, The Balkans A History Of 

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Petros Mavromichalis, the chief of the leading clan, the Mainates issued from their mountains. This was in
April, and by the middle of May all the open country had been swept clear, and the hosts joined hands before
Tripolitza, which was the seat of Ottoman government at the central point of the province. The Turkish
garrison attacked, but was heavily defeated at Valtetzi by the tactical skill of Theodore Kolokotrónis the
'klepht', who had become experienced in guerrilla warfare through his alternate professions of brigand and
gendarme--a career that had increased its possibilities as the Ottoman system decayed. After Kolokotrónis's
victory, the Greeks kept Tripolitza under a close blockade. Early in October it fell amid frightful scenes of
pillage and massacre, and Ottoman dominion in the Peloponnesos fell with it. On January 22, 1822, Korinth,
the key to the isthmus, passed into the Greeks' hands, and only four fortresses--Nauplia, Patras, Koron, and
Modhon--still held out within it against Greek investment. Not a Turk survived in the Peloponnesos beyond
their walls, for the slaughter at Tripolitza was only the most terrible instance of what happened wherever a
Moslem colony was found. In Peloponnesos, at any rate, the revolution had been grimly successful.
There had also been successes at sea. The merchant marine of the Greek islands had suffered grievously from
the fall of Napoleon and the settlement at Vienna, which, by restoring normal conditions of trade, had
destroyed their abnormal monopoly. The revolution offered new opportunities for profitable venture, and in
April 1821 Hydhra, Spetza and Psarà hastened to send a privateering fleet to sea. As soon as the fleet crossed
the Aegean, Samos rid itself of the Turks. At the beginning of June the rickety Ottoman squadron issued from
the Dardanelles, but it was chased back by the islanders under the lee of Mitylini. Memories of Russian naval
tactics in 1770 led the Psariots to experiment in fire-ships, and one of the two Turkish ships of the line fell a
victim to this attack. Within a week of setting sail, the diminished Turkish squadron was back again in the
Dardanelles, and the islanders were left with the command of the sea.
The general Christian revolution thus seemed fairly launched, and in the first panic the threatened Moslems
began reprisals of an equally general kind. In the larger Turkish cities there were massacres of Christian
minorities, and the Government lent countenance to them by murdering its own principal Christian official
Gregorios, the Greek patriarch at Constantinople, on April 22, 1821. But Sultan Mahmud quickly recovered
himself. He saw that his empire could not survive a racial war, and determined to prevent the present revolt
from assuming such a character. His plan was to localize it by stamping out the more distant sparks with all
his energy, before concentrating his force at leisure upon the main conflagration.
This policy was justified by the event. On March 6 the 'Philikì Hetairia' at Odessa had opened its own
operations in grandiose style by sending a filibustering expedition across the Russo-Turkish frontier under
command of Prince Alexander Hypsilantis, a Phanariot in the Russian service. Hypsilantis played for a
general revolt of the Ruman population in the Danubian Principalities and a declaration of war against Turkey
on the part of Russia. But the Rumans had no desire to assist the Greek bureaucrats who oppressed them, and
the Tsar Alexander had been converted by the experiences of 1812-13 to a pacifistic respect for the status quo.
Prince Hypsilantis was driven ignominiously to internment across the Austrian frontier, little more than a
hundred days after his expedition began; and his fiasco assured the Ottoman Government of two encouraging
facts--that the revolution would not carry away the whole Orthodox population but would at any rate confine
itself to the Greeks; and that the struggle against it would be fought out for the present, at least, without
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