Archipelago having been formerly a fresh-water lake or series of
lakes, and, if this be true, Crete must have been connected with the main lands
of Europe and Asia Minor, in which case the aboriginal inhabitants would be a
land migration, probably from Aryan sources. That a Phrygian colony known as
the Idaean Dactyls brought here knowledge
of certain arts and religious mysteries, and became to the people with whom
they mingled, semi-divine, appears probable. The subsequent visit of the Tyrian
Hercules, who, on his way to get the cattle of Geryon, called here as the
rendezvous of his forces, and, to recompense the Cretans for their friendship,
purged the island of wild beasts, may indicate a Phoenician colony or passing
expedition.
But admitting, as of possibility, that the Eteocretan was a land emigration, cavern-dwelling, as
the abundance of the caves in the island suggests; a collation of all the
traditions makes it probable that the first important immigration was Pelasgic, and from the Italian shores, noted in many Greek
traditions as the Tyrrhenian Pelasgi (Etruscans?), whose colonies
came down by the Morea and the isles of Cerigo and Cerigotto by easy journeys to Crete. [The records of
Karnack show that, in the reign of Thotmes III,
a great migration of Cretan Pelasgi came into Egypt, and became the
Philistines (Pilisti or Pilisgi);
proving that at this early period the hive was so full that it had begun to
swarm.]
This first immigration became, if my conjecture goes
to the mark, the Cydonian stock—the
subsequent one which Homer speaks of as Pelasgic,
being of much later date; the Dorian, which was of the highest importance in
its effect, as finally assimilating or subjecting all other races, and the
Achaean, a scarcely influential influx, coming within the recognized
traditions. The author of the “Isles of Greece” supposes two aboriginal races
in the island, a needless multiplication of “original Adams”, though an Asiatic
or Phrygian race coming in at the east, and a Pelasgic at the west, seem to have been the first recognizable elements in the
population.
The myth of Jupiter and Europa is regarded as
concealing the history of the introduction of the worship of the moon by a Phoenician
colony, who, combining with the population of the eastern end of the island,
whose peculiar deity was Jupiter, produced the race over which Minos came to
rule, from this fabled to be the son of Jupiter and Europa. The journey of
Europa along the river Lethe indicates the course of this colony to the capital
of Minos, Gortyna, which more anciently had
borne the name of Larissa, a Pelasgic name, from
which we might conjecture that it was founded by the colony of Teutamos, who, with a band of Dorians, Achaeans, and Pelasgi,
the builders of all the early Greek cities, is said by the early historians to
have arrived in Crete three centuries before the Trojan war, and to have
settled in the eastern part of the island, and given the early city its Pelasgic name.
The present inhabitants betray differences of
character so great as almost to indicate difference of race. The Sphakiotes are larger of build, more restless and
adventurous, thievish and inconstant, turbulent and treacherous, than the
people of any other section. The Seliniotes, in
the western extremity, are the bravest of the Cretans, but less turbulent or
quarrelsome, not given to stealing, and of good faith. In the eastern end,
especially the region of Gortyna and
Cnossos, the blessings of the rule of Minos seem to rest in pacific natures.
The great Dorian invasion, about 1,000 BC, gave the island, a
dominant caste, uniformity of language and customs, but without complete fusion
of races.
The language of Crete today is a Dorian dialect, and
preserves many characteristics noted by the ancient authors. The use of Kappa
as c is used in Italian, either hard or soft (in terminal
syllables generally the latter), the use of r for l,
especially with the Sphakiotes, and the presence
of many words in modern Cretan which have disappeared from modern continental
Greek, with a comparative rareness of Turkish words, and entire absence of
Albanian and Slavonic, show how much less the Cretans have been affected by
outside influences than other parts of the Greek community.
There is a trace of genuine Cretan literature, though
its chief work, the “Erotókritos”, is by an Italian
colonist, Vincenzo Cornaro. They have, however,
many songs and many bards, though to any but Cretan ears the music is far from
agreeable. I knew one of the popular singers, Karalambo,
poet and singer at once, as most of them are (and many are improvisatori of considerable facility). He was
so much in repute that no wedding or festivity was considered complete anywhere
in the range of a day’s ride from Chania unless Karalambo was
there; and at other times he used to sing in the cafes on the Marina,
screaming, to the strain of a naturally fine tenor, songs which, though to me
not even music, used to melt his audiences into tears. He was a patriot as well
as poet, and when the insurrection of '66 actually broke out, his songs were so
seditious, and excited the Khaniote Christians
so much, that he was driven into the mountains, and, joining a band of his neighbors,
was one day wounded by the accidental discharge of a pistol one of his comrades
was cleaning. The wound was fatal from want of surgical attendance.
The Cretan music is always of a plaintive character,
and monotonous; in singing, they have a habit of incessant quavering, and this,
with the drawling tone, makes it far from agreeable to an ear accustomed to
cultivated music, but it has a decided character of its own.
There were in Kalepa before
the insurrection two improvisatori of
considerable repute, who were accustomed to carry on musical disputes, one
singing a couplet, and the other replying in a similar one. Sometimes it was a
match of compliments, and sometimes the reverse, but following with tolerable
exactitude the metre, a four-lined stanza, the
second and fourth lines rhyming. All the ballads I have seen are in this form,
the music also differing but little to my ear, though possibly to a Cretan
there may be wide differences.
The Cretans possess, in common with all the Greeks,
the avidity for instruction and quickness of intellect which make of this race
the dominant element in the Levant. They are tenaciously devoted to their
religion and to their traditions, which have kept them up and preserved the
national character against such a continuation of hostile influences as
probably no other people ever lived through. The history of Crete is a series
of obstinate rebellions and barbarous repressions, since the first conquest by
the Saracens in ad 820, a conquest which was followed by an almost complete
apostasy from Christianity—sword-conversion, and by persistent attempts on the
part of the Byzantine emperors to reconquer it, until 961, when Nicephorus
Phocas succeeded in driving the Saracens out. They seem to have made no
considerable addition to the Cretan stock, since the population rapidly
returned to Christianity, to which, judging from the known and more recent
past, they had always probably remained devoted at heart. At the division of
the Byzantine empire, Crete passed to Boniface, Duke of Montserrat, and from
him was purchased by the Venetian Republic, 1204, from which time till its
conquest by the Turks, completed in 1669, the Cretans were under a yoke that
would probably have depopulated any other section of the Old World. The
cruelties and misgovernment of the governors sent from Venice would be
incredible if not recorded by Venetian historians and official records. The
Venetians seem to have regarded the Cretans much in the same light as the
English colonists of America did the Indians, and, when their wretched state
came to the knowledge of the Senate, they sent commissioners to examine into
it, from whose reports I translate some extracts (quoted in Italian by
Pashley), who, from the original documents in the public library of Venice. Basadonna, the first of these officers whose reports
remain, says (1566):
“The tax gatherers and others dependent on them use
against these unhappy people, in one way and another, strange and horrible
tyrannies. It would be a matter worthy of your clemency immediately to abolish
so odious and barbarous exactions, since to maintain them is to abandon these
wretched men to most cruel serpents, who lacerate and devour them entirely, or
oblige the few of them who remain to escape into Turkey, following the footsteps
of innumerable others who, from time to time, have gone away from this cause”.
Then from Garzoni (1586):
“In all the villages in which I have been, I have seen
the houses of the inhabitants, in the greater part of which there is not be
seen any article for the uses of dress or table; and for food, they are without
bread or corn; they have no wine; their women are despoiled, their children
naked, the men slightly covered, and the house emptied of everything, without
any sign of human habitation. And this wretched people is compelled by
established custom to give to the cavaliers two angarie [twelve
days’ work] each per annum, and is obliged also by ancient regulation to work
as much more as the cavalier may need for the pay of eight soldini a day, which amounts to a gazetta [two Venetian soldi, or about one penny]
and a fifteenth, introduced by them two hundred years ago, and not since
increased. They are obliged to keep chickens and hens according to the number
of doors [I do not feel sure of having properly translated this expression,
obscure in the original], their masters having applied the term of doors to
houses, which are built by the peasants themselves, and have no kind of use of
doors, because the Cavaliers, industrious for their own advantage, make doors
as frequently as possible to increase the number of royalties. The beasts of
labor, called donnegals, are obliged to
plough a certain quantity of land, for which, planted or not, the peasant must
pay the third. The donnegals are
also obliged to work two angarie per
annum. Mules and other beasts of transport must make two voyages to the city
for the master. Animals of pasture the tenth, and a thousand other inventions
to absorb all the productions of the land. If the peasant has a vineyard
planted (the ground always belonging to the Cavaliers) and trained by him,
although on land before wild, he must pay to the master, before marking the
division for the royalty (which by ancient regulation gives one-third to the
Cavalier and two to the peasant), five measures, called mistaches, for each vineyard, under pretext that he
has eaten part before the vintage, for the use of the pattichier [in
Crete, even now, an open shallow kind of vat built in the fields, of flat
stones, and cemented, in which the grapes are trampled], and under other most
dishonest inventions. And to increase still more the royalty, they divide the
vineyard into so many parts that few return more than fifteen mistaches, in such a way that with fraud founded on
force they take two-thirds for themselves and give one to the peasant.
“There are chosen for judges of their country, as I
have said, Castellans—writers who serve as secretaries; and Captains to look
after the robbers, who all set rapaciously to rob these poor people, taking
what little any of them may have hidden from the Cavaliers under pretext of
disobedience, in which the peasant abounds, by reason of his desperation, so
that he is in every way wretched. The Castellans cannot by law judge the value
of more than two sequins, although by some regulation they are allowed
authority to the sum of two hundred perperi,
about fourteen sequins; and because they have eight per cent, for the charges
they make, all causes amount to two hundred perperi,
however small it may be, in order to get their sixteen of charges, with
thousand other inventions of extortion to eat up the substance of the poor. The
Captains, whose name indicates their functions, have their use from robberies,
and always find means to draw their advantage from the same, plundering the
good and releasing the guilty, to the universal ruin. . . . The men chosen for
the galleys are in continual terror of going, and those who have the means,
with whatever difficulty, from some vineyard, or land, or animals, throw all
away unhesitatingly for a trifling price to pay for their dispensation, which
costs fifteen or twenty sequins—expense which they cannot support. The poorest,
hopeless of their release, fly to the mountains, and thence, reassured by the
Cavaliers, return to their villages, so much the more enslaved as they are
fearful of justice, and by their example make the other villagers more
obedient, attributing to the Cavaliers the power of saving them from the
galleys... To which, add the extortions to which they are subjected by a
thousand accidental circumstances, execution of civil debts, visits of rectors
and other officers, to whom they are obliged to give sustenance at miserable
prices.
So that the peasantry, oppressed in this manner, and
harassed in so many ways, annoyed by the reasonings of the Papists, and made
enemies of the Venetian name, ... are so reduced by the influences I have
enumerated, that I believe I can say with truth that, with the exception of the
privileged classes, they desire a change of government, and though they know
they cannot fall into other hands than those of the Turks, yet, believing they
cannot make worse their condition, incline even to their tyrannical rule”
I extract from the opinion of Fra Paolo Sarpi (1615), a more Jesuitical, and, it would seem,
more palatable advice to the Senate, since it was, in the end, and to the end
followed: “For your Greek subjects of the island of Crete, and the other
islands of the Levant, ... the surest way is to keep good garrisons to awe
them, and not use them to arms or musters, in hope of being assisted by them in
extremity; for they will always show ill inclination proportionably to the
strength they shall be musters of ... Wine and bastinadoes ought to be their
share, and keep good nature for a better occasion ... If the gentlemen of these
colonies do tyrannize over the villages of their dominion, the best way is not
to seem so see it, that there may be no kindness between them and their
subjects; but, if they offend in anything else, it will be well to chastise
them severely, etc. ... And in a word, remember that all the good that can come
from them is already obtained, which was to fix the Venetian dominion, and for
the future there is nothing but mischief to be expected from them”.
What a pity that Sarpi had
not lived before Dante, that he might have been niched in the “Inferno”:
Questo é de' rei del fuoco furo.
I have only space to epitomize a passage of the
history of Crete, under the Venetians, to show how utterly infamous, unjust,
and devilish was their régime. In the beginning of the sixteenth century, the
provinces of Selino, Sfakia,
and Rhizo seceded, and established an
independent government, which was for some time unmolested by the Venetian
authorities. The governor of the seceded republic finally presuming to ask in
marriage for his son the daughter of a Venetian noble, the latter, to revenge
the insult, plotted with the governor of Chania and, pretending to consent,
lured the family of the soi-disant Greek governor, with a
company of nearly 500 of his compatriots, to the marriage feast. The guests
having been intoxicated and gone to sleep, and the signal given to the
authorities at Chania, the governor came with 1,700 foot and 150 horse, took
the whole prisoners, and in various ways and different places massacred them,
except a few who were sent to the galleys.
This was followed up, for the better terrifying of the
seditious, by a raid on the village of Foligniaco,
near Mournies, and on the edge of the plain of
Chania, in which they took the whole population prisoners asleep, burned the
village, hanged twelve of the primates, ripped open three or four pregnant
women, wives of the principal people, put to death and exiled the whole
population remaining, except five or six who escaped. The Provveditore then called on all the Greeks of the
lately revolted district to come in and surrender themselves, but, as they
naturally declined, they were put under a ban which is perhaps the most
horrible sentence ever given by a civilized community. No
inhabitant of the proscribed district could secure his life except on condition
of bringing in the “head of his father, brother, cousin, or nephew”
“At length a priest of the family of the Pateri-Zapa entered the city, accompanied by his two
sons and by two of his brothers, each of the mournful party carrying in his
hand a human head. (Of the five heads, the first belonged to the son of the
priest, the second to one of his brothers, the third to his son-in-law, and the
fourth and fifth to sons of one of his brothers.) The wretched men placed their
bleeding offerings before the Signor Cavalli and the other representatives of
Venice, and with the bitterest tears stated whose heads they were. The facts
were duly established by witnesses; even the governor who had been sent to
Crete to extirpate the seditious Greeks was moved, and the law was at length
abolished”
This was under the auspices of Christianity. Under the
Crescent, things were at first better, but finally such as to cause wonder how
there is still a Cretan people, considering that even Dante could say:
“Nel mezzo 'l mar siede un paese guasto
Diss'egli allora che s'appella Creta”.
The Venetian rule had reduced the population of the
island to about 160,000, the tenth of its probable number under the Byzantine
emperors. The anticipations of Garzoni were
to the full realized, for the Cretan, favoring the Turkish conquest, made it
possible, and avenged himself in the way of the weak. The Turks, in recompense
for the important assistance rendered them by the Cretans, exempted them from
conscription or military tax, but learned no lesson from their conquered enemies,
and, until the cession of the island to Egypt in 1830, Crete was the scene of
the most unbridled license of individuals and fanaticism of sects.
In passing from the Venetian to the Turkish despotism
the Cretans had exchanged bad for worse. The Venetian was oppressive to the
last degree in pecuniary extortions, but the Turk brought in slavery of another
form—the harem and all its horrors to a captive people, even then celebrated
for the beauty of its women. The Turkish rule has never been, and probably
never will be, anything but piracy—the rule of the strong hand. The great
object of government was to wring from the governed the largest possible amount
of plunder; it is so still. No motive of civilized government has ever yet
entered into the head of the Ottoman. The development of a country’s resources,
even to increase its revenues, has never been thought of. A race of nomad
conquerors, holding the land as if it waited the trumpet that should expel it,
and could only reap where its predecessors had planted, but never from its own
sowing, it has extorted, butchered, and enslaved, without leaving behind it
more than its bones to fertilize the soil. The noble public works which marked
the Venetian regime in Crete were allowed to fall into decay, the walls of the
cities show the shot-holes made by the siege-guns, only filled up when it was
necessary to keep the wall from falling.
Of the early period of Turkish rule in Crete we know
little. Pirates keep no record; and the only insurrection of any note we hear
of was that of 1770, which seems to have been mainly a Sphakiote affair, and to have resulted, on the whole, favorably for the mountaineers,
from their having been allowed to maintain a virtual independence, as up to
1860 no Turkish garrison was ever permitted in Sphakia.
The fortress of Samaria has not been, in the records of modern history,
penetrated by an enemy in arms.
From 1770 to 1821, the condition of Crete was that of
a man on the rack. The conquests and the advantages of apostasy had induced many
Christians to become Mussulmans; others followed from the bitter persecutions
which began soon after the insurrection of 1770, and made the life of the
Christian in the plains utterly intolerable. The former class generally became,
ipso facto, fanatical persecutors of their late fellow-Christians, and the
children or grand-children of the converts became oblivious of their ancestors’
creed and relations, and as, under the Koran, they lapsed into a more complete
ignorance than the Christians, they soon became as fanatic as any. The influx
of Turks was never considerable, but the Cretan Mussulmans, becoming the
governing class, disposed of the lives and properties of their Christian
fellow-countrymen entirely at their will. Their agas, or chiefs, by force of
character became captains of bands of these Janissaries, as they were called,
and established a sway beside which the Venetian was a bed of feathers. The
Venetian was inhuman; the Janissary was devilish. I have known several men who
lived in the island while the Janissary government was in full force, and who
have testified to me of the occurrence of such horrors as no system of slavery
known since the establishment of Christianity can show.
Every rayah (beast or domesticated
animal) was utterly at the mercy of his aga, who could kill, rob, or
torture him at will, without responsibility before any law, or any obligation
towards him. If the aga wanted money, he went to any rayah he
suspected of being possessed of any, and ordered him to hand it over. If he
wanted work done, he ordered the rayah to do it. If he fancied
the rayah’s wife or daughter, he went to his house, and ordered the man out of
it until his lust was satisfied, and if any resisted he was killed like a dog.
If a Christian celebrated his nuptials with a girl of great beauty, he received
from the aga a handkerchief with a bullet tied in the corner of it,
and if he did not at once send his bride to the aga he paid the
penalty with his life. The only resource was to fly to the mountains before the aga had
time to send his men to seize him. Most of the beautiful girls and women were
sent to the mountains as a precaution, which is probably one reason why the
women of the higher mountain districts are so much more beautiful than those of
the lowlands.
The Janissaries even ruled the governors sent by the
Sultan, and deposed or assassinated them when they did not please. Needless to
say that the poor islanders had no hope of justice as against their tyrants. It
was forbidden to any Christian except the archbishop to enter the city gates on
horseback, and, the Bishop of Chania having transgressed this law, the
Janissaries took him prisoner, and determined to burn him and all his priests.
About to carry out this decision, the Pasha intervened, and to pacify them
issued an order that no Christian man should sleep in the walls of Chania, and
accordingly the whole adult male population was mustered out every night,
leaving their wives and children in the city. There is hardly room to wonder
that the Cretan is still a liar, rather wonder that he is still a man, with
courage to revolt and die, considering that only one generation has intervened
between him and a slavery more abject than any domestic servitude the civilized
world knows of.
The oppression became more and more brutal and blind,
and the Cretans, crushed and stupefied, thought of nothing but saving life by
the most abject submission. Even when the agitation which led to the Greek war
of independence began, the Cretans were not moved; but in June of 1821, the
Mussulmans massacred a large number of Christians, some thousands, in the three
principal cities. This was followed up by a demand that all the Christians
should give up their arms, a demand which was followed by the revolt of Sphakia, the mountaineers having never consented to this
degradation. The rising of the district about Ida followed, and the war was so
vigorously carried on that in a month the open country was almost entirely
cleared of Mussulmans.
This stage of the war developed a man whose name has
become one of the historical in Crete, Antoni Melidoni.
Collecting a small band of bold men, he swept from one end of the island to the
other, falling on the negligently guarded posts, and taking them by storm in
rapid succession. His hardihood knew no impossibilities, disparity of numbers
made no difference in his calculations, he measured moral forces alone, and
flung his sword and name into the scale against any opposing numerical force.
Surrounded at night by superior forces, he led a charge sword in hand on the
hostile circle, broke it, and drove the Pasha’s army from the field, not
permitting its disordered masses to reform until the walls of Heraklion
sheltered them. A detachment that made a sortie to attack him was destroyed,
and another victory following this, the Pasha of Heraklion, expressing
admiration of his prowess, begged to be favored with an interview. The Cretan
hero, trusting himself to no temptation, treachery, or delay, replied that the
Pasha would soon be his prisoner, and that then he might look at him as much as
he liked. And the prophet fulfilled the prediction to the letter.
So far, however, Christian and Turk fought on equal
terms. No discipline entered on either side—the Janissary fought the partisan,
and the superior enthusiasm of liberty turned the scale in favor of the
Christian. They had yet to meet their strongest foes—internal dissension and
disciplined force. The first did its work quickly, and Melidoni was
assassinated by Russos, the Sphakiote chief, in jealousy of his dominant influence. A Moreote chieftain, Afendallos, was sent from Greece to replace him, but,
incapable and without control of the Cretans, his command was in every way
unfortunate, and he was superseded by a French Philhellene of ability, Baleste, who for a moment restored the fortunes of Crete,
but, deserted by the wretched Afendallos in
the heat of battle, and the Cretans being carried away in panic by the
example, Baleste was surrounded by the
Turks and killed. At the same time, an Egyptian army coming in to reinforce the
exhausted and demoralized Janissaries, the war became for the Christians a
series of disasters, relieved for a time by the management of Tombasis, a Hydriote chief,
who again cleared the open country of the Turks, and laid siege to Chania. The
arrival of new forces from Constantinople obliged him to retire to the
highlands, and an Egyptian fleet arriving debarked a fresh army, which,
marching into the interior, surprised a great number of villages, and in a
single raid put to the sword nearly 20,000 men, women, and children. Tombasis, watching his opportunity, fell on a small
detachment of Egyptians, and cut them to pieces. The Christians rallied, and,
swarming down from the mountains, assailed the retiring army with such fury
that they killed 7,000 men.
A new Egyptian expedition of 10,000 troops with a
large squadron reinforced the Ottoman army, and the commander, Ismail
Gibraltar, so-called from having been the first Turk to sail beyond the Straits
of Gibraltar, an able, adroit, and comparatively humane man, began to assail
the Sphakiotes on their weak side, and
induced them by bribery to withdraw from the hostilities. The other districts,
many times decimated, had not the force to maintain the struggle, and Tombasis, after making a vain effort to rally the elements
of another struggle, abandoned the island, which submitted almost entirely.
Thousands of the most devoted and patriotic Cretans went to Greece, where they
fought bravely for the common nationality. We see still on the plains of Athens
the tomb of the corps that perished there to a man refusing to turn their backs
to the Turk.
After the battle of Navarino (20 October 1827), the
insurrection broke out anew; an expedition from Greece under Kalergis captured Grabusa by
stratagem, Kissamos was taken by siege; soon the
Cretan Mussulmans (the regular Egyptian forces being engaged in the Morea) were
shut up again in the three fortresses of Chania, Rethymno,
and Heraklion, and would soon, in all probability, either have abandoned the
island or have perished in it, had not the three allied powers decided that
Crete should be united to the government of Mehemet Ali, and notified their
decree to the Christian population.
The establishment of the Egyptian régime was
at first productive of great relief to the Christian population, as Mehemet Ali
had shrewdness enough to comprehend that their oppression would be the disfavor
of the Christian powers, now for the first time clearly recognized to be
mistresses of the fortunes of the Ottoman Empire, and to perceive that for
material prosperity the Christian element was far more available than the
Mussulman, corrupted and degraded by long unchecked and unmeasured abuse of
power, and dependence on servitude of others, the most hopeless of all slavery.
Order was re-established, and political organization, which Crete had never
known, was introduced, exiles began to return, and all promised a better régime
than any Cretan could have hoped for under foreign rule.
The Pasha, in his designs of obtaining complete
independence, saw also that he must someday count the Turkish population of
Crete as his enemies; all these causes combined gave the Christians an
advantage over the Mussulman element. After a time, however, the pirate’s
instincts took the predominance, and Mehemet Ali, well assured of his
possession, began to measure the capacity of the island for extortion of taxes.
The promises made at the time of pacification were unheeded, imposts succeeded
each other, until the population, alarmed, had recourse to their immemorial
expedient of an assembly, and, several thousand strong, Christian and Mussulman
alike, they met at Murnies, unarmed and
accompanied by their families. This habit of so assembling has from ancient
times played an important part in the history of Crete, and was known as
Syncretism. To this day, every crisis and every important measure referring to
the general welfare is discussed in a full assembly of deputies of the whole
population.
The assembly of Murnies was
peaceful; no one brought his arms, no violence of any kind was perpetrated on
any interest or person. The assembly petitioned the protecting powers for
redress and the fulfillment of the promises made at their submission, but the
indifference of the soi-disant Christian powers to everything
that implied the rights of the subject had already descended on the Greeks, so
lately emancipated by the “untoward event”; and the French and English
residents at Alexandria, more charmed by Egyptian music than the claims of
justice, heard what was agreeable to the Viceroy, and the English agent even
advised him to make an example of insubordination which should save him any
future trouble. So encouraged, the arbiter of life or death to this brave
people sent orders to execute a number of persons, both Christian and
Mussulman. The Governor, Mustapha Pasha, now known as Mustapha Kiritli (Cretan), a hard and barbarous Albanian, bred
in the brutalities of the long wars with the Christians, readily complied, and
seized a number of persons at Chania indifferently. At the same time, the same
orders were sent to other provinces, and a general and simultaneous execution
took place. Many of the victims had no connection with the assembly, nor does
the number or quality seem to have been fixed.
The Albanian butcher caught the spirit of his master’s
order, and hanged at random. Pashley says that thirty-three were hanged, but
perhaps he had a desire to diminish the enormity of the deed for which he
declares the English agent at Alexandria to have been largely responsible.
Residents at Chania at that time have assured me that over eighty were hanged
at Murnies, and the then Austrian consul at
Chania has repeatedly declared to me that there were several hundred victims,
and that he himself had seen the bodies hanging on the trees of Murnies, until the whole air round was infected by them.
This was in 1833, and until 1840 the Butcher held the island tranquil under the
rod of his menace.
In 1840, insurrectionary movements took place, which
were attributed to English influence, and said to be encouraged by the English
admiral at Suda. I have heard from residents at
Chania (non-Cretan) that the admiral facilitated the introduction of
muskets and ammunition, and advised the chiefs to ask for an English
protection. This proposition was favored at the assembly of that occasion, but
the Turkish authorities secured its rejection by persuading secretly the chiefs
that their choice would be between annexation to Greece and English protection,
and as, of course, they preferred the former, the project was unanimously
rejected, having secured which, and the consequent English indifference,
Mustapha, by an energetic blow, suppressed the movement.
In 1858, a similar crisis was made use of by the
French government, whose agent openly took the part of the insurgents, bullied
the authorities, and encouraged the Cretans to look for French support. The
assembly was held at Nerokouros, and petitioned
the Sultan for relief from the most weighty grievances of the population. It
was at once determined to suppress the movement, like the former, by force, but
disturbances breaking out in the Christian provinces of Turkey, and the
attitude of France causing distrust, the Porte finally yielded, made the
concessions demanded, and the assembly broke up. This outbreak was remarkable
for one incident which may have had much to do with the solution arrived at.
The government had determined to obtain from its adherents an address in
opposition to that of the assembly, and it was considered needful to have the
signature of the Bishop of Chania.
This prelate, one of the most worthy and pious bishops
Crete has had in modern times, refused to sign, and compulsion was applied, the
Bishop being shut up in a room with the council, and a pen put into his hand
and applied to the paper by force. But he resisted all pressure, declaring
that, if they killed him, he would not sign what he knew to be a falsehood.
This contest of will lasted hours, when the physique of the Bishop gave way,
and he fainted, not having yielded. He was earned to his house in great
excitement, which rapidly spread and increased, until he died in the course of
the day. The Cretans regarded him as a martyr, and his death fired them with
still greater enthusiasm.
Never was moment more favorable for insurrection; and
that the Cretans contented themselves with such moderate demands as the relief
of some of the newest and most oppressive taxes, and yielded on the
promise only of redress, dispersing quietly to their homes, shows that
they were not, as they were represented by unfriendly writers, disposed to
factiousness and insurrection.
The promises made in 1858 were never fulfilled—if
there is honor amongst thieves, there is none amongst Turks; and when, at the
death of Abdul Medjid, his successor, Abdul
Aziz, was reminded of the promises made to the Cretans, he replied that he was
not bound by the engagements of his predecessors, and Cretan reforms lapsed
into the abyss of good (and bad) intentions. From that time the island was
moved by discontent. The next governor, Ismail, a clever, cunning Greek
renegade, charlatan in everything but intrigue, of the worst possible faith and
honesty, avaricious, mendacious, and cruel, but plausible and persuasive,
succeeded in delaying agitation by promises and bribes, by dividing the chiefs
one against the other, till 1864, when another assembly was held, and another
petition drawn up and delivered to the governor to be forwarded to Constantinople,
when the assembly dispersed. Ismail immediately convoked an assemblage of his
adherents, and had a counter-petition forwarded, assuring the Porte of the
perfect content of the Cretans with their governor and their state. The true
petition was never heard of again, but the bearers of the false one received
the Medjidieh, and Ismail the thanks of the
Sultan, with presents which he valued much more.
The ensuing winter was one of great distress, and the
spring passed without renewal of the disturbances or petitions, but in the
autumn of that year, after my arrival in the island, I heard that there would
be an assembly the following spring, 1866. The discontent was very great. New
taxes on straw, on the sale of wine, on all beasts of burden, oppressive collection
of the tithes, together with short crops for two years in succession, had
produced very great distress, and the Governor added to these grievances his
own extortions, with the most shameful venality in the distribution of justice,
and disregard of such laws of procedure and punishment as existed. The councils
were absolute mockeries, and the councilors his most servile tools. The summer
of my arrival, I was told by the surgeon of the civil hospital of a death that
had just occurred under his care, in prison, of an old man, arrested for an
offence which his son had committed, and because the son could not be found.
Men accused of offences by Ismael’s partisans were
thrown into prison, and kept indefinite periods without trial until some friend
went to bribe his accuser. Ismael never went out into the island for fear of
assassination, so well did he know the hatred borne him. This was the state of
the island when I arrived in 1865.
CHAPTER I.
THERE was an annual fair at Omalos in the month of April, and I had intended to make this the occasion of a
journey through Sphakia. The Pasha was very earnest
in counselling me not to go, and magnifying difficulties for the passage; but
this only made me more disposed to go, if only to cross his humor, as he had
been exceedingly annoying to me, and we carried on a polite war, defensive on
my side, but on his, part of a systematic course of bullying the consuls in
order to diminish their influence with the people. His tactics were to
encourage infractions of the consular prerogatives, imprison their employees or
protégés, make questions at the custom-house, etc. He had, immediately after my
arrival, got up a question with me, a patrol of zaptics (Albanian
police) having entered the consulate to seize and carry off one of the sons of
the vice-consul, who resided in the consulate.
I demanded an apology, which he refused. We then
exchanged sharp notes, first in French, and then on his part in Turkish, to
which I replied in English—a mutual checkmate. Meeting him at a whist party
just after, he complained that I had written in English, and he had been
obliged to hunt Chania for three days in order to find some person in
confidence who could translate it for him, to which I replied that after four
days’ search for a person whom I could admit into the secrets of the consulate,
I had been finally obliged to have recourse to the public interpreter. He
thereupon promised to write in French, and in this language the diplomatic
broil went on. The beginning of the row had been an exchange of words between
the patrol and the offending protégé. Whose the fault
of the first word was an open question, but one with which mine had nothing to
do, as no provocation justified infringement of the consular privilege of
exterritoriality. The zapties were
put on trial. I had four witnesses, who deposed that they saw them in the
house. The four zapties swore that
they had not entered the doors, and the Pasha declined to render judgment
against them, saying that, as there were four witnesses for and an equal number
against, the truth could not be ascertained. I demanded that the testimony
should be taken down for transmission to Constantinople, whither I intended to
appeal. By this time the affair occupied the whole attention of the population
of Chania, a large majority being on my side, and the declaration of my
intention to refer the affair to Constantinople annoyed the Pasha very much, as
he saw that he would be compelled to make excuses. He, ingeniously, in taking
the testimony of my witnesses, omitted administering the oath, while he
administered it to his own. When, therefore, the certified copy of the
proceedings was delivered me, I called in the parish priest, and took the
evidence anew under oath, affixed it to the record, and sent it all on. This
was having a trump too many for him, as he had intended to invalidate the
evidence of my witnesses on the ground that they had refused to take the oath.
Judgment was delivered in Constantinople, ordering the
apology to be made for violation of domicile, and the minister on my part
engaged my protégé to make a declaration that he. had not had any intention of
insulting the authorities. But, with this positive order communicated to both
of us, he denied for several weeks that he had had any orders on the subject;
but as I stuck to the affair like a leech, having nothing else to absorb my
energies, he finally admitted judgment, and ordered the mulazim to ask my pardon, but cunningly managed
to have the amends made in his own audience-room to escape éclat. I said
nothing, but waited until he made me a visit, and without any warning
introduced my culprit; and before he knew what was passing, the Roland was
delivered for his Oliver. He did not attempt to conceal his annoyance, nor I my
satisfaction, for he had notified me that he expected our apology chez lui. This was not the end of the Liliputian diplomatics, for
on my next visit to him the Tasha insisted on presenting me with an intaglio,
which, he said, he had bought of a peasant some days before. He knew that I was
an amateur of gems, and he was a collector, and had several very fine ones. The
intaglio was exquisite, but the genuineness doubtful, and, when he insisted on
forcing it on me in spite of my repeated refusals, I accepted it, with the
intention of sending it to the government if genuine, so as not to be tinder
obligations to him. Reaching home, I drew a file across it, and found it to be
a paste copy worth a dime. I immediately wrote him a note, enclosing the file,
and telling him that, as he was a buyer of gems, and might not know how well
they were counterfeited, I begged to enclose him an instrument I had found very
useful.
After this skirmish, the general result of which, enormously
magnified in popular report, was a mortifying defeat to the Pasha, merely from
the obstinacy with which he had fought the question, we got into a chronic
state of pique, and my resolution to go to Omalos and Sphakia put him into a great irritation. He had no
right to oppose my going, but tried to make trouble, and began to talk about
intrigues, etc. However, the news coming down from the mountains that the fair
was to be turned into an Assembly stopped me, for a Cretan imbroglio is
something into which no wise man will allow himself to be drawn voluntarily. On
the 12th of April, the Assembly began to gather at Omalos,
whence it moved to Boutzounaria, then to Nerokouro, nearer to Chania, where it remained until the
gathering was nearly complete, when it moved back to Boutzounaria.
CHAPTER II.
THE real agitation began when the Assembly finally
adjourned to Boutzounaria, a tiny village at the edge
of the plain of Chania. Three thousand men were assembled on a little plateau
overlooking the plain, and about three miles from the city. Here gushes out of
the living rock the stream which supplies the city with water, by an aqueduct
which dates from the Hellenic times. Metellus cut it
when he laid siege to Cydonia, and the Cretans in the war of Greek independence
repeated the offence, and though, in the latter case, the siege was raised by a
fleet and army coming to the assistance of the Turks, the sufferings produced
by cutting off the water were very great.
From here the people had a safe retreat into their
fastness above, and had nothing to fear from the Turkish forces. They came
unarmed, but kept patrols at night on all the roads leading from the city to
guard against surprise. By day they could observe the whole plain from Suda to Platania; and here,
looking down on the orange groves of Murnies and Perivoglia, the wide expanse of olive orchards, and the
fields where thousands of sheep, the property of Mussulmans mainly, feed while
the herbage is green with the spring rains, they passed the time much after the
old Greek fashion, games of agility and strength occupying the time of the
young, while the old discussed the affairs of state; but no disorder occurred
during the session of the Assembly proper.
Sheep were roasted whole, the messengers came and went,
deputations from the further districts came in slowly, others whose affairs
demanded their presence at home went away, there being none of those professed
politicians who live by attending conventions, and making the public harm their
good, so that there could be no vicarious expression of opinion.
Finally, all was done, the ne plus ultra of democracy
had said its say, and signed its name for the indignant regards of the most
despotic of sovereigns. A solemn deputation of gray-headed captains of villages,
the executive committee, brought to each of the consuls a copy of the petition,
and consigned the original to the Governor for transmission to Constantinople.
This functionary had been growing uneasy about the apparent unanimity and
deliberateness of the Assembly, and, having cast his lead occasionally and
found the water deeper than he thought, began to be anxious to see the Assembly
dispersed. The moral force of the recognition by the consular corps of the
peaceful and legal character of the meeting had dissuaded him from interrupting
its labors; but, the petition once delivered, he peremptorily ordered the
Cretans to go home and wait the answer, intending to repeat the trick he had so
successfully tried before, namely, arresting the chiefs and calling a
counter-assembly; and, further ordering the committee to disperse, it refused.
This was the position into which the Pasha had desired
to draw the Cretans. Their Assembly was perfectly legal, they having a firman which permitted them to meet unarmed,
the Porte having long before seen the impolicy of depriving them of a custom
which was of so great antiquity and reverence; but the Pasha hoped to give an
illegal color to their refusal to obey his order, and, according to his habit
of making his will the supreme law, determined to make use of their persistence
in their rights to precipitate the collision which he knew they were unprepared
for; and, having once excited armed resistance, even against an illegal use of
authority, he confidently counted on the support not only of his own
government, but of the consuls. To this end, he called a conference of the
consular corps, at which, having stated the measures he had taken, he declared
his intention to use the military force at his disposal to disperse the Assembly.
In this conference, a division was shown as to the advisability of using force.
The French consul (a Levantine of the lowest order, a
bastard of one of the De Lesseps family by a Jewish adventuress, and an intense
hater of the Greeks ever since the society of Syra,
where he was once Chancelier de Consulat, refused to recognize his mistress, a
retired saltimbanque from a cafe chantant
of the Champs Elysées) supported the Pasha in
everything, and even urged him to greater arbitrariness.
The English consul, Mr. Dickson, a man of the most
humane character and entire honesty, had an unfortunate weakness before
constituted authorities, and the greatest possible respect for the Turks,
coupled with an Englishman’s innate dislike for a Greek. He had his orders, moreover,
to cooperate with his French colleague, and, with his good faith and
unsuspecting nature, he was no match for his intriguing and mendacious
yoke-fellow, who led him wherever he wished. It was like coupling a faithful
mastiff to a dirty bazaar dog. These two supported the Pasha from very
different motives, but with the same result. All the others opposed any
violence as inexpedient and unjustifiable, being entirely assured of the
peaceful intentions of the committee.
Ismael opened the discussion by rehearsing his labors
with the Assembly to induce them to submit and disperse, and declared that,
having exhausted persuasion, he should employ force if the committee did not at
once dissolve. Mr. Dickson said that his Excellency deserved great credit for his
moderation, and hoped that he would continue to show the same quality, adding
that thus far the Assembly had behaved in a strictly legal manner, being
convoked in accordance with their privileges, but admitted that, if they
refused to disperse on order, they rendered themselves amenable to force. M. Derché, the French consul, urged their immediate violent
dispersal, but the others all declared their opinion that, the Assembly having
met for a legal purpose, and having so far comported themselves in an entirely
unoffensive manner and showed no intention of going beyond the object for which
they had met, the Pasha had no pretext for the employment of force.
Mr. Colucci, the Italian consul, then stated that he
had received information that the committee had expressed their willingness to
disperse on receiving the assurance that the signers of the petition should not
be persecuted by the Pasha, and that he considered that the Governor owed this
assurance, since he and all others admitted that the Assembly and committee had
so far committed no illegal act. His Excellency dodged the suggestion, and,
rising, was about to dismiss the conference, when, seeing that all was on the
point of being won to the arbitrary course of the Pasha, I begged to offer my
protest against any implied endorsement on my part of the proposed violence,
as, until the assurance of immunity had been given the Cretans, the peaceful
expedients for assuring tranquility had not been exhausted, or need for
employment of force arisen. The Italian, Russian, and other consuls followed me
in protest.
The Pasha, disconcerted, sat down again, and the
discussion was renewed. His Excellency hesitated, but Derché came to his relief with reasons for his not according the immunity asked,
saying that the Pasha had no right to compromise the intentions of his
government. I replied that there was no question of Constantinople in the
matter. The Cretans had confidence in the good-will of the Sultan, but not in
his Excellency. Mr. Dickson was of opinion that the assurance was already
implied in the Pasha’s promise to support the petition with the Porte, and
that, as the Assembly had committed no act to deserve persecution, it could not
be supposed that they would be subjected to it. He therefore regarded the assurance
as uncalled for. Six consuls were against the Pasha, and two with him, but he
took M. Derché’s clue, and stood firm on
the ground which that led him to, and so the conference ended.
The Pasha had, however, failed in getting the moral
support of the consular corps to the blow which he had intended to strike, and
dared not send the troops out. He made a great blunder in calling the
conference, as the consuls had no right of intervention in the affair, but,
like all over-cunning people, he caught himself in the trap he set for us.
Having invited us not really to get our opinion, though he asked it, but to get
our endorsement to his policy, he not only failed in this, but got a rebuff
which made the experiment more hazardous than if he had said nothing. It had
another bad effect for him in making public the difference between his
Excellency and the consular corps, and, as the latter is believed in Turkish
countries to be omnipotent, the popular feeling was immensely strengthened. The
irritation of the Pasha against the consular corps was unbounded, especially
against Colucci and myself; indeed, I may say, peculiarly against myself as an
old enemy and the spokesman of the opposition.
Popular rumor magnified the difference, and myths as
wild as those of the day of Minos made the tour of the island; one which I saw
in a Greek newspaper represented me as rising in the conference and declaring
that, if the Pasha sent troops against the committee, I would go and put myself
in front of them, and then we should see if the troops dared fire!
Meanwhile, all the friendly consuls united in urging
the dissolution of the committee, and leaving the protection of individuals to
the governments of the protecting powers, as the only means of averting what
was seen to be a disastrous affair for the Cretans. That this was the true
policy events have shown.
The Cretans were not prepared to fight at that time,
their friends on the Continent were no more prepared to assist them, and there
was no supply of powder or arms in the island, nothing but old tufeks, trophies of the war of 1821-30; the whole
Turkish empire was at peace, and its available force ready to be poured on the
island. The committee wavered and half-decided to disperse, they offered to put
themselves as a committee into the hands of the Pasha, and await in his palace,
or other quarters assigned them, the reply to the petition. This was refused,
and the critical question hung by a hair.
The influence of two persons prevailed over the
committee against that of the consuls—one a priest called Parthenius Kelaides, there being two Parthenii in
the committee; the other a Greek physician, temporarily in the island, known by
the two names of Joannides and Pappadakis, long resident in England, an ultra-radical, and
one of those who, ultra-demagogical in all their tendencies, are really honest
in their intentions, and, wishing to do good, only succeed in doing the greater
evil.
In Crete, Dr. Joannides is
generally considered as the immediate cause of the disastrous turn events took,
and, as soon as the insurrection took active form, he abandoned it to its manifest
destiny, and has never been heard of since in the island. It has always been a
question if the Russian consul was sincere in his union with his colleagues of
the majority, it being thought by some that in his hostility, mainly personal,
to the French consul, he secretly took ground against the unconditional
submission, that the Pasha and M. Derché might not
carry the day. Be this as it may, I am confident that with regard to fighting
he was in accord with his colleagues, and considered that actual insurrection
should be avoided, and that the instructions of the government were to this
effect. But he was a man of very unsound judgment, and so passionate and
personal in his way of seeing men and matters that I have always been of the
opinion that, from mere personal feeling against Derché,
he secretly strengthened Parthenius, over whom his
influence was supreme, in his obstinacy, and so prevented the dispersal of the
committee, which finally withdrew to the mountains to be secure from a coup de
main. Before doing so, however, they offered to allow two or more battalions of
troops to guard them at Boutzounaria, a proposition
which the Pasha refused peremptorily, knowing that, so long as the committee
remained a constituted body, the Cretans would respect its authority, but that,
if they dissolved and dispersed, they would lose all right to act, or control
over the people. So ingrained is the Cretan’s regard for the law of his ancient
tradition that, while the whole population would have risen at once at the call
of the committee as long as it was constituted, not one of the districts would
have regarded an appeal made by the individual members when they had ceased to
represent in due form the original Assembly. The question at issue was not,
then, a trivial one, and in the reply to it lay the decision of peace or war.
CHAPTER III.
UNABLE to provoke a direct collision with the
committee, the Pasha had recourse to another expedient: he called in the entire
Mussulman population of the island to the walled cities. Totally unprepared for
this unnecessary step, the unfortunate Mohammedans broke up their
establishments of all kinds, and repaired to the fortresses in a state of the
greatest irritation at the sacrifice they had made and the privations they had
had to endure.
One complained that he had left his harvest uncut, and
another had left his after it had been garnered; one told how he had been
obliged, at a ruinous sacrifice, to dissolve partnership with a Christian
neighbor with whom he had been engaged in silk-growing, the chief industry of
the island, the Christian having no money to pay him for his share; and another
had thrown all his silk-worms to the fowls. The consuls, on becoming aware of
this movement, protested to the Pasha against a step so likely to produce
collisions between the two religions; on which the Pasha sent counter-orders to
his coreligionists to remain at home. The bearers of these orders met the
Mussulmans on the roads, and succeeded in halting several bodies of them, while
others, without provisions or protection from the weather, insisted on entering
the cities. This confusion and vacillation increased the suffering and
irritation of the people, and finally brought about the effect desired by the
Pasha—a feeling of hostility against the Christians. A large body of these
refugees encamped before the gates of Canéa, and
menaced the Pasha with insurrection if they were not permitted to enter. The
Pasha yielded, threw open the gates, and again sent secret messengers to invite
the fugitives en route to
come into the city.
Heraklion, Chania, and Rethymno were speedily filled to overflowing by an exasperated mob of fanatics, whose
menaces against the Christian population were neither measured nor secret. The
Christians remembered past insurrections, and most of them had been witnesses
of the scenes of 1858, when the armed Mussulmans had dragged the body of a
Christian they had killed through the streets of Chania, and before the
consulates, firing their pistols at the doors of the most obnoxious, and were
only prevented from wholesale massacre by European men-of-war in the port. The
entry of the Mohammedans was the signal for a panic with the Christians, and a
frantic exodus commenced. The Lloyd steamers were overcrowded every trip;
several Greek steamers came over, and caïques,
and sailing-boats even, were freighted full, and sailed for Milos, Cerigotto, and other islands. In Heraklion, unrestrained by
the presence of European representatives, the Mussulmans entered the houses of
the Christians by force, and obliged the latter to make room for them; the same
took place in Rethymno; while in Selinos the whole Christian population took to the mountains. Meanwhile, the Pasha had
informed his government that insurrection was imminent, and demanded
reinforcements of troops. These, beginning to arrive, exhilarated the Mussulman
population, who now began to prepare for hostilities, and their priests began
openly to preach a crusade against Christianity. A Dervish, who arrived with a
battalion in which he served as chaplain, landed with a green banner, spread
his carpet on the marina in front of the custom-house, and, after his prayer,
began to preach the holy war and the extermination of Christianity, declaring
that “the cross must no longer stand, but be put in the dust”. The rabble of
porters and boatmen, mainly Arabs, Syrians, and other foreign Mussulmans, and
intensely fanatical, were roused to the highest enthusiasm, and shouted
“Amin! amin!” to his exhortations, when he continued his itinerary of the
city. Information of the fact being brought to me, I took a witness of the
Dervish’s conduct, and remonstrated at once with the general-in-chief, Osman
Pasha, who ordered the Dervish on board a frigate and sent him to Heraklion,
where was no European to report his proceedings.
The emigration of Christians to Greece continued until
about 12,000 souls left the island, and at all points of contact mutual
irritation of Christian and Mohammedan increased. The hostility of the
Mussulmans to the consuls who opposed the Pasha became especially virulent, and
we were, openly and continually threatened with being the first victims of the
new crusade.
By this time it became evident to all in the island
that the Pasha was laboring to provoke a collision, and that M. Derché was doing his best to assist him, but neither side
seemed inclined to take the first step in open hostilities— the committee
because they did not desire them, and the Pasha because he desired to avoid the
responsibility of them. The first blood shed was of Christian by Christian, and
furnishes so good an illustration of Cretan manners that it seems worth
detailing. During the exchange of words which had taken place between the Pasha
and the Assembly, a messenger of the former, a Cretan Christian, was insulted
by one of the committee’s people, spit on, and bitterly reproached for his
unpatriotic subserviency. His son shortly after assassinated the insulter.
Both were Sphakiotes, a race with whom
blood-vengeance is a religious obligation. It was supposed that the
assassination was instigated by the Pasha as the means of bringing on
hostilities; and, when the relatives of the murdered man went to execute
justice on the murderer, they found the house fortified, and after a short
skirmish, during which a child of the murderer was killed by a ball fired
through the door, the attacking party retired to wait a more convenient
opportunity, and the Pasha sent a battalion of troops to the locality to
protect the murderer’s house, making no pretense whatever of bringing him to
judgment. The move very nearly succeeded in bringing on hostilities, a captain
of one of the adjoining villages, with his men, going at once to drive out the
intruding Turks. The committee sent a body of picked men to disarm the
villagers, in which they succeeded by stratagem, and so averted a collision.
Amongst the troops which arrived were 8,000 Egyptians,
and with them the general-in-chief of the Egyptian army, Schahin Pasha, an
accomplished diplomat and administrator of the Eastern type, munificent in
gifts and promises, and magnificent in ceremonies and negotiations. He came in
pursuance of a grand plan, concocted at Constantinople between the Marquis
de Moustier, the Turkish and Egyptian
governments, which was to coax or hire the Cretan chiefs into appealing to the
Viceroy for protection, when, on the application of the plebiscite, the island
was to be transferred to Egypt, on the payment by the Viceroy to the Sultan of
a certain consideration, said to be £400,000 down, and £80,000 per annum
tribute. De Moustier was to have received
£100,000 as payment for his services in managing the affair, and in due course
of time, it was whispered, the Bay of Suda, having
been duly fortified by the Egyptians and made a naval station, was to have been
transferred tale quale to France. Schahin, on arriving, placed
himself in relations with the French consul, and under his advice concocted the
plan of operations. It was a fatal mistake, and led to the ruin of the whole
intrigue. Derché could comprehend but two kinds of
men—those who are bought and those who buy them. He himself was of the former
class; Schahin was a prince in the latter. Derché’s opinion
of the Cretans was that any could be bought or frightened into their project,
and Schahin, accepting Derché’s estimate,
bid munificently for the votes of the Cretan chiefs, made presents to the
churches, startling professions of liberality towards the Christians, and
comported himself in the most approved style of Eastern potentates towards the
consuls and all other influential personages.
Having prepared, as he supposed, a favorable
reputation with the Cretan committee-men, he set out for the Apokorona, the rocky region which contains the passes to Sphakia, where the committee had moved its headquarters.
There he commenced direct operations by distributing large sums of money
amongst the influential Cretans, who, nothing loath, accepted the money, making
no promises. At this juncture, the Governor-General, getting wind of Schahin’s
plans, insisted on attending him during his interviews with the committee, and
joined him in the Apokorona. He had a plan of his
own, with which that of Schahin militated, and for which he had been for
several years pre paring. This was, having prepared and precipitated the
insurrection, and crushed it, as he confidently anticipated doing between
bribery and force, to draw up a petition for signature by the Cretans, praying
that the island might be made a principality, with Ismael as prince. He
therefore did all in his power to prevent an understanding between Schahin and
the committee. Many days passed thus in intrigues and counter-intrigues, until
Ismael was struck down by a dangerous fever, and was brought back to Canéa scarcely alive, leaving the field open to
Schahin, who thereupon made a rendezvous with the committee, but, with Egyptian
faith, arranged a battalion of troops so as to catch them as they came to keep
it. The wily mountaineers detected the trap, and broke off all communications,
so that Schahin was obliged to return to Chania having gained nothing, and
cursing the Cretans as a hard-headed, impracticable set of villains. He left,
however, 4,000 troops at Vrysis, an important
strategical point in the Apokorona, menacing the
approaches to Sphakia and the headquarters of the
committee, and holding the most direct communication between the eastern and
western parts of the island.
Having learned the worthlessness of M. Derché as a means of influencing the Cretans, he had begun
to enquire amongst the islanders whose influence would best be employed to
serve his purposes, and was referred to the Russian consul and myself; I
presume primarily to myself, from the fact that all the new proposals and
negotiations were directed at me, and, after many idle compliments and some
magnificent entertainments, his Excellency condescended to open his plans with
apparent frankness to me, and proposed to me in so many words to pay me any sum
I should name if I could bring to bear the influence necessary to secure the
success of the Egyptian scheme. I took his propositions into consideration, and
immediately communicated them to our minister at Constantinople, by whom they
were, I believe, laid before Lord Lyons, who, I presume, quashed the matter, as
it never was heard of more in the island.
Meanwhile, the agitation in the island, and the
hostility between the Mussulman and Christian population, were rapidly
increasing. One of the principal Cretan Mohammedans, notorious for his activity
and cruelty in the war of 1821-30, and who served the troops at Vrysis as guide and interpreter, was killed under the
following circumstances: Having entered a cafe in one of the Christian villages
near Vrysis, he was boastingly narrating his
former feats, amongst which was the murder of a white Christian family of
eleven persons, whom he found at supper in their own house unarmed, and, after
having been welcomed by them, he closed the doors, and killed the whole on the
spot. He continued boasting of what he would do in the coming war in the same
vein, and on leaving the cafe was waylaid by a relative of the murdered family,
and shot dead.
This was the first Mussulman blood, and the body was
carried with great pomp to Chania, and lay in state outside the gates, the
remonstrances of the consuls preventing it from being carried through the city
according to the intention of the relatives. The family of the new victim being
large and influential, it gathered in numbers outside the gate, blocking it up
temporarily, while the women of the connection went en masse to
the palace of the Pasha to demand vengeance on the murderers. The Mussulman
population became intensely exasperated, and proposed retaliating on the Christians
in general, beginning with the consuls. The whole consular body united in
pressure on the Pasha to induce him to repress the agitation, and succeeded so
far that no immediate outbreak occurred. The body was buried without worse
demonstrations than insults and menaces to all Christians, whoever and
wherever, and the crowd dispersed by order of the Pasha.
But though no actual violence occurred, the state of
excitement was intense, and it became evident that, in spite of all the
influence of the consular body, the least untoward incident might precipitate a
general massacre of the Christians in the cities. The exodus by sea continued,
and the houses of the Russian, Italian, and Swedish consuls, and my own,
at Khalepa, were besieged by terror-stricken
crowds of Christians without the means of emigrating to Greece, and bringing
their household goods to be stored under the protection of the flags. In the
Italian consulate alone were over 150, and several cabins clustered round my
door were filled with women and children, while hundreds more, abandoning
everything, took to the mountains.
The Mussulmans were anxious for the fighting to begin.
The Governor had distributed rifles and ammunition ad libitum to
his Cretan co-religionaries. The Russian and Italian consuls and myself urged
at Constantinople concessions and the removal of the Governor, and all except
the English and French begged for the dispatch of a man-of-war for the
protection of European residents. M. Derché and Mr.
Dickson, considering that the presence of any European flag would be an
encouragement to the insurrection, refused to unite in this request.
Several times the gates of the city had been closed to
prevent a sortie of the Mussulmans in the city to attack the consulates. We
doubled the number of our cavasses, got revolvers and rifles in order, prepared
mattresses for barricading the houses, and organized a strong patrol from the
Cretans who had taken refuge in the consulates, to watch the roads by which the
Turks would come from Chania.
At this juncture news arrived of the appointment of
the former Governor-General of the island, Mustapha Kiritli Pasha,
to supersede Ismael. The Imperial Commissioner, for this was the title by which
he was to be known, had great personal influence over the Cretans of both
religions, and, if he had come immediately on his appointment, would probably
have succeeded in averting the insurrection. I find in my correspondence of
this date, August 28, 1866:
“As to the insurrection itself, it waits to draw first
blood. The Greeks to the number of thirty to thirty-five thousand [an
enormously exaggerated estimate, I afterward found] are concentrated in the
mountains, and determined to fight it out to the bitter end. The delays of
diplomacy to right a wrong that was too patent even for your [English] consul
to blind himself to, have permitted a trouble to grow that might have been
rooted up with reasonable concessions on the part of the government, and now
nothing but death and desolation will bring back Crete to Turkish rule. They
will now insist on independence where they only demanded common justice. We
shall doubtless have another sanguinary, desperate struggle, and a depopulated
island, unless Europe intervenes to right the wrong it did in 1830”.
The troops in the Apokorona were face to face with the Cretans armed to protect the committee, and that
step forward would make a collision certain. The irregulars, proud of their new
rifles, were firing in every direction all over the country. One heard
rifle-balls whistling past, falling on the roofs and everywhere continually.
Still no European ships. By every post we pleaded with our ministers at
Constantinople for protection. The anxiety and excitement became almost
unendurable. The whole community seemed to be in a state of tension and
apprehension that approached madness. I found myself going continually and
unconsciously to my balcony, telescope in hand, although ten minutes before I
failed to discover an object in the range of vision. I grew, like the genius of
the Arabian tale in his vase of lead, ready to curse the tardy deliverer that
he tarried so long. The sight of a steamer on the horizon produced a loathing,
as one after another we had watched them approach only to see the accursed
crescent increase on our vision. One night a party of Mussulmans, passing
through the suburb in which we resided, in frolic fired several pistol-shots,
yelling “Death to the Christians!”. In a few minutes, all that remained of
Christianity in the quarter outside the gates of the consulates were rushing in
a state of uncontrollable panic to beg admission. My cavasses were obdurate and
indifferent, being Mussulmans, and refused to open, and, while I lay listening
for indications of further and serious disturbance, my wife had descended, thrown
the doors open, admitting the crowd of women and children, who passed the rest
of the night seated on the floor of the consulate. None of us left our walls
needlessly, and then only with an armed guard. My children for weeks did not
pass the threshold, and, when business called either of us, whom the Cretans
called the friendly consuls, to the palace of the Governor-General, we were
greeted passing through the streets with unmistakable scowls and menaces. The
sentinel at the city-gate as I passed one day, instead of presenting arms, as
etiquette requires to a consular officer, saluted me as an infidel dog,
accompanying the epithet with a menace and, grimace comprehensible even to one
who understood not a word of Turkish. I begged my wife at last to take the
children and go to Syra, where they would be in
security, but she resolutely refused, believing that her departure would be the
signal for the last panic among the Christian women, who depended on our
protection. Only they who know the extent and bitterness of Mussulman
fanaticism can estimate the danger or anxiety of those few weeks.
CHAPTER IV
THE first relief was the flying visit of Admiral Lord
Clarence Paget, in the Psyche dispatch-boat, direct from
Constantinople en route for
Malta, to inform us that the Arethusa had been ordered to
Crete. This was a reprieve of a few days, and was followed by complete freedom
from anxiety on the arrival of the Arethusa, the sound of whose
saluting guns at Suda Bay (the port of Chania for
large ships) produced an emotion which was like waking from a long nightmare.
We all went to Suda to pay our official and personal
visits, which the officers returned, and bluejackets swarming in the town, and
racing over the plain of Chania like mad fox-hunters, hilarious, indifferent
to yataghan or bullet, as if they were anything but Giaours,
assured both Turk and Christian that at least the Europeans must be respected.
We took down our barricades, and again moved about freely; yet the feeling was
so strong amongst the Mussulmans that the English were on their side that the
native Christians experienced no benefit from the cause which brought us
comparative relief. We attended service the Sunday subsequent to the arrival of
the Arethusa on board, and, lunching with Captain McDonald, were called from
the table to see the stars and stripes rounding the point and entering the bay.
They floated from the gaff of the corvette Ticonderoga, whose
commandant, being at Trieste, came for old friendship’s sake to look after us
on getting the first news of the insurrection. Her stay for a few days was a
demonstration of force which, so far as I was concerned, left a most healthy
impression as to my being supported by the United States Government, the more
that the Ticonteroga sailed from Suda direct for Constantinople (according to her
commander’s original intention), a course which produced a general impression
in Crete that she had gone to support my view on the question. Nothing could
exceed in friendliness and cordiality the manner in which the commander,
Commodore Steedman, and his officers supported me in my difficult position, and
identified the national dignity with the respect due to the humblest of its
representatives. The Arethusa, a few days after her arrival, was
succeeded by H. B. M.’s gunboat Wizard, which during several
subsequent months was our only and sufficient protector. Her humane and gallant
young commander, Murray, will ever be remembered with gratitude and honor by
every European resident in Crete during the insurrection. He placed us all
under obligations of many kinds which a passing notice can only faintly
recognize.
Meanwhile, the dissension between the Governor-General
and the Egyptian Pasha increased in violence, until anything like co-operation
became impossible, the policy of the latter being clearly pacific with a show
of force. He wished to avoid a collision as long as possible, hoping still to
conciliate Cretan public opinion, while Ismael was determined to do everything
in his power to bring about hostilities. The Egyptian therefore threw himself
for support on the consular body, from whom he received that degree of support
which their instructions and personal sympathies rendered possible, as, with
the exception of M. Derché, all the members of the
corps were anxious to prevent bloodshed.
The committee sent to the Italian and Russian consuls
and myself urgent entreaties that we would persuade the Egyptians to withdraw
from Vrysis, a position which provoked attack by
the Cretans, as, if maintained by the troops, it prevented all strategical
movements by the insurrectionary forces. This request we all urged on the
attention of Schahin, and he energetically demanded from the Governor-General
permission to withdraw the menaced battalions. The effective reply of the
Governor was to withdraw all the Turkish supports, and leave Schahin to his own
resources, compelling him to devote two of his four battalions remaining to keeping
open the communications of Vrysis with the
sea-shore. While this family quarrel paralyzed the government at Chania, the
Mussulmans in Selinos, a fortress on the south side
of the island, were shut in by strong guards of Christians posted on the hills
round about, and were even more impatient than at Canéa because
more inconvenienced, and finally made a sortie on one of the adjoining
Christian villages. They were fruitlessly warned back, and, persisting, were
fired upon, and several killed and wounded. Ismael immediately called a council
of war, and made a requisition on Schahin for a battalion of Egyptians to go
with another of Turks to the relief of the Seliniotes.
Schahin sent for me at once to advise him on the matter. I recommended him
strongly not to obey the requisition, as the breach of the peace having taken
place between the indigenes of the two religions justified him in assuming that
hostilities did not exist, and, according to his instructions, that he was
under no circumstances to be drawn into an offensive movement. He therefore
returned answer that, his battalions at Vrysis being
menaced, and this affair being only a collision between Cretans of the two
religions, he was not justified in withdrawing any of his remaining troops from
a position where they might be needed to secure the safety of those already
compromised, and declined to obey the requisition. The expedition was therefore
abandoned, though the steamers were lying in the roadstead with steam up ready
to transport the troops. At the same time, news arrived from Vrysis that the Cretans had concentrated at the
passes, and forbade the sending of any more supplies to the Egyptian camp,
under penalty of attack. This produced another request from Schahin to the
Russian consul and myself to urge the committee to take no such offensive step,
he promising at the same time not to make common cause with the Turkish troops,
even should they be attacked, so long as the Egyptian troops were not molested
in any way.
On the heels of this came news of another sortie from Selinos of the Mussulmans, which had been repulsed, as well
as another of the regular troops made in support of them. The receipt of this
news brought excitement in Chania to its culmination, and irritation toward the
insurgents (for such they had substantially become) began to find expression in
acts of violence to unoffending Christians in and about the city. A Christian
who kept horses for hire at the gates of the city, was attacked and beaten and
stabbed to death; immediately after, another, in the city, met the same fate;
and the authorities taking no notice whatever of these murders, the fanatics,
emboldened and having tasted blood, murdered, pillaged, and robbed in every
direction.
The panic which ensued amongst the few remaining
Christians was indescribable. Many started on foot, alone or in small parties,
for the mountains, but, having been entirely disarmed, most of them were cut
off and murdered on the way. Others, coming to the city in ignorance of these
events, were met and shot down on the roads. No one was allowed to carry arms
to defend himself, nor was any investigation made into these matters. The state
of the country for the next few days defies description. Gunshots were heard in
every direction, and the more friendly of the Mussulman peasantry brought news
of single bodies here, and groups there, by the roadside, in houses, and in
chapels, where they had taken refuge. No one dared go out to investigate the
truth of most of these reports, but the secretary of the Greek consul made an
excursion, accompanied by several cavasses, as far as Galatas,
a village of the plain, three miles from Chania, and counted seven dead bodies
naked by the way. By the seaside, between my house and the city, were the
slaughter-houses where all the cattle and sheep for the use of the city and
army were butchered. Here were ordinarily immense flocks of ravens, accustomed
to batten without disturbance on the offal thrown out on the shore. Within two
or three days the whole of those birds deserted the shore, where they did not
reappear for weeks, but were to be seen in small flocks hovering amongst the
olive-groves of the plain.
During this state of things, extreme hostilities broke
out at several points of the island. The messengers we had sent to the
committee to urge a truce with the Egyptians had not been permitted to pass the
lines, or for some other reason failed in reaching their destination, so that
our message was never received by the committee, who, in pursuance of their
previous resolution, summoned the Egyptians peremptorily to leave the Apokorona or take the consequences, and, the refusal being
equally peremptory, the committee ordered their forces to close at once upon
the troops, cut off access to the springs, and close the passage to all relief.
The unfortunate Egyptians, disastrously repulsed in an attempt to recover the
springs of water from which they had their daily supply, were driven within
their entrenched camp and closely blockaded. The battalions ordered to reopen
the communications, being also repulsed m their attack in the passes, and those
in camp having exhausted all their ammunition, food, and water, were compelled
to surrender at discretion. The Cretans permitted them to march out with their
arms and all of their equipments they could
carry, and gave them forty-eight hours to send mules without escort to carry
off the remainder. No parole even was exacted not to bear arms in future.
Simultaneously with this affair, the Turkish troops at Selinos, having made a sortie in force on the
Christians who beleaguered them, were drawn into the defiles of the mountains,
and were then attacked, beaten, and driven into the mountain fortress of Candanos, where they were blockaded closely. These feats of
arms naturally elated the Cretans, and exasperated the Turks correspondingly.
The Governor-General lost all self-possession, and abandoned the reins of
government to his subordinates. Confusion became anarchy, and, to increase the
dismay, the few remaining Christians in the cities were forbidden to leave the
island. The Egyptians, mortified by their defeat, assailed the Christians in
the villages nearest their new encampment in the most brutal and barbarous
manner.
The presence of the Wizard in the
port alone prevented a general massacre of the Christians in Canéa. Assemblies of the Mussulman Cretans were held in
their quarter of the city, with the avowed purpose of going out to kill the
Christians in the suburbs, beginning with the consuls. The military authorities
had the presence of mind to close the gates to all Christians entering or
Mussulmans leaving the town. The whole Christian population of the island
seemed in arms, and considerable parties of them made raids within sight of the
walls of the city, carrying off as prisoners a number of Mussulmans who were
engaged in getting in the vintage.
At the moment when it seemed impossible that confusion
should not end in universal anarchy and massacre, the Imperial Commissioner
arrived. Mustapha Kiritli Pasha had, by an
impartial and energetic, if barbarous, administration of the affairs of the
island, secured the respect and even esteem of the Christians, while his
merciless repression of previous insurrections had inspired the strongest
belief in his military capacity. As he entered the town, a Christian was shot
down in the road behind him, one of the few who, influenced by the old regard
for the Pasha, ventured to follow in his train; and, at the same moment,
another was stabbed to death within a few hundred yards— a well-known employee of
one of the principal Turkish beys, whose position had hitherto been his
protection. The installation of Mustapha checked these disorders, and,
investigation being ordered into them, the Governor-General, whose incapacity
and malevolence became apparent, was peremptorily ordered to leave for
Constantinople, not even being allowed time to pack his household furniture.
The Commissioner at once commenced organizing and preparing expeditions to
attack the Christians and relieve the troops cooped up at Candanos. The Cretan Mohammedans, to the number of 5,000,
were regularly enrolled as volunteers. Strict orders were given in every
direction for the protection of unarmed individuals, and in all the villages
within the power of the government forces the option was given to the
inhabitants of inscribing themselves as friends of the government and taking
written protection —a course which would expose them to the hostility of the
insurgent forces— or of joining their coreligionists in the mountains. A
proclamation was issued, directed to the committee, in which the insurgents
were summoned instantly to submit and give up their arms. No concessions were
made, none even promised; the purport of the firman was, “Submit, be good children, and you shall see what you shall see!”. As was
to be expected, the committee, flushed by its recent successes and encouraged
by the promise of succor from Greece, where committees had been formed at the
first news of hostilities having commenced, rejected the proclamation
contemptuously, and issued a counter-proclamation, which was forwarded to all
the consuls and to the ministers at Constantinople.
As I shall have, in the course of this history, to
make serious question of the conduct of the Greek government, I shall do it the
justice to say that, to the best of my information, it had up to this time
utterly discouraged the insurrection as injudicious and ill-timed. But the
affair of Vrysis had so great an effect on
public opinion in Greece that the government was obliged to make concessions to
it.
Mustapha found the Egyptian army diminished and
utterly demoralized by defeat. About 12,000 Turkish troops were in the island,
indifferently equipped and in a poor state of discipline; added to these, he
had his 5,000 irregulars and a few hundred Albanians. From these he organized
an army of about 10,000 men, with whom he marched to the relief of Candanos. The direct passes were all held by the Cretans in
such strength that the Turks were unable to force their way, and they were
obliged, therefore, to make a long detour through the western part of the
island, constantly harassed by parties of the insurgents, who held all the
advantageous positions on the route.
The expedition succeeded in relieving Candanos without a fight, the Cretans retiring before
the overpowering forces of the Commissioner, not too soon for the besieged, who
were at the verge of starvation before relief arrived. The siege was marked by
the usual atrocities of those religious barbarian conflicts. An incident,
related to me by a Christian Cretan who assisted at the siege, will suffice to
show the animus by which they were already possessed. Some of the besieged
Cretans, recognizing a brother of a prisoner in their possession amongst the
besiegers, killed the prisoner, and, cutting him up as the butchers cut meat,
hung the members above the parapet, calling to the besiegers that they had meat
yet. The besiegers retaliated by treating half-a-dozen prisoners in the same
way, aid calling to the besiegers that, if they wanted more, they might come
and get it
The Commissioner withdrew immediately, taking in his
escort all the Mussulman families who had been blockaded in Selinos and Candanos, together with those of some
neighboring villages who had not hitherto been molested by the Christians, the
insurrectionary committee having still hopes of conciliating the opposition of
their Mussulman compatriots, and, in pursuance of this policy, having given
orders to do everything possible to induce the Mussulmans to make common cause
with the Christians. These, however, augmented the train of the Commissioner
with their families and flocks, and the return of the army so encumbered was
slow and dangerous, the Christians following and harassing the flanks, showing
resistance in front at all difficult passes, and cutting off stragglers; the
troops, in retaliation, destroying all villages on the road of return as they
had on that of going. I had been able to watch from my balcony the departure of
the troops, and follow their line of march by the smoke of the burning
villages; and after two weeks’ absence, during the latter part of which no
communications had been kept up between the army and the capital, the wildest
panic prevailing at headquarters, where rumors were generally believed to the
effect that the whole army had been blockaded, I was able, from the same point,
to perceive the return of the troops by the same ominous indications. In
returning by a shorter route than that followed in going, the army had to pass
by a difficult ravine, called Kakopetra, where
the Christians made a determined attack and attempt to block the road, in which
they would certainly have succeeded had they possessed modern firearms, but as
they were armed mostly with the tufeks of
their grandfathers, or pistols of the war of Greek independence, an attack on
equal terms was impossible. The Pasha, by throwing out his irregulars on both
sides to keep back the insurgents, and pressing down the road, with the
imperial troops and Egyptian regulars escorting the families and flocks,
succeeded in forcing his way through, though with serious loss. A European
surgeon attached to the government hospital at Canéa assured
me that the killed amounted to 120 and the wounded to upwards of 800, the
wounds being mostly slight from spent balls apparently fired from pistols. In
fact, if the Cretans had been well armed and provided with good ammunition, the
campaign would probably have ended there and then, and Kakopetra become
as famous as Askypho in the great
insurrection, when the same Mustapha, in 1823, was blockaded, and his army
almost exterminated, himself, with his immediate followers, only escaping by
scattering the contents of the military treasury on the road.
The successful return of the army to Chania was the
signal of the most enthusiastic rejoicings on the part of the Mussulman
population of Canéa, who, with the extravagance
of a semi-barbaric people, had passed the last few days in the wildest frenzy
of fear and irritation.
CHAPTER V
THE rescue happily concluded, the Pasha organized a
movement against Lakus, Theriso, Keramia, strong points where the Christians had
assembled in considerable numbers and from whence they might harry the plains
of Chania carrying off flocks and occasionally prisoners. This expedition
consisted of twelve thousand men. While the organization was going on, the
Christians came down to the number of several hundred, and took possession of
the direct road to Theriso, and attacked the
block-house on the hill of Malaxa overlooking the
plain, and three miles from Chania. The attack on the block-house necessarily
failed from the want of artillery, and the Commissioner succeeded in
reinforcing the garrison strongly after a sharp repulse in which the
reinforcements were driven back nearly to the plain country, as I myself was
able to perceive, watching the skirmish through a telescope. The day after, two
battalions were ordered to clear the road to Theriso,
held by the insurgents, and were assisted by a battery of artillery, taking the
Cretans in flank from the block-house of Malaxa,
firing across an impassable ravine. The attack lasted the whole afternoon, and,
watching the affair through my glass, I could perceive that neither the direct
nor the flank movement produced the least impression on the insurgents, who
maintained their position till nightfall, when the troops were withdrawn to the
plain. The next day the attack was renewed with five thousand men and a
considerable force of irregulars.
The Cretans fell back from their position of the day
before to the ridges and ravines which cut up the plateau of Keramia, where they received the attack of the troops, and,
always retreating but contesting every inequality of ground, they fell back to
the precipitous spurs of the White or Sphakian Mountains
on the further side of the plain, where they made good their position during
the remainder of the day. The losses on either side we were never able to
ascertain, though the Cretans admitted a loss of seven killed and thirty or
forty wounded, among the former being a son of Manosouyanaki,
the chief captain of the district, who commanded the defence.
The troops returned at night, having occupied the whole day in making an
advance of about three miles, but the official report the next day declared
that the movement had been perfectly successful, without the loss of a man
killed or wounded. The expedition against Lakus,
proceeding westward, turned that position, which the Cretans abandoned without
contest, and retreated across the almost impassable ravine which separates the
hill of Lakus from the central chain of mountains,
to Zurba, a village situated on a bold bastion,
which could only be attacked successfully from the higher mountains, and which
they had fortified in a rude manner as depot and hospital. The number of Cretans
at Zurba amounted to six hundred, the
attacking force as many thousand, with two batteries of artillery; but after
two days’ bombardment, during part of which time I counted (Zurba being
only nine miles in a straight line from my house) thirty shots per minute, and
three assaults, the Turks were obliged to abandon the attack and move on to Theriso. This village, an ancient stronghold of Crete,
which, with the ravine leading to it, has been the scene of many disasters to
the Turkish troops in the different insurrections, is situated in a valley
surrounded on all sides but one by abrupt hills, and could easily have been
held by five hundred well-disciplined and resolute men against the whole
Turkish army. The Cretans lacked not resolution, but unfortunately for their
discipline the news arrived at this moment that the Panhellenion blockade-runner
had landed her first cargo of arms and supplies on the north side of the
island, on learning which nearly the whole force stationed for the protection
of Theriso went to assist in the debarkation of the
cargo. Mustapha took this moment for the attack on Theriso,
which he occupied without opposition, and evacuated with equal celerity on
receiving warning of the return of the Cretans, armed with the rifles of the Greek
national guard and reinforced by a body of Hellenic volunteers. The Cretans,
following their usual policy, however, gathered on his flanks and harassed his
retreat, for it virtually became such, until he reached the positions attained
in the previous attack by Keramia, where he encamped
to reorganize the movement onward through the Rhizo against
the Apokorona.
In a campaign of seven days, he had destroyed nearly a
score of villages, most of them undefended; had utterly destroyed all hope of
compromise or conciliation; and, though he had penetrated the strongest
outposts of the insurgents, had attained no other result than the temporary
possession of the position of Lakus, the village
being a mass of ruins, as a base of operations in case of a new attack on Theriso or an expedition against Omalos,
amid the western peaks of the White Mountains. He had anticipated great moral
effects from his mountain artillery, but the Cretans learned to despise it.
With their old-fashioned firearms, they had managed to harass the Turkish
troops to such an extent that they looked to the days when they should fight
with rifles with enthusiasm and resolution. Then every burned village left an
additional number of men who, having lost all their property, had no interest
in peace; so that every advantage he had gained had only increased the force
opposed to him. I urged this consideration as strongly as possible on the
Commissioner in several visits, which was all the better reason in his mind to
make him insist on his policy. He had expected that his name would induce
immediate submission, or, at least, that in a single battle he would make so
decided an impression that the favorable terms he was then prepared to offer
would be at once accepted, but, till the military power of the Cretans was
completely broken, the Porte was determined to make no concessions of any kind.
The insurgents, on the other hand, were already under the influence of Hellenic
enthusiasts, and receiving munitions of all kinds by the blockade-runners, and
the drift of their counsels was toward war. It was clear now that the Porte had
made a most disastrous blunder, in fact an unbroken series of blunders in all
its measures. It should not have entertained the project of transference in the
beginning; in the second place, having decided on the transfer, it should have
carried it out logically, and not by a bastard popular vote enforced by the
presence of an Egyptian army; and finally, having decided to send the
Commissioner, it should have sent him at once, instead of keeping him and the
answer to the petition waiting for three months. Its whole course was
irritating and unjust. It had had no excuse for the employment of force, and
was warned by the consular corps, without exception, of the previous dishonest,
tyrannical, and impolitic conduct of Ismael Pasha. If it had a consistent
policy in the whole matter, it could only have been to provoke an insurrection
in Crete when all the other provinces were unable to rise, and so disarm by a
crushing suppression the enemy most dreaded of all its subject provinces.
The finale of the Theriso campaign was marked by the appearance of the great Deus ex machina of
the insurrection, the Russian frigate Grand Admiral, and the
commencement of the real moral intervention of Russia in the already
complicated affair. The Russian commander, Boutakoff,
was too fit a selection for the role which events compelled (or permitted) him
to play to have been intentionally chosen by any government. In the three years
subsequent to his arrival, I saw him often, and knew as much of his opinions
and feelings as it is permitted an outsider to know of a Russian official, and
both his acts and language have always confirmed my impression that the Russian
Government did not influence the turn events took, and anticipated only a
speedy and disastrous end to the insurrection, while entertaining the most
cordial sympathy and good wishes for a more prosperous end than any sane man
would have expected. In fact, with the exception of the boldest of the
insurgents and some harebrained Greeks, no one in the island anticipated
anything but ruin from the movement. Captain Boutakoff was a devout and liberal Christian, a type of all that is most chivalric,
patriotic, and compassionate in manhood, large-brained, prudent, and, if
zealous enough to merit all the honors then and since conferred on him by his
sovereign, he was never capable of any patriotic vice worse than the most
profound reticence. To know him as I knew him was to conceive a better opinion
of his country. I am morally certain that Boutakoff never said or did anything to encourage in any way the hopes of the Cretans, or
lead them to indulge in dreams of European intervention in their favor. His
position was that of a humane observer, and with all the sympathy which existed
between him and myself, and the mutual confidence in our personal intercourse,
I could find in his language and acts no trace of arrière-pensée in
favor of any other interest than the real good of the Cretans. My own strong
sympathy with the unhappy islanders made me the ally and co-operator with
whoever gave them any help, and placed me, I have good reason to believe, high
in the confidence of the Russian authorities in Crete and Constantinople; and,
with no political interest in the matter other than Cretan, I am free to
confess that, while I believed Russian policy in Crete to be the good of Crete,
I was willing to aid in carrying out any plans that policy might point out. If,
then, these plans had pointed out the secret encouragement of the insurrection
as desirable, I am certain that I should have been influenced in that
direction. It will be seen before I have finished that I am no apologist for
the Russian conduct of this affair when it had become matter of European
interest and action; but I must do the Russian Government the justice to
declare that it is in no wise responsible for the disaster and carnage which
the war brought on, and that it was not until several months that it openly
gave the revolt moral encouragement (as a means of weakening the Turkish
empire?)
The Imperial Commissioner having concentrated and
reorganized his troops at Condapoulo, a village
of the plain of Keramia, transferred his base of
operations to Kalyves, on the sea and at the
mouth of the river which drains the Apokorona, and as
soon as the change was effected commenced his march toward Krapi,
the main pass of Sphakia. The troops were first
opposed at Stylos, the first of the natural
positions of which the country affords so many, and were repulsed in a first
attack. The vanguard were of Egyptians, who were in this campaign
systematically put foremost and encouraged in every brutality and ferocity, in
the hope apparently of making them good troops, their natural temper being
unfavorable to that end. Though the result of this treatment certainly did show
that nobody is so brutal and devilish as a coward, and the fellahs eminently distinguished themselves in
devastation and killing of defenseless people, they never succeeded in exciting
any other feeling than hatred and contempt in the Cretan. At Stylos, as in other places, they were beaten with ease, and
it was only on the following day, when the Cretan positions were flanked and
the irregulars sent forward, that the insurgents evacuated their strong
positions. In this affair the Egyptian general, Ismael Pasha, urging, his
troops to retrieve their disgrace at Vrysis, was
mortally wounded. The troops attacked the position of Campos, which was
abandoned by all combatants, the remaining inhabitants being put to death, and
the insurgents relinquished all the country as far as Vafé to the Turks, who ravaged it in the most thorough manner, with the extreme of
barbarity and atrocity to all the Christian inhabitants who were unfortunate
enough to fall into their hands. In the neighborhood of Kephala there are numerous grottoes, partly natural
and partly excavated, as places of refuge from immemorial times, some of them
celebrated in the traditions of the island for the sieges they had maintained.
Into these many of the Christians retreated, taking with them their effects. In
one of these about two hundred villagers, mostly old men, women, and children,
had taken refuge, and, refusing to surrender, were stifled in the cave. A woman
came, one day, to my house to obtain protection and charity, having been
brought a prisoner to Canéa, and narrated to me
the circumstances of her capture. She was, she told me, on her way from her
village to a larger one in the Apokorona to purchase
bread, and was in the company of eleven men, all Christians and unarmed, going
with the same intention. They were stopped in the road by a party of Seliniote irregulars, who deliberately beheaded the
men and piled their heads in the path, taking her with them to headquarters to
extort from her information as to the places of concealment of her compatriots.
Giving no desired indications, she was about to be beheaded, when two Egyptians
whom she had sheltered and fed after the defeat of Vrysis recognized
her, and, stating her kindness to the Pasha, she was released and sent to
Chania.
The consequence of this severity was not what Mustapha
Pasha expected it to be, to intimidate the Cretans into submission, but to
drive them into the high mountains, where hundreds perished from hunger and
cold. As children as well as adults of both sexes were welcome game to the
fanaticism called out by the first taste of Christian blood, and no partial
submission was accepted, the cruelty being the means to an end quite
characteristic of Turkish policy and the nature of the Albanian, who years
before had earned the title of the butcher of Crete and as the submitted had no
power to induce the submission of the more resolute insurgents, there was no
possible safety to any portion of the population except in the mountains, where
a large proportion of the weakest died, leaving the men unencumbered for
vengeance. Every step of the Turkish authorities was a blunder. Submission
being useless unless complete, and complete submission out of the power of any
one to enforce, there remained only complete insurrection, and this the
commissioner succeeded in exciting, with a renewal of all the old religious
animosity, and a desperation natural to men to whom surrender brought no
protection, and submission no guarantee.
CHAPTER VI
NO resistance was after this offered until Vafé was reached. Here about two hundred Greek volunteers
and a thousand Cretans, under the command of Hadji Mikhali,
of Lakus, and Costa Veloudaki,
of Sphakia, were concentrated. The Cretan chiefs were
opposed to any regular fighting, and counseled a retreat into the ravines,
where they could entangle the troops and attack them without serious risk to
themselves, while a pitched fight was not only not in the way of the islanders,
but, if lost, as they considered it must be in view of the overpowering Turkish
forces, it would discourage the movement greatly. Zimbrakaki,
the commander of the volunteers, with the most of his men, wished not to
abandon so strong a position, at which they had, moreover, constructed a strong
redoubt, without fighting, and it was decided to make a stand. The majority of
the Cretans, however, recognizing no authority but that of their captains,
withdrew before the fight, which, had Mustapha been a commander careful of the
lives of his troops, might have been decided by flanking movements without
firing a shot, as his army was composed of ten thousand regulars and fully
three thousand irregulars, Albanian and Cretan, while the Christians were
hardly five hundred. No forces the committee could have assembled would have
made the stand a prudent or justifiable one under the circumstances, and its
result was what the Cretan chiefs had foreseen. Mustapha, as usual, opened with
a direct assault of Egyptians, which was repulsed with heavy loss; but, in the
meantime, a body of Albanians were engaged in climbing the heights which
protected the flanks of the position, and so nearly succeeded in surprising the
Greeks that they only saved themselves by precipitate flight. A few gallant
fellows, indifferent to the odds or the certainty of defeat, were killed, taken
prisoners, or escaped by suicide. The committee, with the Hellenes, retreated
to Askyfo, and made the best preparations to defend
the ravine which their demoralized forces permitted; and so formidable was the
position that Mustapha decided not to attack it, but to be content with the
moral advantage of the victory at Vafé, which was
nearly fatal to the insurrection, in spite of the triviality of the losses of
the Christians, which did not surpass thirty killed of both Hellenes and
Cretans. The latter had attributed invincibility to their allies, and to find
them defeated so utterly at the first encounter paralyzed the insurrection for
the moment; and, if the Turkish commander had moved energetically on Askyfo, it is not probable that any serious defence would have been made, and, as there was then
no other center of resistance, the taking of Askyfo would have left the movement without any power of forming another nucleus of
moral force. The committee must have dispersed, and the thousands of families
assembled in Sphakia must have surrendered.
But Mustapha, remembering his former disaster in the
defile of Krapi, hesitated, waited at Prosnero and in the Apokorona,
while the Sphakiote chieftains craftily negotiated,
and made their calculations on the amount of assistance they could get from
Greece, the measure of Concessions or personal advantages they could hope for
as the price of submission, and prolonged the practical truce until the
reaction from the effects of the late defeat began. Hadji Mikhali,
with his Lakiotes, went back to Lakus and Theriso, entirely abandoned
by the troops, and resumed his old policy of little and incessant raids to
harass the Turkish commander and keep his own men from the despondency of
inaction.
The immediate salvation of the insurrection was,
however, the arrival of Col. Coroneos, the ablest by
far of the Greek chiefs, and the only one, it would seem, who was capable of
adapting his plans to the kind of material he had to work with. He arrived too
late either to prevent or assist in the battle of Vafé,
and, seeing the danger the insurrection was in of dying of despondency and the
dissidence of its chiefs, moved at once into the central provinces, and,
collecting together such Cretans as he could find, surprised and cut off two
small Turkish detachments, and with unimportant advantages reawakened the
enthusiasm of the fickle and excitable islanders, gained for himself the
prestige of victory, and rapidly recruited a considerable force.
At the same time, slight advantages were won by Hadji Mikhali near Chania, and by other chiefs in the eastern
provinces, where an Ottoman detachment had been disastrously repulsed in an
attempt to penetrate into the Lasithri district. Coroneos, with a small body of volunteers, established his
headquarters at the old fortified convent of Arkadi, a building of Venetian
construction of such size and strength as to be a fit depot of supplies and
place of refuge as against anything less than a regular siege. From here he
harassed the detachments which issued from Rethymno,
and kept alive the movement in the district between Sphakia and Mount Ida, and on several occasions menaced the city of Rethymno,
which is fortified by a low wall, almost unprovided with artillery. Mustapha,
after nearly a month of indecision and negotiation, in which the Cretans showed
a diplomatic ability and duplicity quite worthy the antique reputation of the
race, found himself compelled to act against the new dangers which Coroneos had conjured for him. He moved with great rapidity
from Episkopi, where he had made his headquarters in order that he might watch
both the great passes into Sphakia, Krapi and Kallikrati, to Rethymno, and thence to the attack of Arkadi, which had
been left with a small detachment of volunteers and about one hundred and fifty
Cretan combatants, including the priests. Besides these, there were about one
thousand women and children, whom Coroneos had made
every attempt to dissuade from remaining, but, on account of the opposition of
the Hegumenos, who would not consent to the
expulsion of his own relatives, the rest could not be induced to leave a place
of traditional security, well provisioned and adequately defended against any
attack they could conceive of, Coroneos only
persuaded about four hundred to return to their villages. The Greek commander,
with the main body of his forces, had been watching Mustapha after his taking
position at Episkopi, and followed his movements to prevent, if possible, his
investment of Arkadi. Taking the circuit of the hills, he only reached the
convent after Mustapha’s vanguard, which he engaged until nightfall, when his
men mostly withdrew to the mountains, and Arkadi was necessarily abandoned to
its fate.
Mustapha, arriving the next day, summoned the convent
to surrender, but, having no faith in his observance of the conditions, the Christians
refused, and the attack was ordered. The small rifled pieces (mountain-guns)
were found to produce no effect on the walls or on the new masonry with which
the gateway had been filled up, and, the fire from the convent being found to
be unexpectedly hot and effective, the investment was made complete, and
reinforcements sent for from Rethymno, whence nearly
the whole garrison and Mussulman population came to his aid, making the total
force employed about 23,000 men, regulars and irregulars, being, in fact, by
much the greatest part of the Ottoman force in the island. Heavy artillery was
also ordered from Rethymno, and two or three old
siege-guns were transported with great difficulty (a distance of about twelve
miles), and placed in battery; and, having demolished the masonry in the
gateway, an assault was made, but the fire from the monastery was so vigorous
that the attacking column was unable to face it, and after two or three
assaults had failed, neither the Turkish regulars nor their officers being
willing to renew it, a body of Egyptians were placed in front and driven in at
the breach by the bayonets of the Turkish soldiers in their rear.
The convent was a hollow square of buildings, with a
large court, in the center of which stood the church. The inner and outer walls
were equally solid, and the cells and rooms opening into the court were
garrisoned with bodies of the insurgents, who poured a hail of bullets into the
mass of Ottomans entering, but, the entrance once made, defence and submission were alike fruitless. The
troops killed all who fell into their hands, fighting their way from cell to
cell, and bringing even their artillery into the rooms to penetrate the
partition walls. And so the struggle of extermination was fought out, until one
of the priests, who had previously expressed to his companions the
determination to blow up the magazine if the convent were entered, finding
death inevitable, fulfilled his threat, and changed what was before but a
profitless butchery into a deed of heroism, which again saved the insurrection
from the jaws of failure. The result of the explosion was very limited so far
as the combatants were concerned, and probably did not kill a hundred Turks.
But even this catastrophe did not stop the carnage.
The troops recoiled, but again returned, and the last of the combatants
defending themselves in the refectory, having exhausted their bullets,
surrendered on the faith of an oath that their lives should be spared, and were
at once put to death. At the end, thirty-three men and sixty-one women and
children were spared.
The few men who were spared from this massacre were
those who were able to appeal to Mustapha Pasha, or some of his suite, on the
ground of ancient personal relations, or who succeeded in obtaining his clemency
by some sufficient plea, after surrender. That all the butchery was not due to
the heat of assault is shown by this and by several incidents reported to me.
One of the latest parties of the combatants who surrendered on a promise of
their lives was passed in review before the Pasha himself, and all who wore
European clothing passed under the sword at once, as volunteers, though amongst
them were several Cretans from the adjacent villages, whose relatives attested
their nativity. When the refectory surrendered, the Pasha swore on the head of
the Sultan to spare its inmates, who were required to hand out all their arms,
and were afterwards butchered, even to the women. Mr. Skinner, in his “Roughing
it in Crete”, gives an account of his visit to Arkadi some months later, when
he found the bodies still unburied and describes the scene in the refectory
with ghastly verity. After the fighting was all over, a party of irregulars
went round with lighted candles, and, holding them to the noses of the corpses,
gave the coup de grace to all who breathed. Two Cretans had managed to hide on
the roof of one of the buildings, where they remained till the next day, when,
as the Albanians were leaving, one of them shot a pigeon which fell on the roof
where the Cretans had hid, and, going up to secure his game, discovered the
unfortunates, who were put to death in cold blood. On the march back to Rethymno, all who could not keep up were at once killed,
and those who reached the city were kept for months in prison and in extreme
misery.
Of the pandemonium that the walls of Arkadi enclosed,
I have heard many and ghastly hints, and have in vain asked eye-witnesses to
tell me what they saw; they all said it was too horrible to be recalled or
spoken of. One of the most violent of the Mussulman fanatics of Crete, who had
performed all the pilgrimages and holy works required by the Koran, and
earnestly desired as the last grace of this life to die in the holy war against
the infidels, and had fought recklessly in all the battles he had been able to
participate in, went home after Arkadi in despair, declaring that destiny
forbade his dying the holy death. Mustapha was a general of the old type, and
did not care to win bloodless victories or spare the lives of his troops, and
the result, apart from the moral effect, was far more disastrous to the Porte
than to the insurrection. The losses in killed and wounded were certainly not
less than 1,500, and were estimated at a much higher figure. The army was
occupied thirty-six hours in bringing the wounded into Rethymno,
and nearly 500, unable to find place there, were brought on to Canéa (480 was the number given me by a European
surgeon in the Ottoman service). The Pasha himself saw that he had made a
blunder, and everything which the local administration could effect to disguise
and conceal the nature of the event was done. I had, however, fortunately sent
a trusty man to Rethymno on the first intimation of
the movement, with orders to get me the most minute and exact information
possible, and his report, with the confirmation of certain Turkish employees
and submitted Christians residing at Rethymno, was in
the main accepted by most of my colleagues of the consular corps as the nearest
to the truth which had been obtained; and, though in these lands of fable and
myth no exact history can well be written, I believe that this is substantially
the truth as to Arkadi.
CHAPTER VII
MUSTAPHA immediately retraced his steps to Chania,
and, housing himself outside the walls, having sworn not to re-enter his
capital until the insurgents had been subdued, called a council to plan
measures to strike a quick blow at the insurrection before the effect of Arkadi
should be felt in the public opinion of Europe. Up to that time the struggle
had seemed to me a hopeless and insane one, and though my warmest sympathies
had been, of course, with the Cretans, as victims of a monstrous injustice—a
sequence of crimes—I had not dared utter a word of hope or encouragement in
reply to all the earnest appeals to me by the friends of the insurrection. Now,
seeing the enthusiasm that Arkadi excited amongst the insurgents and even
the mutis (submitted Christians), I felt
that there was a hope that Christendom would be compelled to listen to the
history being enacted before it on this sea-girt mountain ridge. That the Pasha
also felt this was evident both from his words and acts. He made new and more
tempting offers to the Sphakiote chiefs, and
employed the well-known appliances of Eastern politics to make friends amongst
the insurgents, but with only partial success. At the same time, he made
preparations for another attack on Sphakia, but this
time from the west via Selinos. He, therefore,
leaving Mehmet Pasha to guard Krapi with four or five
battalions, concentrated all his available forces besides, at Alikianu, his point de départ for
the first Theriso campaign. All this country had been
abandoned, and had to be reconquered, particularly Theriso,
which, if unoccupied, would be a menace to his communications with Chania. At
the same time, a concentration of the volunteers and insurgents took place in
the plain of Omalos, by which alone access is had to Sphakia from this side. A force of volunteers recently
landed were engaged in a foolish siege of Kissamos, a
worthless position to either side, as it was commanded by the men-of-war, and
could not be held if taken; and the different chiefs of the volunteers were
kept ineffective by dissensions and jealousies amongst themselves, each
refusing to obey any other. Coroneos and Zimbrakakis, however, united their forces to resist the
attack on Omalos. The volunteers, under the command
of Soliotis, a Hellenic officer, made a gallant defence of the position of Lakus,
but were compelled to retreat to the upper ridges which border Omalos, while Theriso was
abandoned before a flank movement of Mehmet Pasha, obliged temporarily to leave
the Apokorona undefended. Omalos,
however, resisted direct attack, and the Pasha moved round by the passes of Kissamos to the west of the mountains, devastating as he
went, and driving before him all the non-combatants of the country he passed
through. By this time the snow had fallen with unusual severity of cold for
that climate, and the insurgents, although ill-provided against an inclemency
they usually escaped from in the plains below, were in many respects better off
than the troops, who were compelled to march through ravines which were often
mountain torrents in this rainy season; and as they did not carry tents, that
they might move with greater rapidity, and were often cut off from all
communication with the base of supplies for days together by the rain filling
the roads, at best only bad mule-paths, they suffered prodigiously without
fighting or even the encouragement of the sack of villages. The Egyptians, clad
only in linen which their climate required, perished by cold and wet in
hundreds; pneumonia became an endemic in the army; and, to add to the misery,
the beasts of burden perished under the hardships, and lined the paths with
their corpses.
Mustapha was as merciless a commander as enemy, and,
though the army was suffering extreme misery, he kept a vigilant watch for his
opportunity, and when, after two weeks of fatiguing outpost duty, waiting in
hunger, rain, snow, and frost, the Hellenes who guarded the difficult pass of
St. Irene were frozen and starved into negligence, he made a dash, one foggy
morning, surprised the post, and, taking possession of the heights crowning the
ravine, his army defiled leisurely over into the valleys of Selinos.
The Greeks moved over to the pass of Krubtogherako,
which admits to the plain of Omalos from the Selinos side, and the Pasha, believing a defence ready, encamped in the still undevastated
valleys, and passed some days in burning and ravaging, destroying vineyards and
mulberry-trees wherever they could be reached. The olive-trees, as the reliance
of the future income of the island, were mostly spared.
Meanwhile, a “moral intervention” was being prepared,
which brought respite to the insurrection and deranged all the plans of the
Pasha. The atrocities of Arkadi had finally impressed public opinion with the
conviction that the old barbarities of the Greek and Turkish wars were being
perpetrated anew; and even the English consul at Chania became convinced that barbaric
massacre and ravage were being employed as the means of subduing the spirit of
the islanders, and had reported to his Government certain of these atrocities,
remonstrating, at the same time, to the Commissioner. The reports of those
consuls who had by this time, become characterized as the “friends of the
insurrection”—viz., Colucci (Italian), Dendrinos (Russian), Sacopoulos (Greek), and myself—had spread through the
European journals the news of these barbarities and excesses to such a degree
that remonstrances were made by the ambassadors at Constantinople, while the
clear-headed and true-hearted Murray had from the beginning, with great justice
and discrimination, measured the facts and manifested the warmest sympathy with
the Cretans. At this juncture came H.B.M.’s sloop Assurance,
Commander Pym, relieving the Wizard, ordered to Malta. We parted
from our gallant protector with an emotion not easily comprehended by those who
do not know the nature and nearness of the dangers of the previous four months,
or how the resolute and outspoken manhood of the young officer in his one-gun
steamer had stood so long between us and death, as the representative of a
power in civilization which subsequent years made me honor more and more—the
English navy. Fortunately, Pym had learned from Murray, in the few days which
elapsed between the arrival of the Assurance and the departure
of the Wizard, what was the real position of affairs, and followed
the traditions of his predecessor. He had, moreover, a certain defiance of
red-tape and a feverishness to distinguish himself which did not always measure
carefully the purport of general orders, and which, perhaps, in battle would
have made him turn a blind eye to a signal of recall, and now disposed him to
abandon on any pretext the cold-blooded neutrality of his government.
Pym soon determined that a very small pretext would
suffice to make him throw himself in the way of a decided intervention in
behalf of the non-combatants, and did not fail to exert all his influence on
Dickson to obtain an official request that he should cruise on the coast in
advance of the Pasha’s army, and to seize every available opportunity for
affording refuge to any Christian in distress who may seek protection on board
his ship, and to convey such refugees to Greece. Pym had declared to me (and
possibly to Dickson) that he should, on his own responsibility, take such a
step if he did not get the requisition from the consul; and, on leaving for a
run to Heraklion, said that he should go thence to Selinos and put himself in the way of humanity. Under these circumstances, Dickson’s
humanity, further stimulated by Murray’s and Pym’s enthusiasm, got the better
of his official prepossessions, and, without waiting for a reply from his
Government to a petition addressed to all the Christian powers to send ships to
save the women and children exposed to such chances as those of Arkadi, had
followed up his remonstrances to the Commissioner with a proposal to send a
ship to pick up the families gathered before the army in its movement into Selinos. The Commissioner, still under the impression of
the effect produced by recent events on European public opinion, dared not
refuse his consent to such a demand from his best friend, and, it may be
conceived, reluctantly, verbally, and evasively gave it. But Dickson, too
honest and earnest to comprehend the duplicity, took him literally at his word.
As a consequence of all these considerations and conclusions, the Assurance found
herself at Suia of Selinos while Mustapha was pounding away at the passes, and took three hundred and
fifteen women and children and twenty-five wounded men on board and transported
them to Peiraeus.
No act could have been purer or more free from
ulterior views than this of Pym’s—an expression of what not only he, but all of
his fellow-officers of the English navy whom I saw on the station, with one
exception, felt—the compassionate desire to stand between women and children
and the devilish policy which butchered them to terrify their husbands and
fathers into submission. I saw Pym and his officers on their return from this
voyage, and not one of them but would have given a month’s pay to have gone on
another similar trip. Their Government, in passing judgment on the act, could
not condemn it, but to two parties, unfortunately, it was a political
movement—the Hellenes, who insisted on considering it an intervention in their
favor, and so compelled the English Government to forbid its repetition; and
the French, who regarded it as a maneuver to block the game of the Viceroy. The
French-agent who afterwards succeeded Derché assured
me that they had the most conclusive evidence that Captain Pym had orders from
London to give the insurrection a jog, because the annexation to Egypt would
have been the result of the failure of the insurrection at this juncture, and
that, although Pym was immediately recalled and, to all intents and purposes,
disgraced, and I believe retired on account of his venture, he was only so in
appearance, and really had been rewarded for his apparent punishment.
There were, at this time, two Italian corvettes, an
Austrian frigate and gunboat, and a French gunboat, besides the Russian
frigate, all of which, except the Frenchman, had, or were reported to have,
orders to follow the lead of any other Power in rendering assistance to the
non-combatants, and most of the commanders were anxious to follow Pym, but
their delay in learning of his venture, and the quick disapproval of it,
deterred all from intervention, and while correspondence was going on the war
seemed suspended. It appeared finally to be decided that no one should imitate
the English commander. The insurrection seemed on the point of collapsing,
through the severity of the winter and the discouragement of the Cretans.
Volunteers had been coming over from Greece—a motley mass of all nations—many
of them from Smyrna and other Turkish parts, who, as soon as they landed, began
to breed disaffection and maltreat the Cretans, creating the most angry feeling
in the island, which did not stop short of violence. At this time, the whole
body were driven into the Sphakian mountains,
where, exposed to intense cold, half-fed, and without any discipline, they were
dangerous only to the insurrection, and yielded readily to proffers of the
Pasha to give them free exit and conveyance to Greece. A portion of them
accepted the proposition on condition that they should be sent on European
ships, and the Vice-Commissioner called a council of those consuls whose
governments had naval representatives in Cretan waters, to propose that their
ships should go to receive the disaffected volunteers but with the condition
that no non-combatants or Cretans should be accepted. None of the commanders
were willing to accept the mission on these terms, except the French, and the
gunboat which he commanded went, therefore, to Lutro,
a port of Sphakia (the Port Phoenix of St. Paul), and
embarked four hundred and eighty men, who were landed at Peiraeus, where
they were received with violence and insults by the excited populace, and some
barely escaped paying the last penalty for their defection.
CHAPTER VIII
THE remaining auxiliaries, paralyzed by want of
organization, the usual dissensions of the chiefs, and their mutual jealousies,
even more than by their want of supplies, retreated before Mustapha, who, after
some weeks of indecision, resumed his campaign; but, instead of following up
his advantages by land, and getting possession of Omalos as a better base of operations, and preventing the Cretans from reoccupying it,
he embarked his troops at Sugia, and attempted
to land at St. Rumséli, the entrance of the
ravine of Samaria, the stronghold and place of refuge par excellence of Sphakia, and where, at this time, were gathered
thousands of women and children. This movement menaced too closely the
mountaineers, who opposed the landing, and finally repelled the attack, as well
as a subsequent one at Tripiti, nearer to Sugia, when Mustapha returned to his camp in Selinos, and passed another period of inaction, during
which the insurrectionary committees in Greece, admonished by the imminent
danger the movement seemed to have evaded for the moment, renewed their efforts
to send relief, and threw over other bodies of volunteers, mainly Mainotes, a hardy, courageous race, regarded as better
irregulars even than the Albanians, who, landing in the eastern provinces,
revived the insurrection where the government was ill able to meet it. The best
of the volunteers, under Coroneos and Yennissarli, recovering from their demoralization by rest
and the removal of the more disorderly elements, moved eastward to join the new
bodies, leaving the Sphakiotes to guard
their own country. If Mustapha, after the affair of Krustogherako,
had followed the attack up with vigor, two weeks would have finished the
insurrection. Even as it was, Sphakia being strongly
disposed to purchase freedom from conquest by neutrality, and several of the
captains having openly embraced the Turkish cause, there seemed very little
hope for the prolongation of the insurrection, when another of those wanton
acts of barbarity, which had on more than one occasion strengthened the
insurgents instead of weakening their courage, gave it another jog.
The Russian minister at Constantinople had, as soon as
the news reached that place that an English ship had rescued a number of
non-combatants from Crete, obtained from the Grand Vizier a reluctant consent
that other ships might intervene, and dispatched a steamer at once to Crete,
with orders to the Grand Admiral to commence deportation. A violent storm favored
the Turks by delaying the avviso for
several days, and, when final y the order came, we had the news that the
English Government had disapproved Pym’s acts, and the Commissioner (who had
plenary powers in all matters connected with Crete) had withdrawn the
permission given to Dickson, and both Dendrino and Doutakoff hesitated to execute the
order, anticipating its revocation. The former, a timid, irresolute man, master
of the arts of intrigue, but lost as soon as he had an open part to play in
which he must bear the responsibility of decision, was more concerned for his
own security than for the fate of the Christians, and hesitated to give a
requisition to the captain to move, while the latter, indifferent to the
consequences to himself, as against the relief of the Christian sufferers,
hesitated to move before getting renewed orders after the long delay, lest he
might compromise his Government in the event of a change of its momentary
policy, which was to avoid all appearance of ultra-advocacy of the insurgent
cause. It lacked but two or three days of our regular weekly courier when
the avviso had arrived, and both the
Russian officials had decided to wait the courier before moving.
As for myself, since the affair of Arkadi I had thrown
aside all reserve, and, while never going beyond the limits of moral
intervention, I had used all my influence with my colleagues, and with our
minister at Constantinople as well as our Government, to provoke acts of
positive intervention. I made no secret of it, nor did the Turkish Government
of its hostility to me. A patrol of zapties watched
my front door, and another my back door, and no Cretan dared enter my house. I
was regarded as the postman of the insurgents, and so complete was the delusion
that the authorities entirely neglected to watch my colleagues, two of whom
daily received and sent letters to the mountains. All the little persecutions
which a petty local government could inflict were laid on me, and I
reciprocated, as I best could, by disseminating news of the true condition of
the insurrection, and stimulating the activity of my colleagues. Mr. Moms, our
minister at Constantinople, at first strongly under the influence of the
English ambassador, the just and liberal Lord Lyons, became convinced that
nothing was to be expected in the way of humane intervention from England, and
passed entirely over to the Russian policy, and lent me his whole prestige and
influence, made himself my defender at the Porte, and gave me instructions
after my own drawing up. I made common cause, therefore, with my Russian
colleague, on whose irresolution I managed, in most cases, to impose my
resolutions, and, little by little, gained all the control over him which I
desired for critical emergencies, while I flattered his amour propre by
giving him the credit of making up his own mind. I had also organized a sort of
news agency, by which I was able to get the earliest and most reliable news of
all movements in the island, so that gradually not only the consuls but the
naval officers came to expect from me the most reliable information.
During the few days of suspense between the arrival
of Boutakoff’s orders and the arrival of
the courier which should confirm or revoke them, the act of brutality to which
I have alluded came to quicken decision. I had received news that a Turkish
frigate, hoisting English colors, had run in near the coast of Sphakia, and when the unfortunate refugees, expecting aid,
came down to the shore, the Turks opened on them with shot and shell. A Turkish
cannonade is generally a pretty harmless affair, except for accidental
casualties, but the affair gave me all the justification I needed to put a
pressure on Dendrino to issue a requisition for the
Grand Admiral to go at once to the south coast of the island. That night the
post steamer was due, and, from the absence of any dispatches to the Italian
commander similar to those to the Russian, I anticipated that the movement had
failed, and that counter-orders would come to Boutakoff by the post. I went at once, therefore, to Dendrino,
and, putting the most energetic pressure on him, dictated a letter to Boutakoff, who was on board the frigate at Suda, requesting him to get up steam and go to the Sphakian coast without delay, and did not leave till I
saw the messenger on the way and beyond recall, knowing that if I left Dendrino it would stop there. Boutakoff,
nothing loth, fired up at once, and at nine p.m. was on his way. At midnight
the post arrived, as anticipated, with counter orders, but too late. Except
myself, no one was so glad that the countermand failed as General Ignatieff,
the Russian minister.
The Grand Admiral went to Tripiti,
where were thousands of non-combatants hiding in caves and living amongst the
rocks, waiting the relieving European ships, but when the Russian boats ran in
they were fired on by the Cretan guards, made suspicious by the Turkish frauds.
Once assured of their friends, however, the people swarmed out of their holes
like ants, and, as Boutakoff told me, in a few
minutes the whole coast was lined with them, more than he could possibly stow.
He took about 1,200, and sailed for Peiraeus.
This deportation had a triple effect: first, in
strengthening the Russian party in the island by assuring the Cretans of the
good faith of the Russian Government, that party having been hitherto very
inconsiderable; second, in relieving a large body of men of the care of their
families; and, third, in deciding doubtful and uninvaded districts to take up
arms, and breaking off the negotiations between the Commissioner and the Sphakiote chiefs, by which the former had hoped to have Sphakia given up without combat. The most tempting offers
were refused, and the people of Eastern Sphakia, under
the command of old Costa Veloudaki, entered on the
war-path again, and, surprising a Turkish post at Episkopf,
drove the garrison, with serious losses, back to Rethymno;
and, near the same time, Coroneos and Korakas on one slope of Ida, and Petropoulaki, the chief of the Mainote volunteers,
on the other, harassed and drove back all the outposts in the open country, and
shut up the Turks of the central district in the fortress of Rethymno; while some battles, better worth the name than
the desultory skirmishes which most of the combats had been, were fought in the
open country around Candia, where Reschid Effendi
proved himself a shrewd and capable strategist, and drove the insurgents back
to the western slopes of Ida after sharp fighting, in which the dissensions of
the Greek and Cretan chiefs were more conspicuous than their wisdom; but
everywhere the insurrection showed new vigor.
CHAPTER IX
IMMEDIATELY after the affair of Arkadi, I had, in
conveying to our Government the petition of the Cretans for ships to be sent to
carry away their families, recapitulated the course I had taken, and proposed
to the Government that, if an American man-of-war came to Crete for the
deportation of non-combatants, and the local government made any protest, I
should reply that, their conduct having been in violation of every dictate of
humanity and law, they were not entitled to appeal to the latter in their own
behalf, and that I should advise the officer in command to remove the families
without reference to Turkish prohibition. I received in reply the following
dispatch:
Department of State, Washington, Dec. 25, 1866.
W. J. Stillman, Esq., U. S. Consul, Chania:
Sir: Your dispatch No. 32, with regard to the Cretan
insurrection and the attitude you have assumed in the matter, has been
received.
Your action and proposed course of conduct, as set
forth in said dispatch, are approved. Mr. Morris, our minister resident at
Constantinople, will be informed of the particulars set forth in your dispatch,
and of the approval of your proceedings.
Rear-Admiral Goldsborough has been instructed to send
a ship of-war to your port.
I am, sir, your obedient servant,
W.
H. Seward.
This dispatch was immediately communicated to Mr.
Morris by him to the Hellenic minister at Constantinople; and thence to the
committee at Athens; thence to the insurgents, through whom it rapidly spread
and confirmed their warlike resolutions. The Russian commander, like Pym, had
been obliged to desist from any new attempt, and waited for our steamer to
come. The Italian commanders were eager to avail themselves of their standing
instructions to follow the ships of other nations in this work, and so a new
phase of the struggle awaited the appearance of the Stars and Stripes.
Meanwhile, Mustapha Pasha, skirmishing along the coast
of Sphakia, bargaining and cajoling the chiefs of the
formidable Sphakiotes, wasted his time and
troops in fruitless encounters and under the inclement season. At length,
unable to proceed by land, and compelled by his programme to
pass through the canton, he embarked all his troops at Suia,
and transported them to Franco Castelli, where there is a plain country between
the mountains and the sea, and, after negotiations with the chiefs of the
villages on the south slope, was permitted to go, without molestation, through
the defile of Comitades into the plain of Askyfó, where he encamped to receive the submission of
the Sphakiotes. What were the inducements which
permitted him to pass by a ravine where one hundred resolute men could have
destroyed his whole army, I do not know; but it is hardly conceivable, considering
subsequent events, that it was owing to any general complicity of the
mountaineers, but probably to the defection or bribing of that chief whose
place it was to guard the shore end of the defile near which his village was.
He had long been known to be a warm personal friend of the Pasha, and had on
one occasion prevented a blockade-runner from landing her cargo on his
territory.
The day after Mustapha had entered Askyfó,
one of the captains of that section came to me to ask for counsel, saying that
they were undecided whether to submit or fight, on account of their families;
but, if the foreign ships were coming, as they had heard, they would attack
Mustapha in Askyfó. I replied that I could in no wise
counsel him, or make myself responsible for what they should do, but translated
for him Mr. Seward’s dispatch, and told him that I expected daily a ship, and
that as soon as she came she would go, in company with the Russian, to the
coast of Sphakia, and relieve the families there. He
returned to Askyfo, and a council was held, at which
it was decided to attack Mustapha at once. The Pasha, warned by his spies,
broke up his camp at midnight, and, when the Christians gathered at the head of
the defile of Krapi at daybreak, they found the
heights guarded and the rear-guard of the Turkish army already entering the
ravine. The Christians were but six hundred men, but they attacked at once. The
pass is not a simple gorge, but a precipitous pass, in some places divided by
sub-ridges with only mule-paths, and in some passages very bad at that, the way
being partially choked with boulders and overgrown with scrubby oaks, amongst
which the Christians concealed themselves in squads, and fired on the passing
troops in security and deliberation, sometimes even throwing stones on them.
The latter lost all order, and in confusion and separate parties passed
through, scarcely having the courage to stop and return the fire. An attendant
of the Pasha, who rode at his side (when the path permitted), told me that the
balls were like an infernal hail, and that the Pasha pushed through without
stopping to make any defence. Defence was impossible, indeed; for no rear-guard
dared make a stand, with the certainty of being blockaded and cut off when the
main body had passed through. The Egyptians—timid as sheep in danger, but
brutal as wolves when they had to deal with defenseless Christians—paid the
penalty of their cruelty, and received no quarter. The native guides saved
themselves in the rout, and many of the troops, confused in the intricacies of
the way, hid themselves in the thickets, where, for several days after, parties
were discovered and dispatched, no quarter being given.
What the losses were was never known, returns not
being to the taste of the old irregular, or consoling to his Government; but
when the army reached the Apokorona and reassembled,
it was reported by Mustapha (official report, February 6, 1867) at 6,000 men,
too large an estimate in the opinion of the officers of the men-of-war at Suda, who witnessed the defile as they debouched on the
plain of Chania, whence they had gone out for the Theriso campaign, in October, 17,850, with eight guns, by the official statement to Mr.
Dickson (Cretan Blue Book, Mr. Dickson’s dispatch of October 15, 1866), besides
several thousand irregular reinforcements. The commander of one of the Italian
ships, who took the trouble to count some of the battalions, reported one of
them to me at less than 300, and this an Egyptian battalion which had come 900
strong. It was evident to all in Canéa that
Mustapha’s administration was an utter failure. The spring had come; new bodies
of volunteers had been thrown into the island, and the trips of the blockade
runners continued without a single disaster. The Turkish forces, which, at the
assumption of the command by the Commissioner, had been above 30,000, were now,
by my estimate, less than 20,000. The official reports, as usual, chanted
victory, but the under-officials at Chania were not so reticent, and a profound
gloom settled over the whole Mussulman population. The more energetic of the
Turkish commanders openly attacked Mustapha’s cautious policy, and demanded a
more dashing campaign.
Mustapha, by way of reply and justification, gave to
the most noisy of his insubordinates a division to attack the insurgents at Omalos, where the prudent, if a little useless, Zimbrakaki commanded a body of volunteers, and was
supported by Hadji Mikhali with his Lakiotes, Criaris, one of
the bravest of Crete, with the Seliniotes, and
all the men of the destroyed villages of the Rhizo and Kissamos, a desperate throng which every movement of
the Turks did but increase. Ali Riza Pasha, to whom the movement was entrusted,
unwilling to risk again the twice-attempted road by Lakus,
made his attack by a pass further to the west, which led to a declivity by
which approach to the plain of Omalos was possible
but not easy, and which the Cretans call kakoi plevroi (bad slopes). The assault was against men
hidden amongst huge fragments of rock and brushwood, and, though obstinately
pushed, made no headway, and the troops, after losses, as usual unreported,
retreated to Hosti in the valley, where
they were followed and surrounded by the Cretans, and all communication was cut
off with Canéa for two or three days. Here
Hadji Mikhali performed one of those feats which
recall the old days of Greek heroism. Descending at night with a small party of
picked men, he cut his way through the Turkish camp, and disappeared on the
other side. The Turks began an indiscriminate firing of musketry and artillery
in every direction, and kept it up until daylight. Mikhali was certainly the most remarkable character developed by the insurrection. The
son of a chieftain of the same name, who is one of the traditional heroes of
the “great insurrection” (1821 to 1830), he inherited an influence, with
genuine strategic abilities and undaunted courage, which, with great personal
prowess, made him the terror of the Turkish authorities. I have often remarked
the unconscious adaptation of Homer's description of Achilles used by the
Cretans in speaking of Mikhali, his most-dwelt-on
characteristics being his beauty, his swiftness of foot, and immense strength
and stature.
Ali Riza was only rescued from the hands of the
Cretans (for M. Zimbrakaki never ventured from his
safe retreat, though he had now an opportunity to destroy the whole division of
Turks by an energetic and concentrated attack, and the Hadji had to work with
his own people) by a strong column from Canéa opening
up the way for his retreat; and with the abandonment of this plan all hopes of
making any impression on Sphakia were abandoned, the
more as all the villages now took up arms and threw off any pretense of
composition.
In the eastern provinces, at the same time, Reschid Effendi, organizing an army including all the
disposable forces at Heraklion and Rethymno estimated
at 10,000 men, moved to attack the volunteers and Cretans under Coroneos, Petropoulaki (chief
of the Mainotes), Korakas, Skoulas, and others, for once fortunately united, in Amari,
the broken country on the western slope of Ida. Their plan seemed to be to pass
through the canton to the south shore, and return by the plain of Messara and
the eastern slope of the mountain to Heraklion. The Christians drew the whole
force of the Turks into a difficult position at Yerakari,
and then, by a vigorous hand-to-hand attack, cut the column in two, the smaller
half pursuing the proposed route, the other being driven back to Rethymno, losing baggage, two guns, and quantities of
ammunition and provisions. The smaller detachment, pursued, were overtaken at
St. Thomas, where they had halted to rest, and again routed and pursued to the
neighborhood of Heraklion.
Both the divisions of Ali Riza and Reschid,
in returning, avenged themselves on the submitted Cretans in their way. The
following extract from a letter from Lieut. Murray to Mr. Erskine, English
Minister at Athens, characterizes the position of things in the whole island :
“Chania, February 24, 1867.
Things appear to get worse and worse, and the end
appears further off than it did six months ago. Today the troops returned from
an unsuccessful attempt to force a passage into Omalos,
partly owing, they say, to the plain being covered with melted snow, but in a
great measure owing to the stubborn resistance offered by the insurgents under Zimbrakaki. What the next move will be I am as yet unable
to say; report says they are going to Kissamos. I
fancy, unless reinforcements arrive, they will soon have to withdraw inside the
fortified towns.
February 25.—A sad tale was told to me yesterday. A
shoemaker living in Chania, and well known to all as a quiet, peaceful man,
fled to the hills when the insurrection broke out. There he followed his trade
till three months ago, when, the country round Canéa appearing
to be pretty quiet, he came and settled at the village of Fourna, in the plain of Alikianu.
A few days ago, his wife ran in and said, ‘There are soldiers coming into the
village’. He replied, ‘Don't be alarmed, they have been here before’. A few
minutes afterwards, two soldiers dragged him out of the house, and beat him so
that they broke his arm, which caused him to faint. His wife brought him some
water, as did also an officer, and left him. Shortly afterwards, while he was
still unable to rise, two other soldiers came up and dispatched him with their
swords. This is the history of one out of eighteen killed in the same village
that day, told me by his poor wife, who, together with her four children, came to
seek redress from Mustapha Pasha. He gave her two hundred piastres, and said he
would enquire about it.
“I am sorry to tell you that the troops have again
gone out—one division to Kissamos, the other to Apokorona. The people are again flying to the hills before
the advent of the troops, and I greatly fear more atrocities”.
CHAPTER X
BY this time, the Powers had learned how utterly
mendacious all the Turkish official reports were, and that the insurrection was
further than ever from being suppressed; and the Porte, dreading the effect of
the knowledge of the utter failure of the Imperial Commission from which it had
promised itself such immense results, developed a new plan, in which the douceurs of
a plébiscite were to be administered
by its armies, and a new assembly constituted, who were to sit at
Constantinople, and represent both the Mussulman and Christian populations as
an advisory council on the new measures of reform which were to pacify
the conquered islanders. The most curious of all the strange
characteristics of this affair were the persistence of the Turkish Government
in misinforming Europe of the position of the struggle, and the willingness of
official Europe to be misinformed. Now, at a moment when every corps of the
Turkish army had been defeated, the Porte, with a ludicrous gravity which would
have been comical in the extreme if one could have forgotten the misery of
starvation, of barbarism, death by cold and fire and sword, with atrocities
without name which were momentarily being perpetrated by its authority on the
helpless victims of its paternal tenderness, sent to Crete its ablest
diplomatic agent, Server Effendi, with the following proclamation, nominally
addressed to the Commissioner, but really to the Powers, Server Effendi being
actually the plenipotentiary, Mustapha being in disgrace, but openly honored by
an honor as delusive as the victories by which he had secured it:
“It is needless to tell thee that we are deeply
grieved at the insurrection which has been fomented in Crete by ill-intentioned
people, at the evils which have resulted from it to the inhabitants, and at the
blood which a cruel necessity has forced to flow. If, notwithstanding all their
efforts, our Government have not been able to prevent these misfortunes, if the
paternal advice which they gave to the misguided inhabitants, in order to bring
them back to the line of duty, have remained fruitless, the responsibility must
wholly fall, before God and the tribunal of public opinion, upon the
instigators of these calamities.
“The wise behavior, however, of the islanders who,
understanding the real state of things, remained faithful to us, and, on the
other hand, the bravery of which our Imperial army has given most signal proofs
in fighting against the insurgents, as well as the wise measures which thou
hastened to take, have powerfully contributed to restore peace and security in
all parts of the island, with the exception of such as are infested by the
presence of foreign brigands. Those islanders who, giving way to culpable
insinuations and deluded by false promises, have some time followed these seditious
agents, have hastened to profit by the general amnesty granted beforehand, and
have returned to their duties. A committee has therefore been formed in our
capital for the purpose of examining and framing a future mode of
administration of the island for the new Governor, who is to be sent there as
soon as matters shall have reassumed their normal condition. Thus the committee
will have to look to the best means of repairing the ills sustained by the
country, to perfect the administration in conformity with the legitimate and
indispensable wants of the people, and to effect thus that prosperity which
results from the development of agriculture and commerce; in a word, they will
have to procure a general bettering of the condition of the country. But for
these measures relating to the government of the island to succeed, and for the
welfare and prosperity to be realized, it has been deemed necessary to consult
likewise some of the principal people of the island, who enjoy the confidence
of the inhabitants. On the suggestion, therefore, of our Government, we have
approved of and instruct thee to proceed to the election, by the inhabitants,
of one or two notables, Mohammedans or not, taken in each district, and to send
here as soon as possible those who may have been selected. Be careful to bring
to the knowledge of the public the present Imperial firman,
and to be at the same time with the inhabitants of the island the interpreter
of the good intentions with which we are animated towards them”.
Server Effendi was really a most intelligent and (for
a Turk) humane administrator, and, had he not been crippled by the necessity of
keeping up the absurd pretense of an actual conquest achieved, might have found
some sortie from the difficulty, which would have arrested the train of
disasters which afterwards brought the Porte so near to its final quietus. He
made himself no delusions, and, I believe, propagated none at Constantinople.
In point of fact, no one of the responsible governments there was now deceived;
but the Sultan had passed into a monomaniacal condition of fury on the subject
of the conquest of Crete, and no Grand Vizier could have remained in office who
proposed an abandonment of the war without conquest. The powers, except
England, counseled the Porte to yield a principality, and it is probable that,
if England had acceded, the Cretans would, at that time, have accepted this
solution of the question in spite of the Hellenic influence. The policy of
England has always seemed to me mistaken to Turkey and faithless to the
Cretans, for, in effect, all the powers signatary of
the protocol of February 20, 1830, were morally bound to secure to the Cretans
a similar condition to that of Samos. But it must, at the same time, be
admitted that this policy was open, consistent, and, so far as Turkey was
concerned, loyal, while that of France was double, disloyal to all her allies,
wavering, and entirely egotistic; and that of Russia was consistent only in its
unfaltering hostility to Turkey, and its willingness to favor any affair that
promised to weaken her empire. The tactics of Greece were of a nature to make
the chances of Crete more precarious than they need have been. The policy of
Crete for Greece, rather than Crete for her own good, made confusion and jealousy
in the conduct of the war much greater than they need have been. What the
Cretans wanted was a good leader, arms, and bread. Greece sent them rival
chiefs without subordination, a rabble of volunteers, who quarreled with the
islanders, and weakened the cause by deserting it as soon as they felt the
strain of danger and hardship; and if, after the first campaign, they were more
wise in enrolling men to go to Crete, they still allowed the jealousies and
hostilities of the leaders to go unchecked by any of those measures which were
in their power. But the radical fault of the Hellenes was that they compromised
the question by the introduction of the question of annexation, and forced it
into the field of international interests, disguising the real causes and
justification of the movement, and making it impossible for England
consistently with her declared policy to entertain the complaints of the
Cretans without also admitting to consideration the pretensions of the
Hellenes. If the latter had not intruded their views on the tapis, the former
might have been heard; but, from the moment in which annexation to Greece
became the alternative of the reconquest of Crete, the English Government could
clearly not interfere against the Porte without upsetting its own work, and if,
in some minor respects, especially the question of the principality, she had
been more kind to Crete, no one could have found fault with a policy which was,
in its general tendency, obligatory on her. Her great mistake was in not
recognizing more clearly the utterly irresponsible nature of the Turkish
administration, and compelling the Porte to redress the wrongs which even
Dickson, philottoman as he was to the last
degree, could not ignore the reality of, before they had passed into the arbitration
of arms. I believe that, if Lord Lyons had had the direction of affairs from
the beginning, he would have composed the difficulty without bloodshed, for he
saw clearly and understood the real merits of the question.
Server Effendi succeeded in naming deputies from
nearly all the districts of the island, and in compelling most of them to go to
Constantinople. One escaped, and came to my house to ask asylum. Of course I
was compelled to give it, and he remained for six weeks my guest, when he escaped,
disguised as a Russian sailor, on board a Russian corvette, and went to Greece.
The others were sent under guard to the capital, where they also demanded
protection from the Russian Legation, declaring that they came against their
own will, and that of the Cretan people; and so in effect ended a farce, put on
the stage with all the appliances of the Turkish Government, and played with
their best actors.
The arrival of a new swift steamer from England, for
the purpose of running the blockade, gave a new (flan to the insurrection, and
the Arkadi (formerly the Dream of American
blockade celebrity), was from this time until her destruction in August of 1867
an element of the first importance in the war. The former blockade-runner,
the Panhellenion, was a slow steamer,
never making above nine miles per hour, and her success in provisioning without
a mishap the insurrection for nearly a year, with a squadron of thirty ships to
watch her, is one of the most surprising instances of capacity on one side, or
incapacity on the other, in the history of marine warfare. The Arkadi not
only brought arms and supplies, but she carried away at almost every trip
numbers of non-combatants, and formed a safe and reliable means of
communication between Greece and Crete, by which messengers, supplies of all
kinds, and every requisite for the war were transported with tolerable
certainty. The warm weather enabled the insurgents to re-enter the field in
greater numbers, and it finally became evident that the war was to be one which
would only be finished by the exhaustion of the resources either of Greece or
Turkey.
A change in administration at Athens had brought a
more capable and thoroughly national council into power, under the presidency
of Mr. Comoundouros, the ablest and clearest-headed
statesman of the Hellenic kingdom, who had discouraged an appeal to arms until
the war became a fait accompli, when he advocated a policy of
aid to Crete coûte qui’l coûte, and, on
assuming power, made the insurrection his chief care. The whole resources of
Greece were devoted to it, and the funds of the insurgent committee at Athens
were fed directly from the national treasury. There was, no doubt, scarcely any
disguise about the complicity; but public feeling in Greece was so thoroughly
enlisted that no government could have existed which did not unmistakably favor
the insurrection. Unfortunately for the success of the Greek plans, the
government did not impose on the Cretans an effective organization and a
supreme commander. It still based its chief hope on European intervention, and
counted on a limitation of the struggle by their influence, instead of
preparing to act in the most complete independence. There was some excuse for
this in a states-man-for-the-moment, in the fact that intervention had already
begun by the overtures of Russia, acceded to at this date by France, whose
Emperor was at the juncture ready to come to an understanding with the Czar on
the basis of mutual concession; but Comoundouros should
have seen that the readiness of Greece to endure and prolong a war with Turkey
would be the best argument for the intervention the former desired. Greek
politics have always had the fault of being based on sentimentality, and
calculating too much on the sympathy of Christendom and classical scholars,
neither of which has ever played a noteworthy part in modern Hellenic history,
for even the genuine philhellenism of 1821 would have accomplished nothing had
it not been that Turkey stood in the way of Russian combinations. The Greeks
seem never to comprehend that governments are purely political, and never
influenced by sentiment or religious affinities. They count that Hellenism and
Christianity must always be weighed in the Eastern question, and in this case
calculated on forcing the hand of the Christian powers by these appliances;
while if they had proved that they were capable of conducting the war with
energy and good system, preparing themselves meanwhile for a war with Turkey,
Europe must have interfered, as a war between Greece and Turkey involved too
momentous questions to be risked for so small an affair as Crete, and
Christianity might have got the casting vote in deciding which side
interference should favor. If Russia had been sincere in her friendship for
Greece, she might have helped the question to a speedy ending by giving the
word to the Danubian provinces to rise; but
she has never desired a strong Hellenic kingdom, and this Comoundouros understood clearly, and that any
intervention voluntarily made by Russia would be for her own interest purely,
and that, holding as he did the initiative in a movement of all the Christian
races, he could, by the employment of it, compel Russia to favor his plans or
lose her prestige with them, and to a great extent her moral influence. It was
with this view that he prepared movements in Epirus and Thessaly, while
Montenegro became agitated, and the seeds of the Cretan trouble seemed wafted
over the whole Turkish Empire.
Pending the question of intervention, the transport of
families waited the arrival of the American ship, of which no advices came. I
telegraphed to Admiral Goldsborough for news of her, and received reply that he
knew nothing of any orders for Crete. Subsequent information showed that our
Secretary of Legation at Constantinople, a Levantine, and, like his class in
general, devoted to the Turkish Government, and a most rancorous and persistent
assailant of both Mr. Morris and myself in the journals of Europe and America
(and whom the disgraceful condition of our diplomatic service permitted to
assail the acts of his superior and the declared policy of his own government),
acting in the interests of the Turkish Government, had put himself in
communication with the naval authorities by the intermediation of officers
attached to the squadron in European waters, and instigated the revocation of
the decision of the Government, and, when finally the Canandaigua arrived
in the middle of March, she had orders to do nothing in any way disagreeable to
the Turkish authorities; and I soon found that the state of feeling in the navy
was anything but favorable to the employment of our ships for humane purposes,
I myself, as instigator of their discomfort, being treated by the officers with
a degree of incivility which showed as little good-breeding as esprit
de patrie, and was manifested so openly as
to encourage the local authorities in their systematic persecution of me. With
the exception of two or three of the younger officers, the whole wardroom
broadly expressed their sympathies with the Turkish Government, so that, after
having persuaded Captain Strong, who sympathized somewhat with the awkwardness
of my position, to run down to Rethymno with me to
look into the condition of the Christian families shut up in that town, I saw
the Canandaigua sail, with a heartfelt desire not to see one of my country’s
men-of-war again while I was on the station. The Commissioner showed his
appreciation of our official servility by ostentatiously ignoring the visit of
Captain Strong, passing the Canandaigua by without notice, while he visited all
the other foreign men-of-war in the harbor.
CHAPTER XI
TO compensate myself for the slights of my
fellow-countrymen, and at the same time escape from and retaliate for the
annoyances of the Turkish officials, I sent to Corfu for a little cutter-yacht,
and until it came sent my family to Syra. All
official intercourse had ceased between the Commissioner and myself, and,
encouraged by our Secretary of Legation, who maintained a correspondence with
the dragoman of the Commission, the Pasha showed his determination to drive me
out of the island. It was forbidden to let me a house, the one I had having
become untenable from the number of military hospitals gathered round it. I
found it almost impossible to be served in the market, which was under official
control, and every movement I made was so watched, and locomotion made so
dangerous by the random discharges of the muskets of the irregulars, which were
fired off on all occasions, and even with none, the balls constantly being
heard passing overhead, that I determined on passing the summer on board
the Kestrel, which I did, running from port to port in the island,
and over to the Greek islands, whenever the fancy took me. In this way I
revenged myself most agreeably. My satisfaction was greatly increased by seeing
the disgrace of my adversary, the Commissioner, who was recalled, having
utterly failed in everything but devastation. He was replaced by Hussein Avni,
a cautious and heavy-witted man, a good disciplinarian, but a most fanatical
Mussulman, and so forewarned of my dangerous qualities that I found, to my
great amusement, that I was considered the head and front of the insurrection.
As with all the espionage they could apply, no act of complicity could be
discovered, I was credited with superhuman cunning, it never entering the heads
of the rusés Mussulmans that I had
nothing to conceal, and that, while they were watching my house at Kalepa, the insurgent messengers came in at the city gates
almost every day. In fact, except as a witness of events, I had ceased to be of
any importance to the insurrection; and, entirely unsupported by any moral or
diplomatic influence of my own Government, and wearied of a struggle which
brought to me but a succession of spectacles of misery and barbarity, I would
gladly have left the island, where the extraordinary expense of living was
devouring my substance without any recompense, but that I had become in public
opinion, both in Greece and Crete, so identified with the existence of the
insurrection that my resignation or recall would have been a danger to it in
the eyes of its friends. The moral, intervention of my own Government amounted
to the despatcher before quoted, a fustian despatcher from Mr. Seward to Mr.
Morris about “the brave and suffering Cretans”, and a buncombe resolution of
Congress, in view of which the people of the East, having to deal generally
with governments whose words have a positive value, supposed that we were the
friends of the Cretans, and I determined to avail myself of the delusion, as
far as my own position was concerned, and conform to what was really public
opinion in America, confident that the Government cared nothing about the
matter pro or con. The Porte threatened to revoke
my exequatur. Nothing would have pleased me better, for I knew that this would
compel my Government to do something, and Ali Pasha seemed to have the same
opinion, for the threat was dropped. A strong pressure was then applied at
Washington to have me recalled, and Mr. Seward had consented, and decided to
call me home, I was informed, under pretext of consultation on some public
affairs; but General Ignatieff, getting wind of it, telegraphed to St. Petersburg
that I must be retained, and a telegram from there to Washington settled the
matter, I conjecture, as nothing more was heard of it. This I believe was the
extent of the part performed by the American Government, and, trivial as it
was, it seems to me the least creditable played by any government concerned.
Hussein Avni was only the locum tenens of
the Serdar Ekrem, Omar Pasha, whom the Porte had
decided on sending to Crete as a final and reliable agent, his name being, as
was supposed, so formidable as to discourage any protraction of the resistance.
In the interregnum, Hussein undertook no measures against the insurrection. Ali
Riza Pasha, being beaten at Topolia in an
attempt to penetrate into Selinos, where a new
gathering of volunteers and insurgents had been made, contented himself with
ravaging the plain districts of Kissamos which had
hitherto escaped. Whole villages, which had submitted without any resistance,
were plundered, the women violated by order of the officers, until in some
cases death ensued; and of the men, some were killed, others beaten and
tortured in many ways, all who could escape taking refuge in the caves and
hiding places along the shore, where they escaped by small boat to Cerigotto. I ran over later in the Kestrel, and
saw several hundred of these miserable wretches, women and children mainly, and
saw two row-boats arrive with their lading so crowded that it was a marvel how
they could have made the passage of twenty miles or more of open sea, in any
weather. I saw one old blind man of ninety who had been wrapped by the soldiers
in cloths on which they poured oil, and then, setting them on fire, left him to
his fate. His friends came back in time to save his life, but I saw the broad
scar of the burning, covering nearly his whole chest.
Omar Pasha arrived on the 9th of April, and on the nth
a body of 2,000 insurgents came down to the heights of Boutzounaria,
and attacked the guard of the aqueduct, to show his Highness, apparently, that
they were not discouraged. They were driven back with the loss of three killed,
the plan of attack having been betrayed by a miller in the neighborhood, and
the troops been reinforced in the night before the appointed day. At the same
time, a more decidedly offensive strategy seemed to be adopted by the whole
insurrection, owing to the new material brought over by the Arkadi,
and in several places combats of comparative importance took place. The
insurgent chiefs made no concealment of their satisfaction at the change in the
command, fearing the wiles and personal influence of Mustapha more than all the
artillery and discipline of the Generalissimo. Omar had landed with great pomp
and circumstance—horses and guns, cavalry and a staff, new and splendid
uniforms. Amongst the others I paid my respects to the new victim, and found
him, to my surprise, a weak, conceited, bombastic old man. He assured me that
his plan and appliances were so complete and irresistible that within two weeks
from the time he set out the insurrection would be crushed. I ventured to
suggest that he would find on getting into the interior that the work was much
more difficult than he imagined, and that the neglect of the Porte to
construct good roads when they had command of the island made their work very
difficult. He replied that it could not be more difficult than Montenegro, and
he had conquered that, etc. I left him with much less apprehension for the
success of the campaign than I had previously entertained. He was a strong
contrast to the quiet, concentrated, nisi Mustapha.
The political intervention of Russia commenced at this
juncture by the negotiation of a secret arrangement with the Viceroy, by which
he engaged to withdraw his troops from Crete, and a division was actually
embarked for Egypt before the Serdar Ekrem succeeded
in arresting the defection, which was completed on his return from the
campaign, seven months later, when a number, which, with the previous
departure, amounted to about 10,000 men, the remainder of a total of 24,000
Egyptians landed in Crete, returned to Egypt. The change in French policy was
also marked by the recall of the slavishly pro-Turkish consul Derché, incapable either of honesty or good policy, and
whose demoralization had made him worthless even to his own government, and the
replacing of him by M. Tricou, a clever,
quick-witted Parisian, but long in the service, and lately stationed at
Alexandria. There seems to be little doubt that he was authorized to use his
eyes to the disadvantage of Omar Pasha if possible. [Tricou arrived
just too late to be received by Omar before setting out, and followed him to
Heraklion with the intention, if not the order, to follow him through his
campaign; a surveillance which Omar bluntly declined, to his cost, as events
proved.]
He occupied about two weeks in organizing his troops,
receiving heavy reinforcements from Turkey, including some splendid-looking
regiments with full ranks, and then, with about 15,000 men, set out for the
conquest of Sphakia. The Cretans, as if to reply to
the new manifesto of the Porte, formed a provisional government, and
chose Mavrocordato, an able Greek administrator,
and most trustworthy and patriotic man, as president, decreeing at the same
time that all authority should be exercised in the name of the King of the
Hellenes. But the difficulty, not to say impossibility, of reconciling the
claims of the rival chieftains, and of enforcing any kind of administrative
system in the island, deterred Mavrocordato from
assuming his post, though the brutum fulmen of proclamation on both sides still
continued, the only practical question being which side would stand most
killing. Strategy on either side was of trivial importance, tactics of none.
The Cretans rolled stones and felled trees into the passes, already nearly
impassable, and Omar and his staff planned, on the chart, a campaign for a
country none of them had ever seen, and with the greatest contempt for the
judgment of those who knew it. Mehmet Pasha, who still retained command in the Apokorona, though he had been obliged to retreat to the
seaside, advanced anew, and formed an entrenched camp near Vrysses, while Omar, with the bulk of the army, moved on to
Episkopi, and waited there the arrival of the troops at Rethymno.
When all were ready, a joint attack was made, by Mehmet on Krapi and the Serdar Ekrem on Kallikrati,
a much longer but less precipitous pass, which led into Askyfó from the east.
Zimbrakaki, with Veloudaki and other Cretan chiefs, and Soliotis of the Greeks, commanded at Krapi,
and Coroneos at Kallikrati,
and the affair ended as had all the former attacks, Mehmet being driven back to
his camp, and Omar to Episkopi. These were affairs of sharpshooters entirely,
where no opportunity of employing discipline for the attack offered, and the
troops exposed themselves to a fusillade which they could not reply to. But,
with the irritation of defeat, the Ottoman Generalissimo gave way to the most
brutal impulses of revenge. Villages which had just submitted, and whose people
had remained within the Turkish lines, were put to sack, and the last outrages
of war perpetrated on the inhabitants.
The rumor which accompanied the Serdar Ekrem, that in spite of his professions of moderation and
legality (as opposed to Mustapha’s policy) he had secret orders to stamp out
the disaffection by the severest rigor, found now clear confirmation. What
under the Commissioner, subsequent to Arkadi, was variable and overlooked
barbarity in the subordinates, was, under the Generalissimo, the law and order
of things, and he himself partook of the plunder of the defenseless, and
rejuvenated the lusts of his old age with the pick of the captive Cretan
maidens. The testimony of several of the European officers in the army was
offered me, proving that Omar Pasha dishonored even his adopted country by his
violation of his word, by his depravity and his cruelty, and himself set the
example to his army of everything which could add to the misery and despair of
unhappy Crete.
It is as natural for the Turkish authorities to deny
as for the Christians to exaggerate the atrocities committed, but evidence of a
nature not to be rejected, or even questioned in its general import,
establishes that the policy adopted was one of subduing Crete by terror, and to
this end full license was given to the soldiery. One entry in a memorandum book
kept by Geissler (Pilaver Pasha), Omar’s chief
of artillery, and which I had the chance to read, said, noting the entry into
one of the villages near Goidaropolis: “O.
Pasha ordered the division to ravage and rape”. All villages were burned, and
all prisoners murdered or worse. The chiefs of four villages who came to make
their submission were at once beheaded. The population invariably fled to the
high mountains on the approach of the troops.
It will hardly be edifying to follow further in detail
this barbarity; and with the general statement that the policy here indicated
was followed throughout Omar’s campaign unflinchingly, and that the French
consul was refused permission to accompany Omar in his movements, that no
civilized witness might bring his deeds to light, I shall drop the theme, which
sickens me to recall even at this long interval. My duty then compelled me to
investigate, as now to declare, these things, but I spare the civilized world
and myself any further recital of the deeds of the Croat Pasha.
The 6th of May a force of volunteers, commanded by Dimitrikarakos, landed in the eastern provinces, where up
to that time hostilities had been very unimportant. A large body of insurgents
quickly rallied round the volunteers, and, establishing their headquarters at Lasithe, they swept the country up to the walls of Candia.
This compelled a new concentration of forces to meet the new emergency, and
Omar set out, via Rethymno, through Mylopotamo to Heraklion, sending word to Reschid Effendi to come to meet him en route. Coroneos,
meanwhile, had not been idle, and while Zimbrakaki and Costa Veloudaki, with the Apokoroniotes, some volunteers, and most of the Sphakiotes, remained to keep Mehmet in check, and profit by
an unguarded moment to attack him, Coroneos and his
followers kept near the army of Omar Pasha, waiting until he should be
entangled in the ravines of Mylopotamo to attack him,
and when he had reached Margaritas, he was beset furiously by the whole body of
the men of Agios Basilios and
the Amariotes, with the volunteers who
accompanied Coroneos. The Turks, shut into narrow
ravines overlooked by bold heights, defended themselves with difficulty, and
were soon entirely hemmed in, unable to advance or retreat. The fire of the
Cretan rifles penetrated into every part of the Turkish encampment, Omar’s tent
being several times pierced. At a council of war, called on the emergency, the
opinion was general that the position was critical, and some considered it as
next to hopeless. There was nothing to do but take shelter and wait for Reschid and his irregulars, who, well acquainted with the
mountains and the Cretan method of fighting, would be able to form an
advance-guard, and, by skirmishing vigorously, protect the march of the
regulars, utterly helpless in this kind of warfare.
The passage of the troops through this section was
described to me by several eye-witnesses as anything but military. They cowered
at the first attack, and refused to move forward in the ravines except when
preceded by a cloud of irregulars to drive back the Christians, every onslaught
of whom produced a panic; but, as they were behind as well as before, retreat
was impossible, and there was no alternative to the Turks but to take to such
defenses as the ground permitted and defend themselves as they best could. The
Albanians and Circassians were not sufficiently acquainted with the country,
cut up with interminable ravines, covered with olive groves, and defended by
men who knew every inch of the ground. The wretched Turks lost all courage,
even that of despair, and a European officer in the Egyptian service who was
present said to me that most of his comrades entertained no hope of escape, and Coroneos has since assured me that if the other
chiefs had responded to his call for help, the total destruction of the army,
including the Serdar Ekrem and his staff, was
practicable.
As has generally been the case in Greek wars, the
jealousies of the chiefs were the safety of the Turks. Petropoulaki,
a Mainote palikari of
the old war, who commanded in Malavisi and
Temenos, and watched Candia from the eastern slopes of Ida, refused to come to
the aid of Coroneos; and when Reschid moved from the east, entered the defiles of Mylopotamo at Damasta, instead of throwing himself before
the Turkish division and delaying their advance, he attacked them in the rear
after they had gone through, and, though he inflicted severe losses on them and
took much of the baggage, he rather facilitated than otherwise the junction of
the two Turkish corps, and, after a short pursuit, abandoned him, instead of
following up and uniting with Coroneos. Skoulas, chief of Mylopotamo,
alone kept up the chase, and Coroneos, warned in time
of the advance of Reschid, dispatched a small body of
men to oppose his junction with Omar. Reschid,
however, with the greatest obstinacy and gallantry, hammered away regardless of
loss, and, fighting all night long, effected his junction, with which Coroneos’s hope of bottling up Omar was lost. The
Generalissimo embraced Reschid as his savior, and
promoted him on the spot. What made the matter still worse for the Cretans was
that their ammunition was exhausted, and supplies did not arrive in time, so Coroneos reluctantly fell back, leaving the way open. The
next day his ammunition arrived.
CHAPTER XII
ON the march forward through Mylopotamos the troops avenged themselves for their flight and losses in the most barbarous
manner. Olive-trees were burned and cut down, every house burned, and every
luckless Christian who fell into their hands sent with short shrift to his
account. The European officer above alluded to declared to me that he was an
eyewitness of the oft-repeated incident of burning the refugees in one of the
caves, around the mouth of which a huge pile of green wood was piled, and fired
while the troops hurried on, without waiting to see what the result might be;
and so reached Damasta only slightly
opposed, and debouched on the open country of Candia.
This occupied from the 18th to the 20th of May. The
Turkish army then concentrated near the remains of Cnossos, and without
entering into Candia moved on to Pediada, where
Omar established his headquarters at Castale,
near the foot of the Lasithe Mountains. He now
announced his plan, which was to sweep round the insurgent forces, and push
them all westward into Sphakia, where he would shut
them up and finish the war. That he entertained no such expectation, however, was
evident from the order of his attack on Lasithe,
which he made at a single point, so as rather to disperse than gather in the
insurgents. The 3d of June he sent Reschid to attack
the northern pass of Lasithe, by Abdou. The column of
irregulars entered the little plateau, which is as an ante-chamber to the great
plain of Lasithe, without opposition, and his men at
once camped, and began to cook their supper, or whatever else the desire of the
bashibazouk might be. They were, in this state of confusion and security,
suddenly attacked by the Cretans, and utterly routed and driven back to the
plains below, leaving their dead and wounded on the ground. The news of the
disaster followed the dispatch announcing the entry so closely, that both
became known in Heraklion that same night. Reinforcements were continually
arriving, and the Pasha had now in the field for the attack 18,000 men. With
these he renewed the attack on Lasithe in two
directions, from Abdou on the north, and from the west by Mathea and the pass which was defended by the mountain
called Lasithe Effendi—a very strong position, but in
a state of defence in no ways equal to its
natural advantages. The insurgent force gathered in the Lasithe at this time was the largest the insurrection had ever seen assembled, and is
estimated by competent assistants at about 5,000, but with no head, though many
commanders. The force was sufficiently well organized to have defeated Omar
Pasha, but, after three days' cautious skirmishing, the Turks penetrated on several
sides, the irregulars turning Abdou by a difficult and undefended approach at
the east, and the insurgents retired in disorder and in every direction; some
by Messara into the Ida district, but the larger portion into Rhizo Castron, south of Lasithe, and the higher ridges of the Lasithe range, which Omar did not attempt to penetrate.
On hearing that Omar had arrived at Heraklion, and was
about attacking Lasithe, I ran down in the Kestrel to
watch his movements from nearer, and get more reliable information than the
consular agents there generally furnished, as well as to convey more promptly
the news to Greece and Constantinople, the agents only reporting back to their
superiors at Chania. On the arrival of the first news of the entry of Reschid into Abdou, Omar sent off an express with the news
to Syra and Constantinople, but when the
later report came, of the surprise and repulse, I was able, to the great
annoyance of the authorities, to send by the Austrian post steamer, which left
the next day, to correct the advices by the new information which I received
from the son of Reschid Pasha, who was in great
anxiety for the fate of his father, a raid of the Christians having temporarily
cut his communications with headquarters. For two or three days the panic and
confusion in Candia were extreme.
Orders were then issued for the bulk of the army to
concentrate at Dibaki, and Omar moved across the
plains of Pediada and Messara, Reschid taking a line further west by St. Thomas and the
slopes of Ida, while the troops who had moved further into the Lasithe country attempted to pass directly to the coast.
Two battalions of Egyptians in this movement were caught in the ravines of
Sime, and almost annihilated, leaving baggage, arms, and mules, loaded with
ammunition and provisions, in the hands of the Cretans, who hung on the rear of
every detachment, harassing more successfully than they had opposed them.
At Dibaki the army
was reorganized for the Sphakian campaign.
It was the beginning of July when it began to move. The fleet had been waiting
at Dibaki some time, and embarking the bulk
of the regulars, still strengthened by fresh troops from Constantinople, they
were landed at Franco Castelli, and took immediate possession of the heights
commanding Kallikrati. The forces under Coroneos were on their way to oppose this movement, but,
moving by land, were too late, and Zimbrakaki and
his Sphakiotes made no opposition. Reschid, meanwhile, moved from Dibaki through Agios Basilios, his march being facilitated by the assassination
of the chief of that district, which left the Christians without a head, and
paralyzed their defence in great measure,
though opposition enough was made to render his march slower than the plans of
Omar had provided, and gave time to Coroneos to get
to Kallikrati, where he immediately commenced
operations by an attack on Omar's positions on the hills south of the plain. He
began the combat with forty men, who were rapidly increased to 1,500, whom he
divided into two bodies, of which the heavier, massing unperceived on the left
flank of the Turkish position, after the defence had
been concentrated against the feint made by Coroneos himself, charged energetically, and carried the two positions on the Turkish
left. The ground was very favorable to irregular operations, rocky, with much
small growth of trees, making artillery useless. The Cretans held the positions
taken, and in them prepared an attack for the day after.
On this day the insurgent force had augmented to 2,000
men, and the plan of operation was a slight variation only of that of the day
before, the feint being on the left, but, unfortunately for it, the order to
the commander who should have made the real attack was kept in the pocket of
the officer who carried it until an hour after the time at which the assault
was ordered to be made, so that though the diversion of Coroneos was very well carried out, and the Sphakiotes under
him penetrated to an abattis which had been constructed around the
principal position of the Turkish army on a conical hill called Avgon (die egg), the expected flank attack was
not delivered, and the troops who had held the positions on the light had time
to concentrate against Coroneos, and he was driven
back. Preparations were, however, made for the third day, with forces still
increasing, when the news that Reschid had arrived
at Gaiduropolis, and consequently menaced their
rear, demoralized the Cretans, compelling Coroneos with his volunteers to fall back on Askyfo.
Mehmet Pasha, once more attacking Askyfó by Krapi, while Omar’s troops and Reschid with his bashi-bazouks passed by the
mountains from Kallikrati to Asfendu,
and so into Askyfo, had been opposed by Zimbrakaki, Soliotis, and the Sphakiote chiefs for three days, when, finding the defence concentrated at the head of the gorge, he
climbed the hills at his right, passed over into Askyfó,
took possession of Kares, on the edge of the
plain, barricading himself there without attempting to advance further. Coroneos, on his retreat to Askyfo,
threw a force of several hundred Sphakiotes and
volunteers behind him, and for several days his communications with Canéa and his base at Vryses were
cut off, when Reschid succeeded in getting into Askyfo and supplying him with provisions, of which he stood
much in need, having left Vryses with six
days’ rations, and now been twelve days out without further supplies. Zimbrakaki had retired to the heights between Askyfo and Anopolis,
followed by Omar’s forces, while Reschid occupied the
southeastern part of Askyfo, Mehmet being in the
northeastern. The indefatigable Coroneos took
position at Muri with about 800 men, and thence menaced the communications
between the latter chiefs, and so effectually that Mehmet was obliged to
evacuate Askyfo, and get back to Vryses, when, falling on the rear of Reschid, Coroneos compelled him to fall back to Kallikrati. The Greek chief then placed himself between
Omar and his auxiliaries, and watched both, ready to attack either when the
development of their plans should tell him what to do. Omar pushed on to Anopolis, and thence to Aradena,
where he was gallantly opposed by a small force of Greek volunteers under Smolenski and Nicolaides. The Greeks, attacked in
front and on both flanks, while Zimbrakaki, at an
hour’s journey, remained idle, and Petropoulaki,
a league away, guarded an unattacked pass,
were forced to fall back, and leave Aradena to
the Turkish troops, after a display of courage which called forth the praises
of their enemies. But here the defenses of nature stopped the invaders. The
great stronghold of Sphakia, Samaria, was impregnable
from the side of Aradena, the mountains hardly
giving place for undisputed passage to pedestrians. The troops were accordingly
withdrawn to the seaside, and as the shore gives no passage, a detachment was
carried by ships to the entrance of the gorge of Agios Roumeli. An energetic assault penetrated as far as the
village which gives name to this valley, a distance of half a mile, but here
the Cretans, concentrating in numbers, and aided by the masses of rock and
torrents, stopped all further advance, and the troops were withdrawn; and,
their passage through Sphakia to Canéa being barred, they were sent round by sea,
leaving the country as hostile as they had found it, but desolated and ravaged
as the paese guasta never
had been before. The losses of the army in this campaign had been frightful.
The sun of July, beating on those bare rocks with southern slopes, with rare
and unhealthy wells, fatigues of climbing and battle, merciless driving and
pushing to enable Omar to telegraph to the Sultan at Paris the conquest of Sphakia, had been a hundredfold more fatal to the Turks
than Cretan bullets. Sunstrokes and dysenteries carried off hundreds. Amongst
the deaths was that of Geissler, Omar’s chief of artillery, in whose journal
the writer read after his death these words: “Who could have believed that I
could ever have assisted in the subjugation of these unhappy Christians!”. He
had done his utmost at the beginning of the campaign to check the barbarities
by which it was sought to terrify the Cretans into submission, and having
remonstrated with Omar for one case of peculiar and repulsive atrocity, a
coolness arose between them, which continued until Geissler’s death.
Omar reached Chania by ship August 30, not having even
done as much towards the conquest of the island as Mustapha, no division of his
troops having passed from sea to sea except by the plain of Pediada, etc. His losses since leaving Chania cannot be
estimated at less than 20,000 to 25,000 men—the estimate made by the most
competent persons of the total force employed in the Sphakian campaign
being not less than 45,000, while, on leaving, he himself declared that he had
not over 20 000 troops, all told, in the island, and European officers in the
service declared to me that this was an overestimate.
Returning for a moment to follow Reschid in his retreat from Sphakia, we shall so conclude
this campaign. Waiting a day or so at Kallikrati, he
seemed undecided what course to take, and Coroneos watched him, fearing a raid on the undevastated district near Kallikrati, but, urgently summoned by the Assembly to Sphakia to resist Omar, he was on the way to obey, when he
received news that Reschid had broken up his camp,
and was in retreat on Dibaki. He instantly sent
messengers to the men of Agios Basilios to
hasten to stop the way at Halara, a most
difficult pass of their canton, while he followed him with all the forces he
could muster. Flight and pursuit were rapid, but when at Halara Coroneos overtook the
Mussulmans, he found no force in Reschid’s way,
and that he had occupied the pass without resistance. Pursuit recommenced next
day, and in passing by Amari, Reschid escaped an
ambush of the Amariotes by taking an unused
and difficult way in preference to the commonly travelled one at which they lay
in wait for him, and, incessantly harassed, and losing men and baggage
continually, was caught again by his Greek adversary near Melambos, in a parting fight, in which, it is said, he
received a wound from which (or from some other cause) he died a few weeks
later at Heraklion.
This was the general result of the great expedition
which would end the insurrection in two weeks. Nothing had been gained, an army
wasted; and when, on October 3, the remnant of Egyptian troops left, there was
no Turkish force out of gunshot of the fortresses except a small garrison
at Dibaki, under the guns of the fleet.
With the practical and complete failure of Omar Pasha
to subdue the island, all hope of military success seemed to fail the Turkish
authorities. Omar returned from Sphakia with his army
by sea, save a body left in Selinos, who made an
expedition on Omalos, and, after penetrating with
slight resistance to the plain, found themselves unable to keep up their communications
with the coast, and abruptly evacuated it again, suffering considerable loss in
forcing the passes outwardly. The elastic system of resistance adopted by the
Cretans, and finally acceded to by the Greek chiefs, wore out the Turkish
forces without giving them the prestige of tangible victory. There were no
fortresses to capture, no accumulation of stores to destroy, and the very
poverty and want of military coherence made a strength for the insurgents in
face of the wretched strategy of the Turks.
CHAPTER XIII
ANOTHER step of the moral intervention which the
Russian Government had been so long and so skillfully engineering came at this
juncture to make the cause of the Porte more hopeless. The negotiations with
France had resulted in a kind of entente on the Eastern question, by which the
French emperor had agreed, under certain contingencies, to unite with the
Russians in deporting the families of the Christian combatants. The new French
agent, Tricou, had from the beginning shown a
tendency to criticize Omar Pasha unfavorably, which the latter had increased by
his contemptuous treatment of the new consul. Tricou had,
consequently, set his agents to find out all the instances of Turkish barbarity
obtainable—a ghastly roll, obtained from easily read records. It happened
during the operations against Sphakia, which Omar
nominally directed from on board the flag-ship of the squadron off the coast,
that news came in of his having blockaded a number of families in a cave on the
seaside and having attempted unsuccessfully to stifle them out (or in), and the
active Murray went at once to make his Highness a visit, and ascertain if the
catastrophe were avertible. He obtained from the Generalissimo a promise that
the prisoners should not be attacked by any inhuman appliances, and should be
guaranteed honorable treatment on surrendering. In the course of the
conversation, Omar animadverted on Tricou in
terms which Murray, in narrating his visit to me, declined to repeat, and
which, in all their vagueness and possible malignity, I at once applied as a
caustic to Tricou’s already wounded pride,
in accordance with a systematic policy to make all the bad blood possible
between the Pasha and my colleagues. The ruse succeeded to my best hopes, and
thenceforward the irritated Frenchman sought every opportunity to punish the illustrious
renegade, and his activity resulted in the following dispatch, sent while Omar
was still engaged in the Sphakian raid:
(Translation.)
Chania, July 21, 1867.
M. le Chargé d’affaires :
The situation grows daily worse. I have had the honor
of notifying to you the deplorable excesses which have been committed in the
district of Kissamos; today I learn that massacres
have broken out in the eastern part of the country.
For the last month, isolated murders took place daily
in the neighborhood of the town of Chania; the native Mussulmans overran the
country and abandoned themselves to the saddest iniquities in the Christian
villages. These barbarous expeditions over, they would return to the town, and
the gates opened before them to give passage to their bloody trophies. I had
made strong complaints to the local authorities, but all my representations had
remained without effect. Emboldened by impunity, the bashi-bazouks on
the 12th and 13th of this month spread themselves over the district of Rhizo and massacred women and children. To revenge
themselves, the insurgents carried off a young Turkish girl and killed her
father. The Candian Government, which has
for a long time forbidden Christians to enter the town, doubtless counted upon
these atrocities remaining buried in silence. They let them go on, and the
irregulars could glut their ferocity entirely as they pleased.
On the 17th, they invaded the villages of Humeri, Alcolohuri, Aghias Paraskevi, Shilus, and a
great number of the villages of the district of Pediada,
murdering the peaceable and defenseless villagers, old men, women, and
children. The consular agents of Heraklion unite, and wish to send their
dragomans to the places; but the Governor opposes this, and the carnage
continues.
These sad tidings have deeply moved the consular body.
As soon as I had been informed of them I went to the Imperial Commissioner,
whom I found, I must say, deeply afflicted, but overwhelmed with the feeling of
his impotence. He no longer attempts to deny the evil, but he feels himself
incapable of staying its progress. From all parts of the island the most
sinister reports reach us. Women and children wander along the shore, dying of
hunger and exposed to the most horrible treatment. I am in a position to inform
you, M. le Chargé d’Affaires, that three young
Turkish officers, witnesses of the barbarities which have taken place at Kissamos, have given in their resignation, to avoid
presiding over such butcheries.
In so serious a situation, my English colleague and I
thought it our duty to inform our respective governments in the promptest
manner. We consequently drew up the following telegraphic dispatch, which we
sent this day to the Peiraeus to be transmitted to Constantinople, as
well as to the Cabinets of London and Paris:
“Massacres of women and children have broken out in
the interior of the island. The authorities can neither put down the
insurrection nor stay the course of these atrocities. Humanity would
imperatively demand the immediate suspension of hostilities, or the
transportation to Greece of the women and children”.
The Russian and Italian consuls address an identical
telegram to St. Petersburg and Florence.
We cannot, M. le Chargé d’Affaires, remain blind to the fact that from
impotence the Turks passed to fury, and from fury to extermination. I do not
hesitate to say that, if this useless struggle were to be prolonged, the women
and children would have no refuge but exile or death.
Omar Pasha continues his expedition of Sphakia. It is asserted that he has effected his junction with the corps of Mehmet Pasha, which is said to be entirely free.
It would be very desirable that the Serdar should make himself master of this
position as soon as possible; it is true that the insurrection would be
scarcely weakened by it, but this success might perhaps induce the Porte to
order a suspension of hostilities.
The aviso of the Imperial navy, the Prometheus, which
has come to relieve the Salamander, anchored on the 17th in the harbor of
Chania.—Accept, etc.
(Signed)
Tricou.
The consequence of the Russo-Frankish accord was that,
on the receipt of the above dispatch at Constantinople, the French and Russian
squadrons at Peiraeus proceeded to Crete, and there commenced to
embark the families gathered along the coast. This undertaking, which had
probably as little as possible to do with humanity in its secret springs, was
evidently concerted, and waited only the arrival of some signal like Tricou’s telegram, followed accordingly by this
preconcerted rejoinder from the French representative at Constantinople:
M. Outrey to Ali
Pasha.
Therapia, July 26, 1867.
Highness: The consul of France at Chania sends me the
following telegram [given above].
In view of such acts, which the Porte can but reprove,
and in virtue of orders which I have received from my Government, I hasten to
inform your highness that I have ordered Admiral Simon to repair to the Cretan
coast with the ships under his orders, to receive and transport to Greece all
the women and children who wander on the shores, dying of hunger, and exposed
to frightful treatment. The mission of Admiral Simon, having no political
character, cannot, I imagine, meet any difficulty from the Ottoman authorities,
and I beg your highness to have the goodness to instruct his Highness Omar Pasha
to lend all his sympathy to a work of humanity”.
Which is made clearer by the extract from the dispatch
of the English chargé to Lord Stanley:
(Extract)
Mr. Barron to Lord Stanley (Received August 6).
Constantinople, July 23, 1867.
The French chargé d’affaires has
called to inform me that, having received instructions from his Government to
dispatch vessels to Crete for the purpose of removing homeless victims of the
war, whenever it should be advisable, he deemed the last advices from the
French consul at Chania (enclosed herewith in copy) to be such as to oblige him
to use the discretionary power placed in his hands.
On the receipt of this dispatch he immediately
concerted measures with the Russian Ambassador, who was provided in advance
with corresponding instructions, and they both sent late on the 26th identical
instructions by telegraph to their respective naval officers in the
Mediterranean”.
The number of relieving ships sent to Crete in
obedience to this accord was four French, three Russian, followed by two
Italian; and, lest isolation should seem intervention, three Austrian, not over
well-willed, and one small Prussian gunboat, that the now great Power might not
be left out of the new question.
This movement had, in my opinion, no direct effect on
the military question, the Sphakian expedition
having already done its worst, and begun to recoil, before the arrival of
Admiral Simon with his ships; but it did, no doubt, prevent the success of the
conciliatory movement which followed. The Generalissimo, after his return to
Chania, about the middle of September, issued a proclamation prepared at
Constantinople, offering a general amnesty and an armistice of six weeks,
preparatory to measures of a softer and more persuasive character. The Turkish
officials, in their intercourse with the consuls, frankly admitted that force
had failed, and that no hope of its more successful appliance remained. The
depleted army could only with great difficulty, and slowly, be refilled.
Reinforcements were obtained, but not enough to keep the cadres at their full
condition, and a dispatch of the English consul at Beyrout attests
the dread of this service which had infected the troops in other sections of
the Ottoman empire, while battalions in Crete mutinied and refused to labor any
longer.
Early in October, Ali Pasha arrived, to put in effect
the sober second thought of the head of Islam. The manner and views of the
Grand Vizier impressed me with profound respect and sympathy—his proffers
seemed to me reasonable, and likely to assure to the Cretans a substantial
liberty and reform. But they were too shrewd not to see that the ablest man in
the Turkish empire had only come to Crete to try the last resort of his
persuasion, because his case was nearly hopeless, and simultaneously with his
arrival came stimulating dispatches from the Russian agents, encouraging the
Cretans to hold out and strike now the final blow at the Turkish domination.
They were assured by these dispatches in the most positive terms that if they
withstood this temptation, and refused all the conciliatory propositions of Ali
Pasha, their independence and annexation to Greece were certain. I feel
confident that but for these assurances the scheme of Ali Pasha would have been
accepted, for the island was harrowed and ravaged and miserable to the last
degree. The campaign of Omar Pasha had destroyed, according to the declaration
of a European officer engaged, six hundred villages. Except in Sigia, the extreme eastern peninsula, there was hardly a
house with its roof on, and the people had no means to provide new rafters.
The discouragement was great, and required as counterpoise
all the confident promises of Russia and the means and appliances of Greece to
induce the people to decide to keep up the resistance.
My own opinion was that the Cretans had better accept
Ali Pasha’s propositions, but our minister at Constantinople wrote me to urge
their rejection with all my influence, as the certain condition of
independence. I do not believe that our Government had any part in these
instructions or policy. Mr. Seward had at one time given me the fullest
endorsement of my pro-Cretan views, and at another was ready, on the
remonstrance of the Turkish minister, to recall me for having done what he approved
both in myself and Mr. Morris, and abstained only on another application being
made by the Russian Government. Being on the spot, and as well able to judge as
any one, it seemed to me wisest for the Cretans to accept autonomy and peace,
but I obeyed the instructions sent me against my own feelings. I communicated
the advices of my minister to those whose business it was to advise the
insurgents. I felt a confidence in Ali Pasha which no other Turkish official
had ever inspired me with, and a certainty that he would act in good faith.
Humanity demanded peace in defiance of all politics.
Dissensions had arisen between the volunteers and
Cretans; and the chiefs of the former, wearied of a pointless and resultless guerilla warfare, and sure that the question
was only to be settled on the continent, in order to hasten the preparation of
movements on Epirus and Thessaly, one by one returned to Greece, followed by
most of their retinues. The Cretan combatants, relieved of their families, were
quite sufficient for all the needs of the situation, and, well armed and
provided, could have kept up the struggle for years, if disposed.
But the fatal blow to the insurrection was being
prepared by its own friends. The Russian Government had, during the nuptial
visit of the King of Greece to St. Petersburg, secured a complete ascendency
over him, and immediately on his return to Greece it became evident that the
dismissal of the Comoundouros ministry had
been decided in that conclave with the execution of whose plans no motive of
humanity ever interferes, whose deliberations no curious House of Commons pries
into or clamoring journal opposes. The Russian Government had decided to take
the direction of the insurrection, and to that end, to get rid of Comoundouros and his friends, whose anti-Russian
tendencies were too strong to be bent to the desired course, the king, when the
moment had arrived, made a difference with the ministry on some trivial point,
and peremptorily dismissed it. But the chamber, with an unexpected constancy,
refused to sanction any change in the administration, and the Russian minister
in Athens then made overtures to the dismissed president of the council,
offering to bring him back to power if he accepted the programme of
St. Petersburg. He refused, and the chamber, unyielding, was also dissolved,
and in the new election, in which the whole influence of the court and throne
was exerted against the Comoundouros party,
by the most violent and illegal measures the deposed chief and his principal
adherents were kept out of the new chamber, which was, to a sufficient degree,
subservient; and Bulgaris, the evil genius of
Greece since her independence, under whose auspices at all times disorder and
dishonesty, brigandage and peculation, had especially thriven, became the
arbiter of the destinies of Crete.
At this time all means and supplies for the war came
directly from the Hellenic treasury. Private contributions had never been
great, and were almost exclusively confined to Greeks abroad—a comparatively
trivial supply of food and clothing from America being the exception. Nearly
50,000 refugees from Crete were dependent on the Hellenic Government, which,
with the means supplied to the war committee for military operations,
constituted a drain on the resources of Greece sufficiently alarming, yet
popular opinion was so strong in favor of continuing the insurrection that no
government dared seem even to be lukewarm towards it; and with excellent
opportunities for observing, I am able to assert confidently that the Hellenic
people were ready to run all the risks of war with Turkey, rather than allow
the Cretans to be reconquered, and that no government could have lived a day
which did not proclaim, as the chief condition of its existence, the vigorous support
of the Cretan insurrection.
What the views of Russia were in regard to the
insurrection no outsider can, of course, say; but they seemed to be in favor of
only making the Greek agitation a part of a great scheme, having its direction
at St. Petersburg. The only immediate change, however, in the direction of the
insurrection was the gradual suppression of the powers of the Cretan committee
at Athens, and an occasional relaxation in the vigor of support, as if to try
the condition of public feeling. I judge that Russia had made other
combinations, which made the success of the insurrection as a Hellenic movement
undesirable, and that she was gradually getting it in hand, to be able to
suppress it when the proper moment came. To do this without sacrificing that
influence over the Hellenes which would be so useful in certain contingencies,
it was necessary to have a Hellenic instrument to do the work—hence the
position of Mr. Bulgaris.
CHAPTER XIV
IN judging of such acts as the intervention of Russia,
we have no standard but success, and the greater or less fitness of one of the
participants to rule; but from the point of view from which I must look at it,
the conduct of Russia seems to me as the most base, cruel, and politically
dishonorable which I have ever known, being, as it was, practiced on a wretched
people, co-religionary, whose sufferings had been extreme, and which, being
offered a tangible and not inconsiderable concession in return for its efforts,
was only induced to refuse it from faith in Russian promises of better things.
Ali Pasha landed on the 4th of October, and on the
13th Captain Murray reported to his Government: “The insurgents have thrown
away a golden opportunity in the advent of Ali Pasha, for I believe, short of
annexation, they might have anything they asked for. Whether the concessions
would be temporary or not, is a matter of opinion; but his mission has
completely failed”. This was clear to all, and in December following, the
highest Christian functionary of the Turkish Government in the island said to
me : “We have got to come to the principality with a Christian prince, and that
before it is too late to gain even that—we have nothing to hope for from arms”.
Yet in a desultory way fighting went on. Omar Pasha
went home in disgrace on the nth of November, but left for his successor,
Hussein Avni, a plan for paralyzing the insurrection, by lines of block-houses
running across the island and cutting it into three principal parts, each of
which was then to be subdued in turn. But if the Cretans had been weakened by
the withdrawal of the most of the volunteers, the Turks were enfeebled by
sickness and extreme dejection, and the war was languidly carried on, the Turks
maintaining themselves within their fortified lines and now and then making a
sortie on some bold party of insurgents, the principal affair of the winter
being an attack on Zurba, on the 13th of
December, which was, like all the previous ones on the village, repulsed with
disaster. And under such auspices—the insurrection, less disputed on its ground
than at any previous period, holding posts within sight of Canéa; the hospitals of the island filled with sick troops
(at and about Chania alone were an average of 3,000 in the hospital, with
unexampled mortality from hospital gangrene and fevers, and the funerals
ranging from ten to twenty per day); supplies very low, and the troops only
paid three months’ pay for the last twenty—the year 1867 went out and the third
year of the insurrection came in. And all through the spring and summer this
state of things continued, neither the Government nor the insurrection capable
of making the feeble effort necessary to extinguish the forces of the other. We
in the Turkish lines suffered almost as much as if we were in a besieged town,
for supplies from the interior were cut off, and they came not by sea; meat was
very dear and poor, vegetables rare and sometimes unattainable, so that I was
shut up in my house for three months with a scorbutic malady. What the
unfavored must have suffered may be conceived. Despondency and gloom were
dominant in all official circles. Building of block-houses went on slowly, but
there were not troops enough left in the island to garrison all that were
planned, while on the other hand the Hellenic Government gave only assistance
enough to keep the insurgents from surrendering, and the Greeks from
revolution, which would have been the most probable result of the open
abandonment of the insurrection. In August of this year, I had unmistakable
proof of the reality of the insurrection, having witnessed a skirmish
between Zurba and Lakus,
and narrowly escaped being taken prisoner near Theriso,
with some of my colleagues and several officers of the men-of-war in port, Mr.
Dickson and a portion of our excursion party having been actually captured by
Hadji Mikhalis’ forces within an hour’s walk of
Chania.
This season brought no change in the military
position, there being a gradual weakening of the army until only about 5,000
regulars were disposable for field operation, and a total of less than 17,000
were reported to me by Turkish officers as the effective remaining from 82
battalions of Turkish troops, which with 22,000 Egyptians were the regular
forces employed since the commencement of the insurrection, and of which only
10,000 of the latter had been since sent home otherwise than as sick or
wounded.
In September of 1868 I left Crete under medical
orders, and with the impression, generally felt in Crete, that the Hellenic
Government was about abandoning the insurrection. On arriving at Athens, where
I determined to wait the result, I found the Cretan committee so far convinced
of the bad faith of the Bulgaris government
that they meditated resignation en masse as
an appeal to the people, and to discharge themselves of all responsibility for
the impending collapse of the revolt. The Minister of Foreign Affairs soon
after waited on me at my house to beg me to use my influence with the committee
to persuade them to hold on, assuring me in the most earnest manner that the
Government had no intention of withdrawing its support
from the Cretans, and that it intended organizing an expedition on a most
effective. scale to reassure and reanimate the movement; and that it had the
intention of directing this organization officially to ensure its efficiency.
Meanwhile the Provisional Government of the island had
made an earnest appeal to Coroneos to return and
assume the command-in-chief of the insurrection, and he had prepared a plan by
which he was confident of keeping up the war through another winter by a
judicious employment of Cretan forces. His plan was accepted by the committee,
but, on being laid before the Government, was rejected under the pretense that
the sum demanded (£10,000) was beyond its means, and it proceeded without
reference to the committee to organize at more than double the expense an
expedition under the old Mainote palikari, Petropoulaki, in
so open and undisguised a manner that, with most other friends of the Cretans,
I was convinced that it was meant to give Turkey an opportunity to brusquer
les choses by (what Greece had hitherto avoided) open
violation of international law.
Every subsequent movement of the Government confirmed
me in this opinion. The bands paraded the streets openly with the Cretan flag;
were furnished with artillery from the national arsenal; and embarked in two
detachments for Crete, unmolested by any of the Turkish ships, though all the
world knew when and where they were going; on landing they sent back the
artillery, and not only made no offensive movement, but did not even defend
themselves; the smaller detachment being cut to pieces in a few days, the
other, fleeing in disorder to the plain of Askyfo,
made overtures at once for surrender, carrying with them in their defection
most of the Cretans of the western provinces. There still remained in the
eastern provinces a strong nucleus of insurrection undismayed even by this
apparent disaster, and capable of rallying 5,000 men. In compliance, however,
with what has always seemed to me a preconcerted plan between the Porte
and Bulgaris, Hobart Pasha, the new English
commander of the Turkish fleet, waylaid the Ennosis blockade-runner
in Greek waters on her return from Crete, and pursued her into the port
of Syra, where he blockaded her with the whole
squadron, leaving the coast of Crete utterly unguarded, though there were
still three good steamers at the disposal of the committee. But in the new
excitement of this patent outrage on international law the Bulgaris government found its opportunity to withdraw
all support from Crete, and, while public opinion was diverted to the not
slight chances of war with Turkey, further supplies to the insurrection were
cut off and it collapsed almost without notice.
In all this shaping of events there was no disguising
the control of the Russian Government. The insurrection became a menace to
bring on the Eastern question, for which Russia was not yet ready, and which
she could not permit to be brought on under Hellenic auspices. The moment could
not have been more auspiciously chosen for Greece to carry on a war with the
Ottoman empire, and public opinion in Greece was unanimous in favor of this
emergency rather than abandoning Crete, be the risks and event what they might.
The Turkish army was already fully occupied—a further levy of troops would have
been perilous, and Joseph Karam waited at Athens the signal to arouse the
Lebanon. The Greeks had little money, but the Turks had comparatively less, for
their army and navy had not been paid, were discouraged and mutinous, and the
treasury was empty. Egypt was hostile, the Principalities ready to revolt. My
own opinion then was, and is still, that if Greece had gone to war she had a
reasonable chance of victory—not without disasters or great sacrifices, but
her history has shown that she is capable of enduring both the one and the
other; and if Russia had been friendly to her in this crisis, success would
have been most probable. The Bulgaris administration,
its object gained in the suppression of the insurrection, was in its turn
overthrown by the popular indignation at the discovered trick, but when the
diplomatic flurry had passed, and tranquility had returned to the Aegean, we
had only to see drift over to the shores of their kindred land the debris of
one of the best justified and best deserving revolts against misgoverning
tyranny which modern history has recorded. All was quiet in Crete.
CHAPTER XV
THE last year of the war I had left Crete on a leave
of absence of two months, which was extended indefinitely by Mr. Washburn, then
Secretary of State, on account of the health of my family; but in April my
wife, broken by the hardships of our Cretan life and sick-bed watching; and
dejected greatly by the loss of a cause in which she had the most passionate
sympathy, and by the misery of the unhappy Cretans around us, became insane and
ended her life.
Simultaneously, Mr. Fish, now become Secretary of
State, removed me from the consulate at the request of the Turkish Government,
and in June I went to Crete to hand over the consular effects to my successor,
and, on the petition of the Cretan chiefs still remaining in Athens, to obtain,
if possible, some mitigation of the measures which prevented them from
repatriating themselves. I found the island as I had left it, in peace indeed,
but the peace of destruction and paralysis. Roads were being made, and blockhouses
being constructed, but no houses being rebuilt, and the roads were all
military. The new Governor-General seemed amiable, just, and good-willed, but
in Turkish disorganization the best will does not go far. The subordinates of
the local administration were the spies, the traitors, and loyal people of the
war, with rancors to vent and revenges to
take. There was nothing to rob the people of, but there remained prisons and
persecutions.
I found, naturally enough, all my efforts with the
Governor useless, and that the condition of things made return unsafe for
anyone who had taken a prominent part in the war; and so, despairing of finding
any opening, I was about to return to Athens without awaiting my successor, but
before going decided to make that visit to Omalos and
Samaria which the insurrection had stopped and the state of hostilities ever
since had rendered impracticable from the Turkish posts.
Even when peace had been restored and not a recusant
fugitive remained in the mountain hiding-places, the local authorities could
with difficulty reconcile themselves to the idea of my going there; and it was
only after the failure of several petty intrigues to prevent my getting away,
that they determined to pass to the other extreme and do handsomely what they
could not avoid doing. I set out in the dawn of a July day with an officer of
the mounted police, a chosen and trusty man, with one private of the same force
and my own cavass. The private rode a hundred yards ahead en vidette against any attack on
the official dignity by unknowing peasant or unheeding patrol or straggler of
the faithful, and discharged his duty on the road to my complete satisfaction,
no countermarching troops daring to hold the narrow way to the detriment of the
consular dignity. The lawlessness of the Turkish administration in Crete has
kept alive, more than in most of the Christian provinces of the Ottoman Empire,
the power of and respect for foreign officials. Just as much as the unjust
Governor dreads the inspecting eye and the exposing blue-book, so much the
Rayah hopes from them, and honors the Effendi as the Turk curses the Ghiaour; and so in Crete the extreme of official deference
is kept up, corresponding to the degree of official oppression hitherto
obtaining.
So, when my avant-courrier announced
to the awkward squad of Anatolian infantry, ragged, sullen, that the “Consolos Bey” demanded the road, a savage frown of
unwelcome gleamed through the disciplinary respect; while the shouting,
chattering groups of Christian peasants ambling along on the mules and donkeys,
with their little loads of fowls or oil for the market at Chania, were generally
arrested by the summons of the guard, and drew up respectfully at the roadside,
the most respectful dismounting until I had passed.
The road for ten or twelve miles runs westward over a
level plain, the ancient bed of the Iardanos, by
whose banks we know, from Homer, that the Cydonians dwelt.
The fact that the Iardanos (now
called Platanos, from the immense plane-trees
growing on its banks) now empties into the sea ten miles from Chania, has
puzzled geographers to reconcile Cydonia with Chania; but, on arriving at the
point where the river debouches into and cuts across the plain, it will be seen
that the new channel to the sea has been cut through the hills by the action of
the river, and that the ancient course was evidently eastward through the still
marshy plain into the bay of Suda, passing close to
the position of Chania.
The roads in Crete are marked with historical
associations of all ages, as the Appian Way with recollections of the great
dead. The town that we pass, near the mouth of the Platanos,
was the ancient Pergamos, whither Lycurgus, to evade the possibility of his
laws being revoked, banished himself, where he died, and was buried. The town
which we enter as we cross the Platanos at
the ford is Alikianu, the scene of that
atrocious and perfidious massacre of which I have told the story. It is a town
of half-ruined villas—some, of the Venetian days—buried in orange-trees, and so
surrounded with olive groves that but little of it can be seen from the river.
The road we must follow only skirts it, following the river, until it rises on
a ridge of mountains, zigzag and undulating, up to Lakus The Lakiotes are accounted among the
bravest of the Cretans; and though military science, flank movements, and
artillery made their town untenable in the late insurrection, it is still a
formidable position. The village itself lies along under the summit ridge of
the chain of hills which form a buttress to the Asprovouna,
stretching north, with steep approaches from every side. It used to be a
prosperous village, one of the largest in the island, but now its straggling
houses were in ruins, two or three only having the roofs replaced, others
having only a canopy of boughs laid over one end of the space enclosed by the
blackened walls, enough to keep the dews off while the inhabitants slept, for
rain never falls here through the summer months. All bespoke utter exhaustion
and extreme poverty. The jaded, listless look of the people, the demoralization
of war and exile, most of them having been of the refugees in Greece, the
ravage and misery of all surroundings, made a picture which never has passed
from my memory.
In the first capture by Mustapha Pasha, Lakus was taken by surprise and a flank movement of the
Turkish irregulars, the Lakiotes having
only time to secure their most valuable and portable goods and bury the
church-bell, retiring up the mountain slopes beyond, firing a few shots of
defiance as they went. When Ali Pasha arrived in Crete, he ordered the
reconstruction of the church of Lakus, demolished by
the Turks at the capture of the village, and the primates were ordered to find
the bell. Declining to know its whereabouts, they were thrown into prison, to
lie until they did, a few days of which treatment produced the desired effect,
and the bell was hung over the reconstructed church. That afternoon notes of
compulsory joy sounded from the belfry, and the insurgents from the ridge
of Zourba opposite came down to the brink
of the ravine to ask who had betrayed the bell. Their submitted townsmen replied
by an avowal of the modus operandi of getting at the required
knowledge; and the ‘patriots’ replied, “Ring away. We will come and ring it
tonight”. And agreeably to promise, a band of insurgents came across the ravine
at midnight, carried off the bell, and, hanging it on a tree near Zourba, rang the night out. The Turkish guard, which
occupied the block-house in the village, scarcely thought it worthwhile to risk
the defence of the bell, if indeed they
knew of its danger.
At Lakus I had made my plans
to breakfast and pass the noon-heat, but I had reckoned without my hosts, for,
on “pitching my tent” and sending out my cavass to find a lamb to roast, I
found evidence of the inroads of civilization—I could not get one for less than
three pounds sterling—about fifteen times the usual price, and a sure attempt
at swindle based on my supposed necessities. Fortunately my escort had amply
provided themselves, and we had bread and cheese, caviar and coffee, to stay
our appetites until we should reach Omalos, where
were a garrison and an army butcher. So I ate my modicum of what they gave me,
smoked my cigarette, and tried to doze, while the chattering villagers, holding
themselves aloof in reminiscent dread of the Moslem, mingled their hum with
that of the bees from the hives near us. My tent was an ancient mulberry-tree
above, and a Persian carpet beneath; and, though I tried to sleep away the
time, I did nothing but listen to the story my cavass, Hadji Houssein, was telling his companions of the adventure we
had had the year before in the valley below, and which, lest he have not given
the true version, I will tell as it happened.
In the bottom of the valley at our feet lies the
village of Meskla, built along the banks of
the Platanos, where it is a pure, cold, rushing
mountain brook, of which, in any other part of the world, the eddies would have
been alive with trout, but in which now there are only, as in all other Cretan
rivers, eels. A party of official personages in Canéa,
including her Britannic Majesty’s consul, myself, the American ditto, with the
captain and officers of the English and French gunboats on the station, and an
English colonel in the Turkish army, had made a picnic party to Meskla, in August of the last year of the war. The Turkish
troops held Lakus and Omalos and the western bank of the Platanos down
to the plain; but the insurgents still remained in possession of all the
northern spurs of the Asprovouna, from Lakus east for twenty miles, including Zourba; and, while we drank toasts and ate our roast-lamb
under the plane-trees by the river, a perpetual peppering of rifles was going
on from the hill-tops on each side of the valley above. Was it fighting, or was
it fun? I began to climb one of the nearest spurs on the Turkish side of the
ravine to see, and, not to be suspected of both sides, took my way to the
picket of Turkish irregulars, which, sheltered by a group of trees on the
summit, was firing across the valley in a desultory way. As I showed myself in
one of the windings of the path to the patriots at Zourba,
I saw the smoke-puff of a rifle on the edge of a ravine, and the ball glanced
along the rocks within three feet, spattering the lead over me in a most convincing
way. I naturally made a flank movement, which shortly degenerated into the
retrograde of a satisfied curiosity.
The incident had a side interest to the whole party,
for it showed us that the road we proposed to take might be dangerous, the more
as we had a Turkish officer and his two attendants in uniform in our company.
We had purposed following the river up still higher, and then crossing the
ridge to Theriso.
Consulting one of the submitted Meskliotes, who waited his chance for the débris of the picnic, we were informed that it
would be very far from safe to follow our proposed route, which was exposed in
its whole line to the chance of shots from the main mountain ridge; but he
offered to guide us by a road running along the side of the ridge furthest from
the insurgents, and where he could warn any outposts of them that we were
coming. This road was a fair sample of those which existed in Crete before the
war, a mere bridle-path scratched in the slope of a huge landslide, which rose
above us two or three hundred feet, and descended three or four times that
distance into the bed of the Platanos. Part of
it was too dizzy and dangerous to ride, and we led our beasts hesitating and
hobbling along. We were soon amongst the outposts of the insurgents, as we had
unmistakable evidence on arriving at Theriso, where
we found a detachment of a dozen or more rough, motley-looking fellows, armed
with all kinds of guns, and clad in all ways except well. They looked askance
at our fez-wearing colonel and his two cavalrymen, but from respect for the
consular presences respected their persons. We drank with them at the spring,
exchanged identifications, and pursued our way down the celebrated ravine, the
scene of two terrible disasters to the Turkish army during different
insurrections. Nothing can be more uncomfortable, in a military point of view,
than one of these Cretan ravines. Cut in the limestone rock by the glacier
torrents of ages, zigzag in their courses, and shut between abrupt ridges, with
no road but an unsatisfactory bridle-path, the troop which is incautious enough
to enter without crowning the heights on each side as it advances is certain to
be hemmed in, and to be severely treated by a comparatively small foe or
exterminated by a large one.
We had delayed too long, and, as we entered the most
precipitous portion of the ravine, the red sunlight on the eastern cliffs told
us that the sun, long shut from direct view, was sinking; and in our haste we
missed the way, and fell into a vineyard-path, out of any line of travel.
Immediately we heard voices hailing us from the hill-tops, to which we paid no
attention, thinking them the cries of shepherd-boys, and continued until we
found ourselves in a maze of vineyards, and the path and sun gone at the same
instant. Now the hailing began with bullets. The uniforms of our Turkish escort
demanded explanation, and as our guides had left us at Theriso we were helpless. To go back and explain was to be a better mark, and to march
ahead, anywhere, was our only chance. Unfortunately, Hadji, who carried my
hunting rifle, considered it his military duty to return the fire, and in a few
moments, other pickets coming in, we had about forty sharpshooters popping away
at us in the twilight. Our further passage was shut by an abrupt hillside,
along which we must make a movement by the flank toward the road we had lost,
and directly across the line of fire. The sound of the bullets suggested
getting to cover, and as all path had now disappeared we dismounted and led our
beasts at random, no one knowing where we were going or should go, and only
aiming to turn the point of the ridge above us, to get out of the fire, which
was increasing, and the pinging of Enfield bullets over our heads was a
wonderful inducer of celerity. It was a veritable sauve qui peut. I saw men of war ducking and dodging at every
flash and whistle in a way that indicated small faith in the doctrine of
chances, according to which a thousand shots must be fired for one to hit. We
found, at length, where the ridge broke down, a maze of huge rocks, affording
shelter, but beyond was a deep declivity, down which in the dark we could see
nothing; further on again was the river, along which the road led. We could
hear the shouts and occasional shots of a detachment running down the road to
intercept us, and another coming along the ridge above us. My mule was
dead-beat, and could scarcely put one leg before another, and few others were
better off. A short council showed two minds in the party—one to lie still to
be taken, with the chance of a shot first; the other to push on for the road
before the insurgents reached it. The only danger of any moment was to Colonel
Borthwick and his Turks, who would be prizes of war, and to me the chance of a
fever from lying out all night. The majority, nine, voted with me to go on,
and, abandoning mules and horses, we plunged, without measuring our steps, down
the slope, falling, slipping, tripping over rocks, in bogs, through overtopping
swamp-grass, bushes (for the hillside was a bed of springs), pushing to strike
the road before the insurgents should head us off, so as to be able to choose
our moment for parleying. I knew if I could get there first, saving the chance,
that all would be well; if a rash boy of fourteen saw me first, I might be
stopped by a bullet before any explanation would avail.
Tired, muddy, reeking with perspiration, bruised on
the stones, exhausted with haste and trepidation, we won the race, and halted
behind a little roadside chapel to gather the state of things. Above, we heard
voices of a colloquy, and knew that the remainder of the party were in safe
custody, and our road was quiet. A short walk brought us to the outpost of the
Turkish army, a village garrisoned by a couple of companies of regulars and a few
Albanians. The commandant, a major, was outranked by Borthwick, who ordered him
at once to send out a detachment to rescue Consul Dickson and his companions.
The poor major protested and remonstrated, but in vain. “It was dangerous”, he
said; but the colonel insisted, he ordered out a detachment, and then called
for pipes and coffee, after which, under a heavy escort, we started for Chania.
Borthwick obtained a battalion of the regulars in garrison, and started next
morning at early dawn to rescue our friends; but no persuasion could induce the
Turkish commander to enter the ravines. He posted his troops along the overlooking
ridge and waited in ambush. I have it on Borthwick’s word that, while the
troops were lying concealed, under orders to keep the most profound silence, a
hare started up at the end of the line, and the Turkish commander instantly
ordered the first company to their feet, and to make ready, and was about to
give the order to fire when a hound of the battalion anticipated the volley by
catching the poor beast and dispatching him on the spot.
Meanwhile, Dickson and his companions were in the
hospitable hands of a party of Hadji Michali’s men,
and at about eight a.m. came down the road into view of the ambush, escorted by
a guard of honor of insurgents, none the worse for their adventure, and
bringing back our beasts and baggage; but nothing would induce the Turkish
officer to go the mile separating him from the insurgent outpost which had
fired on us.
While Hadji told his story to his admiring companions
(he was an excellent raconteur, and put the whole of his barbaric
soul into the narration, though his respect for the Effendi kept his voice low
and quieted a little his camp manner), one or the other of the three made my
cigarettes and brought me fire, and only when the sun began to sink from the
meridian did we move on.
As we passed the blockhouse, I found that the
General-in-Chief had preceded me, and given orders that the honors due to a
consular personage—the same as those paid to a superior officer in their own
army—should be carefully observed, and so we had the whole garrison of each
blockhouse on the way out at the “Present arms!” The road not only zigzags
going from Lakus to the plain of Omalos,
but makes such ascents and descents as well accounted for the fruitlessness of
so many attempts to enter the plain, which is a sort of portico to Samaria. But
now a fair artillery road followed the ridges up to the very plain, and
blockhouses covered with their fire every point where an ambush could be made,
and those little glens, famous in Cretan tradition for extermination of Turkish
detachments, will never again help native heroism against organized conquest.
We passed, in one of the wildest gorges through which the road passes, a
blockhouse perched high on a hill-top like an eyrie, a peripatetic atom on the
parapet of which caught my eye, as a wild goat might have done amongst the
cliffs around. As we came into sight, looking again, I saw the garrison
swarming down the hillside amongst the rocks like ants, wondered what they were
at, and rode on, when at another turn the officer said, “They salute,
Effendi!”. I looked around, and, only on his indication, saw drawn up in rank,
hundreds of feet above me, a line of animalcules, which, by good eyesight, I
could perceive was the whole garrison presenting arms, and they so continued
presenting until, after turn upon turn of the road, they disappeared from view
definitively, when I suppose they swarmed back to their fastness.
We passed through the ravine of Phokes, where Hadji Michali once
caught a small detachment which incautiously attempted to penetrate to Omalos. I had heard the story of the fight, told at the
time by an Albanian who was in it, in a brief but graphic way. The Christians
waited invisible, he said, till the troops were in the bottom of the ravine,
and then began to fire from many directions. The troops stopped, made a show of
resistance, and then broke and made for the blockhouse at Lakus;
“and those who couldn’t run well never got there”, he interjected laconically.
He frankly admitted that he was so far in advance that he saw very little
actual fighting, and made no halt, nor did any others, Mussulman or Christian,
till they arrived at the door of the blockhouse, which he was surprised at
their shutting in time to keep out the Christians.
It was well into the afternoon when we entered the
plain of Omalos, evidently a filled-up crater, its
level about five thousand feet above the sea. The snows and rains of winter and
spring flood it, and as no stream runs from it the waters disappear by a Katavothron—a gloomy Acherontic recess—into whose crooked
recesses the eye cannot pierce, and down whose depths is heard a perpetual
cavernous roaring of water.
In the plain was no vestige of human habitation
visible, except the tents of a battalion of regulars, and a two-story
blockhouse on a spur of hill which projected into the plain. We rode into the
camp, and were received with emphasis by the Pasha, who, with true Eastern
diplomacy, expressed unbounded surprise at my visit, so entirely unexpected
and, learning the result of my attempts at feeding in Lakus,
called to the mess-boy to bring me the remains of the breakfast, apologizing
abundantly, and informing me that I should be expected to dine with him and the
commander of the post at eight. The residual breakfast, supplemented by a plate
of kibaubs, the mutton-chop of the East,
dispatched; the ceremonial pipes and coffee finished, and the more than usually
complimentary speeches said, the shadows meanwhile falling longer on the plain;
I accepted the Pasha’s offer of a fresh horse, and rode across to the
famous descent into the glen of Samaria, the Xyloscala,
so-called from a zigzag colossal staircase made with fir-trunks, and formerly
the only means of descent into the glen. There was a detachment of troops
building a blockhouse to command the upper part of the glen, and the commander
kept me salaaming, coffee-taking, etc., until I saw that the sunlight was
getting too red to give me time to explore the ravine, and I contented myself
with a look from the brink down into the blue depths.
I doubt if, in the range of habitual travel, there is
another such scene. It was as if the mountains had gaped to their very bases.
In front of me were bare stony peaks 7,000 to 8,000 feet high, whose
precipitous slopes plunged down unbrokenly, the pines venturing to show
themselves in increasing number as the slope ascended, and ended in a narrow
gorge. At the side, the rock rose like the aiguilles of Chamouny,
cloven and guttered, with the snow still lying in its clefts, and broad fields
of it on the opposite eastern peaks. I looked down through the pines and cedars
that clung in the crevices of the rocks below me, and the bottom of the glen
looked blue and faint in their interstices. The Xyloscala,
destroyed by the insurgents at the beginning of the insurrection, was replaced
by a laborious zigzag road, which sidled off under crags, and came back along
slopes, blasted out of rock, and buttressed up with pines, seeming to me, where
I stood, as if it finally launched off into mid-air, and would only help
another Daedalus into the mystery of the labyrinth of pines and rock gorges
below.
As I watched, the flame of the sunlight crept up the
peaks across the glen, the purple-blue shadow following it up, changing the
snow-fields from rosy to blue, and the peaks of pale-gray rock to russet, as
the day died away. The chill of night reminded me to put my overcoat on. We
rode back across the plain in the twilight, accompanied by the building gang,
whose polyglot murmur was as cheerful and full of mirth as though they were
peasants going home from the vintage.
Nothing can surpass the good-humor and patience of the
Turkish soldier. Brutal and barbarous they doubtless (were when their
fanaticism and the rage of battle united to excite them, but in camp and in
peace I have found them always models of the purely physical man.
Our dinner was luxurious, and in the true Eastern
manner. The Pasha, the Bey commanding the place, and his aide-de-camp made four
with me, and one dish, placed in the middle of the table, served our fingers or
spoons according as the viand was dressed, each one of the four scrupulously
adhering to his quadrant of the copper circle. The dinner was almost
interminable; it was dark and cold when the end did come.
The soldiers, gathered round their camp some half a
mile away, had eaten their suppers and were at ease, the shouting of their
merriment coming to us occasionally above the general hum. Presently we saw
them taking fir-branches, and, each lighting one at the nearest camp-fire, come
running to us at full speed, making a long madcap procession of torch-bearers,
the pitchy fir giving out an immense flame; and, making for the headquarters,
followed by the battalion band playing, they threw their branches in a pile on
a level space before the Pasha’s tent, and then, turning to the right and left,
sat down in a semicircle open towards us. A detachment was told off to keep up
the fire, and a sort of glee club, accompanied by rude instruments, drums
beaten by the hand, and a kind of flute and mandolin, commenced singing at the
top of their voices the plaintive monotonous songs which all who have been in
the East know.
This was the overture to a terpsichorean and dramatic
entertainment most unique and amusing. The programme opened
with a dance of Zebeques, the barbarous race who
occupy the country behind Smyrna. They are wrapped in a sash from the armpits
to the hips, with a sort of bag y knee-breeches, and bearing long knives thrust
crosswise through their sashes. They formed a circle, and began a movement
which seemed like a dance of men in armor, half stage-stride and half hop. The
music struck up an appropriate air, and the dancers, joining in the song,
circled slowly two or three times in the same staid and deliberate manner,
then, drawing their knives, brandished them in time, quickening their pace, and
hurrying around quicker and quicker as the song grew more excited, when they
finally came to a climax of fury, rushing in on each other at the center of the
circle as if to cut each other down. But the raised knives were arrested by the
opposing empty hands; and, the paroxysm passed, the song died down to its
lower tone and moderate time, and the dance began a new movement, each dancer
thrusting his knife into the ground at the center, and then repeated the
quickening circles; this time, rushing, at the climax, on their knives and
drawing them from the earth, they threw themselves on an imaginary enemy
outside the circle, and, having hypothetically demolished him, returned to
their gyrations, varying the finale by lifting one of the company into the air
on their hands, and dropping him simultaneously with their voices. This lasted
half an hour.
After an intermission, in which the soldiers, unawed
by the presence of the Pasha, laughed and joked and shouted to their content, a
soldier entered the circle dressed as an Egyptian dancing woman. He was one of
the tallest men in the regiment, capitally travestied, and all who have seen
the dance of the Almah can imagine the bursts of laughter with which
his grave, precise imitation of one of them was received by the circle. I have
never seen anything more exquisitely ludicrous. His figure seemed lithe as a
willow-wand, and he twisted and bent, and bowed and doubled, with the peculiar
expression of physique which seemed impossible to any other than the slender
Egyptian girl.
Roars of applause followed this performance, and the
next was a pantomime—“The Honey-Stealers”. Two men enter dressed as peasants,
one carrying a gun on his back, and begin groping about as in the dark, run
against each other, stumble and fall, and finally, by much listening, find a
box, which had been placed to represent the hive. The thief lays down his gun
to be more free in his motions, and a soldier runs into the circle and carries
it off. Enter presently a third honey-seeker, blacked to represent a negro or
some diabolical personage, it was impossible to say which, and, stumbling on
the other two, an affray ensues, in the course of which the bees get disturbed,
and come out in swarms, the luckless black getting the lion's share of the
stings. At this moment an alarm is given, and the gunner misses his gun, upon
which he falls on the black as the thief, and between the stings and the blows
the intruder expires, the play ending with the efforts of the two living to
carry out and dispose of the one dead, interfered with greatly by a spasmodic
life remaining in the members, which refuse to lie as they are put. But this
finally subsiding, the body is satisfactorily disposed of, and the pantomime
gives way, amid the most uproarious laughter and applause, to a Circassian
dance. The dancers were few, and the dance tame, and, not meeting any appreciation,
gave way to a repetition of the Zebeque saltations, of which they seemed never disposed to tire.
The entertainment lasted till eleven o’clock, when,
each soldier taking a branch of fir, the actors and audience raced off like a
demoniac festival breaking up, the band following with a blare of trumpets and
bang of drums, and we were left to our dignity and the dying embers of the
theatre fire.
Although in July, the night was so intensely cold
that, sharing the Pasha’s tent, and with all the covering he could spare me, in
addition to my own Persian carpet over instead of under me, I was almost too
cold to sleep, and the morning found me well disposed to put my blood in motion
by vigorous, exercise. Coffee served, we rode over to the Xyloscala,
and, after more coffee-and-pipe compliments, we began the descent of the new
zigzag road. It was so steep that no loaded beast could mount it, and it took
me two hours’ walk to get to the bottom, where the road straightens and follows
the river, here a dancing, gurgling stream, rushing amongst boulders and over
ridges, under overhanging pines, as though there were no tropics and the land had
not had rain for two months. The whole gorge was filled with the balsamic odors
of firs and pine, which covered the slopes wherever the rock would give them
place; and above that, bare splintery cliffs overhung the gorge, so that it
seemed that a stone would fall three thousand feet if thrown from the summit. A
few Turkish soldiers, lazily felling or trimming pines for the blockhouses,
were the only signs of humanity we saw. Above, in the pines, we heard the
partridge’s note, as the mother called to her young brood to follow her. The
gorge widened to a glen; the slopes receded slightly, and then, after another
hour of walking, we came to a sharp turn in its course, where the high
mountains walled up the glen to the east with a sheer slope of five or six thousand
feet from the peaks to the brook bed, and the rocks on each side shut in like
the lintels of a doorway. Here is the little village of Samaria, so long the
refuge of the women and children of this section of Crete, and where, so long
as arms and food lasted, a few resolute men might have defended them against
all comers. I doubt if in the known world there is such another fortress. No
artillery could crown those heights, no athletes descend the slopes; while the
only access from below is through the river-bed, in one place only ten feet
wide, and above which the cliffs rise perpendicularly over a thousand feet; the
strata in some places matching each other, so that it seems to have been a
cloven gorge—the yawn of some earthquake, which suggested closing again at a
future day—and for two hours down from the glen there is no escaping from the
river course, except by goat-paths, and these such as no goat would care
needlessly to travel.
Pashley has described the village of Samaria, and its
magnificent cypresses and little chapel, as they are now. No destruction, no
sacrilege, has entered there; and perhaps this is the only church in Crete,
outside the Turkish lines of permanent occupation, which has not been
desecrated. The roof of the chapel is made of tiles, which must date from the
early Byzantine Empire.
The river below here, the St. Roumeli,
is a rapid perennial stream, which at times of flood shuts off all travel by
the road. Lower down is a tiny village of the same name as the river, in a
gorge into which only an hour’s sunlight can enter during the day—damp, chilly,
and aguish—the residence of a half-dozen families of goat-herds. Pashley
identifies a site near the mouth of the river as that of Tarrha, the scene of Apollo’s loves with Acacallis, who, if bred in this glen, must have been of
that icy temperament which should have best suited the professional flirt of
Olympus.
To travellers who
care to visit Samaria, I would give the hint to leave their horses at Omalos, and have a boat to meet them at the mouth of the
St. Roumeli, as the ascent is long and painful, even
by the new road, which, since I saw it the torrents may have demolished. They
may thus visit the Port Phoenix of St. Paul, which lies a few miles to the
eastward, and landing at Sougia, west of St. Roumeli, have their horses come down by the pass of Krustogherako, and so return by way of St. Irene— a very
wild pass of the Selinos mountains—to Chania.
We had made no such provision, and so we were obliged
to toil back in the intense heat of the July sun beating down into the gorge,
and, arriving past noon, to be refreshed by sherbet and coffee by the
hospitable commander of the station at Xyloscala, the
snow of the sherbet being brought from the opposite cliff two hundred yards
away, but an hour’s climb to get to it. The commander was a more intelligent
man than it is usual for Turkish officers to be, and he related how during the
insurrection he had led a detachment round to the top of the opposing cliffs,
and how when they got there they were like the twenty thousand men of the King
of France, and had to come back by the way they went.
However, they have now a blockhouse at the Xyloscala, another at Samaria in sight and signaling of it,
and a third at St. Roumeli, so that, for the future,
there need be no doubt as to who holds the Heart of Crete.
The night’s discomforts had been too great to allow me
to spend another in Omalos, so, after a slight detour
to look at the immense wild pear-trees which grow on the plains, we rode
directly back to Chania, accompanied by the Pasha. Meeting the priest of Lakus by the way, I gave the village a vicarious berating
for having in such an ungrateful manner refused hospitality to a man who had
been their advocate and friend so long, and whom they had obliged to go back to
their enemies and his for a dinner. He seemed much ashamed, and the day after I
received a profound apology from the primates pleading ignorance of my
personality.
I improved the acquaintance with the Pasha (Mehmet
Ali, “the Prussian”, so-called from his race, though he was brought up from
boyhood as a Mussulman), whom I found more intelligent and liberal than any
Turkish official I had met with, except Ali and Server Effendi, to introduce
the condition of the chiefs of the insurrection remaining in exile, many of
them old and worn out, afflicted with the nostalgia which mountain people know
so well, and ready to submit unreservedly to the government. A nominal amnesty
had been granted, relieving all from any political prosecution, but not from
the civil suits for damages, etc., which might be brought against the chiefs
who had taken sheep or cattle or destroyed any property. Two or three of the
chiefs who had returned had already been thrown into prison on suits of this
kind, and as the complainants were always adherents of the government through
the war, and all the minor officials were of that class whose loyalty had been
beyond question from the beginning, a civil suit had pretty much the same color
as a political persecution. This state of things effectually prevented the
return of any of the prominent personages of the insurrection, who, living in
exile, were reasons of the strongest against the restoration of tranquility,
and made a convenient appliance for agitation and renewed strife on any
disturbance of the political atmosphere of Europe.
My only interest was the restoration of the island to
such peace as was possible, and this Mehmet Ali comprehended, and, throwing
aside all hostility, he entered into the discussion of the positions, and on a
subsequent interview begged me to go to Constantinople and place the matter
before Ali Pasha, to whom he gave me a letter of introduction.
I accordingly went to Constantinople, and was received
in the kindest and most considerate manner by the Grand Vizier, to whom I
stated at length my ideas of the difficulties of the pacification, and at his
request made a memoir of all the facts and motives involved, with a description
of the class of men to whom was entrusted the carrying out of the measures by which
the Porte had hoped to conciliate the Cretans, embittered political and
religious adversaries, full of wrath at the losses and indignities they had
suffered, and more anxious to avenge their own wrongs than to secure the true
interest of the Porte. He begged me to wait until he could send to Crete and
obtain a report on my memoir, and, as he found on its receipt that my assertion
was just, he promised to correct the abuses of administration, and proposed to
me to go to Crete to superintend the carrying out of the measures which seemed
necessary to restore the confidence of the late insurgents, pledging himself to
accord complete immunity to any individuals whom I should designate as
possessing my confidence, and offering me a stipend more than sufficient for
all my needs in the service. I knew that so long as he was Grand Vizier I could
depend on the fulfillment of these promises, but, in the event of any change of
administration, the understanding between us would fail as between his
successor and myself. I demanded, therefore, a comprehensive measure securing
all the insurgents from civil suits on account of acts of war committed during
the insurrection, as a condition of my acceptance of the official position thus
created for me. This the Grand Vizier declared the government could not grant
without assuming all the personal liabilities thus discharged, which he was not
willing to recommend, and so, after several interviews and thorough discussion,
I was obliged to decline the offer made me, much to my regret, for the
islanders had ever a place in my regard, which, with the interest of common
suffering and loss, the years of advocacy of rights kept back and redress
denied, and perhaps the personal attachment I had found for me and mine in so
many of them, disposed me to make any effort in my making ta secure their good.
But to engage my faith and influence with them on such uncertain grounds as the
continuance in power of a Grand Vizier, or the maintenance of harmony between
myself and the local administration, was too great a risk for a prudent man,
unwilling to engage others in a position from which he might not have the power
to extricate them.
It was with such a pain as the waiting of my own
sentence of exile would have given me that I went to meet the old captains on
my return to Athens, and told them that there was no hope of their repatriation
through my efforts at least. I never shall forget the silent despair in the
face of old Costa Belondaki, tall and straight
under his seventy-odd years, white-haired, and meager, but alert as a man of
forty, as he turned from me when he got his sentence. As with his elder
compatriots, the mountain nostalgia fevered him and the idle exile broke his
spirit, but I could give him no hope that in his day European civilization or
Turkish administration would be wise enough to economize his devotion to his
country, and make use of rather than crush the spirit which makes Crete
rebellious while its government is criminal.
The End
William James Stillman (June
1, 1828 – July 6, 1901)
was an American journalist,
diplomat, author, historian, and photographer. Educated as an artist, Stillman subsequently
converted to the profession of journalism, working primarily as a war
correspondent in Crete and the Balkans, where he served as his own
photographer. For a time, he also served as United States ambassador in Rome,
and afterward in Crete during the Cretan insurrections. He helped to train the
young Arthur Evans as a war correspondent in the Balkans, and
remained a lifelong friend and confidant of Evans. Later in life, he seriously
considered taking over the excavation at Knossos from Minos Kalokairinos, who had been stopped from further excavation
by the Cretan Assembly; he was, however, prevented from pursuing that goal
further by a failure to obtain a firman, or
permission to excavate. Stillman wrote several books, one of which,
his Autobiography of a Journalist, suggests that he viewed himself
primarily as a writer.
Stillman was born in Schenectady,
New York in 1828. His parents were Seventh Day Baptists, and his
early religious training influenced him throughout his life. He was sent to
school in New York by his mother, who made great sacrifices so that he might
get an education, and he graduated from Union College of Schenectady
in 1848. He studied art under Frederic Edwin Church and early in 1850
went to England, where he made the acquaintance of John Ruskin, whose Modern
Painters he had devoured; was introduced to Turner, for whose
works he had unbounded admiration; and fell so profoundly under the influence
of Dante Gabriel Rossetti and John Everett Millais that on
his return home in the same year he became known as the "American Pre-Raphaelite."
In 1852 Lajos Kossuth sent
him on a fool's errand to Hungary to dig up crown jewels, which had
been buried secretly during the insurrection of 1848-1849. While he was
awaiting a projected rising in Milan, Stillman studied art under Yvon in Paris,
and then, as the rising did not take place, he returned to the United States
and devoted himself to landscape painting on Upper Saranac Lake in
the Adirondacks and in New York City, where he started the Crayon.
It numbered Lowell, Aldrich and Charles Eliot Norton among
its contributors, and when it failed for want of funds, Stillman removed
to Cambridge, Massachusetts.
There he passed several years,
but a fit of restlessness started him off once more to England. He renewed his
friendship with Ruskin, and went with him to Switzerland to paint and draw in
the Alps, where he worked so assiduously that his eyesight was affected.
He then lived in Paris and was in Normandy in 1861 when the American
Civil War broke out. He made more than one attempt to serve in the
Northern ranks, but his health was too weak; in the same year he was appointed
United States consul in Rome.
In 1865 a dispute with his
government led to his resignation, but immediately afterwards he was appointed
to Crete, where, as an avowed champion of the Christians in the island and of
Cretan independence, he was regarded with hostility both by the Muslim population
and by the Turkish authorities during the subsequent Cretan uprising. In
September 1868 he resigned and went to Athens, where his first wife (a
daughter of David Mack of Cambridge), worn out by the excitement of life in
Crete, committed suicide.
He was an editor of Scribner's
Magazine for a short time and then went to London, where he lived with Dante
Gabriel Rossetti. In 1871 he married artist Marie Spartali,
a daughter of the Greek consul-general Michael Spartali,
although without his permission. When the insurrection of 1875 broke out in Herzegovina he
went there as a correspondent of The Times, and his letters from
the Balkans aroused so much interest that the British government was induced to
lend its countenance to Montenegrin aspirations.
In 1877-1883 he served as the
correspondent of The Times at Athens; in 1886-1898 at Rome.
During this time he was assisted in his photographic work by the nascent
archaeologist and photographer, John Henry Haynes. He was a severe critic
of Italian statesmen, and embroiled himself at various times with various
politicians, from Crispi downwards.
After his retirement he lived
in Surrey, England where he died on July 6, 1901 at Frimley Green
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