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THEODOROS See also: Greek statesman, was See also: born at Kalavryta, See also: Peloponnesus, in 1826
.
He studied See also: law at Athens, and in 1843 entered the See also: ministry of the interior, of which department he became permanent secretary in 1859
.
In 1862, on the deposition of See also: King
See also: Otho, he became See also: minister for See also: foreign affairs in the provisional See also: government
.
In 1867 he was minister at See also: 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 See also: great See also: rival, Tricoupi
.
In the so-called " Oecumenical Ministry " of 1877 he voted for war with See also: Turkey, and on its fall he entered the See also: cabinet of Koumoundoros as minister for foreign affairs
.
He was a representative of See also: Greece at the Berlin Congress in 1878
.
From this See also: time forward, and particularly after 1882, when Tricoupi again came into power at the See also: head of a strong party, the duel between these two statesmen was the leading feature of Greek politics
.
(See GREECE: See also: History.) See also: Delyanni first formed a cabinet in 1885; but his warlike policy, the aim of which was, by threatening Turkey, to force the See also: powers to make concessions in See also: order to avoid the See also: risk of a See also: European war, ended in failure
.
For the powers, in order to stop his excessive armaments, eventually blockaded the See also: Peiraeus and other ports, and this brought about his downfall
.
He returned to power in 189o, with a See also: radical See also: programme, but his failure to See also: deal with the See also: financial crisis produced a conflict between him and the king, and his disrespectful attitude resulted in his See also: summary dismissal in 1892
.
Delyanni, by his demagogic behaviour, evidently expected the public to See also: side with him; but at the elections he was badly beaten
.
In 1895, however, he again became See also: 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 See also: 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 See also: June 1905, he was murdered in revenge for the rigorous See also: measures taken by him against gambling houses
.
The See also: main fault of Delyanni as a statesman was that he was unable to grasp the truth that the prosperity of a See also: 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 See also: 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
.
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