Georgios Liologlou

Greek revolutionary

Georgios Liologlou (Greek: Γεώργιος Λιόλογλου; 1805?−1920) was a Greek revolutionary of the Greek War of Independence.

Biography

Liologlou claimed to have been born in 1805[a] in Isaakio of Evros. He participated in the uprising of the inhabitants of the Didymoteicho region during the Greek Revolution of 1821, which ended as a failure in Thrace after the defeat of the revolutionary forces in the Battle of Saltikio (now Lavara).[2] Following the complete destruction of his home town, Isaakio, by the Ottoman forces under Hadjiestrev Agha, he and his grandfather were reduced to work as the Agha's serfs, after the possessions of Greek inhabitants of the village were confiscated.[2] He later was a priest in Didymoteicho.[3]

He died in 1920 at the claimed age of 115,[2][4][a] just after Western Thrace, including his home town, had become incorporated into Greece.

Notes

  1. ^ Other sources claim he was born in 1819 and that he died in 1932[1] but that is not possible as he took part in the Greek War of Independence, which began in 1821.

References

  1. ^ Θρακικά, τ. 16-18, Θρακικό Κέντρο, 1941.
  2. ^ a b c Προσφορά αίματος και θυσιών της Θράκης 1361 - 1829, Σφαγή των Ελλήνων κατοίκων του χωρίου Ισάκ-Πασά (Ισαακίου Έβρου)
  3. ^ https://labweb5.duth.gr/erg_laog/thrakika/Thrakika03parartima.pdf Archived 2019-07-23 at the Wayback Machine ...ό πατήρ του σήμερον εν Διδυμοτείχω ζώντος είσέτι Γεωργίου Λιόλογλου ηλικίας 111 ετών... [...The priest of Didymoteicho is Georgios Liologlou who is aged 111...], ΘΡΑΚΙΚΑ, Παράρτημα Γ' Τόμου, Τμήμα Ιστορίας Εθνολογίας, Athens, 1931
  4. ^ Συνομιλία του πρόεδρου με ένα μαθουσάλαν εις διδ)τειχων - ...αναχωρήσεως του εδέχθη εις Διδυμότειχον γέροντα ηλικίας 115 ετών, ονόματι Γεώργιον Λιόλογλου... [President's conversation with a Methuselah in Didymoteicho - ...of his departure he accepted a 115-year-old aged man in Didymoteicho, named Georgios Liologlou...], Makedonia, 1920.

Sources

  • Αδαμάντιος Ταμβακίδης, Γυμνασιάρχης, Παράρτημα, Γ' τόμος, «Θρακικά», p. 62
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