That Greece might still be free : : the Philhellenes in the war of independence / / William St. Clair.

"When in 1821 the Greeks rose in violent revolution against the rule of the Ottoman Turks, waves of sympathy spread across Western Europe and the United States. More than a thousand volunteers set out to fight for the cause. William St Clair meticulously researched and highly readable account o...

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Bibliographic Details
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Year of Publication:2008
Edition:New ed., rev., corr. and with additional illustrations and updated bibliography /
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource (xxi, 419 pages) :; illustrations, maps, portraits; digital, PDF file(s)
Notes:"First edition published in 1972 by Oxford University Press."--T.p. verso.
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Table of Contents:
  • The Outbreak
  • The Return of the Ancient Hellenes
  • The Regiment
  • Two Kinds of War
  • The Cause of Greece, the Cause of Europe
  • The Road to Marseilles
  • Chios
  • The Battalion of Philhellenes
  • The Battle of Peta
  • The Triumph of the Captains
  • The Return Home
  • The German Legion
  • Knights and Crusaders
  • Secrets of State
  • Enter the British
  • Lord Byron joins the Cause
  • 'To bring Freedom and Knowledge to Greece'
  • Arrivals at Missolonghi
  • The Byron Brigade
  • Essays in Regeneration
  • The New Apostles
  • The English Gold
  • The Coming of the Arabs
  • The Shade of Napoleon
  • 'No freedom to fight for at home'
  • French Idealism and French Cynicism
  • Regulars Again
  • A New Fleet
  • Athens and Navarino
  • America to the Rescue
  • Later
  • Appendix I: Remarks on Numbers
  • Appendix II: The Principal Philhellenic Expeditions
  • Notes on the Select Bibliography
  • Select Bibliography
  • Bibliography of Primary and Secondary Material Since 1972.