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Athanasios Souliotis-Nikolaidis and Greek Irredentism: A Life in the Shadows. By John Athanasios Mazis. Lantham: Lexington Books, 2022. vii, 195 pp. Appendix. Notes. Bibliography. Index. $95.00, hard bound.

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Athanasios Souliotis-Nikolaidis and Greek Irredentism: A Life in the Shadows. By John Athanasios Mazis. Lantham: Lexington Books, 2022. vii, 195 pp. Appendix. Notes. Bibliography. Index. $95.00, hard bound.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 January 2024

Evdoxios Doxiadis*
Affiliation:
Simon Fraser University
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies

John Mazis’ new book is a biography of a relatively obscure figure in Greek historiography. Little known even among historians Athanasios Souliotis was, according to Mazis, a crucial figure in Greece's irredentist project in Macedonia in the early twentieth century. Mazis argues that Souliotis was almost as crucial as his more famous friend Ion Dragoumis, the subject of an earlier book by the author (Mazis, A Man for All Seasons: The Uncompromising Life of Ion Dragoumis, 2015). This is an interesting new look into the struggle for Macedonia that focuses on the urban organizations Souliotis set up in Thessaloniki and Istanbul rather than the more common approach of looking at the armed bands that advanced the claims of the Balkan states on the European regions of the Ottoman Empire.

This short book is divided into nine chapters and an introduction. The first chapter begins with the death of Athanasios Souliotis in an Athenian sanatorium in 1945. His official military record appeared unremarkable despite the turbulent period during which he had served, but it was what was not included in the official record that made the dying officer unique. Mazis provides in the second chapter an overview of modern Greek history in a concise and rather traditional manner, while the third chapter is a very brief account of the family background of Souliotis.

It is with chapter four that we truly get to the heart of the book as Mazis first takes us into the complex “Macedonian Question” and introduces us to Athanasios Nikolaidis, who is of course Souliotis under an assumed name. Souliotis arrives in Thessaloniki to set up a clandestine organization to promote Greek interests by any means necessary. Souliotis-Nikolaidis proved remarkably successful in this role, creating a wide-ranging network in the city that collected information, countered Bulgarian activities, and disseminated propaganda in favor of Greece. While such activities are familiar, Mazis adds to this knowledge by unveiling the urban side of the conflict as well as the scope of activities that ranged from assassinations to Souliotis’ efforts to Hellenize the city through the promotion of Greek in its economic activities.

Souliotis’ effectiveness led his superiors to transfer him to Istanbul to create a similar network in the capital of the Ottoman empire. He repeated the methods he had developed in Thessaloniki in the more complex environment of the Ottoman capital, once more with some success. He was also able to navigate the Young Turk revolution, became involved in the parliamentary politics of the Ottoman empire, and managed relatively well the difficult relations with the Patriarchate of Constantinople until he was forced to leave Istanbul with the eruption of the First Balkan War.

The next chapter delves in the friendship of Souliotis and Ion Dragoumis, which lasted from their meeting as operatives in the fight for Macedonia until the latter's murder in 1920. Dragoumis of course is well-known as a political and intellectual figure in Greece but Mazis makes a credible case that Souliotis should be considered if not his equal than at least a partner in the ideological formulations of what is known as the Eastern Federation concept. The next two chapters (seven and eight) recount the life and service of Souliotis from the Balkan Wars to his death, his inevitable involvement in the interwar political divisions of Greece, and his flirtation with ideas stemming from fascism. The final chapter offers some concluding thoughts on Souliotis and especially his ideological make-up.

Overall, this is an interesting biography of a relatively unknown but significant figure and Mazis uses the opportunity to explore some underexamined aspects of Greek and Balkan history, such as the urban aspect of the Macedonian conflict, the impact of alternative nationalist ideas, but also the effect of this conflict on the lives and careers of its participants. The book could have benefitted from more careful editing, as there are some repetitive passages, while the 30-page historical background chapter seems overly long for such a short book. Nevertheless, Mazis succeeds in exposing the significant role of individuals like Souliotis in the convoluted and often tragic political developments of Greece in the first half of the twentieth century and sheds new light on a field that is often perceived as exhaustively researched.