The Greek Revolution and the Violent Birth of Nationalism: A New History
A sweeping global history of the birth of modern Greece
In 1821, a diverse territory in the southern Balkans on the fringe of the Ottoman Empire was thrust into a decade
of astounding mass violence. The Greek Revolution and the Violent Birth of Nationalism traces how something
new emerged from an imperial mosaic of myriad languages, religions, cultures, and localisms—the world’s first
ethnic nation-state, one that was born from the destruction and the creation of whole peoples, and which set
the stage for the modern age of nationalism that was to come.
Yanni Kotsonis exposes the everyday chaos and brutality in the Balkan peninsula as the Ottoman regime
unraveled. He follows the future Greeks on the seaways to Odesa, Alexandria, Livorno, and the Caribbean,
and recovers the stories of peasants, merchants, warriors, aristocrats, and intellectuals who navigated the
great empires that crisscrossed the region. Kotsonis recounts the experiences of the villagers and sailors who
joined the armed battalions of the Napoleonic Wars and learned a new kind of warfare and a new practice of
mass mobilization, lessons that served them well during the revolutionary decade. He describes how, as the
bloody 1820s came to a close, the region’s Muslims were no more and Greece was an Orthodox Christian
nation united by a shared language and a claim to an ancient past.
This panoramic book shows how the Greek Revolution was a demographic upheaval more consequential than
the overthrow of a ruler. Drawing on Ottoman sources together with archival evidence from Greece, Britain,
France, Russia, and Switzerland, the book reframes the birth of modern Greece within the imperial history of
the global nineteenth century.
Yanni Kotsonis (Author), Steven Crossley, TBD (Narrator)
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