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THEODOROS DELYANNI (1826-1905)

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Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 979 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THEODOROS

DELYANNI (1826-1905)  , Greek statesman, was born at Kalavryta, Peloponnesus, in 1826 . He studied law at Athens, and in 1843 entered the
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ministry of the interior, of which department he became permanent secretary in 1859 . In 1862, on the deposition of King Otho, he became minister for
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foreign affairs in the provisional government . In 1867 he was minister at Paris . On his return to Athens he became a member of successive cabinets in various capacities, and rapidly collected a party around him consisting of those who opposed his
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great
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rival, Tricoupi . In the so-called " Oecumenical Ministry " of 1877 he voted for war with
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Turkey, and on its fall he entered the
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cabinet of Koumoundoros as minister for foreign affairs . He was a representative of
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Greece at the Berlin Congress in 1878 . From this time forward, and particularly after 1882, when Tricoupi again came into power at the head of a strong party, the duel between these two statesmen was the leading feature of Greek politics . (See GREECE:
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History.) Delyanni first formed a cabinet in 1885; but his warlike policy, the aim of which was, by threatening Turkey, to force the powers to make concessions in order to avoid the
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risk of a
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European war, ended in failure . For the powers, in order to stop his excessive armaments, eventually blockaded the Peiraeus and other ports, and this brought about his downfall . He returned to power in 189o, with a radical programme, but his failure to
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deal with the
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financial crisis produced a conflict between him and the king, and his disrespectful attitude resulted in his
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summary dismissal in 1892 . Delyanni, by his demagogic behaviour, evidently expected the public to side with him; but at the elections he was badly beaten .

In 1895, however, he again became

prime minister, and was at the head of affairs during the Cretan crisis and the opening of the war with Turkey in 1897 . The humiliating defeat which ensued —though Delyanni himself had been led into the disastrous war policy to some extent against his will—caused his fall in
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April 1897, the king again dismissing him from office when he declined to resign . Delyanni kept his own seat at the election of 1899, but his following dwindled to small dimensions . He quickly recovered his influence, however, and he was again president of the council and minister of the interior when, on the 13th of
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June 1905, he was murdered in revenge for the rigorous
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measures taken by him against gambling houses . The main fault of Delyanni as a statesman was that he was unable to grasp the truth that the prosperity of a state depends on its adapting its ambitions to its means . Yet, in his vast projects, which the powers were never likely to endorse, and without their endorsement were vain, he represented the real wishes and aspirations of his countrymen, and his
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death was the occasion for an extraordinary demonstration of popular grief . He died in extreme poverty, and a pension was voted to the two nieces who lived with him .

End of Article: THEODOROS DELYANNI (1826-1905)
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