Contemporary British account of the end of British rule in Corfu, 2nd June 1864, (quoted in Xenocracy: State, Class, and Colonialism in the Ionian Islands, 1815-1864, by Sakis Gekas)
Sir Thomas Maitland, or "King Tom," who ruled the Ionian Islands as an enlightened despot, building infrastructure and hanging rebels.
Contemporary British takes on the inhabitants of Corfu Town.
Under British rule, the Ionian Islands had the second highest murder rate of any rural area of Europe, after Corsica. The British referred to the Ionians as "Mediterranean Irish" in an attempt to understand their character (via Gallant, 2000: doi.org/10.2307/1571456)
Gladstone, as Lord High Commissioner of the Ionian Islands, comparing their accelerating Greek nationalism to that of Wales
Sir Charles Napier, later the hero of Sindh, then the governor of Kefalonia, compares the island's inhabitants to the Irish, without the drunkenness (quoted in Bowen's anonymously-penned The Ionian Islands Under British Protection, 1851)
Bowen again (born in Donegal, Sir George Ferguson Bowen was appointed rector of the Ionian University in Corfu & initiated the idea of formally annexing the island; he married an Ionian noblewoman, the Contessa Diamantina di Roma, & later governed Hong Kong & Queensland).
Maitland (the picture shows the statue of himself in a toga he erected in front of the Lord High Commissioner's palace, which he built) started out as a Whig, before crushing the Luddites and becoming a military authoritarian and the island's enlightened despot
Napier noting, with some acid, that the Lord High Commissioner of the Ionian Islands was paid the same wage as the President of the United States of America
The British state at a period when it enjoyed building infrastructure
Under Maitland's 1817 constitution, Greek was reintroduced as the administrative language of the islands for the first time since falling out of Byzantine control in 1257
A nationalist Ionian Greek noble, Georgios Drakatos Papanikolas, stung by Bowen's description of him as "the brother of a shopkeeper," criticises Bowen's excessive pay, his poor Greek, and his Irish accent (1851):
The traveller John Dunn-Gardner on Ionian demands for enosis with Greece, 1859:
The Anti-Papal League accuses Gladstone, then Lord High Commissioner, of attending an Orthodox service in Corfu, and of being a crypto-Catholic (1871)
Mrs Gaskell imagines Corfu garrison life for an officer's wife, in North and South (1854)
Private John Connors VC, 3rd (The East Kent) Regiment of Foot (The Buffs), of Co. Kerry, buried on Corfu after falling off the fortifications in 1857 (National Army Museum)
Left, the Sir Howard Douglas obelisk, Right, the Maitland Rotunda, Corfu Town, 1861– part of the effort to turn Corfu into Cheltenham. One mid-19th c British commentator compared the architecture of the town’s fashionable new suburb to “Hackney, or Holloway.”
Bowen (who wanted Britain to annex Corfu but give the other Ionian islands to Greece) contrasts the Corfiots with the other Ionians
On the national character of the Greeks, an unsympathetic portrayal by John Dunn-Gardner, who wanted Britain to formally annex the Islands, and use them as a base to boost trade with the Ottoman empire
From The Illustrated Magazine of Art, 1854 (painting by Edward Lear)
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Assuming the answer isn’t just “move to Northern Europe,” presumably one effect of rising Med temperatures will be the eventual depopulation of the plains & coastlines & a return to the currently depopulated mountains (in Greece’s case, a return to pre-modern settlement patterns)
In much of premodern Greece, the coastline was depopulated due to Corsair raids, and the plains due to malaria: high population density in the mountains, often out of reach of Ottoman tax collectors, made currently depopulated villages then prosperous cultural centres
One unexpected driver of the 19th c resettlement of the plains: the phylloxera infestation, which spared Greece and created a boom in currant production for export
Images from the 1953 Soviet war film “Ships Storm the Bastions” about the Russian conquest of Corfu in 1799. Corfu would remain a Russian dependency until 1805: Corfu’s half-century of British rule was almost entirely directed towards keeping the island out of Russian hands again
Under Russian rule, Corfu and the Ionian Islands were granted notional independence— the first Greek state since the fall of Byzantium— as an oligarchic Septinsular Republic, with a very cool flag:
The Corfiot nobleman Giovanni Capo d’Istria (better known in Greek historiography as Ioannis Kapodistrias, first ruler of independent Greece), whose ancestors derived from what is now Slovenia’s Koper, then became the Russian foreign minister, and a harsh critic of British rule
For @unherd, I spent a week in the Donbas embedded with the Ukrainian Volunteer Corps (Right Sector), in their first mission since being formally absorbed into the Ukrainian army, tasked with harassing advancing Russian troops: unherd.com/2022/06/on-the…
Formerly the militia of the Right Sector party, the Ukrainian Volunteer Corps (DUK) has now been absorbed into the regular army as an elite professional force
Tasked with harassing advancing Russian troops and delaying the Russian assault on the Donbas, DUK is fighting a semi-guerrilla war on the steppe
The Macronian synthesis is surely that a deepened European political, cultural and defence relationship with Ukraine isn’t a brake on strategic autonomy, but a catalyst, as the US inevitably turns to the Pacific, medium-term.
See Macron citing Ukraine as the spur to develop his longstanding dream of accelerated European defence/tech development, eg:
Will this work? IDK. How does the nascent UK-Baltics-Poland-Ukraine defence bloc fit in, as Britain’s reintegration within a European political sphere, or as a spoiler to greater autonomy? Again, impossible to say.