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Greece Celebrates Anniversary of Union With Ionian Islands

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The Hellenic Navy offers a guard of honor to the Greek President. Credit: Twitter/Presidency of the Hellenic Republic

Greece celebrated in Friday the historic anniversary of the integration of the Ionian Islands with the mainland.

Greek President Katerina Sakellaropoulou laid a wreath at the Monument of the Union of the Ionian Islands in Corfu to mark the anniversary.

“Today we celebrate the integration of the Ionian Islands in the national body, which was the first expansion of Greece after it was established as an independent state in 1832.

“We commemorate the glorious morning of May 21, 1864, when the British guards were replaced by Greek military units, the Greek flag was raised at the fortress of Corfu and Thrasyvoulos Zaimis, as a proxy of King George I, officially accepted the handover of the Ιοnian islands

“A moment of national joy, which granted the Ionian Islands the much coveted union with Greece and our country an island complex with a long history, a high level of culture and a passionate, democratic ethos,” the President of the Republic said after the event.

After nearly six centuries of Venetian rule, the Ionian Islands fell successively under French, Russo-Turkish (as the “Septinsular Republic”) and finally British control (as the “United States of the Ionian Islands”).

British rule of Ionian Islands

It was at the Congress of Vienna in 1814 and 1815 which granted the United Kingdom full sovereignty over all of the Ionian islands, after the British navy defeated the French.

The Ionian Islands then was given a bicameral legislature, titled the “Parliament of the United States of the Ionian Islands,” and composed of a Legislative Assembly and a Senate, something very similar to what the USA has.

The United States of the Ionian Islands was formed as a federation, with each one of the seven main islands constituting one member-state in the federation.

This was depicted not only in the coat of arms of the island federation, but also on its coinage.

In order to maintain its sovereignty on the islands, the UK appointed a ”Lord High Commissioner of the Ionian Islands,” who was traditionally chosen by the British monarch.

The capital of the United States of the Ionian Islands was Corfu, where the chambers of the Assembly and the Senate were established.

The union with Greece

As was only natural, the islanders gradually but steadily began to demand a political union with their motherland, the Kingdom of Greece.

Skirmishes took place on most of the islands between the Greeks and the British throughout the decades of British rule, with the British Army often intervening to impose order.

The final years of British rule were actually quite difficult for the islanders.

The British decided to make Greek the official language of the States, something that surprisingly had not been the case in the past.

The party of the Radicals demanded union with Greece, and many of its MPs, including Detoratos Typaldos, Frangiskos Domeneginis and Telemachus Paizis among many others, signed the proposed parliamentary bill which called for the union of the United States of the Ionian Islands with Greece nearly fifteen years before the union actually occurred.

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Photo of delegates of the Ionian Parliament who voted for the union with Greece in October 5, 1863

The United Kingdom, as it has done throughout the history of the British Empire, responded with force and violence to the growing movement for independence and union with Greece.

Persecutions, arrests, imprisonments and exile were their common practices to suppress the growing desire of the local people to join with their Greek motherland.

Eventually, on March 29, 1864, after nearly a decade of turbulence, the United Kingdom decided to offer the Ionian Islands as a present to the newly-enthroned King George I of Greece, who was a dyed-in-the-wool Anglophile.

Thus, on May 28, 1864, by proclamation of the Lord High Commissioner, the Ionian Islands were officially united with Greece, beginning the new, modern chapter in their long history.

 

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