Greek Resistance

























National Resistance
Part of the Balkans Campaign of World War II and the Resistance against the Axis Powers

Triple Occupation of Greece.png
Map of the Triple Occupation of Greece by Germany, Italy, and Bulgaria in 1941–44













Date April 1941 – October 1944
(until May 1945 in some Greek islands, including Crete)
Location
Greece
Result

  • Liberation in parts of the mainland and establishment of a "Free Greece"

  • Support to the Allied Victory

  • Rise of EAM/ELAS and first phase of the Greek Civil War


Belligerents

 Germany
 Italy
 Bulgaria


Greece Hellenic State

Greece Greek Resistance

supported by

Greece Greek government-in-exile

 United Kingdom and Allies
Commanders and leaders

Nazi Germany Günther Altenburg
Nazi Germany Hermann Neubacher
Nazi Germany Walter Schimana
Nazi Germany Alexander Löhr
Nazi Germany Hellmuth Felmy
Kingdom of Italy Pellegrino Ghigi
Kingdom of Italy Carlo Geloso
Kingdom of Bulgaria Andon Kalchev
Greece Georgios Tsolakoglou
Greece Konstantinos Logothetopoulos
Greece Ioannis Rallis
Greece Georgios Poulos

Greece Napoleon Zervas
Greece Georgios Kartalis
Greece Dimitrios Psarros
Greece Komninos Pyromaglou
Greece Kostas Perrikos
Greece Aris Velouchiotis
Greece Stefanos Sarafis
Greece Georgios Siantos
Greece Markos Vafiadis
Greece Andreas Tzimas
Greece Evripidis Bakirtzis
Greece Alexandros Svolos
United Kingdom Eddie Myers
United Kingdom Chris Woodhouse
United Kingdom Patrick Leigh Fermor
United Kingdom Bill Stanley Moss
Units involved

Nazi Germany Wehrmacht Heer

Nazi Germany Waffen-SS

Nazi Germany Gestapo

Greece Security Battalions
and other collaborators
Kingdom of Italy Italian Army

Kingdom of Bulgaria Bulgarian Army


Secessionist groups



  • Vlach "Roman Legion"


  • Ohrana


  • Këshilla



Greece EDES/EOEA
Greece EAM/ELAS
Greece EKKA/5/42 Regiment
Greece EOK and many minor groups
Greece Greek Armed Forces in the Middle East


United Kingdom British Mission in Greece (SOE)


The Greek Resistance (Greek: Εθνική Αντίσταση, translit. Ethnikí Andístasi, "National Resistance") is the blanket term for a number of armed and unarmed groups from across the political spectrum that resisted the Axis occupation of Greece in the period 1941–1944, during World War II. It is considered as one of the strongest resistance movements (especially EDES/EOEA) in Nazi-occupied Europe.




Contents






  • 1 Origins


  • 2 First resistance acts


  • 3 Establishment of the first resistance groups


  • 4 Resistance in the mountains – Andartiko


    • 4.1 Emergence of the armed resistance


    • 4.2 The establishment of "Free Greece"


    • 4.3 Italian collapse and German takeover


    • 4.4 Prelude to Civil War: the first conflicts




  • 5 Resistance in the islands and Crete


  • 6 Resistance in the cities


    • 6.1 Urban protest




  • 7 Risks involved


  • 8 Table of main Resistance groups


  • 9 Notable Resistance members


  • 10 See also


  • 11 References


  • 12 Sources


  • 13 External links





Origins



The rise of resistance movements in Greece was precipitated by the invasion and occupation of Greece by Nazi Germany (and its allies Italy and Bulgaria) from 1941–44. Italy led the way with its attempted invasion from Albania in 1940, which was repelled by the Greek Army. After the German invasion, the occupation of Athens and the fall of Crete, King George II and his government escaped to Egypt, where they proclaimed a government-in-exile, recognised by the Western Allies, but not yet by the Soviet Union, which was temporarily neutral to Nazi Germany after the signature of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. The British actively encouraged, even coerced, the King to appoint centrist, moderate ministers; only two of his ministers were members of the dictatorial government that had governed Greece before the German invasion. Despite that some in the left-wing resistance claimed the government to be illegitimate, on account of its roots in the dictatorship of Ioannis Metaxas from 1936–41.


The Germans set up a Greek collaborationist government, headed by General Georgios Tsolakoglou, before entering Athens. Some high-profile officers of the pre-war Greek regime served the Germans in various posts. This government however, lacked legitimacy and support, being utterly dependent on the German and Italian occupation authorities, and discredited because of its inability to prevent the cession of much of Greek Macedonia and Western Thrace to Bulgaria. Both the collaborationist government and the occupation forces were further undermined due to their failure to prevent the outbreak of the Great Famine, with the mortality rate reaching a peak in the winter of 1941–42, which seriously harmed the Greek civilian population.



First resistance acts




German soldiers raising the German War Flag over the Acropolis of Athens. The symbol of the country's occupation, it would be taken down in one of the first acts of the Greek Resistance.


Although there is an unconfirmed incident connected with Evzone Konstantinos Koukidis the day the Germans occupied Athens, the first confirmed resistance act in Greece had taken place on the night of 30 May 1941, even before the end of the Battle of Crete. Two young students, Apostolos Santas, a law student, and Manolis Glezos, a student at the Athens University of Economics and Business, secretly climbed the northwest face of the Acropolis and tore down the swastika banner which had been placed there by the occupation authorities.


The first wider resistance movements occurred in northern Greece, where the Bulgarians annexed Greek territories. The first mass uprising occurred around the town of Drama in eastern Macedonia, in the Bulgarian occupation zone. The Bulgarian authorities had initiated large-scale Bulgarization policies, causing the Greek population's reaction. During the night of 28–29 September 1941 the people of Drama and its outskirts rose up. This badly-organized revolt was suppressed by the Bulgarian Army, which retaliated executing over three thousand people in Drama alone.[citation needed] An estimated fifteen thousand Greeks were killed by the Bulgarian occupational army during the next few weeks and in the countryside entire villages were machine gunned and looted.[citation needed] The town of Doxato and the village of Choristi are officially considered today Martyr Cities.


At the same time, large demonstrations were organized in Greek Macedonian cities by the Defenders of Northern Greece (YVE), a right-wing organization, in protest against the Bulgarian annexation of Greek territories.


Armed groups consisted of andartes - αντάρτες ("guerillas") first appeared in the mountains of Macedonia by October 1941, and the first armed clashes resulted in 488 civilians being murdered in reprisals by the Germans, which succeeded in severely limiting Resistance activity for the next few months.[1] However, these harsh actions, together with the plundering of Greece's natural resources by the Germans, turned Greeks more against the occupiers.



Establishment of the first resistance groups




Guerillas of ELAS


The lack of a legitimate government and the inactivity of the established political class created a power vacuum and meant an absence of a rallying point for the Greek people. Most officers and citizens who wanted to continue the fight fled to the British-controlled Middle East, and those who remained behind were unsure of their prospects against the Wehrmacht. This situation resulted in the creation of several new groupings, where the pre-war establishment was largely absent, which assumed the role of resisting the occupation powers.


The first major resistance group to be founded was the National Liberation Front (EAM). EAM was a political movement. By 1944 EAM became a movement with more than 1,800,000 members (the Greek population was around 7,500,000 at that time). EAM was organized by the Communist Party of Greece (KKE) and other smaller parties, but all major political parties refused to participate either in EAM or in any other resistance movement. On February 16, 1942, EAM gave permission to a communist veteran, called Athanasios (Thanasis) Klaras (later known as Aris Velouchiotis) to examine the possibilities of a victorious armed resistance movement. Soon the first andartes (guerrillas) joined ELAS and many battles were fought and won against both the Italians and Nazis (the sabotage of Gorgopotamos bridge [with the participation of EDES partisans and British commandos of SOE], the battle at Mikro Horio, etc.)


The second to be found was Venizelist-oriented National Republican Greek League (EDES), led by a former army officer, Colonel Napoleon Zervas, with exiled republican General Nikolaos Plastiras as its nominal head. Although its foundation was announced in late 1941, there were no military acts until 1942, when the Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS), the armed forces of EAM, was born.



Resistance in the mountains – Andartiko





Napoleon Zervas, leader of the military wing of the EDES, with fellow officers


Greece is a mountainous country, with a long tradition in andartiko (αντάρτικο, "guerrilla warfare"), dating back to the days of the klephts (anti-Turkish bandits) of the Ottoman period, who often enjoyed folk-hero status. In the 1940s, the countryside was poor, the road network not very well developed, and state control outside the cities usually exercised by the Greek Gendarmerie. But by 1942, due to the weakness of the central government in Athens, the countryside was gradually slipping out of its control, while the Resistance groups had acquired a firm and wide-ranging organization, parallel and more effective than that of the official state.



Emergence of the armed resistance


In February 1942, EAM, an organization controlled by the local Communist Party formed a military corps, ELAS, that would first operate in the mountains of Central Greece, with Aris Velouchiotis, a communist activist, as their chief captain. Later, on 28 July 1942, a centrist ex-army officer, Colonel Napoleon Zervas, announced the foundation of the National Groups of Greek Guerrillas (EOEA), as EDES' military arm, to operate, at first, in the region of Aetolia-Acarnania. National and Social Liberation (EKKA) also formed a military corps, named after the famous 5/42 Evzone Regiment, under Col. Dimitrios Psarros, that was mainly localized in the area of Mount Giona.




The rail bridge of Gorgopotamos that was blown up (Operation Harling).


Until the summer of 1942, the occupation authorities had been little troubled by the armed Resistance, which was still in its infancy. The Italians in particular, in control of most of the countryside, considered the situation to have been normalized.[2] From that point, however, the Resistance gained pace, with EAM/ELAS in particular expanding rapidly. Armed groups attacked and disarmed local gendarmerie stations and isolated Italian outposts, or toured the villages and gave patriotic speeches. The Italians were forced to re-evaluate their assessment, and take such measures such as the deportation of army officers to camps in Italy and Germany, which naturally only encouraged the latter to join the underground en masse by escaping "to the mountains".[3]


These developments emerged most dramatically as the Greek Resistance announced its presence to the world with one of the war's most spectacular sabotage acts, the blowing up of the Gorgopotamos railway bridge, linking northern and southern Greece, on 25 November 1942. This operation was the result of British mediation between ELAS and EDES (Operation "Harling"), carried out by 12 British Special Operations Executive (SOE) saboteurs and a joint ELAS-EDES force. This was the first and last time that the two major Resistance groups would cooperate, due to the rapidly developing rivalry and ideological retrenchment between them.



The establishment of "Free Greece"





Conference of EAM in Kastanitsa, Thessaly


Nevertheless, constant attacks and acts of sabotage followed against the Italians, such as the Battle of Fardykampos, resulting in the capture of several hundred Italian soldiers and significant amounts of equipment. By the late spring of 1943, the Italians were forced to withdraw from several areas. The towns of Karditsa, Grevena, Trikkala, Metsovon and others were liberated by July. The Axis forces and their collaborators remained in control only of the main towns and the connecting roads, with the interior left to the andartes. This was "Free Greece", stretching from the Ionian Sea to the Aegean and from the borders of the German zone in Macedonia to Boeotia, a territory of 30,000 km² and 750,000 inhabitants.



Italian collapse and German takeover


By this time (July 1943), the overall strength of the andartes was around 20[4]-30,000,[5] with most belonging to the ELAS, newly under the command of General Stefanos Sarafis. EDES was limited in operations to Epirus, and EKKA operated in a small area in Central Greece.[5] The Italian capitulation in September 1943 provided a windfall for the Resistance, as the Italian Army in many places simply disintegrated. Most Italian troops were swiftly disarmed and interned by the Germans, but on Cephalonia the Acqui Division resisted for about a week (ELAS fighters joining them) before being forced to surrender and subsequently massacred. In many places significant amounts of weaponry and equipment, as well as men, fell into the hands of the Resistance. The most spectacular case was that of the Pinerolo division and the Lancieri di Aosta [it] Cavalry Regiment, which went completely over to the EAMite andartes.[6]




Memorial to the Greek Resistance on the road to Distomo.


The Germans now took over the Italian zone, and soon proved to be a totally different opponent from the demoralized, war-weary and far less brutal Italians. Already since the early summer of 1943, German troops had been pouring into Greece, fearing an Allied landing there (in fact falling victims to a grand-scale Allied strategic deception operation, "Operation Barclay"). Soon they became involved in wide-ranging counterguerrilla operations, which they carried out with great ruthlessness, based on their experiences in Yugoslavia. In the course of these operations, mass reprisals were carried out, resulting in war crimes such as at Kommeno on August 16, the Massacre of Kalavryta in December and the Massacre of Distomo in June 1944. At the same time, hundreds of villages were systematically torched and almost one million people left homeless.[7]



Prelude to Civil War: the first conflicts



Despite the signing of an agreement in July 1943 between the three main Resistance groups (EAM/ELAS, EDES and EKKA) to cooperate and to subject themselves to the Allied Middle East High Command under General Wilson (the "National Bands Agreement"), in the political field, the mutual mistrust between EAM and the other groups escalated. EAM-ELAS was by now the dominant political and military force in Greece, and EDES and EKKA, along with the British and the Greek government-in-exile, feared that after the inevitable German withdrawal, it would try to dominate the country and establish a soviet regime. This prospect was not only linked with the increasing distrust shown by many conservative and traditional liberal members of the Greek society towards the Communists and EAM, but also with British. The British were opposed to an EAM's after-war dominance in Greece due to their political opposition to communism, while on the logic of the spheres of influence they believed that such a development would lead the country, which traditionally considered belongs in their sphere of influence, to that of the Soviet Union. Finally the conflict of interests between them and the USSR settled after British secured Soviet assent to this in the so-called "percentages agreement" between Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin in October 1944. EAM on its part considered itself "the only true resistance group". Its leadership was intensely distrustful of British policies for Greece, and viewed Zervas' contacts with London and the Greek government with suspicion.[8]





Dimitrios Psarros, leader of EKKA


At the same time, EAM found itself under attack by the Germans and their collaborators. Dominated by the old political class, and looking already to the oncoming post-Liberation era, the new Ioannis Rallis government had established the notorious Security Battalions, with the blessing of the German authorities, in order to fight exclusively against ELAS. Other anti-communist resistance groups, such as the royalist Organization "X", were also reinforced, receiving arms and funding by the British.


A virtual civil war was now being waged under the eyes of the Germans. In October 1943, ELAS attacked EDES in Epirus, where the latter organization was the dominant resistance group, by transferring units from the neighbouring regions. This conflict continued until February 1944, when the British mission in Greece succeeded in negotiating a ceasefire (the Plaka agreement) which in the event proved to be only temporary. The attack led to an unofficial truce between EDES and the German forces in Epirus under General Hubert Lanz.[9] But the fight continued amongst ELAS and the other minor resistance groups (like "X"), as well as against the Security Battalions, even in the streets of Athens, until the German withdrawal in October 1944. In March, EAM established its own rival government in Free Greece, the Political Committee of National Liberation, clearly staking its claim to a dominant role in post-war Greece. Consequently, on Easter Monday, 17 April 1944, ELAS forces attacked and destroyed the EKKA's 5/42 Regiment, capturing and executing many of its men, including its leader Colonel Dimitrios Psarros. The event caused a major shock in the Greek political scene, since Psarros was a well-known republican, patriot and anti-royalist. For EAM-ELAS, this act was fatal, as it strengthened suspicion of its intentions for the post-Occupation period, and drove many liberals and moderates, especially in the cities, against it, cementing the emerging rift in Greek society between pro- and anti-EAM segments.



Resistance in the islands and Crete






W. Stanley Moss in Crete during the Damasta sabotage.



The resistance in Crete was centred in the mountainous interior, and despite the strong presence of German troops, developed significant activity. Notable figures of the Cretan Resistance include Patrick Leigh Fermor, Petrakogiorgis and George Psychoundakis. Resistance operations included airfield sabotages, the abduction of General Heinrich Kreipe by Patrick Leigh Fermor and Bill Stanley Moss, the battle of Trahili, and the sabotage of Damasta.


On Euboea, Sara Fortis led a small, all-female company of partisans against the German occupational forces.[10]



Resistance in the cities





Lela Karagianni was head of the intelligence group Bouboulina. She was executed in September 1944 by the Germans


Resistance in the cities was organized quickly, but of necessity groups were small and fragmented. The cities, and the working-class suburbs of Athens in particular, witnessed appalling suffering in the winter of 1941-42, when food confiscations and disrupted communications caused widespread famine and perhaps hundreds of thousands of deaths. This caused fertile ground for recruitment, but lack of equipment, funds and organization limited the spread of the resistance. The main roles of resistance operatives were intelligence and sabotage, mostly in cooperation with British Intelligence. One of the earliest jobs of the urban resistance was helping stranded Commonwealth soldiers escape. The resistance groups stayed in touch with British handlers through wireless sets, met and helped British spies and saboteurs that parachuted in, provided intelligence, conducted propaganda efforts, and ran escape networks for allied operatives and Greek young men wishing to join the Hellenic forces in exile. Wireless equipment, money, weapons and other support was mainly supplied by British Intelligence, but it was never enough. Fragmentation of groups, the need for secrecy, and emerging conflicts between right and left, monarchists and republicans, did not help. Urban resistance work was very dangerous: operatives were always in danger of arrest and summary execution, and suffered heavy casualties. Captured fighters were routinely tortured by the Abwehr and the Gestapo, and confessions used to roll up networks. The job of wireless operators was perhaps the most dangerous, since the Germans used direction-finding equipment to pinpoint the location of transmitters; operators were often shot on the spot, and those were the lucky ones, since immediate execution prevented torture.




Panagiotis G. Tesseris (center) was a leader within EAM/ELAS. He is in full military uniform with other members of the Greek Resistance.



Urban protest


One of the most important forms of resistance were the mass protest movements. The first such event occurred during the national anniversary of 25 March 1942, when students attempted to lay a wreath at the Monument of the Unknown Soldier. This resulted in clashes with mounted Carabinieri, and marked the awakening of the spirit of Resistance amongst the wider urban population. Soon after, from 12–14 April, the "TTT" (Telecommunications & Postal) workers began a strike in Athens, which spread throughout the country. Initially, the strikers' demands were financial, but it quickly assumed a political aspect, as the strike was encouraged by EAM's labour union organization, EEAM. Finally, the strike ended on April 21, with the full capitulation of the collaborationist government to the strikers' demands, including the immediate release of arrested strike leaders.[11]


In early 1943, rumours spread of a planned mobilization of the labour force by the occupation authorities, with the intent of sending them to work in Germany. The first reactions began amongst students on 7 February, but soon grew in scope and volume. Throughout February, successive strikes and demonstrations paralyzed Athens, culminating in a massive rally on the 24th. The tense climate was amply displayed at the funeral of Greece's national poet, Kostis Palamas, on 28 February, which turned into an anti-Axis demonstration.[12]



Risks involved




Statue of Nike (Victory) in Hermoupolis commemorating the Resistance


Resisting the Axis occupation was fraught with risks. Foremost among these for the partisans was death in combat as the German military forces were far superior. However, the guerrilla fighters also had to face starvation, brutal environmental conditions in the mountains of Greece, while poorly clothed and shod.


The resistance also involved risks for ordinary Greeks. Attacks often incited reprisal killings of civilians by the German occupying forces. Villages were burned and its inhabitants massacred. The Germans also resorted to hostage taking. There were also accusations that many of ELAS' attacks against German soldiers didn't happen for resistance reasons but aiming the destruction of specific villages and the recruitment of their men. Quotas were even introduced determining the number of civilians or hostages to be killed in response to the death or wounding of German soldiers.[13]



Table of main Resistance groups




































Group name
Political orientation
Political leadership
Military arm
Military leadership
Estimated peak membership

National Liberation Front (Ethnikó Apeleftherotikó Métopo/ΕΑΜ)

Broad leftist front affiliated with the Communist Party of Greece

Georgios Siantos

Greek People's Liberation Army (Ellinikós Laikós Apeleftherotikós Stratós/ELAS)

Aris Velouchiotis, Stefanos Sarafis
50,000 + 30,000 reserves (October 1944)[14]

National Republican Greek League
(Ethnikós Dimokratikós Ellinikós Sýndesmos/EDES)

Venizelist, nationalist, republican, socialist, anti-communist

Nikolaos Plastiras (nominal), Komninos Pyromaglou

National Groups of Greek Guerrillas
(Ethnikés Omádes Ellínon Antartón/EOEA)

Napoleon Zervas
12,000 + ca. 5,000 reserves (October 1944)[15]

National and Social Liberation
(Ethnikí Kai Koinonikí Apelefthérosis/EKKA)

Venizelist, republican, liberal, anti-communist

Georgios Kartalis

5/42 Evzone Regiment
(5/42 Sýntagma Evzónon)

Dimitrios Psarros and Evripidis Bakirtzis
1,000 (spring 1943)[15]


Notable Resistance members








EAM/ELAS:



  • Elli Alexiou

  • Electra Apostolou

  • Nikos Beloyannis

  • Charilaos Florakis

  • Manolis Glezos

  • Dimitris Glinos

  • Neokosmos Grigoriadis

  • Solon Grigoriadis

  • Father Germanos Dimakos

  • Father Dimitrios Holevas

  • Manolis Mantakas

  • Yiannis Ritsos

  • Alexandros Rosios

  • Ptolemaios Sarigiannis

  • Giorgios Siantos

  • Stefanos Sarafis

  • Apostolos Santas

  • Alexandros Svolos

  • Panagiotis G. Tesseris

  • Ilias Tsirimokos

  • Andreas Tzimas

  • Mikis Theodorakis

  • Aris Velouchiotis

  • Markos Vafeiadis

  • Antonis Vratsanos

  • Iannis Xenakis



EDES:



  • Archbishop Seraphim of Athens

  • Komninos Pyromaglou

  • Napoleon Zervas


  • Vasilios Sachinis (MAVI)


EKKA:



  • Evripidis Bakirtzis

  • Georgios Kartalis

  • Dimitrios Psarros


PEAN:



  • Kitsos Maltezos

  • Anastasios Peponis

  • Kostas Perrikos



Other:



  • Evangelos Averoff

  • Archbishop Chrysanthus of Athens

  • Elias Degiannis

  • Amalia Fleming

  • Georgios Grivas

  • Jerzy Iwanow-Szajnowicz

  • Lela Karagianni

  • Thomas Manolakos

  • Themis Marinos

  • Alexander Papagos

  • Michalis Papazoglou

  • Georgios Petrakis

  • Ioannis Tsigantes

  • Terpsichori Chryssoulaki-Vlachou

  • Konstantinos Ventiris



British agents:



  • E. C. W. "Eddie" Myers

  • Christopher Woodhouse

  • Patrick Leigh Fermor

  • N. G. L. Hammond

  • W. Stanley Moss

  • Peter Fraser




See also



  • Cretan Resistance

  • June 1942 Crete airfield raids

  • French Resistance

  • Polish resistance movement in World War II

  • Partisans (Yugoslavia)



References





  1. ^ Mazower (2001), p. 87-88


  2. ^ Mazower (2001), pp. 106–7


  3. ^ Mazower (2001), p. 132–3


  4. ^ German Antiguerrilla Operations, Ch. 7.II


  5. ^ ab Mazower (2001), p. 137


  6. ^ German Antiguerrilla Operations, Ch. 8.III


  7. ^ Mazower (2001), p. 155


  8. ^ Mazower (2001), p. 141–43


  9. ^ Mazower (2001), pp. 148, 178


  10. ^ Admin, Content (2016-12-07). "Sara Fortis". Jewish Partisan Educational Foundation. Retrieved 2018-10-12..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  11. ^ Mazower (2001), p.112


  12. ^ Mazower (2001), pp.120-121


  13. ^ Mazower, Inside Hitler's Greece p.177


  14. ^ Shrader (1999), pp. 23, 26


  15. ^ ab Shrader (1999), p. 31




Sources



  • R. Capell, Simiomata: A Greek Note Book 1944-45, London 1946


  • Eudes, Dominique (1973). The Kapetanios: Partisans and Civil War in Greece, 1943-1949. Translated by John Howe. New York and London: Monthly Review Press. ISBN 978-0-85345-275-1.


  • Clogg, Richard (1986), A Short History of Modern Greece, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-33804-2


  • N.G.L. Hammond, Venture into Greece: With the Guerillas, 1943-44, London, 1983. (Like Woodhouse, he was a member of the British Military Mission)


  • Hammond, N. G. L. (1991). "The Allied Military Mission in Northwest Macedonia, 1943-44". Balkan Studies: Biannual Publication of the Institute for Balkan Studies. 32 (1): 107–144. ISSN 2241-1674.


  • Howarth, Patrick (1980), Undercover, the men and women of the Special Operations Executive, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-7100-0573-1


  • Drez, Ronald J. (2009), Heroes Fight Like Greeks: The Greek Resistance Against the Axis Powers in WWII, Ghost Road Press, ISBN 978-0-9816525-9-7


  • Mark Mazower (2001). Inside Hitler's Greece: The Experience of Occupation, 1941-44. United States: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-08923-3.


  • Papastratis, Prokopis (1984), British policy towards Greece during the Second World War, 1941–1944, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-24342-1


  • Perdue, Robert E., Jr. (2010). Behind the lines in Greece : the story of OSS Operational Group II. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse. ISBN 9781449067892. Retrieved 2013-04-11.


  • Shrader, Charles R. (1999). The Withered Vine: Logistics and the Communist Insurgency in Greece, 1945-1949. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-275-96544-0.


  • Woodhouse, Christopher Montague (2002), The Struggle for Greece, 1941–1949, C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, ISBN 978-1-85065-487-2


  • Reginald Leeper, When Greek Meets Greek: On the War in Greece, 1943-1945


  • United States Army Center of Military History, German Antiguerrilla Operations in The Balkans (1941-1944) Washington DC: United States Army.

  • Hondros, John L. (1983), Occupation and Resistance: The Greek Agony, New York: Pella Publishing



External links








  • Martyr Cities & Villages of Greece Network 1940-1945 (in Greek)

  • Official site of the documentary film The 11th Day which contains an extensive interview with Sir Patrick Leigh Fermor, and documents the Battle of Trahili, filmed in 2003.









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