streets on biers, and flowers were strewn where they had fallen. There was, however, no further violence. After a few days in which the government’s authority appeared to have almost completely broken down, the demands of the tobacco workers were granted, and the general strike was called off. The American ambassador, Lincoln MacVeagh, who had been in the city throughout these events, was quite clear that their underlying cause was the government’s neglect of labour conditions in northern Greece, and of the economic plight there in general. “The region as a whole feels itself in a hopeless situation,” he wrote. “Is the Greek Government going to heed these lessons? Or is Salonica destined to become another Barcelona and spread the infection of economic revolt throughout the whole rotten body politic of this country?” 13
MacVeagh was not blind to the possibility of communist agitation behind what had happened, but it was not, for him, the real reason for such widespread protest. After all, had the unrest been revolutionary in its aims, it would not have subsided so quickly. Prime Minister Metaxas, however, was of a different mind and played up the threat of subversion. When the trades union federation announced a general strike for 5 August, he was given the pretext he had sought. He told the king the country faced a communist plot to overthrow the political system, and with the latter’s approval, he declared martial law the day before the strike was due to begin and assumed dictatorial powers.
Glossary
agha - janissary commander
ayan - provincial landed notables
ayios/ayia - saint
bazaar - open market
bedesten/bezesten - covered market for valuables
beratli - beneficiaries of the capitulation agreements (thus, clients of a European state)
bey - high military title
boza - drink made of fermented barley and millet
caique - long, fast boat
caravanseray - a hostelry for travellers
cavass - bodyguard
cortijo - courtyard
defterdar - treasurer
dervish - member of Muslim mystical order
devshirme - child slave levy
djami - large mosque
Dönme - see Ma’min
dragoman - interpreter
Effendi - title of respect
fetva - advisory opinion issued by mufti
firman - imperial decree
gavur - infidel (used of Christians) (also giaour)
ghazi - warrior fighting for Islam
halvades - sellers of halva
hamal - porter, carrier
hamam - bath-house
haremlik - women’s/family quarters
Hatt-i-Humayun - imperial decree/rescript
herem - a decree of excommunication
hodja - teacher
imam - Muslim prayer-leader
imaret - a complex of public buildings associated with a mosque
intari - gabardine overcoat worn by Jewish men
janissary - member of imperial infantry corps
Judesmo - Judeo-Spanish (lit. “Jewish”)
kadi - judge
kahal - congregation of a synagogue
kahya - agent, representative
khan - hostelry
komitadji - armed band member (lit. “committee-man”)
konak - villa, governor’s building
limonadji - lemonade-seller
loustros - shoe-black
mahalla - neighbourhood, district
Ma’min - followers of Sabbetai Zevi who converted to Islam
Marrano - Iberian Jews who converted to Catholicism
medrese - religious school attached to a mosque
mesjid - small mosque
millet - religious community
modistra - seamstress [dim. modistroula]
mollah - Muslim judge and senior member of the ulema
mufti - Muslim jurisconsult
muqarna - honeycomb combination of miniature squinches
narghilé - hookah
odos - street
orta - a janissary battalion
oud - musical instrument
pasha - governor, or high-ranking military officer
pasvant - neighbourhood watchman
pechlivanides - wrestlers
plateia - square
sarraf - personal banker, money-lender
shaknisirs - projecting covered windows
shari’a - Muslim canonical law
sheykh - elder, head of a religious order
sheykh-ul-Islam - Chief Mufti of the Ottoman empire
tekke - Sufi lodge
tseftiteli - belly-dance
turbe - mausoleum
ulema - the doctors of Muslim canon law, tradition
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