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Megali Idea
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==Revolts, Cretan crisis and Greco-Turkish War (1897)== {{See also|Epirus Revolt of 1854|Cretan Revolt (1866–69)|Epirus Revolt of 1878|1878 Greek Macedonian rebellion|Greco-Turkish War of 1897|Macedonian Struggle}} [[File:P. A. de László - Constantine I of Greece, King of the Hellenes.jpg|thumb|140px|[[Constantine I of Greece]] was called ''Constantine XII'' by his supporters, the purported successor to the Emperor [[Constantine XI Palaiologos]]]] [[File:Elefteriosvenizelos--victoryofvenizel00seliuoft.jpg|thumb|140px|[[Eleftherios Venizelos]] tried to realize the Megali Idea]] In January 1897, violence and disorder were escalating in Crete, polarizing the population. Massacres of the Christian population took place in Chania and Rethimno. The Greek government, pressured by public opinion, intransigent political elements, extreme nationalist groups (e.g. [[Ethniki Etairia]]) and with the Great Powers reluctant to intervene, decided to send warships and personnel to assist the Cretans. The Great Powers had no option then but to proceed with the occupation of the island, but they were too late. A Greek force of 1,500 men had landed at Kolymbari on 1 February 1897, and its commanding officer, Colonel [[Timoleon Vassos]], declared that he was taking over the island "in the name of the King of the Hellenes" and that he was announcing the union of Crete with Greece. This led to an uprising that spread immediately throughout the island. The Great Powers finally decided to land their troops and stopped the Greek army force from approaching Chania. At the same time their fleets blockaded Crete, preventing both Greeks and Turks from bringing any more troops to the island. The Ottoman Empire, in reaction to the rebellion of Crete and the assistance sent by Greece, relocated a significant part of its army in the Balkans to the north of Thessaly, close to the borders with Greece. Greece in reply reinforced its borders in Thessaly. However, irregular Greek forces and followers of the Megali Idea acted without orders and raided Turkish outposts, leading the Ottoman Empire to declare war on Greece; the war is known as the [[Greco-Turkish War of 1897]]. The Turkish army, far outnumbering the Greek, was also better prepared, due to the recent reforms carried out by a German mission under [[Colmar Freiherr von der Goltz|Baron von der Goltz]]. The Greek army fell back in retreat. The other Great Powers then intervened and an armistice was signed in May 1897. The war, however, only ended in December of that year. The military failure in the Greco-Turkish war cost Greece small territorial losses along the border line in northern Thessaly, and a large sum of financial reparations that wrecked Greece's economy for years, while giving no lasting solution to the Cretan Question. The Great Powers (Britain, France, Russia, and Italy) in order to prevent future clashes and trying to avoid the creation of a revanchist climate in Greece, imposed what they thought of as a lasting solution; Crete was proclaimed an autonomous ''[[Cretan State]]''. The four Great Powers assumed the administration of Crete; and, in a decisive diplomatic victory for Greece, Prince George of Greece (second son of King George I) became High Commissioner.
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