The Real Ethnic Composition of Modern Greece

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  • Carlin
    Senior Member
    • Dec 2011
    • 3332

    Originally posted by Amphipolis View Post
    (Answering some of my questions myself)

    (Not sure how but) William Miller believes the Slavs were two distincts groups located as follows:

    -Ezerites at Elos (this is at the Laconian Gulf between the middle and right finger of Peloponnese)

    -Melingi at Taygetos Mountain (this mountain covers the middle finger of Peloponnese).

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    • Carlin
      Senior Member
      • Dec 2011
      • 3332

      - Akropolites' use of Rhomaioi (and.. 'Latins' for 'Lakonians'?)




      - Slavs of Skorta (blue circled area in the map below)












      Last edited by Carlin; 04-25-2017, 09:18 PM.

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      • tchaiku
        Member
        • Nov 2016
        • 786

        Originally posted by Carlin View Post
        What was the scale and impact of Roman colonization and immigration into Peloponnese & Greece? I am usually told, and hear, that the impact was minimal and that the number of colonists was not large (and that those who arrived were almost immediately hellenized).

        Processes of Cultural Change and Integration in the Roman World
        Processes of Cultural Change and Integration in the Roman World is a collection of studies on the interaction between Rome and the peoples that became part of its Empire between c. 300 BC and AD 300. The book focuses on the mechanisms by which interaction between Rome and its subjects occurred, e.g. the settlements of colonies by the Romans, army service, economic and cultural interaction. In many cases Rome exploited the economic resources of the conquered territories without allowing the local inhabitants any legal autonomy. However, they usually maintained a great deal of cultural freedom of expression. Those local inhabitants who chose to engage with Rome, its economy and culture, could rise to great heights in the administration of the Empire.


        Page 154: This paper presents the results of such context-specific case study. It focuses on the city of Patras, which was colonized by Augustus in 14 B.C. Colonization entailed a massive influx of foreigners into the city, among them a large number of Roman army veterans.

        Page 156: The colonization of Patras took place in the context of the reorganization of Greece that was started by Caesar and continued by Augustus.

        Page 158: The settlement of veterans from Antony's legions after the battle of Actium must have posed a serious problem for Augustus, since, according to some estimations, there were about 35,000 veterans who had to be accommodated; Patras was just one destination for the veterans. ...... A third wave of immigration has been suggested by Keppie and Rizakis ........ The process of large-scale immigration entailed major disruptions to local society. In the case of Patras the act of colonization and the immigration of thousands of colonists led to a radical overthrow of the established order of things.





        Who were then the medieval Romaioi and Tsacones of Peloponnese?
        Many of those Medival Romans in Byzantine Empire were indeed ancient Hellenes, but I wonder how much did Roman conquest affect Greece?

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        • tchaiku
          Member
          • Nov 2016
          • 786

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          • Carlin
            Senior Member
            • Dec 2011
            • 3332

            Originally posted by tchaiku View Post
            Many of those Medival Romans in Byzantine Empire were indeed ancient Hellenes, but I wonder how much did Roman conquest affect Greece?
            Based on which sources do you base this belief on?

            We have just read that up to 35,000 Roman veterans were settled in (southern) Greece, as well as having several waves of large-scale immigration into (only) Corinth and Patras.

            Furthermore, Justinian established Castle of Maina/Mani and settled it with Roman colonists from elsewhere. (I do not have the source handy.)

            Let's not forget that - for want of Hellenes - 'Kapheroi, Thrakesians, Armenians, and others from different places and cities' were settled in Peloponnesos in the early ninth century.

            Moreover, did we not already read (several times) the following:

            - "And now most of Epirus and Hellas and Peloponnesus and Macedonia are inhabited by 'Scythi-Slavs'."
            - And for Western Peloponnese in particular: "And now not even the names of the Pisatans, the Caucones or the Pylians survive. All these regions are inhabited by 'Scythians'".

            There were also minor settlements of Christian Orthodox Seljuk Turk "Romaioi" in the Peloponnesos as well (sometime during/after the 13th century).

            Comment

            • tchaiku
              Member
              • Nov 2016
              • 786

              I meant ... before slavic migration. The Roman conquest and assimilation of Ancient Hellenes into Christian Romans but what I meant is that when Christianization took over, how many of those Pagans were Latin colonies or native Hellenes. You get me ...
              Last edited by tchaiku; 04-26-2017, 01:11 PM.

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              • Carlin
                Senior Member
                • Dec 2011
                • 3332

                Originally posted by tchaiku View Post
                I meant ... before slavic migration. The Roman conquest and assimilation of Ancient Hellenes into Christian Romans but what I meant is that when Christianization took over, how many of those Pagans were Latin colonies or native Hellenes. You get me ...
                Ok, got it.

                Before the Slavic migrations, I am sure there were some native Hellenes. However, let's not forget also that there were numerous incursions into the Balkans and Greece even earlier - and after the Roman conquest of Greece. One of the most devastating attacks was carried out by the Goths, in 3rd century AD.

                The following is the same as my post #235 in this same thread:
                Athens This question has been asked several times, and should be addressed properly once and for all. While I will agree that pockets of Romaic-speakers lived in what were to become the domains of the modern 'Hellenic' state and elsewhere in the Balkans, particularly where it concerns the main trading areas (where as it so


                Citations are from Edward Gibbon's "The History of The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire". What was the extent of the Gothic invasion? Was it 'significant' or 'minor'? Interestingly, Gibbon himself states that troops of Greek deserters and fugitive slaves, which joined the Goths, were themselves of German or Sarmatian (likely Slavic) extraction. How many Germans and Sarmatians were living in Greece at the time of the Gothic attack is impossible to determine.

                Quotes:

                - At length the Gothic fleet anchored in the port of Piraeus, five miles distant from Athens, which had attempted to make some preparations for a vigorous defence. Cleodamus, one of the engineers employed by the emperor's orders to fortify the maritime cities against the Goths, had already begun to repair the ancient walls, fallen to decay since the time of Scylla. The efforts of his skill were ineffectual, and the barbarians became masters of the native seat of the muses and the arts. But while the conquerors abandoned themselves to the license of plunder and intemperance, their fleet, that lay with a slender guard in the harbor of Piraeus, was unexpectedly attacked by the brave Dexippus, who, flying with the engineer Cleodamus from the sack of Athens, collected a hasty band of volunteers, peasants as well as soldiers, and in some measure avenged the calamities of his country.

                - But this exploit, whatever lustre it might shed on the declining age of Athens, served rather to irritate than to subdue the undaunted spirit of the northern invaders. A general conflagration blazed out at the same time in every district of Greece. Thebes and Argos, Corinth and Sparta, which had formerly waged such memorable wars against each other, were now unable to bring an army into the field, or even to defend their ruined fortifications. The rage of war, both by land and by sea, spread from the eastern point of Sunium to the western coast of Epirus. The Goths had already advanced within sight of Italy, when the approach of such imminent danger awakened the indolent Gallienus from his dream of pleasure.

                - But as their numbers were gradually wasted by the sword, by shipwrecks, and by the influence of a warm climate, they were perpetually renewed by troops of banditti and deserters, who flocked to the standard of plunder, and by a crowd of fugitive slaves, often of German or Sarmatian extraction, who eagerly seized the glorious opportunity of freedom and revenge.
                Last edited by Carlin; 04-26-2017, 06:51 PM.

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                • Amphipolis
                  Banned
                  • Aug 2014
                  • 1328

                  Originally posted by Carlin View Post
                  [ Note that the Italians called the Byzantine Arberesh Greci? So, WHO are then the Greci / Greeks? Isn't this a contradiction? ]
                  The only reason that the Italians called these people Greek (Arberesh were Christian Albanians who escaped Ottoman Empire and moved to Italy) is because they were Greek-Orthodox. They were also (linguistically) Hellenized, for instance the Bilbe hadn't been translated in Albanian at that time.

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                  • Amphipolis
                    Banned
                    • Aug 2014
                    • 1328

                    Originally posted by Carlin View Post
                    1. The Venetian documents mention Albanians in Tzaconia.
                    2. The Mardaites inhabited the territory of Monemvasia, or modern Tzaconia.
                    3. Like 'Mardaite', the word 'Tzacon' did not mean a people, but a category of soldiers.
                    4. According to historian Sathas: the ancient Tzaconians belong to Albanian sailors of Kranidi, Hydra.
                    5. Philippson admits that Slavic colonies existed in Vatika also, that is to say south of the fortress of Tzaconia and close to Monemvasia. Some Slavic place names reinforce this supposition.
                    6. As per Chalkokondyles and geographer Meletios, the regions of Taygetos, land of Laconia, and promontory of Tenaron were long inhabited by Romani (that is, Vlachs / Armanoi).
                    7. The Vlachs / Armanoi have been variously called by different writers and in different places by a variety of names: Maniati, Laconi, Bui, Megalovlahiti, Dasareti, Meteori, etc.
                    8. Stam. C. Caratzas states that "Two indications argue for the existence of a relationship between Tzacones and Vlachs in popular poetry."
                    9. Per author F. Curta, the "Tzakonians" appear to have been settled in the Peloponnesus in the course of the ninth and tenth century. The viewpoint that the Tzakonians were settled in the Peloponnesus, from elsewhere, is also supported and shared by the author Stamatis C. Caratzas. There exists a legend which states that Tzakonians originate from Macedonia, namely from the area of Chalkidiki peninsula - and specifically, from the vicinity of Mount Athos district (Holy Mountain).
                    10. Evliya Tchelebi compares the physical features of the inhabitants of Tzaconia between Molai and Monemvasia, to those of Tatar-Kalmyks.
                    11. Investigator Katsanis: "The Tsakonian was influenced without doubt by the Aromanian tongue."
                    12. In village Geraki of Laconia the words ‘κρούσκος/krouskos=relation by marriage’ and ‘τάτας/tatas=father’ correspond to Aromanian ‘cúscru’ and ‘táta’. ‘Γκάλμπινος/galmpinos/ in Greek idioms of the Peloponnese and Epirus means 'blond’, ‘pale yellow’, ‘sallow’, ‘gook’, while ‘galbinu’ is the ‘yellow’ in Aromanian."
                    13. In the petition of Monembasiotes (1527), the nearby residents of Monemvasia are named Vlachs (Βλάχοι).
                    Not sure where to start, I numbered the above points:

                    1. At some point, Albanians DO live at the area that is called Tzaconia. That doesn’t mean the two groups are one, they were never confused.

                    2. Really? When? Were these Mardaites Albanians?

                    3. Not after a while, as we can see. Everyone (for some reason) doesn’t avoid to single them out as a distinct linguistic group, not a social one.

                    4. LOL, I didn’t know Tzaconians or Albanians were ancient. What does this phrase mean? We want to know more.

                    5. Slavs existing at the south of Tzaconia, there’s no problem with that, I can’t see your point. As seen in Mazaris, Tzaconians can’t be confused with Slavs. Also, they still exist today (unlike Slavs) and we can study their language.

                    6. Yes, but that is not in Tzaconia. I understand you lost these Vlachs and you can’t find them anywhere. Also, it’s clear that these Vlachs had just arrived, they were not there during Mazaris work, were they already lost during Celebi’s travels?

                    7. No, no, no. That’s totally wrong and should be further discussed, investigated. Maniotes or Laconians/Tzaconians were not Vlachs.

                    8. This could be the fuzziest statement ever. Why do you keep repeating it since it means nothing? Which are these indications?

                    9. Mount Athos doesn’t have people, it is only restricted to monks.

                    10. There’s a bit of a problem, that these areas are not inhabited by Tzaconians at the moment (remember? You had busted our balls about that) but we certainly want to know more about this passage anyway. I’m very interested in Celebi.

                    11. LOL, Is it without doubt because of the …

                    12. … huge linguistic connection presented here?

                    13. Not sure what this means, but I’d like to see it again. So when are the Vlach traces finally lost?


                    ===
                    Last edited by Amphipolis; 04-26-2017, 08:23 PM.

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                    • Amphipolis
                      Banned
                      • Aug 2014
                      • 1328

                      Originally posted by Carlin View Post
                      The full translation of the highlighted text is:

                      It is forbidden to the Venetians and subjects of the Republic to transport salt ... from Glarenza/Clarence and elsewhere to Tzaconia or Sclavonia.
                      So this refers to two places or one with two alternate names? Are there other sources mentioning this Venetian Sclavonia?

                      Comment

                      • Amphipolis
                        Banned
                        • Aug 2014
                        • 1328

                        Originally posted by Carlin View Post

                        In addition, the entry refers to both the number of inhabitants of the area (40,000) at the time of the original work (1812) and its "ethnological recommendation" (in the view of the dictionary writer).

                        Specifically, it is reported that there was a mixture in that area (mescuglio = mixture in the Venetian language) of Spartani and Slavs (Schiavoni = Slavs in the Venetian language) at that time.

                        ("Albanians", "Vlachs", "Greeks", "Mardaites" are all absent. And who were these Spartani?)
                        Spartani means... Spartans. You can't expect much. This is a generic dictionary so it draws basic information from other sources. Based on the various terms we've seen may times in this thread it could mean Peloponnesians, Maniotes (specifically as this is about Mani), I don't think this one refers to Tzaconians (who are also called Lacedaemonians, Laconians or Spartans).

                        Comment

                        • Amphipolis
                          Banned
                          • Aug 2014
                          • 1328

                          Originally posted by Carlin View Post
                          - Akropolites' use of Rhomaioi (and.. 'Latins' for 'Lakonians'?)
                          This is a translation mistake (Latins instead of Laconians) of this Bonn Edition as explained in page 382.

                          Comment

                          • Carlin
                            Senior Member
                            • Dec 2011
                            • 3332

                            Originally posted by Amphipolis View Post
                            So this refers to two places or one with two alternate names? Are there other sources mentioning this Venetian Sclavonia?
                            This seems to refer to one place: Tzaconia or Sclavonia.

                            Greek author Amantos refused to accept that this testimony refers to the same country or region.

                            There is another testimony, which I already shared on this forum, which states: Ad partes Zachoniae vel Sclavoniae de Romania -- Maggior Consiglio, Deliberazioni. Zaneta, Pilosus 1287-1299, c. 361 Archives de Venise.

                            The Venetian Chancery continued to call the department of Monemvasia or Tzaconia Sclavonia until the fifteenth century. This denomination could have been a loan though - but we have seen that it was already circulating in the time of Saint Willibald.

                            Saint Willibald (723 AD) assigned to the department of Tzaconia the denomination of terra Slavinia, and this was centuries before the terms Tzaconia and Tzaconians even begin to take shape.

                            Comment

                            • Carlin
                              Senior Member
                              • Dec 2011
                              • 3332

                              Hi Amphipolis,

                              1. At some point, Albanians DO live at the area that is called Tzaconia. That doesn’t mean the two groups are one, they were never confused.

                              I don’t necessarily disagree with you but there are quite a few contradictions, confusions and unclear references. * - See below.


                              2. Really? When? Were these Mardaites Albanians?

                              9th century. Post #10 in the following thread -


                              Hard to know if these Mardaites were Albanians. It is a distinct possibility.


                              3. Not after a while, as we can see. Everyone (for some reason) doesn’t avoid to single them out as a distinct linguistic group, not a social one.

                              Yes, and they are classified separately and distinguished even from the Greeks. As we saw, B. Randolph wrote that "THE Inhabitants of the Morea, are Turks, Greeks, Albaneses and T'Zackonians."

                              As a result, the Tzaconians can’t be confused with Greeks. This indicates they may have been hellenized at some point, or even bilingual.

                              Or do you think Randolph made an error, and a confusion?




                              4. LOL, I didn’t know Tzaconians or Albanians were ancient. What does this phrase mean? We want to know more.

                              Verbatim quote from Sathas, translated from French. Check out google books.


                              5. Slavs existing at the south of Tzaconia, there’s no problem with that, I can’t see your point. As seen in Mazaris, Tzaconians can’t be confused with Slavs. Also, they still exist today (unlike Slavs) and we can study their language.

                              Ok. Speaking of their language, Valentina Fedchenko stated the following on pages 77 and 78:
                              --> The dialect speakers maintained contacts with the mainland throughout the Middle Ages until the early part of the 19th c. As a result, the isolation argument can be questioned.
                              --> Contacts with other languages and Greek dialects are confirmed on the syncronic level by the Tsakonian lexical borrowings.
                              --> The description of Tsakonian as having traces of ancient Greek Dorian (Laconian) dialect seems to be a simplified one and neglects a few facts (one of them being the fact that different 'ancient' features ascribed to Tsakonian can be found is some other Greek dialects).




                              6. Yes, but that is not in Tzaconia. I understand you lost these Vlachs and you can’t find them anywhere. Also, it’s clear that these Vlachs had just arrived, they were not there during Mazaris work, were they already lost during Celebi’s travels?

                              I thought Tzaconia encompassed a much larger territory in the distant past?

                              Peloponnesiaca: A Supplement to Travels in the Moréa, By William Martin Leake.
                              Page 336, Laconians = Tzakonians = Maniates:

                              ".. for it is evident from the anonymous Metrical Chronicle of the Wars of the Franks in the Morea in the 13th century, that Tzakonia had then a much wider signification. Even as late as the beginning of the 18th century we find the Venetians applying the name Zaccunia to all the ancient Laconia, including Mani. There remains, therefore, the strongest reason to believe that the Lakones or Tzakones mentioned by Pachymer and Gregoras consisted chiefly of Maniates."

                              I am lost for sure. : )


                              7. No, no, no. That’s totally wrong and should be further discussed, investigated. Maniotes or Laconians/Tzaconians were not Vlachs.

                              Verbatim quote from a Romanian author.


                              8. This could be the fuzziest statement ever. Why do you keep repeating it since it means nothing? Which are these indications?

                              Lifted from Caratzas. I can provide futher and more detailed translations. Parts of his book can be found on google books.


                              9. Mount Athos doesn’t have people, it is only restricted to monks.

                              To reduce temptations to a minimum, a ban on women and female livestock has been in effect for nearly 10 centuries. The official stories carefully fail to mention the real reason why they are not allowed in the monastic state: the Vlachs. For centuries, the monks and these nomad shepherds, who went there to find winter pasture for their sheep, lived side by side in relative peace.

                              Gradually, an increasing number of monks were “tempted” into sneaking ladies wearing men's clothes into the monasteries. “The things that occurred are shameful both to tell and to hear,” said a witness to these events.






                              Mount Athos, a spectacularly beautiful rocky peninsula on the coast of Greece, has been a monastic preserve since the ninth century. This richly illustrated book tells the entire story of Athos, the Holy Mountain, from the first anchorite monks who lived in caves and huts through centuries of political and religious controversy to the thriving monastic communities of today. "Superb photographs, fascinating. Travelers and pilgrims alike, as well as those who prefer to stay at home, will relish this tour of Athos’s history, its relics and treasures, and, in part, its consciousness.”--Literary Review "An all-embracing panorama of the nature and detailed history of Athos.”--Anglo-Hellenic Review "This beautifully produced book contains everything the layman could wish to know about Athos. It is more, much more, than a mere travel book, though it would be a useful addition to the Orthodox pilgrim’s knapsack.”--The Tablet


                              Byzantium, that dark sphere on the periphery of medieval Europe, is commonly regarded as the immutable residue of Rome's decline. In this highly original and provocative work, Alexander Kazhdan and Ann Wharton Epstein revise this traditional image by documenting the dynamic social changes that occurred during the eleventh and twelfth centuries.


                              The expelled laity / Vlachs from Mt. Athos were resettled in the Peloponnese, namely Tzaconia. Can elaborate on this.


                              10. There’s a bit of a problem, that these areas are not inhabited by Tzaconians at the moment (remember? You had busted our balls about that) but we certainly want to know more about this passage anyway. I’m very interested in Celebi.

                              Post #48 in the following thread (it includes the screenshot of page 204, in French) -
                              - "Prior to 1865, Vlachs everywhere in the Peloponnese.." - "Number of non-Vlachs remained lower than the Vlachs.." - "..the Peloponnese consisted mostly, if not entirely, of Vlachs and Albanians.." - "..the guerrillas were generally Vlachs and Albanians, and in the Greek revolution Vlachs



                              11. LOL, Is it without doubt because of the …
                              12. … huge linguistic connection presented here?


                              #11 was lifted from the article Waren die peloponnesischen Melinger Vlachen? by Johann Benos, where Katsanis was cited. Katsanis wrote [Κατσάνης, Ν.] 1989. Κουτσοβλάχικα και Τσακώνικα (Arumanian and Tsakonian). Ελληνική Διαλεκτολογία 1: 41-54 -- which Benos referenced, so we should check with him. Unfortunately, I am unable to find or order this book online.

                              #12 is a separate remark which was made by Antonis Bousboukis here:




                              13. Not sure what this means, but I’d like to see it again. So when are the Vlach traces finally lost?

                              Here - page 120 in the book Les Tzacones, footnote 190




                              Also here - check the footnotes, where it says: Dans la petition des Monembasiotes (1527)...




                              I guess (only small, perhaps last) traces is in Cousinery’s reference in 1831 to the presence of Vlach-speakers, probably Arvanitovlachs, in the area of Argos in the Peloponnese. He reports that, after the War of Independence of 1821, he met some Vlachs, men and women, in Argos market, who told him that they were pastoral nomads with settlements in the mountains around Argos. He also notes that these Vlachs spoke a Latinate language, like the Vlachs he had met in Macedonia.





                              * - From #1 (I wonder how accurate is Sathas in his interpretations..):

                              PAGE LXXII OF Documents inédits relatifs à l'histoire de la Grèce au Moyen âge publiés ... By Konstantinos N. Sathas



                              French: Chalcondyle et l'archeveque Meletius pretendent que les Tzaconiens sont originaires du mont Pindus. Au temps de lempereur Cantacuzene, cette montagne appartenait aux Albanais.

                              English:
                              Chalcocondyle and Archbishop Meletius claim that the Tzaconians are from Mount Pindus. In the time of the Emperor Cantacuzene, this mountain belonged to the Albanians.
                              Last edited by Carlin; 04-27-2017, 06:47 AM.

                              Comment

                              • tchaiku
                                Member
                                • Nov 2016
                                • 786

                                Mardaites, Albanians and Vlachs were Christians unlike Tsakones who were Pagans.

                                If they were worshiping Slavic Gods, Constantine VII wouldn't call them ''older Romans''.
                                They were probably worshiping Zeus/Jupiter.
                                Last edited by tchaiku; 04-27-2017, 06:58 AM.

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