Online Encyclopedia

ANDREAS VOKOS MIAOULIS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 355 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ANDREAS VOKOS

MIAOULIS  or Bokos (1768-1835), Greek
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admiral and politician, was born in Negropont . The surname Miaoulis, which was added to his
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family name of Vokos, or Bokos, is said to be derived from the
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Turkish word miaoul, a felucca . He settled in the island of Hydra on the east of the Morea, and when the Greek War of Independence began was known among his
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fellow townsmen as a trader in corn who had gained
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wealth, and who made a popular use of his
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money . He had been a merchant captain, and was chosen to lead the
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naval forces of the islands when they rose against the government of the Sultan . The islanders had enjoyed some measure of exemption from the worst excesses of the Turkish officials, but suffered severely from the conscription raised to man the Turkish
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ships; and though they seemed to be peculiarly open to attack by the Sultan's forces from the sea, they took an early and active
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part in the rising . As early as 1822 Miaoulis was appointed navarch, or admiral, of the swarm of small vessels which formed the insurgent
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fleet . He commanded the expedition sent to take revenge for the
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massacre of Chio (see KANARIS) in the same
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year . He continued to be the naval chief of the Greeks till Lord Dundonald entered their service in 1827, when he retired in order to leave the
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English officer
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free to act as
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commander . In the
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interval he had had the general direction of the naval side of the Greek struggle for freedom . He had a share in the successful
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relief of the first siege of Missolonghi in December 1822 and
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January 1823 . In 1824, after the
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conquest of Psara by the
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Turks, he commanded the Greek forces which prevented the further progress of the Sultan's fleet, though at the cost of the loss of many fire ships and men to themselves . But in the same year he was unable to prevent the
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Egyptian forces from occupying Navarino, though he harassed them with some success .

During 1825 he succeeded in carrying stores and reinforcements into Missolonghi, when it was besieged for the second

time, though he could not avert its fall . His efforts to interrupt the sea communications of the Egyptian forces failed, owing to the enormous disproportion of the two squadrons in the siege and strength of the ships . As the war went on the naval power of the Greeks diminished, partly owing to the penury of their
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treasury, and partly to the growth of piracy in the general anarchy of the Eastern Mediterranean . When Miaoulis retired to make
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room for Dundonald the conduct of the struggle had really passed into the hands of the powers . When independence had been obtained, Miaoulis in his old age was entangled in the
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civil conflicts of his country, as an opponent of Capodistrias and the
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Russian party . He had to employ his skill in the employment of fireships against them at
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Poros in 1831 . He was one of the deputation sent to invite King Otho to accept the
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crown of
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Greece, and was made
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rear-admiral and then
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vice-admiral by him . He died on the 24th of
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June 1835 at Athens .

End of Article: ANDREAS VOKOS MIAOULIS
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