The Ribbons of the United Nations

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Ribbons of the United Nations Volume 50 Number 4 THE RIBBONS OF THE UNITED NATIONS UNTSO UNMOGIP (Palestine} (India/Pakistan) KOREA UNEF I UNOGIL ONUC (Egypt/Israel) (Lebanon) (Congo) UNSF/UNTEA UNYOM UNFICYP UNIPOM (New Guinea) (Yemen) (Cyprus) (India/Pakistan) UNEF II UNDOF UNIFIL UNIIMOG (Middle East) (Israel/Syria) (Lebanon) (Iran/Iraq) UNAVEM UNTAG ONUCA UNIKOM (Angola) (Namibia) (Central America) (Iraq/Kuwait) ONUSAL MINURSO UNAMIC UNPROFOR (El Salvador) (Western Sahara) (Cambodia) Former Yugoslavia) UNTAC UNOSOM ONUMOZ UNOMUR (Cambodia) (Somalia) (Mozambique) (Uganda/Rwanda) UNOMIG UNOMIL UNMIH, UNSMIH UNAMIR (Georgia) (Liberia) (Haiti) (Rwanda) UNMOT UNCRO UNPREDEP UNMIBH (Bosnia- (Tajikistan) (Croatia) (Macedonia) Herzegovina} UNTAES UNMOP MINUGUA MINURCA (Central (Eastern Slavonia) (Prevlaka) (Guatemala) African Republic) UNPSG UNOMSIL UNHQ UNSSM (Croatia - Police) (Sierra Leone) (Headquarters) (Special Service) UN MISSION NAMES UNTSO - UN Truce Supervision Organization: UNMOGIP - UN Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan: UNEF 1 - First UN Emergency Force: UNOGIL - UN Observation Group in Lebanon: ONUC - Operation des Nations Unies au Congo: UNSF/UNTEA - Lrlq Security ForceAJN Temporary Executive Authority: UNYOM - UN Yemen Observer Mission: UNFICYP - L~ Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus: UNIPOM - UN India- Pakistan Observation Mission: Uq~IEF 11- Second UN Emergency Force: UNDOF - UN Disengagement Observer Force: UNIFIL - UN Interim Force in Lebanon: UNIlMOG - UN Iran-Iraq Military Observer Group: UNAVEM - ~ Angola Verification Mission: UNTAG - UN Transition Assistance Group: ONUCA - Observadores de las Naciones Unidas en Centro America: UNIKOM - UN Iraq-Kuwait Observer Mission: ONUSAL - Observadores de las Naciones Unidas en El Salvador: MINURSO - Mission des Nations Unies pour le Referendum dans le Sahara Occidental: UNAMIC - UN Advance Mission in Cambodia: UNPROFOR- UN Protection Force: UNTAC - UN Transition Authority in Cambodia: UNOSOM - UN Operation in Somalia: ONUMOZ - Operation des Nations Unies dansMozambique: UNOMUR - UN Observer Mission in Uganda-Rwanda: UNOMIG -UN Observer Mission in Georgia: UNOMIL - UN Observer Mission in Liberia: UNMIH/UNSMIH - UN Mission in Haiti/LR,l Support Mission in Haiti: UNAMIR - UN Assistance Mission for Rwanda: UNMOT - UN Mission of Observers in Tajikistan: UNCRO - UN Confidence Restoration Operation: UNPREDEP - UN Preventive Deployment Force: UNMIBH - UN Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina: UNTAES - UN Transitional Administration for Eastern Slavonia, Baranja, and Western Simaium (former Yugoslavia): UNMOP - UN Mission of Observers in Prevlaka (former Yugoslavia): MINUGUA - Mission de las Naciones Unidas en Guatemala: MINURCA - Mission des Nations Unies en Republique Centrafricaine: UNPSG - UN Police Support Group: UNOMSIL - UN Observer Mission in Sierra Leone The Society is extremelypleased to be able to publish a full-color ribbon chartfor the first time in the history of the Journal, which was kindly submitted by Lawrence "Lonny" Borts, OMSA No. 1740. The chart contains in actual size the suspension ribbon/ribbon bar for all medals that have been instituted to date by the UNfor service in the various UN Missions. Exceptfor the Korean Service and UNEF I Medals, the standard UN badge is suspended from the ribbons. The ribbons are arranged in order from the establishment of the earliest UN Mission to most recent mission beginning at the top lefi and ending at the bottom. The third ribbon is for the UN Korean Service Medal, and the last two ribbons are for the UN Headquarters Medal and the UN Special Service Medal We hope this chart will encourage other ribbon collectors to submit charts for publication on the cover offuture issues of the Journal. Editor 2 The Journal of the Orders and Medals Society of America The Independence Medal of the Republic of Turkey .... __ ~~ Iskender (Alex) Mericli, OMSA No. 3141, and Tim Tezer, OMSA No. 5242 "n the aftermath of World War I, the fledgling Republic Kemal (1881-1938), the hero of Gallipoli and the only , of Turkey formed itself from the ashes of the Ottoman Turkish general to end the war without a single defeat in Empire, forging its independence in the fires of a fierce battle. In May 1919, Kemal was appointed Inspector and bitter revolutionary war. The Turkish Independence General of the Ninth Army in the Turkish heartland of Medal was the symbol of the Republic’s esteem for the Anatolia, with orders to gather weapons and armaments men and women whose sacri- laid down by the defeated Otto- fices created this new country. man Army and restore "order." From the establishment of the The Sultan, who was tacitly co- Republic of Turkey in 1923 until operating with the British auth- the passage of the Law of orities, told Kemal enigmati- Medals and Orders (Law No. cally, "Pasha, you can save the 2933) on 24 October 1983, no country.’’2 other awards were issued by the Turkish government; and decor- Meanwhile, Greek Prime Minis- ations of the Ottoman Empire ter Venizelos had been cam- predating the establishment of paigning with the Allies to earn the Republic were not permitted territory for Greece on the to be worn ~ Turkish mainland. Frustrated by Italy’s stubborn refusal to Historical Background recognize Greece’s territorial claims, Venizelos nevertheless Following the defeat of the won the approval of England, Central Powers in World War I, France, and the United States to the broken remnants of the once dispatch an expeditionary force powerful Ottoman Empire fell to Turkey. Launched on 14 May under occupation by Allied 1919, just days after Mustafa troops. The worldwide wave of Kemal assumed command of the nationalism that had fueled the Ninth Army, the Greek invasion outbreak of the war continued to captured Smyrna (modem day create conflicts in the remaining Izmir) and surrounding terri- territories of the former empire. tories. Realizing that the occu- From the earliest days of the pation of Smyrna posed a threat Allied occupation, the Turks to Turkish control of the main- themselves began to feel a rising land, Kemal began to organize tide of national sentiment. War- Independence Medal- Obverse other Turkish generals in Ana- hardened Turkish officers re- tolia into a unified front to hold turning to Istanbul found a vigorous subculture of resist- back the Greek advance. By this time, the Istanbul ance to the occupation. Chief among them was Mustafa government had relieved Kemal of his command; but he defiantly stayed in the central Anatolian city of Ankara where he set up his base of operations. The United Nations Korean Service Medal was granted semiofficial On 16 March 1920, the British put Istanbul under martial status even though it was not issued by the Turkish government. In law in response to the election of a Chamber of Deputies addition, the Turkish National Mint struck a few special medals for visiting dignitaries to mark a special occasion, such as military man- euvers and the opening of a new rail line. For an example of one such medal, see TheMedal Collector, Vol. 29, No. 12 (December 1978), 2 p. 16. "Pasha" is a Turkish title that is the equivalent of a general. Volume 50 Number 4 (the Ottoman Turkish Parli- Turks in the hopes of not only winning territory but also ament) with mostly nation- winning back the support of the French and British. In alist members. After the January 1921, the Greek armies moved to capture the Chamber of Deputies was strategic railway junction at Eski~ehir but were checked dissolved, Kemal declared a at In6nti by a Turkish force under Colonel Ismet. new Turkish government in Immobilized by the bitter cold and mountainous terrain, Ankara that would be the the Greeks were forced to retire to Bursa. legitimate government of Turkey. He rounded up The next Greek assault began on 23 March, but this time British forces in the area with two separate thrusts. Eski~ehir came under attack and placed them under again from the east, while a larger Greek force moved arrest, then sent messages to into the town of Afyonkarahisar (modem day Afyon) to Istanbul and the world the south. At this point, the Greeks made a grave Mustafa Kemal (Atatiirk) stating that the Sultan was strategic error: instead of turning their force at Afyon- considered to be a prisoner karahisar northward to attack Eski~ehir in a pincer of a hostile foreign army. In Ankara, a new parliament, movement, they moved on Konya further to the south. the Grand National Assembly, convened for the first time The Turks however, had established a strong defensive on 23 April 1920. line at Konya; and the southern advance of the Greek Army stalled. Meanwhile, the Greek’s northern arm Under the Treaty of Sfvres of August 1920, the Istanbul fought a fierce battle around the town of In6nti, government relinquished any claims to territories in eventually pushing to the edge of the Anatolian plain. Arabia and the Levant, thus reducing the empire to a There they were thwarted by heavy artillery fire and the puppet state of the Allies and legitimizing the Greek reinforcement of the Turkish lines with cavalry reserves. invasion of Smyrna. A wave of indignation among the Exhausted and depleted by heavy casualties, the Greeks Turkish population turned the tide irrevocably in favor of pulled back to a defensive line. Kemal and the nationalists, and the nationalist movement became a full-scale revolution. Bulgaria The Greeks renewed their offensive on 22 June 1920 with an army better-equipped than the Turks and with the financial and political backing of the British. However, the other Allies were not as supportive. The Italians were still opposed to the invasion outright, and both France and the United States were noncommittal. The British themselves were spread far too thin trying to exert military influence throughout the Middle East with an army that was tired of fighting and low on morale. Nevertheless, the Greek offensive delivered on its promises by capturing the city of Bursa and driving a wedge between the nationalists and Istanbul.
Recommended publications
  • GIPE-021472-Contents.Pdf (1.460Mb)
    I.-- --------~= I EUROPE I I · · · he~ BALKAN NATIONS • no man's 1 ~ d of world power politics" I I I I ._I I QU MAN I A L_ I r---....,~~~ .I - 1 li I t::::- - - -; "'- ----- STANFORD BOOKS IN World Politics STANFORD BOOKS IN WORLD POLITICS GRAHAM H. STUART, Editor ,. • THE LAW AND PROCEDURE OF INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNALS, Jackson H. Ralston SUPPLEMENT TO THE LAW AND PROCEDURE OF INTERNA­ TIONAL TRIBUNALS, Jackson H. Ralston THE WASHINGTON CONFERENCE AND AFTER, Yamato Jchi- hashi THE PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL coNFERENcE, Norman L. Hill THE POLITICS OF PEACE, Charles E. Martin THE GOVERNANCE OF HAWAII, Robert M. C. Littler INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION FROM ATHENS TO LOCARNO, Jackson H. Ralston GREECE TODAY, Eliot Grinnell Mears INTERNATIONAL UNDERSTANDING: AGENCIES FOR A NEW WORLD, John Eugene 1-l arley THE INTERNATIONAL CITY OF TANGIER, Graham H. Stuart PROGRESS IN INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION, Manley 0. Hudson LABOR IN THE LEAGUE SYSTEM, Francis C. Wilson THE SHANGHAI PROBLEM, William Crane Johnstone, Jr. POST-WAR GERMAN-AUSTRIAN RELATIONs, M. Margaret Ball CADIZ TO CATHAY, Miles P. DuVal, Jr. THE SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE, Eleanor E. Dennison FOUNDATIONS OF MODERN WORLD SOCIETY, Linden A. Man­ der, AMERICAN DIPLOMACY IN ACTION, Richard W. Van Alstyne THE PROBLEM oF INTER-AMERICAN ORGANI¥-TION, M. Mar­ garet Ball EUROPE FREE AND UNITED, Albert Guerard THE DANZIG DILEMMA: A STUDY IN PEACEMAKING BY COM­ PROMISE, John Brown Mason AND THE MOUNTAINS WILL MOVE, Miles P. DuVal, Jr. BALKAN POLITICS, Joseph S. Roucek Balkan Politics ·Balkan Politics INTERNATIONAL RE-LATIONS.. IN NO MAN'S LAND JOSEPH S. ROUCEK CHAIRMAN, DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE HOFSTRA COLLEGE HEMPSTEAD, LONG ISLAND STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS STANFORD, CALIFORNIA LONDON: GEOFFREY CUMBERLEGE :: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, STANFORD, CALIFORNIA LoNDON: G&oJ'FRBY CuMBERLII:Git, OXJ'ORD 'UNIVERSITY PRtss TBE BAIJ:IlR AND TAYLOR COMPANY1 55 J'U'TB AVENUE1 NEW VORl[ 3 HENRY M.
    [Show full text]
  • Diesin74thdayofhis Fast;
    ALL MERCHANDISE THE W EAT H E R ADVERTISED IN THE l'nïiettlpd to-day and In-morro», prob¬ IS GUARANTEED ably shower»; not much change TRIBUNE in lemperature. First to Last the Truth: News--Editorials Sritmn* Full It>i>or» on fa*«» Nine Advertisements LXXX N o, (CopyriKiit, inao. Vot. 27,008 New York Tribune ln<\) 1920 TWO CENTS THRF.F f KNTS FOIR » i ,T| TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, In Greater >ew York «¡thin J(MI Mile* Kluewhere League Head CoxPleads for Votes Attorney for Says Art. X Oí Pro-Germans Contractors Hunger-Striker MacSwiney Is Not Vital Labor Special Dispatch to Thr, Tribune Agent Dies in 74th of His Oct. Fast; Declares DAYTON, Ohio, 25..Under the caption "Something to Think bourgeois Euro¬ About" Governor Cox's Day newspaper The News prints an editorial appealing Hettrick's Letter Offer- pean Statesmen Agree tu "cur German-American" friends. The editorial is more ing Hylan Union Section Is Non-Essential carefully worded than the now famous editorial Sup¬ appeared in (ox's the if He Court¬ BiteKills newspaper of port Greek during campaign 1916, proposing Signed Klfincnl of Covenant a German-American alliance - military and declaring.seven months after house Contract .»> » King Shown Monkey the sinking of the Lusitania.that "German U-boats have committed no crime lake4 against us." It is, nevertheless, a bid for what it terms Alexander Succumbs at Brother and Priest. Imericans "G< clearly Link Only rman-American" votes. Conneclinp 5:20 P. M. to Wound American-Born Irishman Ones Allowed With It loo S-rrioisslv The editorial begins with a reference to a May¬ poll conducted by a national In Housing Probe inflicted Condi¬ in Prison for magazine (The Literary Digest), asking Republican newspaper editors by Pet; Is Third to Die of or, Held amendments Eliminating to name their choice for Secretary of State in the Harding Cabinet.
    [Show full text]
  • The Greek Relief Committee: America's Response to the Greek Genocide (A Research Note)
    Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal Volume 3 Issue 3 Article 9 December 2008 The Greek Relief Committee: America's Response to the Greek Genocide (A Research Note) Nikolaos Hlamides Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gsp Recommended Citation Hlamides, Nikolaos (2008) "The Greek Relief Committee: America's Response to the Greek Genocide (A Research Note)," Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal: Vol. 3: Iss. 3: Article 9. Available at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gsp/vol3/iss3/9 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Open Access Journals at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal by an authorized editor of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Greek Relief Committee: America’s Response to the Greek Genocide (A Research Note) Nikolaos Hlamides London, UK In studies of the various relief efforts launched in response to the fate of Ottoman Christian minorities in the early twentieth century, much attention is given to the American Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief and, in particular, to its successors under different names, especially the Near East Relief. The role of other American-based aid organizations has been largely overlooked. This paper serves as an introduction to the Greek Relief Committee, a New York City–based organization that worked alongside other relief organizations from 1917 until 1921, administering aid to the Ottoman Greek population. Keywords: relief organization, Greek Genocide, American philanthropy The Relief Committee for Greeks of Asia Minor, or Greek Relief Committee (GRC), was an American relief organization formed during World War I in response to the genocide of Greeks in the Ottoman Empire.
    [Show full text]
  • Dance and Socio-Cybernetics: the Dance Event of “K’Na” As a Shaping Component of the Cultural Identity Amongst the Arvanites of Neo Cheimonio Evros, Greece1
    Journal of Ethnic and Cultural Studies Copyright 2020 2020, Vol. 7, No. 2, 30-49 ISSN: 2149-1291 http://dx.doi.org/10.29333/ejecs/342 Dance and Socio-Cybernetics: The Dance event of “K’na” As A Shaping Component of The Cultural Identity Amongst the Arvanites of Neo Cheimonio Evros, Greece1 Eleni Filippidou2 and Maria Koutsouba National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece Abstract: The research field of this paper is the wedding dance event of “K’na”, as this takes place by the Arvanites of Greek Thrace, an ethnic group moved to the area from Turkish Thrace in 1923. The aim of this paper is to investigate whether the three components of dance, music and song of Greek traditional dance, as these reflected in the “K’na” dance event amongst the Arvanites ethnic group of Neo Cheimonio (Evros), are related to issues of ethno-cultural identity under the lens of socio-cybernetics. Data was gathered through ethnographic method as this is applied to the study of dance, while its interpretation was based on socio-cybernetics according to Burke’s identity control theory. From the data analysis, it is showed that through the “K’na” dance event the Thracian Arvanites of Neo Cheimonio shape and reshape their ethno- cultural identity as a reaction to the input they receive from their environment. Therefore, the “construction” of their identity, as a constant process of self-regulation and internal control, is subjected to the conditions of a cybernetic process. Keywords: dance ethnography, ethnic group, identity control theory, refugees, Thrace. Introduction Identity is a concept that has come to the fore in recent years, as it has attracted the interest of many scholars.
    [Show full text]
  • For the Sake of My Brothers: the Great Fire of Salonika (1917) and the Mobilisation of Diaspora Jewry on Behalf of the Victims*
    For the Sake of My Brothers: The Great Fire of Salonika (1917) and the Mobilisation of Diaspora Jewry on Behalf of the Victims* Minna Rozen** Introduction The Great Fire of Salonika has already been studied and discussed from a number of perspectives, primarily the tremendous damage caused to the city’s Jewish community and the impact on its standing;1 the fire as a turning point in Salonika’s urban history;2 and the plausibility of the conspiracy * This article was translated from the Hebrew original by Karen Gold. Many thanks to Prof. Rika Benveniste for writing the Greek abstract, and to Dr. Evanghelos A. Heki- moglou for his valuable comments. ** Minna Rozen is a professor emerita of the University of Haifa. 1. Ρένα Μόλχο, Οι Εβραίοι της Θεσσαλονίκης 1856-1919: Μια ιδιαίτερη κοινότητα (Θεσσαλονίκη: Θεμέλιο, 2001) [Rena Molho, The Jews of Salonika, 1856-1919: A Special Community (Salonika: Themelio, 2001)], 120-122; Vilma Hastaoglou-Martinidis, ‘A Mediterranean City in Transition: Thessaloniki between the Two World Wars’, Facta Universitatus, Architecture and Civil Engineering 1 (1997): 495-507; Rena Molho, ‘On the Jewish community of Salonica after the Fire of 1917: An Unpublished Memoir and Other Documents from the Papers of Henry Morgenthau’, in The Jewish Community of South- eastern Europe from the Fifteenth Century to the End of World War II (Thessaloniki: In- stitute for Balkan Studies, 1997), 147-174; Gila Hadar, ‘Régie Vardar: A Jewish “Garden City” in Thessaloniki (1917-1943)’ (paper presented at 7th International Conference on Urban History: European City in Comparative Perspective, Panteion University, Athens- Piraeus, Greece, 27-30 October 2004); Vilma Hastaoglou-Martinidis, ‘Urban Aesthetics and National Identity: The Refashioning of Eastern Mediterranean Cities between 1900 and 1940’, Planning Perspectives 26.2 (2011): 153-182, esp.
    [Show full text]
  • Κρηπίς»: Κύρτου Πλέγματα / Research Program “Kripis”: Kyrtou Plegmata
    Δίκτυα στην Ιστορία από την αρχαιότητα έωs τη σύγχρονη εποχή Shaping Networks from Antiquity to the Modern Era Πρόγραμμα «Κρηπίς»: Κύρτου πλέγματα / Research Program “Kripis”: Kyrtou plegmata ΔΙΕΘΝΕΣ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΙΌ / INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE Iνστιτούτο Ιστορικών Ερευνών / I nstitute of Historical Research 11-13 ΔΕΚΕΜΒΡΙΟΥ / DECEMBER 2015 ΕΘΝΙΚΌ ΙΔΡΥΜΑ ΕΡΕΥΝΏΝ Αμφιθέατρο “Λεωνίδας Ζέρβας” Λεωφ. Βασιλέως Κωνσταντίνου 48, Aθήνα NATIONAL HELLENIC RESEARCH FOUNDATION Auditorium “Leonidas Zervas” Vassileos Constantinou 48, Athens www.eie.gr Ινστιτούτο Ιστορικών Ερευνών Εθνικό Ίδρυμα Ερευνών Institute of Historical Research National Hellenic Research Foundation 2 Δίκτυα στην Ιστορία από την αρχαιότητα έωs τη σύγχρονη εποχή Shaping Networks from Antiquity to the Modern Era ΔΙΕΘΝΕΣ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΙΌ / INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE Aθήνα, 11-13 Δεκεμβρίου 2015 / Αthens, 11-13 December 2015 Research Program “Kripis” Kyrtou plegmata Iνστιτούτο Ιστορικών Ερευνών / Εθνικό Ίδρυμα Ερευνών Institute of Historical Research / National Hellenic Research Foundation Όργανωτική επιτροπή Organizing Committee Πρόεδρος President Ταξιάρχης Κόλιας, Διευθυντής ΙΙΕ/ΕΙΕ Taxiarchis Kolias, Director IHR/NHRF Γενική Γραμματέας General Secretary Ουρανία Πολυκανδριώτη Ourania Polycandrioti Μέλη Members Χαράλαμπος Γάσπαρης Charalambos Gasparis Ζήσης Μελισσάκης Zisis Melissakis Χαρίκλεια Παπαγεωργιάδου Charikleia Papageorgiadou Πασχάλης Πασχίδης Paschalis Paschidis Γιώργος Τόλιας George Tolias Μαρία Χριστίνα Χατζηιωάννου Maria Christina Chatziioannou Ειδικός γραμματέας Executive Secretary Δημήτρης
    [Show full text]
  • The Smyrna / Izmir Timeline – a Study by Achilleas Chatziconstantinou, 2011
    The Smyrna / Izmir Timeline – A study by Achilleas Chatziconstantinou, 2011 Century Year Month Day Event Theme 13 1225 Fortification of Mount Pagus and construction of six cisterns by John Urban structure III Doukas Vatatzis, emperor of Nikaia 13 1261 The city is handed over to the Genoese by the byzantine emperor Wars Michael VII 14 1328 Occupation by Gazi Umur Bey Aydınoğlu Wars 14 1344 Occupation of the sea castle by the Crusaders Wars 14 1348 Foundation of the Santa Maria Franciscan Convent Religion 15 1402 Occupation by Timur-Leg Wars 15 1425 Deposition of the Aydınoğlu by Sultan Murat II Wars 15 1471 Occupation attempt by Venetian admiral Mocenigo Wars 15 1480 Foundation of the Dominican Convent Religion 16 1535 Capitulations between the Ottoman empire and the French Kingdom Economy 16 1566 Ottoman occupation of Chios island Wars 16 1583 Foundation of the Levant Company Economy 16 1588 Construction of the Saint Voukolos shrine Religion 16 1592 Beginning of construction of Hisar Camii Religion 16 1598 Completion of Hisar Camii Religion 16 Establishment of the Venetian Consulate Politics 16 Establishment of the French Consulate Politics 16 Establishment of the Genoese Consulate Politics 16 Establishment of the English Consulate Politics 16 Establishment of the Dutch Consulate Politics 17 1612 Capitulations between the Ottoman empire and the Netherlands Economy 17 1612 Construction of the Dutch church Religion 17 1623 Construction of the Saint George Orthodox church Religion 17 1624 Foundation of the Jesuit Order's school Education
    [Show full text]
  • KINGDOM of GREECE Quadrumvirate: Anatolian Wars, 1919 Chaired by Berat Talay
    KINGDOM OF GREECE Quadrumvirate: Anatolian Wars, 1919 Chaired by Berat Talay Session XXII Kingdom of Greece Quadrumvirate: Anatolian Wars, 1919 Topic A: Moving Forward in the Wake of the National Schism Topic B: T he Asia Minor Campaign against the Ottomans Committee Overview Parliamentary Procedure With the end of World War I, the Standard MUN parliamentary Kingdom of Greece finds itself on the procedure will be adhered to in this winning side. While Constantine I was in committee, but may be altered at the exile, the prime minister Eleftherios discretion of the chair to reflect the current Venizelos assumed full control of the state of the crisis. Delegates in this kingdom and joined the members of the committee have certain abilities and powers Triple Entente comprised of the United that can greatly affect debate, and Kingdom, the French Republic, and Russian subsequently, the course of events. This Empire in victory. committee will be following procedures Like others, Greece wants to benefit similar to that of the General Assemblies, from a moribund Ottoman Empire. For the which includes maintaining a speaker’s list first time in centuries, Greece has the and having moderated and unmoderated opportunity to remove the Ottoman Empire caucuses. However, there will be a variety completely out of the Balkans. Approaching of crises that will require the use of mid­1919, the Venizelos government is directives, press releases, and portfolio close to settling its deals with an acquisition powers unique to each delegate. The of land that will expand its territory by committee may use the four tools listed in almost twofold.
    [Show full text]
  • The Western Question in Greece and Turkey
    THE WESTERN QUESTION IN GREECE AND TURKEY A STUDY IN THE CONTACT OF CIVILISATIONS BY ARNOLD J. TOYNBEE ‘For we are also His offspring’ CONSTABLE AND COMPANY LTD LONDON · BOMBAY · SYDNEY 1922 TO THE PRESIDENT AND FACULTY OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE FOR GIRLS AT CONSTANTINOPLE THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR AND HIS WIFE IN GRATITUDE FOR THEIR HOSPITALITY AND IN ADMIRATION OF THEIR NEUTRAL-MINDEDNESS IN CIRCUMSTANCES IN WHICH NEUTRALITY IS ‘HARD AND RARE’ PREFACE THIS book is an attempt to place certain recent events in the Near and Middle East in their historical setting, and to illustrate from them several new features of more enduring importance than the events themselves. It is not a discussion of what the peace-settlement in the East ought to be, for the possibility of imposing a cut-and-dried scheme, if it ever really existed, was destroyed by the landing of the Greek troops at Smyrna in May 1919. At any rate, from that moment the situation resolved itself into a conflict of forces beyond control; the Treaty of Sèvres was still-born; and subsequent conferences and agreements, however imposing, have had and are likely to have no more than a partial and temporary effect. On the other hand, there have been real changes in the attitude of the Western public towards their Governments’ Eastern policies, which have produced corresponding changes in those policies themselves; and the Greeks and Turks have appeared in unfamiliar roles. The Greeks have shown the same unfitness as the Turks for governing a mixed population. The Turks, in their turn, have become exponents of the political nationalism of the West.
    [Show full text]
  • The New Hampshire Gazette First Class U.S
    Vol. CCLIV, Live Free! or Die No. 2 The New Hampshire Gazette First Class U.S. Postage Paid October 23, The Nation’s Oldest Newspaper™ • Editor: Steven Fowle • Founded 1756 by Daniel Fowle Portsmouth, N.H., Permit No. 75 2009 PO Box 756, Portsmouth, NH 03802 • [email protected] • www.nhgazette.com Address Service Requested The Fortnightly Rant Obama's Dilemma Barack Obama, the American President bin Laden as if he were more dangerous who was recently named the winner of the than George Orwell’s fictional Emmanuel Nobel Peace Prize, is considering whether Goldstein, said just five months after Op- to grant a request from General Stanley eration Enduring Freedom began, “I truly A. McChrystal for tens of thousands of am not that concerned about him.” If Bush additional troops to … do something in himself could so easily dismiss his former Afghanistan. nemesis, why should Obama feel obliged We say “to do something” because it is to stake his presidency on his capture? not entirely clear just what the troops al- President Obama has said that he wants ready in Afghanistan are doing now. to get the strategy right before making a The U.S. invaded Afghanistan in 2001 decision about the number of troops re- because the hijackers who carried out the quired. The apparent difficulty of settling September 11, 2001 attack on the U.S. had on a clearly focused mission in Afghani- been allowed to train there by the Taliban, stan could be partly a function of the ter- who ruled the country then. rain. Gertrude Stein once famously said The invasion clearly established a prin- about Oakland that there is no “there” ciple that ought to be well remembered there.1 Oakland is a compact city with a by anyone who is responsible for any sort population of about 400,000 people.
    [Show full text]
  • Modern Greece: a History Since 1821 John S
    MODERN GREECE A History since 1821 JOHN S. KOLIOPOULOS AND THANOS M. VEREMIS A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Publication 9781405186810_1_Pretoc.indd iii 9/8/2009 10:48:21 PM 9781405186810_6_Index.indd 268 9/8/2009 10:58:29 PM MODERN GREECE 9781405186810_1_Pretoc.indd i 9/8/2009 10:48:21 PM A NEW HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE This series provides stimulating, interpretive histories of particular nations of modern Europe. Assuming no prior knowledge, authors describe the development of a country through its emergence as a mod- ern state up to the present day. They also introduce readers to the latest historical scholarship, encouraging critical engagement with compara- tive questions about the nature of nationhood in the modern era. Looking beyond the immediate political boundaries of a given country, authors examine the interplay between the local, national, and international, set- ting the story of each nation within the context of the wider world. Published Modern Greece: A History since 1821 John S. Koliopoulos & Thanos M. Veremis Forthcoming Modern France Edward Berenson Modern Spain Pamela Radcliff Modern Ukraine Yaroslav Hrytsak & Mark Von Hagen Modern Hungary Mark Pittaway Modern Poland Brian Porter-Szucs Czechoslovakia Benjamin Frommer Yugoslavia Melissa Bokovoy & Sarah Kent 9781405186810_1_Pretoc.indd ii 9/8/2009 10:48:21 PM MODERN GREECE A History since 1821 JOHN S. KOLIOPOULOS AND THANOS M. VEREMIS A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Publication 9781405186810_1_Pretoc.indd iii 9/8/2009 10:48:21 PM This edition first published 2010 Copyright © 2010 John S. Koliopoulos and Thanos M. Veremis Blackwell Publishing was acquired by John Wiley & Sons in February 2007.
    [Show full text]
  • The Greek Middlebrow Magazine Μπουκέτο (1924‒46) and Its Supplements Despoina Gkogkou
    The Greek Middlebrow Magazine Μπουκέτο (1924‒46) and its Supplements Despoina Gkogkou Journal of European Periodical Studies, 5.2 (Winter 2020) ISSN 2506-6587 Content is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Licence The Journal of European Periodical Studies is hosted by Ghent University Website: ojs.ugent.be/jeps To cite this article: Despoina Gkogkou, ‘The Greek Middlebrow Magazine Μπουκέτο (1924‒46) and its Supplements’, Journal of European Periodical Studies, 5.2 (Winter 2020), 60–79 The Greek Middlebrow Magazine Μπουκέτο (1924‒46) and its Supplements Despoina Gkogkou University of Patras [email protected] ABSTRACT This article introduces one of the first popular literary miscellanies published in Greece after the First World War, Μπουκέτο [Bouquet] (1924‒46). The first of its kind in the country, it led the way to a new type of periodical with subject matter ranging from serialized novels to short jokes, along with a modern layout featuring fine and plentiful illustrations. Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu’s theory of the cultural field, the article starts by showing that the magazine was a manifestation of middlebrow culture, combining commercial values with legitimate cultural aspirations and an eagerness to educate the masses. After situating the magazine in the cultural field of Greek periodical publishing and specifying its audience, the article focuses on its supplements, which followed the magazine’s publishing success. These were spin-off publications associated with the magazine, such as Βιβλιοθήκη του Μπουκέτου [Bouquet’s Library] (1924‒36), a series of translated classic novels, the annual Ημερολόγιον του Μπουκέτου [Bouquet’s Calendar] (1926‒33), and pamphlets or pull-outs sewn into the central pages of the magazine.
    [Show full text]