Tuesday, October 5, 2021

ITALIAN TIENTSIN IN CHINA

Tianjin 1901-1945. The Significance of the Italian Experience, by Maurizio Marinelli

The production of Italianità (Italianness) in the Chinese space

Since the acquisition of the concession in 1901, every unilateral practice of territoriality to assert and enforce control over this geographical area was seen as legitimate.

Ambassador Giovanni Gallina, after signing the concession’s agreement with the Director of the Chinese Maritime Customs Tang Shaoyi, proudly justified the immediate expropriation of the ‘filthy Chinese village’, arguing that all the other powers proceeded to the land expropriation as soon as they occupiethe area of their concession.8 Therefore, after the annihilation of the uncanny Chinese site (1902-04) and the reclamation of the wetlands (1905-06), the Italian colonial government firmly appropriated and thoroughly reinvented the space under its control by approving the new regulatory building code, the police code, and the code of hygiene in 1908.



Despite a slow and uncertain start, the Italian concession in Tianjin became the testing ground of a full-scale pedagogical project of modernity through a radical re-designing of the Chinese space. The enhancing of Italian-style architecture in the Italian concession contributed to generate a collective political and emotional capital which had two fundamental functions: to sustain the Italian government’s claim to legitimise the newly constructed national identity of the recently unified Italian Kingdom (1861-1946), and to gain the international recognition of Italy as a legitimate imperial power on the same level of the other imperialistic nations.

Significantly, Chinese historians Shan Keqiang and Liu Haiyan have emphasized that, from an administrative, juridical, police, and fiscal perspective, the =concessions were ‘states within the state’ (guo zhong zhi guo). Zhang Hongxiang has denounced foreign powers for land expropriation and forced removal of thousands of former residents without compensation. Official documents reveal how officials emphasized that, in the middle of the wars, Tianjin residents suffered immensely, to the extent that their “family businesses were swept away (jiayedangran)”; therefore the officials asked the “civilized countries” (wenmingguo) to avoid the “extreme sacrifice of their land (xishengzhidi).

The Italians, as well as others are accused of having appropriated public land, ontravening the treaties; an entire cemetery was removed and graves destroyed for reasons of public sanitation. There was a specific case of land expropriation, where the salt mines were located (115 mu), and promises of full compensation to the merchants were not kept.

However, for the newly unified Italian nation, the acquisition of the concession became a unique opportunity to affirm Italianità (Italianness) on a global geo-political scale: it represented the long-awaited historical nemesis, after the repeated failures, which had characterized both Italian colonial policy in Africa and diplomatic relations between Italy and China from the 1866 bilateral Treaty onwards.

On 1st March 1896, Italian troops had suffered a devastating defeat in the climactic battle of the first Italo-Ethiopian war, which was fought near Adwa, against Ethiopia’s Negus Menelik II. This defeat triggered the resignation of Prime Minister Francesco Crispi and the fall of his second Government (March 10, 1896), amidst a profound disenchantment with “foreign adventures.”

In the spring of 1899, an Italian attempt to extract from the Chinese government an official recognition of Sanmen Bay (in present day Zhejiang province) as a naval station and Italian zone of influence miserably failed. Veteran Prime Minister Giovanni Giolitti (at the helm of the Kingdom’s cabinet five times between 1892 and 1921), referring specifically to the Italian experience in China, defined the unsuccessful attempt with Sanmen Bay as “a waste of a few million (lire) and a national humiliation.” The refusal by the Chinese government to accept the 1899 Italian request – eventually presented in the untenable form of an ultimatum –, was a serious setback for the imagined community of the newly created Italian nation.

Even more so since this rebuff occurred at a historical juncture when all other major powers (Great Britain, France, Germany, but also Japan and Russia) were obtaining concessions and settlements in strategically important locations for their political presence and economic penetration in the Chinese territory. The wound was rendered all the more painful by Britain’s refusal to support the Italian ultimatum in 1899, thus revealing that other foreign powers were not keen for Italy to be part of the ‘scramble for concessions’ and exert its influence in China. Cicchiti-Suriani, writing in 1951 to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the acquisition of the concession, pointed out that ‘After the unfortunate prelude of Sanmen, that gesture represented the epilogue of the 1900 international events’.

There is no unanimous consent in the sources concerning the Chinese population living in the area at the time of the transfer: 13,704 according to the 1902 census, around 17,000 people according to Fileti’s report, and 16,500 according Arnaldo Cicchiti-Suriani. It is important to notice, however, the significant reduction since the 1922 census reports 4,025 Chinese citizens, 62 Italians, and 42 from other nationalities were living in the concession at the time. In 1935 the total estimated population was 6,261, of which 5,725 Chinese and 536 foreigners including 392 Italians, but Gennaro Pistolese argues instead that the Italians were ‘about 150 people’. F.C. Jones, in the few lines dedicated to the Italian concession, says: ‘The population in 1937 was 373 foreigners and some 6,500 Chinese’. Judging from these figures, one can deduct two factors: a significant decrease of the overall population living in the Italian concession from 16-17,000 (1902) to 4-6,000 (1922-1935) and a predominance of Chinese citizens. Nevertheless, an in-depth analysis of the Italian sources unmasks the tendency to obscure the presence of Chinese citizens in the concession, relegating them to the role of subalterns.

This tendency reached its climax in 1935, when Pistolese affirmed: ‘Our concession has a demographic consistency superior to the other concessions in Tien-Tsin’, and he reports the data of the Japanese concession (5,000 people), British (2,000), and French (1,450). This mystification contributed to the fascist regime’s construction of a self-reflexive and self-congratulatory image, based on cultural reproduction: the successful infrastructural projects that beautified the area were indicative of the outstanding success of the Italian spiritual and civilizing mission in this ‘faraway extension’ of the motherland. Therefore, the Italian concession became a transposed miniature representation of the alleged success of the Italian nation.

The operative mechanisms of spatial territoriality and cultural reproduction revealed an intrinsic character of ethnic displacement and class exclusivity: in Tianjin the Italian planners reinforced the separation between the foreigners and the indigenous residents, unless the Chinese were able to live up to the foreigners’ status and contribute to the ‘aristocratic’ flavour instilled on the concession’s built form.

The outcome was a miniature venue of Italianità, as demonstrated by the replica of Italian-style architecture both on the two main squares (Piazza Regina Elena and Piazza Dante) and the main roads (Via Roma, Via Principe D’Udine, Via Matteo Ricci, Corso Vittorio Emanuele III). The christening of the other space and its occupation with neo-renaissance and romanesque Italian villas, was the unique Italian response to the challenge of finding a collective unified identitary form, both in terms of national culture and national identity, visà-vis the other European great powers operating in Tianjin.

Each foreign concession developed its residential area for the expatriates of the colonial power (and for wealthy Chinese citizens) using building styles that were reflecting, reproducing and imposing the stylistic traditions of each individual country. The Italian area’s architecture was dominated by the neo-renaissance style and became known as ‘the aristocratic concession’. Cultural reproduction contributed to the emergence of hagiographic representations. Imagining an entity like the ‘modern’ Italian nation and projecting it onto China, through the construction of the Italian ‘neighborhood’ in Tianjin, was a way of building a positive story up around the Italian citizens and, intentionally, beyond: this took the form of a master narrative of benign colonialism, where the colonial agentsbecame the positive characters of a specific national success story.

The Italian concession in Tianjin had the characteristics of a hybrid community, with foreign and Chinese citizens living in a small area de iure defined as a permanent foreign possession but de facto dwelling on the Chinese soil. Yet it was a community ‘imagined’ according to a specific scheme of projective self-perception, and therefore represented as a ‘neighborhood’ bridging multiple worlds: Italy and China, but even more so, Italy and the other foreign powers operating in Tianjin.

Narratives and Counter-narratives of the Italian Imperial Dream

The craftsman of the Italian concession was Vincenzo Fileti, who was the Consul General of the concession between 1909 and 1919 and the key promoter of its development and transformation into the so-called ‘aristocratic concession’.29 In his 1921 report, Fileti portrays the Chinese people as unwilling to abandon their rigid obstinacy, insensitive to any western innovation, and even ignorant and superstitious; since they belonged to ‘a closed civilisation jealous of its own ideology which they consider much superior to the western one’. The colonial agent’s lexicon contributes to building the collective political and emotional capital necessary to deconstruct the alleged Chinese superiority complex and proclaim instead the superiority of his own civilisation.

This is the sine qua non used to justify Fileti’s agenda and his vision of China as ‘a virgin land’ ready for exploitation:

Today the European and American capitals, and for the most part Italian labour, have succeeded in building there about 3,500 miles of railways, a very small amount considering the total surface of China … It is therefore a vast virgin land for economic exploitation that can be opened to human activity and the effort to overcome the difficulties is well justified … all the nations that feel strength, due to their commercial and industrial development, have always looked with active and growing interest to the vast and virgin Chinese market and seized every favourable opportunity to breach the wall enclosing such a treasure, to avoid being second or overpowered in the exploitation of that vast new market.31 The idea of catching up and accelerating the process of conquest and exploitation –to compensate for Italy’s late arrival on the globalimperialistic arena– is a constant leitmotiv in Italian colonial literature.

However, the Italian ‘imagined community’ in Tianjin capitalized on the rhetoric trope of the ‘civilizing mission’ attributed to the newly created Italian nation. The Italian colonial experience in Africa, especially in the 1890s, was characterized by a strong emphasis on Italy’s “proletarian” colonialism, which was allegedly less pernicious than the others since it would have been ‘aimed to secure better land and greater prosperity forits indigenous citizens’.

At the same time, Italy almost seemed to have a duty to implement a precise pedagogical design of ‘modernity’, transforming the natives into European-style consumers: in fact lieutenant Gustavo Bianchi describes the natives in Ethiopia as ‘eager to possess weapons, objects, trifles and instruments that belong to Europeans’, but since ‘they cannot understand things that they only hear about’, he argues that the Italians should teach them how to dress, how to build their houses, how to farm their land, in other words, how to desire and acquire consumption tastes similar to the ‘civilised’ European people.

In the Chinese context, the mandate to extend the Italian culture is used to legitimise the use of the concession to promote the mercantile expansion. Italians officials and intellectuals alike often capitalize on the rhetoric trope of a ong-standing friendship between Italy and China, which goes back to the celebrated cross-cultural intermediation of Venetian traveller Marco Polo (1254–1324), and even more Jesuit Father Matteo Ricci (1552–1610).

On 26 April 1927 Professor Ugo Bassi, in a lecture given at the Fascist University of Bologna, celebrates the contributions of the two illustrious Italians and concludes: ‘Our magnificent Italian progeny has offered to the whole world vast continents and new knowledge, affirming herself always and in every field, first among all the others.’

Fileti’s 1921 accurate description of the Italian concession area is less high-sounding and more pragmatic, but he also reveals revealing the juxtaposition of external and internal space. The external space is also imbued with quantitative elements. These allude to the various possibilities of economic exploitation, with regard to the vastness of the indigenous territory, and in comparison with other foreign powers. The internal space is tinged with emotions such as pride, greed, and arrogance, which became even more prominent with the transition from the liberal state to the fascist regime.

As Ugo Bassi emphasizes: ‘Even Italy, the most civilized and famous people throughout Europe was tempted by the same propulsion of greed, which was a characteristic of other nations’.

However, Bassi also reiterates the mantra of Italian benign colonialism: ‘The Italians proud as usual of the humanist tradition of their motherland and the Roman civilisation brought to the indigenous people, where they could, aid and rescue’. The alleged magnanimous behaviour of the Italian ‘liberators’ is contradicted by the first-hand account of Medical Lieutenant Giuseppe Messerotti Benvenuti.

In fifty-eight letters and 400 photographs to his mother (taken between September 1900 and September 1901) he documented the relations between the different military troops, mentioning the killing, the looting and other atrocious excesses, and in the end he sadly concluded:
"If our soldiers did less harm than the other armies it is due to the fact that, even though they (the Italians) always went everywhere, they always got there late, when the villages had already been burned and plundered. The few times they arrived on time, they behaved like the others."

But the Italian colonial literature prefers to embrace and firmly uphold Fileti’s argument that Italy could not miss the opportunity to mark off China ‘as an actor and observer in that world where probably new global destinies were developing.’Fileti’s hagiographic description contributes to construct the metanarrative41 of salvation of the Chinese space, and allegedly the Chinese people, from poverty and indigence.

In 1936, in line with the fascist dream of Empire-building, engineer Rinaldo Luigi Borgnino wrote an enthusiastic article, arguing against the possibility of ceding the territory back to China. The alleged legitimacy of keeping the concession was based on the highly civilizing motivations demonstrated by the Italians, as revealed by the progressive ‘evolution’ of that ‘small territory.’

Before the Italian intervention the area was ‘miserable’, ‘noxious’, ‘desolated’ and ‘sad’. After the Italian acquisition, the area had become a stage display of Italianness: a model of modernity and hygiene. With a clear self-congratulatory tone Borgnino boasted that among the most impressive achievements there were advanced civil engineering and infrastructural projects, such as wide roads, elegant buildings, a modern hospital, electricity and potable water in all the houses, an advanced sewage system, and public landscaping.

A local British newspaper, mentioned by Borgnino, defined the Italian concession as ‘the most pleasant residential neighbourhood among all the concessions’. The representation of the concession as a ‘neighbourhood’ of exquisite Italianness became a recurrent colonial rhetorical trope, indicating pride in the motherland. This reached its climax with military general Cesare Cesari’s 1937 description:

By 1943, however, the concession had a garrison of circa 600 Italian troops and not many civilians were left. On 10 September 1943 it was occupied by Japan, since Mussolini’s Italian Social Republic relinquished the concession to the Japanese-sponsored Chinese National Government (which was neither recognized by the Kingdom of Italy, nor by the Republic of China). On 10 February 1947 the concession was formally ceded back to China by post-war Italy.

Thursday, September 2, 2021

VLACHS IN GREECE OCCUPIED BY ITALY (1941-1943)

Last January 2020 I posted https://researchomnia.blogspot.com/2020/01/auton.html about the autonomy of the Pindus Principate during WW2. As a follow up, I post this month of September 2021 this detailed research: the following is an interesting essay written by Arben Llalla about the Vlachs and nazi-fascism during WW2

Flag (proposed) of the "Principality of Pindus" during WW2
The collaboration of Vlachs with Nazi-fascists (The Declaration of Autonomy of the Principality of Pindus)

During the First World War in 1917, the Italian Army put forth the idea for the establishment of the "Principality of Pindus" based in Mecova in order to gain support in Greece. The head of that project was chosen the Prince Alcibiades Diamandi, a Samarina Vlach of Thessaly, a lawyer by profession. During WWI the project did not find broad support from the Pindus Vlach population. Prince Alcibiades Diamandi left Greece after the end of WWI and moved to Romania.

During World War II, the Greek Army, led usually by senior officers of Vlach origin, surrendered to the German & Italian Army. On 20 April 1941, on Easter Sunday, the Vlach General of Greek Corp-Army I Panagiotis Demestichas, the General of the Corp-Army II Georgios Bake, the Metropolitan of Ioannina Spyridon who was a Vlach from Pogonia, signed the surrender and cooperation of the Greek Epirus Army with the German Army and later with the Italian Army (The Metropolitan of Ioannina, Spyridon, was a bigoted anti-Albanian. He was the Minister of interior in the government of Northern Autonomy of Epirus in 1914. The Metropolitan of Ioannina, Spyridon, served as the Archbishop of Greece in 1949-1956. The people knew him by the name of Spyridon Vlachos, but his real surname was Sito). After surrendering the Greek Army of Epirus and of Greek Macedonia, the Greek generals with Vlach origin gained privileges of ministerial-levels during the greek collaborationist goverments governments of 1941-1944.

On 29 April 1941, the Chief of Staff of the German Army High Command Alfred Jodl and General Alberto Ferrero, Chief of Staff of the Italian Army in Albania, appointed Greek Prime Minister Georgios Tsolakoglou, who had a Vlach origin. After being assigned as Prime Minister, Georgios Tsolakoglou appointed General Panagiotis Demestichas, who was a Vlach, as Interior Minister and another top military officer, Theodore Saranti, a Vlach, as Mayor of Trikala. Colonel Theodhosiso Papadheothosiu, who was another Vlach, was elected as Mayor of Larissa-Volos. Vlachs already led Greece and that reality helped them to declare the independence of the "Principality of Pindus".

In May 1941, Alcibiades Diamandi returned to Greece, went to Ioannina and conducted meetings with Vlachs there. In the summer of that year, Diamandi began a tour across the Vlach settlements, such as in Samarina, Grevena, Larisa, Trikala, Elassona and in many other villages, conducting over 50 meetings in those areas with Vlach graduates in Italian and Romanian schools. During those meetings with the Vlachs of Pindus, Diamandi opened the offices of the Autonomy of the Principality of Pindus in Meçova, Ioannina, Grevena, etc.

On 25 September 1941, Alcibiades Diamandi sent a memorandum to the the first collaborationist Prime Minister Georgios Tsolakoglou, as a representative of the Vlachs of Pindus and of the South Balkan Vlachs. The memorandum of Diamandi initially contained few requirements: a) The appointment of prefects, mayors and local leaders, would be done by him. b) The dismissal of permanent employees and the transfer of those who are not in favor of that movement. c) To compensate the injured individuals during the Italian-Greek war and Vlachs who had offered animals, fur and other items for the care of the soldiers. d) To punish those who during the Greek-Italian war had transfered rumanozondes with anti-national behavior.

In autumn 1941, the Prince of Pindus Diamandi moved to Larissa and -with the support of Italians who controlled that territory- founded the Roman Legions Army. The commandant of those Vlach troops was appointed Nikolaos Matusi who was born in Samaria and lived in Larissa. The number of Vlachs who wore the uniform of the Roma nLegions was about 2000.

The Vlach military troops operated jointly with the Italian Army, which was commanded by the Italian General Romero, in places such as Trikala, Elassona, Samarina, Grevena, Metsovo, Kalabak, Larissa, Farce, etc. They partially terrorized the population, robbed some of their food and possessions. The Vlach Roman Legions were attacked by the partisan troops of ELAS several times. On 1 March 1942, the Vlachs intellectuals of Greece and representatives of the Vlachs in Albania, Bulgaria and Serbia, signed the "Manifesto of the South Balkan Vlachs".

At the top of the list of the signatories of that Manifesto of Vlachs was the chairman of the Vlachs of the Southern Balkans Alcibiades Diamandi, the chairman of the Vlachs of the Pindus Nikolaos Matusi, chairman of the Vlachs in Albania VasiliVarnduli, of Serbia Micelle Tegojani, of Bulgaria Ziko Area. The Vlach intellectuals of Greece who signed that Manifesto were: professor Dimo Cutra, doctor Kosta Taxon, lawyer Georgio Franko, professor A. Beka, Gaqi Papa, doctor Niko Micibuna, professor Dim Kaxhigogo, lawyer Kalometro, Colonel Vasilis Jorgos, professor Kosta Nikolesko, professor Jorgo Kondojani, K. Kaloera, professor Virxhilio Balamace, professor MiceleBarnd, engineer E. Goxhamani, engineer K. Stefa, engineer Niko A. Beka, professorJorgo Balamate, engineer S. Peleqi, lawyer K. Pituli, lawyer Dim Barnda, lawyerToli Haxhi, John Kopano, professor Zisi Haxhibira, doctor Serxhio Triandafili, JaniMercos, Pericles Piteni, Jorgo Gjuleka, Akille Taqi Furkoti, Athanasius Balodhimo. As it can be seen, the names who signed the manifesto of the Vlachs are intellectual figures of Greece, not ordinary people, workers, farmers, but well educated people who were well aware of what they signed. After the war, most of them were not severely punished or expelled from Greece as it happened with the Cham Moslem albanian population, under the pretext that they were allegedly Germans collaborationists. Today, their children or grandchildren are MPs, ministers, mayors, senior officials of the state institutions of Greece.

In late 1943, after it became obvious that the German-Italian Axis power were losing the war, the leaders of the Vlach legions and the majority of its members abandoned their uniforms and joined the troops of Napoleon Zervas. The Prince of Pindus Alcibiades Diamandi left Greece and moved to Romania. Once the communists seized power there, he was arrested in 1948 and died a few months after his arrest in the basement of the Interior Ministry in Romania.

The Prime Minister of the Principality of Pindus and the commander in chief of the armed forces of the Roman Legions, Nikolaos Matusi, fled Larisa after the capitulation of the fascist Italy in September 1943 and went to Athens where he collaborated with the German Army. He fled to Romania after the liberation of Greece in October 1944. There, the Romanian communist police imprisoned him as a collaborator of the German Army. At the request of Greece in 1964, he was transferred back to continue his sentence. At the Court held in Athens in May 1964, the senior leader of EDES for Athens, Apostoli Papageorge, and the political leader, Apostol Paguco, were called to witness about Nikolaos Matusi. Only Papaegeorge gave evidence in the court as witness. In Greece, Nikolaos Matusi enjoyed privileges up to the level of carrying aweapon with permission. In spite of the fact that he was a collaborator of the Italian and German Armies, the Greek courts never condemned him. His daughter, Ksenia Matusiwas, was one of the most renowned painters in Greece and enjoyed privileges despite of her father being a collaborator of the Italian and German Armies during World War II. Nikolaos Matusi died in 1991 in Larissa.

The Vlach population of the Pindus, although officially documented as collaborators of the Italian and German Armies, was not expelled from Greece. In the contrary, it took over the leadership of the country and participated directly in the massacres of the Albanian population in Chameria. The Vlachs of Pindus, together with the orthodox refugees from Asia Minor, were the ones who plundered and exploited the properties of Chams.The historian and journalist Dhimosthenis Kukunas, who has published several books and two volumes about the events in occupied Greece 1941-1944, brings the names of 83 Vlachs who signed the Manifesto of March 1942 and who were part of the Roman Legions; in fact, their number as aforementioned was larger. What sounds the bell is the fact that the children and grandchildren of the majority of the Vlach collaborators with the Italian and German Armies have enjoyed privileges. They have been or are MPs and historians who propagate against Albania for years.

So, Vlachs were not persecuted or expelled from Greece under the charge of being collaborationists of the Italian and German Armies. The untrue charge applied only to Cham Albanians was deliberately used to justify the expulsion of 25000 moslem albanians (Chams) from Greece to Albania.

The research proved that the children or grandchildren of Vlachs who collaborated with the Italian and German Armies and who enjoyed privileges are the following:

Joan Nikolaos Mercos, born in Nimfeo of Florina. The residents of that village are Vlachs and some of them had come from Voskopoja. He was the signatory of the Manifesto of Autonomy of the Principality of Pindus. After the cooperation with the Italian Army in Larissa, in 1942, Joan moved to Thessaloniki with his family and began to collaborate with the German Army. After the war he was sentenced to 11 years to prison. His son Nikolaos Joan Mercos was born in 1936 in Nimfeo of Florina. He now is a lawyer, writer and has published over 15 books. Nikolaos Mercos, the son of the Italian and German collaborationist, was the national adviser for Greek Prime Minister Konstantinos Mitsotakis in 1990-1993. Nikolaos Mercos also assisted closely the former President and former Prime Minister of Greece Constantine Karamanlis. Nikolaos Mercos is an honored figure of the Greek state. Nikolaos Mercos belongs to the anti-Albanian group that promotes the annexation of southern Albania and is a friend of the Archbishop of the Orthodox Church of Albania, Anastasios.The MP of Greece Konstantinos Gioulekas of the New Democracy party is a relative of Georgios Gioulekas, a Vlach from Samara. Georgios Gioulekas was a signatory of the Manifesto for the Autonomy of the Vlachs of Pindus in March 1942. He was member of the Vlach Roman Legions and a collaborationist with the Italian and German Armies in 1941-1944. The fate of Georgios Gioulekas is unknown, but the MP Konstantinos Gioulekas derives from the same family. The Vlach Konstantinos Gioulekas is a lawyer and has worked as a journalist for several years in the city of Thessaloniki. Since 2000, he is MP of the New Democracy Party in the Greek Parliament and has been assigned deputy-minister several times.

Within the Ottoman Empire, Vlachs had more rights than Albanians. They had primary and secondary schools in their native language, which is similar to Romanian.The struggle for the assimilation of Vlachs was competitive between Romanians and Greeks, and that caused Vlachs to have dual national consciousness and often fought each other fiercely. There were Vlachs of Grevena with a Romanian consciousness who assassinated the Greek Metropolitan Emiliaos in October 1911, because he propagated their assimilation.

More names of Vlach collaborationists.

As mentioned before, the historian and journalist Dhimosthenis Kukunas has revealed 83 Vlach names that signed the "Manifesto for the Autonomy of the Vlachs" in March 1942 and participated in the Vlach Roman Legions, aiding the Italian and German Armies. Some of them were not punished at all, others received 2-6 years in prison, and a marginal number of them sentenced to life imprisonment. The families of Vlachs who proclaimed the Autonomy of Pindus and who collaborated officially with the Italian and German Armies were neither persecuted nor expelled from Greece by Greek authorities after 1944. Their Greek citizenship was not revoked as it happened with Cham Albanians. Despite of the fact that the allegations about Cham Albanians collaboration with the invading Italian and German Armies were never proved, Cham Albanians were massacred and expelled permanently from their homes where they lived for thousands of years. The classic racist policy of Greeks is now documented in the books of Greek authors and affirms clearly the ethnic and religious divisions.

Alqiviadhis Konstandin Diamandi was born in Samarina in 1894 in a wealthyfamily. During the First World War, he had the rank of a non-commissioned officer in the Greek Army in 1917 and acted in the Vlach villages of Pindus. With Italian support he founded the Army of the Principality of Pindus and proclaimed himself a Prince. For those actions the Greek court convicted Diamandi, but he received forgiveness with the amnesty of 1927. In 1920-1925, Alcibiades Diamandi was a diplomat of Romania in Sarandon, keeping contact with Romanian and Italian secret services. In the early 1930s, he returned to Greece as a representative of some Romanian companies of oil and timber. During that period Alcibiades started the recruitment of Vlachs of Thessaly and Epirus in order to establish the Principality of Pindus with its own Army. With the arrival of the Italian and German Armies in 1941 Alqiviadhis Konstandin Diamandi established the Roman Legions of Vlachs, which were financed by the Italian Army. Prime Minister andcommander of the Principality of Pindus became Nikolaos Matuci. In late 1942, Alcibiades Diamandi left Greece and moved to Romania. When the communists came to power in 1948, he was arrested and died after a few days in jail.

Nikolaos Mattheo Matusi was born in 1899 in Samarina of Pindus. After he finished university studies in Athens, he began working as a lawyer in Larissa. He was the signatory of the Manifesto of the Autonomy of Vlachs of Pindus in March 1942, and later the general commander of the Vlach forces known as the Roman Legions. After the capitulation of fascist Italy in 1943 he went to Athens where he collaborated with the German Army. He fled to Romania after the liberation of Greece inOctober 1944. There, the Romanian communist police imprisoned him as a collaboratorof German Army. At the request of Greece in 1964, he was transferred back to continue his sentence. At the Court held in Athens in May 1964, the senior leader of EDES for Athens, Apostoli Papageorge, and the political leader, Apostol Paguco, were called to witness about Nikolaos Matusi. Only Papaegeorge gave evidence in the court as witness. In Greece, Nikolaos Matusi enjoyed privileges up to the level of carrying a weapon with permission. In spite of the fact that he was a collaborator of the Italian and German Armies, the Greek courts never condemned him. His daughter, Ksenia Matusi was one of the most renowned painters in Greece and enjoyed privileges despite of her father being a collaborator of the Italian and German Armies during World War II. Nikolaos Matusi died in 1991 in Larissa.

The Vlach population of Pindus, although officially documented as collaborators of the Italian and German Armies, was not expelled from Greece. In the contrary, it tookover the leadership of the country and participated directly in the massacres upon the Albanian population in Chameria. The Vlachs of Pindus, together with the orthodox refugees from Asia Minor, were the ones who plundered and exploited the properties of Chams.The historian and journalist Dhimosthenis Kukunas, who has published several books and two volumes about the events in occupied Greece 1941-1944, brings the names of 83 Vlachs who signed the Manifesto of March 1942 and who were part of the Roman Legions; in fact, their number as aforementioned was larger. What sounds the bell is the fact that the children and grandchildren of the majority of the Vlach collaborators with the Italian and German Armies have enjoyed privileges. They have been or are MPs and historians who propagate against Albania for years. So, Vlachs were not persecuted or expelled from Greece under the charge of being collaborationists of the Italian and German Armies. The untrue charge applied only to Cham Albanians was deliberately used to justify the expulsion of 25000 moslem albanians (Chams) from Greece to Albania.

The research proved that the children or grandchildren of Vlachs who collaborated with the Italian and German Armies and who enjoyed privileges are the following: Joan Nikolaos Mercos, born in Nimfeo of Florina. The residents of that village are Vlachs and some of them had come from Voskopoja. He was the signatory of the Manifesto of Autonomy of the Principality of Pindus. After the cooperation with the Italian Army in Larissa, in 1942, Joan moved to Thessaloniki with his family and beganto collaborate with the German Army. After the war he was sentenced to 11 years to prison. His son Nikolaos Joan Mercos was born in 1936 in Nimfeo of Florina. He nowis a lawyer, writer and has published over 15 books. Nikolaos Mercos, the son of theItalian and German collaborationist, was the national adviser for Greek Prime MinisterKonstantinos Mitsotakis in 1990-1993. Nikolaos Mercos also assisted closely the formerPresident and former Prime Minister of Greece Constantine Karamanlis. NikolaosMercos is an honored figure of the Greek state. Nikolaos Mercos belongs to the anti-Albanian group that promotes the annexation of southern Albania and is a friend of theArchbishop of the Orthodox Church of Albania, Anastasios.The MP of Greece Konstantinos Gioulekas of the New Democracy party is arelative of Georgios Gioulekas, a Vlach from Samara. Georgios Gioulekas was asignatory of the Manifesto for the Autonomy of the Vlachs of Pindus in March 1942. Hewas member of the Vlach Roman Legions and a collaborationist with the Italian andGerman Armies in 1941-1944. The fate of Georgios Gioulekas is unknown, but the MPKonstantinos Gioulekas derives from the same family. The Vlach KonstantinosGioulekas is a lawyer and has worked as a journalist for several years in the city ofThessaloniki. Since 2000, he is MP of the New Democracy Party in the Greek Parliamentand has been assigned deputy-minister several times.Within the Ottoman Empire, Vlachs had more rights than Albanians. They hadprimary and secondary schools in their native language, which is similar to Romanian.The struggle for the assimilation of Vlachs was competitive between Romanians andGreeks, and that caused Vlachs to have dual national consciousness and often fought eachother fiercely. There were Vlachs of Grevena with a Romanian consciousness whoassassinated the Greek Metropolitan Emiliaos in October 1911, because he propagatedtheir assimilation.

A list of Vlach collaborationists

As mentioned before, the historian and journalist Dhimosthenis Kukunas hasrevealed 83 Vlach names that signed the Manifesto for the Autonomy of the Vlachs inMarch 1942 and participated in the Vlach Roman Legions, aiding the Italian and GermanArmies. Some of them were not punished at all, others received 2-6 years in prison, and amarginal number of them sentenced to life imprisonment. The families of Vlachs whoproclaimed the Autonomy of Pindus and who collaborated officially with the Italian andGerman Armies were neither persecuted nor expelled from Greece by Greek authoritiesafter 1944. Their Greek citizenship was not revoked as it happened with ChamAlbanians. Despite of the fact that the allegations about Cham Albanians collaborationwith the invading Italian and German Armies were never proved, Cham Albanians weremassacred and expelled permanently from their homes where they lived for thousands ofyears. The classic racist policy of Greeks is now documented in the books of Greekauthors and affirms clearly the ethnic and religious divisions.

Alqiviadhis Konstandin Diamandi was born in Samarina in 1894 in a wealthyfamily. During the First World War, he had the rank of a non-commissioned officer in theGreek Army in 1917 and acted in the Vlach villages of Pindus. With Italian support hefounded the Army of the Principality of Pindus and proclaimed himself a Prince. Forthose actions the Greek court convicted Diamandi, but he received forgiveness with theamnesty of 1927. In 1920-1925, Alcibiades Diamandi was a diplomat of Romania inSarandon, keeping contact with Romanian and Italian secret services. In the early 1930s,he returned to Greece as a representative of some Romanian companies of oil and timber.During that period Alcibiades started the recruitment of Vlachs of Thessaly and Epirus inorder to establish the Principality of Pindus with its own Army. With the arrival of theItalian and German Armies in 1941 Alqiviadhis Konstandin Diamandi established theRoman Legions of Vlachs, which were financed by the Italian Army. Prime Minister andcommander of the Principality of Pindus became Nikolaos Matuci. In late 1942,Alcibiades Diamandi left Greece and moved to Romania. When the communists came topower in 1948, he was arrested and died after a few days in jail.

Nikolaos Mattheo Matusi was born in 1899 in Samarina of Pindus. After hefinished university studies in Athens, he began working as a lawyer in Larissa. He was one of the signatory of the Manifesto of the Autonomy of Vlachs of Pindus in March 1942, and later the general commander of the Vlach forces known as the Roman Legions. After the capitulation of fascist Italy in 8 September 1943, he left Larissa and went to Athens, where he collaborated with the German Army. After the liberation of Greece in October 1944, he fled to Romania and after being captured by the Romanian communists was imprisoned as a collaborator of the Germans Army. At the request of Greece in 1964, he was transferred to continue his sentence in a Greek prison. At the court held in Athens in May 1964, the senior ex-leader of EDES for Athens, Apostoli Papageorgiu, and the political leader Apostol Paguco, were called to witness about Nikolaos Matusi. Only Apostoli Papageorgiu appeared at court to report as a witness against Nikolaos Matusi. In Greece, Nikolaos Matusi enjoyed privileges up to the level of carrying a weapon with permission. In spite of the fact that he was a collaborator of the Italian and German Armies, Greek courts never condemned him. His daughter Ksenia Matusi was one of the most renowned painters in Greece and has enjoyed privileges despite of the fact that her father was a collaborator of the Italian and German Armies during World War II. Nikolaos Matusi died in 1991 in Larissa.

Dhimostheni Nikolaos Cutra, born in 1894, was a high school teacher in Larissa. During the Metaxas government he was dismissed on charges of making leftist propaganda to the students. Since 1941, he joined the idea of Diamandi about the Autonomy of Vlachs of Pindus. He was a signatory of the Manifesto of March 1941. He was the leader of the Vlach Roman Legions. After the war, he was sentenced "in absentiato" death. He died in 1961, hidden in the outskirts of Larissa.

Konstantin Taha was born in Larissa. He was a doctor by profession. He was a signatory of the Vlach Manifesto and in May 1941 he founded the first Roman Legion of Vlachs in Larissa. He was the main leader of the station of Roman Legions in Larissa. After the war he was sentenced to 15 years in prison.Vasileos Kristo Rapotika was born in 1888 in Gramos of Pindus. He was one ofthe first founders of the Roman Legions. He participated in several battles with the Italians against ELAS forces. He was killed in 1943 by ELAS.Thomas Demetrius Pispirigos was a lawyer from Samarina. He was a fanatic of the propaganda of the Vlachs’ autonomy and an anti-Greek. During the movement, the Principality of Pindus aligned with the Italian Army and he was promoted to colonel. He was a member of the Roman Legions and was a chairman of the Association of Romanians in Thessaloniki. After 1944 he fled to Romania, where he died. Nikolaos Miçibuna was a physician from Grevena and a signatory of the Manifesto. He became the main leader of the movement of the Vlach Autonomy in Grevena. After the capitulation of Italy in 1943, he settled in Thessaloniki. After the war he was arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment. Georgio Miçibuna was born in Samarina. He was a member of the Roman Legions in Grevena. He cooperated with the Italian and German Armies. He participated in several battles against the communist Army ELAS. In 1944 he fled to Romania, where he was sentenced to 20 years in prison. Stefano Koço was a member of the movement for the Autonomy of Vlachs and first leader of the Roman Legions in Elassona. In 1943, he became the Prefect of Larissa.He was a collaborationist with the Italian and German Armies. After the war he wassentenced to life imprisonment.Nikolaos Frango was born in Elassona and was a signatory of the Manifesto and the leader of the Roman Legions in Elassona. He collaborated with the Italian Army and after the war was sentenced to 15 years in prison.Zico Area was born in Grevena and lived in Samarina. He was an anti-Greek and a fanatic of the Vlach Autonomy since 1917. He was a teacher and principal at the Romanian gymnasium in Grevena and president of the Romanians in Grevena. In March 1941 he signed the Manifesto as a representative of Bulgarian Vlachs. After the capitulation of Italy in 1943, he settled in Thessaloniki. After the war he was sentenced to 15 years in prison.

Zico Sotiri Area was a teacher at the Romanian gymnasium in Grevena. He was asupporter of the Vlach Autonomy, a collaborationist of the Italian Army and an anti-Greek. After the war he was sentenced to 3 years in prison. Georgios Vasilaqi was born in Grevena, a lawyer by profession, he was an anti-Greek and in favor of the movement of the Vlach Autonomy since 1917. In 1916 he was the mayor of Grevena. In March 1941, he signed the Manifesto of the Vlachs and was a collaborationist of the Italian Army. After the war he was sentenced to 3 years in prison. Georgio Kazanas was a lawyer in Grevena and cousin of Alcibiades Diamandi.He collaborated with the Italian Army and made pro-Romanian propaganda. He led the Association of Romanians office in Grevena. After the war he was sentenced to life imprisonment.Pericles Demetrius Piteli was a businessman, first cousin and confident of Diamandi. He backed the Autonomy and the Manifesto of Vlachs of Pindus. After the war he was sentenced to 15 years in prison.John Nikolaos Mercos was born in Nimfeo of Florina. He was a signatory of the Manifesto of the Autonomy of the Principality of Pindus. After the cooperation with the Italian Army in Larissa in 1942, he moved to Thessaloniki with his family and began to cooperate with the German Army. After the war he was sentenced to 11 years in prison. His son, Nikolaou Joan Mercos, born in 1936 in Nimfeo Florina, is a lawyer and writer.In 1990-1993, he was adviser to Prime Minister Konstantinos Mitsotakis on Greece'snational issues. Mercos has worked closely with the former President and former Prime Minister of Greece, Konstantinos Karamanlis. Nikolaos Mercos is an honored figure of the Greek state and is a friend of the Archbishop of the Orthodox Church of Albania, Anastasios.

Vasileos Agorojanis from Samarina was the chairman of the movement of the Vlach Autonomy in Samarina. Kristo Sterxios Anagnosti was a supporter of the Vlach Autonomy. He cooperated with the Italian and German Armies. After the war he was sentenced to life imprisonment.Vasileos Vardurli from Distrato was a signatory of the Manifesto of the Vlach Autonomy. Nikolaos Efthimio Galani, from Distrato, took off the Greek Army uniform and put on the Italian Army uniform during the Italian-Greek war. He was a supporter of the Vlach Autonomy. He was sentenced to death in absentia. Georgio Giulekas was from Samarina and lived in Elassona. He was a signatory of the Manifesto of the Vlach Autonomy and member of the Roman Legions. He is recorded as missing. The current MP of the New Democracy, Konstantinos Gioulekas is a cousin of Georgio Gioulekas. Other names are: E. Goxamani, Grigor Adham Guda, Stefan Dhelibasi, Demetrius Dimareli, lawyer Anastas Kalometros, doctor K. Kalometros, etc.

Sunday, August 1, 2021

ROMANS IN PHOENICIA (ACTUAL LEBANON)

The Romans conquered Phoenicia in 64 BC with Pompeius. They enlarged their control on all the eastern shores of the Mediterranean sea and started to call this sea with the name "Mare Nostrum" (Our Sea), because from Gibraltar to Phoenicia-Palestine all these areas a few years later were inside of the "Roman Empire" created by Augustus.


Map showing the territory of Roman Berytus (the Phoenicia's area most Latinised) under emperor Claudius. The red points (with latin inscriptions) are the places -very probably- populated by Roman colonists in the Beqaa valley


According to Benjamin Isaac of the Tel Aviv university, the colonies of the Roman Empire in the Middle East were genuine "veteran colonies" (Berytus/Beirut -which presumably at first included Heliopolis and vicinity, Acco/Ptolemais, and Aelia Capitolina/Jerusalem), but there also were "titular colonies", the most important of which are Caesarea-on-the-Sea, Bostra, and Gerasa. Veteran colonies were reorganized at the time of the foundation, and veterans from the Roman legions were settled there and received land. They formed a local elite imposed upon the existing communities. By contrast, the titular colonies were established through political reorganization and a change in status, unaccompanied by the settlement of veterans.

It is noteworhty that under Augustus the Romans started a tentative of "romanization" (mainly cultural) -with roman veterans as colonists- in areas of central Phoenicia.

They imposed -in the first century and half of the Roman Empire- the use of their latin language and pagan religion mainly in Berytus (actual Beirut) with the settlement of two legion's veterans and additionally in the nearby Beqaa valley with farm colonists & also with the creation of the huge pagan temples of Heliopolis (actual Baalbeck).

The Romans used to "consolidate" their conquered territories in the Mediterranean area with settlers (mainly from central Italy during the existence of the Roman Republic, but also from all the Italian peninsula during the Roman Empire) in strategical places and for this reason created "colonies" in what is now central Lebanon.

"At Niha, in the Beqa valley, a series of inscriptions in Latin records the existence of a sanctuary of the Syrian Goddess of Niha’, Hadaranes, or Atargatis. One of those mentions the "Pagus Augustus", presumably an association of Latin-speaking Roman citizens which will have been settled there at the time of the foundation of the Roman colony. At this sanctuary some evidence of social integration has been detected. The sanctuary preserved its indigenous character, and the gods did not receive Graeco-Roman names. In contrast to the sanctuary at Heliopolis itself, the priests and prophetesses were "peregrini", but the inscriptions also mention at least six Roman citizens and their relatives. A sanctuary nearby is identified by a dedication in Latin to the god Mifsenus......For Berytus the epigraphic material confirms the impression derived from the literary sources that this was a substantial Roman veteran colony where the Latin tradition was maintained for centuries after the foundation. The city produced some members of the higher classes and some of its citizens expressed themselves in Latin on public monuments and had proper Roman names". B. Isaac. Cambridge university ed., 2017
.

Berytus was their initial settlement in this area, but they created also two "pagus" (communities of colonists as farmers) in Ptolemais (actual Acre) & the Niha/Beqaa valley. The one that developed greatly was the one in the fertile Beqaa valley: Pagus Augustus (probably this name was chosen because the emperor Augustus promoted this pagus), that was linked to Heliopolis (actual Baalbeck) by a roman-built road.

The Roman settlers of Heliopolis (the Roman colony "Colonia Julia Augusta Felix Heliopolitana") may have arrived as early as the time of Caesar, but were more probably the descendants of veterans of the 5th and 8th Legions under Augustus, during which time it hosted a Roman garrison: from 15 BC to AD 193, it formed part of the territory of Berytus and was chosen -in order to be romanised and so to promote the romanisation of the region- to have the biggest pagan Roman temples in the eastern Mediterranean.

Indeed the Romans built a huge Temple complex in Heliopolis, consisting of three Temples: Jupiter, Bacchus and Venus. On a nearby hill, they built a fourth Temple dedicated to Mercury. Today one of the best examples of Roman Temple architecture is in Lebanon at the ruins of Roman Heliopolis.

Furthermore, the Roman Temple sites in Lebanon (that show the cultural romanisation in Phoenicia) can be divided into three main groups. First, the Bekaa valley north of the Beirut-Damascus road. Second, the area south of the same road, including the Wadi al-Taym and the western flank of Mount Hermon. Third, the area west of a line drawn along the ridge of Mount Lebanon.

George F. Taylor divided up the Temples of Lebanon into three groups:
First, one covering the Beqaa valley north of the road from Beirut to Damascus. Second, a group to the south, including the Wadi al-Taym known as Temples of Mount Hermon. Third, a group in the area west of a line drawn along the ridge of Mount Lebanon that includes Makam Er-Rab, Sfira, Kasr Naous, Amioun, Bziza, Batroun, Edde, Mashnaqa, Yanouh, Afka, Qalaat Faqra, Kalaa, Sarba Jounieh, Antoura, Deir el-Kalaa, Shheem and the coastal plains of Beirut, Byblos, Sidon, Tripoli and Tyre.

The Temples of the Beqaa Valley in Taylor's first group included El-Lebwe, Yammoune, Qasr Banat, Iaat, Nahle, Baalbek, Hadeth, Kasarnaba, Temnin el-Foka, Nebi Ham, Saraain El Faouqa, Niha, Hosn Niha, Fourzol and Kafr Zebad.

The Temples of Mount Hermon in Taylor's second group -that are near the Beqaa Valley- included Ain Harcha, Aaiha, Deir El Aachayer, Dekweh, Yanta, Hebbariye, Ain Libbaya, Nebi Safa, Aaqbe, Khirbet El-Knese, Mejdal Anjar, Mdoukha and Bakka.

The Great Court of Roman Heliopolis's temple complex


The process of romanization (centered on the latin language and on the Roman pagan religion) in the first half of the second century (under Trajan) was nearly complete in Berytus (Benjamin Isaac:"Berytus, a city rather roman in character") and partially successful in the Pagus Augustus area of the Beqaa valley (while it was minimal in the Heliopolis and Ptolemois areas), but started to disappear in the following third and fourth century.

"Berytus and Heliopolis, are known to have been populated by veteran settlers. Heliopolis in particular has produced a good quantity of inscriptions which show that private citizens used Latin on their public monuments, as did distinguished citizens who served in senior imperial positions and as city magistrates. These types of inscriptions show that Latin was to some extent integrated into civilian life." B. Isaac.Cambridge university ed., 2017


In the fifth century the last roman pagans (descendants of the Roman colonists) in the mount Lebanon area near the Beqaa valley were assimilated to christianity by a maronite monk (Abraham of Cyrrhus): they were the first maronites of actual Lebanon.

Additionally, it is noteworthy to pinpoint that the "Berytus Law School" was widely known in the Roman empire; it was famous the Latin motto Berytus Nutrix Legum ("Beirut, Mother of Laws"). Indeed, two of Rome's most famous jurists, Papinian and Ulpian, both natives of Phoenicia, taught there under the Severan emperors. When Justinian assembled his Pandects (the basic fundaments of the Roman Law still used in our times) in the sixth century, a large part of the "Corpus of Laws" -all in Latin- was derived from these two jurists, and in 533 AD Justinian recognized the school as one of the three official Law Schools of the empire.

The following are excerpts from an essay written by a "Universita' di Genova" 's researcher about the Romans in the Lebanon area, mainly in the Beqaa valley's Pagus Augustus (actual Niha village and surroundings):

Historical background of Pagus Augustus

Romans created only four colonies for veterans in the actual Middle East: one was Berytus. But on the mountains (Mount Lebanon and others) east of this city they also settled in an area relatively depopulated where they created various temples and farm-villages (like the Niha's Roman temples) (read the interesting Benjamin Isaac book: https://books.google.com/books?id=7fVsvzHi8iQC&pg=PA52&lpg=PA52&dq=augustus+pagus+at+niha&source=bl&ots=fgG-0TjK-L&sig=dHUPsaTBc7BfWfX15IRCuhSU_Fo&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjWiODV4OLaAhURd98KHUwlA44Q6AEITjAM#v=onepage&q=augustus%20pagus%20at%20niha&f=false about "Latin in cities of the Roman Near east"; p. 52) ). This area (around actual Nihaa and Qsarnaba villages and along the road between Berytus and Baalbeck) was fully Romanized in the first century of the Roman empire and was the only Latin language speaking in the region. This kind of farm & villages settlement in an extended area was similar to others in the Roman empire, like in Roman Iberia's "Colonia Tuccitana" (read Antonio Luis Bonilla Martos's "Villas Romanas en colonia Tuccitana"https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:jvU6T56LnLUJ:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/descarga/articulo/4527070.pdf+&cd=4&hl=it&ct=clnk&gl=us)

"...Dea Suria Nihathe(na)/pro Aug(usto), Pagus/Augustus fecit/et dedica[vi]t" - Dedication in Latin found at Nihaa about Augustus Pagus. (read Anne-Rose Hošek: Augustus Pagus - "Le noveau paysage de la romanisation" https://journals.openedition.org/mefra/3088)


The Roman settlements of Augustus Pagus were located at the shoulder of the Western Lebanese Mountain Range -just to the East of Mount Sannine specifically https://www.int-arch-photogramm-remote-s... Map with location of some temples in the Augustus Pagus area]- and at the border of the central parts of the Beqaa Valley with the famous pagan Heliopolis in Phoenicia. People in this area actually are mostly traditional farmers, famous for growing vineyards and wild rose flowers for rosewater extraction since Roman times.

Remains of a Roman pagan Temple in the "Pagus Augustus", during a morning fog at Niha


Indeed a Latin inscription found in these mountains near the village of Niha, shows a 'Pagus Augustus' (a village, or association of settlers) making a dedication on behalf of the Emperor to the 'Dea Suria Nihathe(na)'(Fergus Millar. "The Roman Near East, 31 B.C.-A.D. 337"; p. 282: https://books.google.com/books?id=IA-YlZqHv90C&pg=PA282&lpg=PA282&dq=augustus+pagus+in+roman+phoenicia&source=bl&ots=-No0xbVt1e&sig=t8qq_o3VCooiLEIjua5btAof-8c&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwip8fGy8-DaAhVHuVkKHU9eD3wQ6AEIbzAL#v=onepage&q=augustus%20pagus%20in%20roman%20phoenicia&f=false)

"In Roman times, this town (now called Niha) located in the center of the "Augustus pagus", is inhabited by a community of pilgrims and Roman settlers (among whom are the Vesii). The inhabitants of Nihatha could pay homage to a divine triad similar to that of Baalbek, with the difference that the gods who compose it retain their Semitic denominations: alongside the couple formed of the supreme god Hadaranès and the goddess Atargatis (Dea Syria Nihathena) is perhaps a young minor consort whose name is unknown, but whose appearance would be similar to that of the Heliopolitan Mercury".(Julien Aliquot. "La vie religieuse au Liban sous l'empire roman"; Niha & surroundings, with detailed images:https://books.openedition.org/ifpo/1456)


Historian Kevin Butcher pinpointed that the territory of Roman Berytus under emperor Claudius reached the Bekaa valley and included Heliopolis: it was the only area mostly latin-speaking in the Syria-Phoenicia region, because settled by Roman colonists who even promoted agriculture in the fertile lands around actual Yammoune. He also wrote that from the 1st century BC the Bekaa valley served as a source of grain for the Roman provinces of the Levant and even for the same Rome (today the valley makes up to 40 percent of Lebanon's arable land): Roman colonists created there even the "country district" called ''Pagus Augustus'' where are located the Niha temples with latin inscriptions.

In his opinion the mountain area between Berytus and Baalbeck was chosen by the Roman colonists because of the climate similar to the one of the Italian peninsula mountains (from where they came) and because it was with no presence of huge Phoenician or local [Aramaic language-speaking communities: for a couple of centuries it was the stronghhold of Rome in the Levant (as a fully Romanized area with Roman pagan religion), that only under emperor Constantine the great started to be converted to Christianity and was assimilated by the surrounding majority of Aramaic-speaking population.

Indeed Eusebius records that the Emperor Constantine destroyed a pagan temple of Venus 'on the summit of Mount Lebanon.' (Eusebius 'Life of Constantine' III.54) and, after the 5th century AD, Christian monks who were followers of a hermit named Maron settled in the mountains where lived the remaining descendants of the roman colonists of the Augustus Pagus.

It is noteworthy to pinpoint that the area of Augustus Pagus is the "original homeland" in actual Lebanon of the territories of the Maronites, a Christian group that looks at the Pope leadership. Indeed the Maronite Church is an Eastern Catholic Church ''sui iuris'', in full communion with the Pope and the Catholic Church (Andre Moubarak. "One Friday in Jerusalem"; ed:Twin T & T; Jerusalem, 2017; ISBN=9780999249420) with self-governance under the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches.

The nearly 20 meters high last standing 6 colummns of the Temple of Jupiter in Roman Heliopolis


Some researchers -like D'Ambrosio- think that this link to Rome is the last legacy of the Roman colonists who settled in this Augustus Pagus area


Lebanon, a Roman legacy?

When France obtained the territory of actual Lebanon in 1918, some politicians (like George Clemenceau) at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference argued that it was possible to create a christian nation in the Middle East.

Indeed the french authorities promoted the development of the Maronites (a christian group that since the sixth century populated the Mount Lebanon area) as a leading group of the Lebanon nation with capital Beirut (the former roman Berytus).

Inside the borders of this new nation many christians from Syria and Iraq took refuge after WW1 and Lebanon in the 1920s was a country were christians were half of the population. The region of Mount Lebanon between Beirut and Tripoli was nearly all maronite populated. Lebanon in the 1930s looked a bit like a piece of southern Europe in the Middle East, according to many journalists and writers.

But after WW2 Lebanon has suffered a terrible civil war and now the Christians are a minority (even if huge) in the country. However it is noteworthy to pinpoint that without the Roman colonization probably the Maronites would have not settled in mount Lebanon and now Lebanon would not be the only partially christian country in the Middle East. Because of this, it is possible to think that Lebanon is -at least in a minimal way- a Roman legacy.

Sunday, July 4, 2021

ITALIAN TROOPS IN 1917 PALESTINE & JERUSALEM

ITALIAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCE IN 1917 PALESTINE, SINAI & JERUSALEM

British historians usually write that Jerusalem was conquered during WW1 by British forces, but they often "forget" to remember that Great Britain received help from some military units of France and Italy. Of course this help -from the military point of view- was secundary and of little importance in the 1917 conquest, but it is worth to be remembered.

After 673 years the city "holy" to 3 religion followers (Christians, Jews and Moslems) returned to Christian rule in 1917 (and remained for 30 years under British control, until 1948).

The Italian government sent -in June 1917- the "Corpo di Spedizione Italiano in Palestina e Sinai" (Italian Expeditionary Force in Palestine and Sinai) to the area, where he fought for the conquest of Jerusalem from summer 1917 (and remained there until 1919; but some units left Palestine in 1921). It was initially made by nearly four hundred "Bersaglieri" and one hundred "Carabinieri" with their officials. They were under the orders of lieutenant colonel Francesco D'Agostino (http://www.tuttostoria.net/storia-contemporanea.aspx?code=329).



On November 7, 1917, General Allenby ordered the offensive on Gaza. A company of the Italian Detachment also took part in the "Third Battle of Gaza" framed in the "XX Composite Force" together with the Imperial Service Cavalry, the 20th Indian Infantry Brigade and six companies of the French contingent. The Italians valiantly defended the salient of Khan Yunis. The Turkish-German forces broke up, withdrew hastily, leaving Jerusalem to the Allies.

On December 6, a unit made up of twenty-five Bersaglieri, twenty-five Carabinieri and the two respective officers left for the Holy City, where Allenby dismounted from his horse out of respect for the place and entered on foot on the morning of 11 December accompanied by the Bersaglieri commander D'Agostino (in the meantime promoted to lieutenant colonel) and by the French counterpart De Piépape. In the holy city the royal Carabinieri were employed in the military police and guard services and the Bersaglieri controlled the railway Jerusalem-Giaffa until 1919.

Indeed in the famous photo of the general Edmund Allenby entering on foot inside Jeruralem on December 11, 1917 (see the following "Illustration" magazine first page), it is possible to see that he was followed by the French (colonel De Piepape) and Italian (lieutenat-colonel D'Agostino, with the typical bersaglieri hat) officials, representing all the troops that conquered the "holy" city.

Allenby later declared that:
....I entered the city (of Jerusalem) officially at noon, 11 December, with a few of my staff, the commanders of the French and Italian detachments, the heads of the political missions, and the Military Attaches of France, Italy, and America... The procession was all afoot, and at Jaffa gate I was received by the guards representing England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Australia, New Zealand, India, France and Italy. The population received me well...


All the Italian troops in Palestine and Egypt, located in Port Said, Jaffa and Sarona, were under the orders of colonel Pesenti since summer 1918: they returned to Italy in August 1919 after the end of WW1.

In Palestine remained only a nucleus of Carabinieri on foot that took the name of "Italian Carabinieri detachment of Jerusalem", which from August 1919 to February 1921 carried out military police services, on guard at the Italian consulate, on guard of honor at the Holy Sepulcher and did courier activity between Egypt, Palestine and Syria.

On March first, 1921 the unit was repatriated and dissolved, ending five years of Italian troops presence in Palestine and Jerusalem.

Photo showing the Italian D'Agostino standing to the left of Allenby, when entered in Jerusalem


Finally, I want to add the translation of excerpts from an interesting article in italian, written by Benjamin Kedar and titled "Il distaccamento italiano in Palestina (1917-1919)" (if interested, read the full article at page 137 of the italian website http://www.societaitalianastoriamilitare.org/quaderni/Italy%20on%20the%20Rimland%20%20TOMO%20II.pdf):

THE ITALIAN DETACHMENT IN PALESTINE (1917-1919)

At noon on 11 December 1917, two days after the surrender of Jerusalem, General Sir Edmund Allenby officially entered the city going through the Jaffa Gate. «A representation of the troops in Palestine was lined up next to the Gate ”, this is what British official history reports on the First World War in Egypt and Palestine. "Out of the Porta were lined up on the right 50 guards of honor of the various English corps and on the left another 50 Australians and New Zealanders; inside 20 French on the right and 20 Italians on the left. All lined up, both inside and outside the door, facing each other the others ». As is well known, out of respect Allenby walked through the Gate on foot, side by side by the commanders of the French and Italian contingents, on the right Colonel Léonce Philpin de Piépape and on the left lieutenant colonel Francesco D'Agostino. Having gone up to the Citadel, the general took from his pocket the proclamation that had been telegraphed to him by his government and read it first in English, and then in French, Arabic, Hebrew, Greek, Russian and Italian.

Who were these Italian soldiers who are designated in the British Brief Record as "Italian detachment in Palestine"? Why were they there?

The Italian participation in the Allied operations in the Middle East arose from the reaction of the Italian Foreign Minister Sidney Sonnino against the exclusion of Italy from the expedition to Palestine decided by the Allies (in view of the division of the Middle East between France and Great Britain, secretly decided ten months earlier by Sykes and Picot).

On April 4, 1917 the British Foreign Office accepted the offer of an Italian contingent, presented on March 17 by the italian ambassador in London, Imperiali, but on the condition that the participation was purely symbolic and in the order of a few hundred men.

As wrote in 1932 Gustavo Pesenti, second and last commander of the Italian troops in Palestine, in March 1917 Italy had set up an expeditionary force in Libya of considerable size, with 6 battalions between national and indigenous & auxiliary troops under construction in Italy, including 5 SAM L-S2 aircraft of the 118th squadron. However, the contingent that landed in Port Said on May 19 under the command of D'Agostino counted only 352 bersaglieri (11 officers) with 46 quadrupeds coming from Tripoli and 100 carabinieri from Napoli.

After a few weeks of machine-gun & shooting training, on June 13 the detachment was transferred to Rafah, then as now on the border between Egypt and Palestine, to check the railroad towards Dayr al Balah. The trenches dug in the sand did not allow adequate defense to them and furthermore were also infested - as Pesenti wrote- with "indiscreet animals". Many soldiers fell ill: in July the daily average of patients was 2.5%; in August the proportions increased 8%, and 25 soldiers were sent back to Italy.

In early September - when Allenby was preparing for the "Third Battle of Gaza", which paved the way for the occupation of Jaffa and Jerusalem - the Italian detachment and six French units were framed in the XX Composite Force (under general Watson orders) along with an Indian brigade and a West Indian battalion: they were about 3,000 men from three continents.

According to Pesenti, the French contingent was not involved in any combat: this was due to the refusal of the French commander to be placed alongside Indian troops; the British command therefore considered withdrawing the Italian troops as well, but that did not happen because Watson, enthusiastic about the Bersaglieri, made his superiors change their opinion.



At the start of the Third Battle of Gaza (31 October) the Composite Force was deployed to the right of the XXI British Corps, connecting it with the XX Corps advancing on Beersheba. On the evening of the 31st Beersheba fell. On November 6, when the British advanced north of Beersheba, the Composite Force was in the same position facing the Turkish entrenched line of Atawine.

Then on November 7, the 21st Corps took Gaza and moved north of the area where it is today located the city of Ashdod. According to the aforementioned Brief Record on November 8 and in the following days the Composite Force participated in the taking of positions in Atawine and in the advance north of Gaza. The Italians successfully defended the salient of Khan Yunis from a counterattack.

On December 7, 25 Bersaglieri and 25 Carabinieri left for Jerusalem and four days later, as we have read, they participated at Allenby’s official entrance. Subsequently Italians, English and French provided the guard to the "Church of the Holy Sepulcher". In mid-December the Italian detachment was in Bayt Hanun, north of Gaza.

Meanwhile, Italian citizens residing in Egypt, in particular in Alexandria, had been called up to form a special company of "Palestine Hunters" ('Cacciatori di Palestina') that was created on December 10, 1917 in Port Said with 140 soldiers and 5 officers (including the commander, captain of the Bersaglieri Felice Mercuri). Later, on May 23, 1918 a platoon of 4 non-commissioned officers and 26 Carabinieri arrived from Napoli.

Additionally, from February 26, 1918 the Italian Expeditionary Force -now made of nearly one thousand soldiers with their officials- was also stationed at "Junction Station" (Wadi Sarar/Nahal Soreq station, in the Jaffa-Jerusalem railway) and carried out control tasks and surveillance in Jaffa and other nearby territories.

In July 1918, Allenby received the order of sending 2 of his divisions to France: he requested to replace them with Italians. Italian Prime Minister Sonnino was in favor, but Cadorna's successor, general Armando Diaz, declared that he could grant a maximum of 2 battalions and so the president of the Italian Council (Orlando) rejected the British request. Instead of two Italian divisions, to Allenby arrived two Indian divisions.

Therefore, it happened that in late 1918, when Allenby was about to launch the decisive offensive that led to the conquest of northern Palestine and Syria, the Italian detachment was left behind as part of the reserve: the Bersaglieri in Jaffa, most of the Carabinieri and "Cacciatori" in Lydda, and a platoon of Carabinieri in Jerusalem. Only Pesenti and the Italian military attaché, Major Balbo Bertone of Sambuy, were authorized to accompany Allenby on the fast advance on Damascus and Aleppo.


Sunday, June 6, 2021

ITALIAN EXPANSIONIST AIMS IN LATE XIX CENTURY (IN BALKANS & POSSIBLE COLONIES)

Italy had just unified in 1861 when the first expansionist aims of the "Kingdom of Italy" began (for detailed info read also: https://issuu.com/rivista.militare1/docs/somalia-vol-i-testo). Some were in the Balkans: in fact initially they looked to Tunisia as an emigration outlet and to East Africa for possible colonies, but over the years, in a limited space of time in the late nineteenth century, the Italian expansionist aims were also addressed to the Balkans.

This is demonstrated by the study that Major Osio and the commander of Italian Marina V. Aminjon prepared in relation to the eventuality of military operations in Albania, against Epirus. the study - according to the "ARCHIVIO DELL'UFFICIO STORICO DELLO STATO MAGGIORE ESERCITO" (AUSSME) - was made in 1876. It envisaged the occupation of the island of Corfu as an operational base to control the region and also to eradicate smuggling in the Adriatic.



The historian Federico Imperato wrote that:

"....The apex of these ambitions of expansion in the southern Adriatic came with the maritime military mission on the Epirot and Albanian coasts, which took place in the summer of 1876 and involved contingents of the Navy and the Army, under the leadership of the vessel captain Vittorio Arminjon and Major Osio.

The report of the mission identified in Preveza, Valona, Durres and Corfu 'the positions that would best correspond to the needs of Italian politics and to those of our future military and commercial greatness'.

In particular, Corfu was considered undoubtedly the key to the Adriatic.

'And to obtain its possession it was necessary to organize an expeditionary force, the preparation of which would have involved the militarization of several bases in the southern Adriatic, the Ionian and even in the Tyrrhenian'......".

Full text of the Report of the Mission of Arminjon and Osio, dated Brindisi/September 8, 1876:

'....... The port that from its very position would be indicated as the starting point of the expedition is undoubtedly Brindisi; but, both to correct the railway concentration of troops, and to facilitate boarding operations, and finally to make secrecy possible, it will perhaps be convenient to establish several starting points, choosing them in the arsenals and in the main ports of commerce, both in the Adriatic that in the Tyrrhenian Sea, and to combine things so that the different transport ships and the battle fleet could be at a fixed day and time at a given meeting point ....... '

The strategic plan underlying the Arminjon and Osio relationship envisaged Italian dominion over the Adriatic thanks to the control that the Navy would have held on the Albanian coast, from Preveza to Durres, to the conquest of the other hinge of the Adriatic port, Valona, which would have allowed the he extension of a full influence on the Otranto channel and the possession of the island of Corfu, is seen as the great naval base to be integrated in Taranto. On the part of the Government of Rome, however, the idea underlying the geographic-political-military concept contained in the report by Arminjon and Osio aroused negligible interest".

This study - it should be noted - was very important when in 1914 the Italian troops occupied southern Albania during the First World War (see map above).

Also in 1884, the cap. Alfonso Carini compiled "Monographic notes on Salonicco" for AUSSME: the documents contain hypotheses on the possibility of landing and military operations.

And from 1879 to 1885 a series of data relating to the political and military situation in Romania were collected by the aforementioned Office of the General Staff, which suggest hypotheses of military interventions.

A whole series of reports and studies followed, compiled by Italian military officers and attachés residing in these countries.

Obviously this was in function of occupying the Balkan territories of the Ottoman Empire, in deep crisis in the second half of the nineteenth century. In fact, in 1878 the Russo-Turkish war ended with a crushing defeat of the Ottoman Empire. As a result, Ottoman possessions in Europe shrunk drastically: Bulgaria became an independent principality within the empire; Romania achieved full independence; Serbia and Montenegro also gained independence, but with smaller territories. In the same year, the Austro-Hungarian Empire unilaterally occupied the Ottoman provinces of Bosnia-Herzegovina and Novi Pazar. Consequentements The young Kingdom of Italy saw the possibility of annexing Balkan territories, especially in Albania.

However these three studies (in Albania, in the Greek part of the so-called European Turkey and in Romania) were complemented by a whole series of studies on possible Italian interventions in colonial areas.

In fact, post-unification Italy was undoubtedly, for decades, committed to solving the many and serious internal problems linked to the process of unification. However, there was no lack of consistent pushes for the definition of a concrete colonial policy. This observation arises from the consultation of a series of documents (we repeat) kept in the Archives of the Historical Office of the Army General Staff.

The documents were of a different nature, and were part of different correspondence. But, extrapolated and read together, they give the clear sensation of how a colonial will - slow, gradual and constant over time - has established itself in Italy even before Assab and Massawa in Eritrea.

In continuation we will focus mainly on some documents up to the early 1880s and on the operational plans compiled by the military authority for the planned Tunis expedition (1864). For two reasons: for the interesting considerations contained therein and because, being operational plans, they are the final result of a political idea that was about to be translated into action.

First studies. Sixties, seventies and eighties of the nineteenth century. Studies, memons, political missions

The documents derll'AUSSME relating to Italian expansionism and colonialism of these years denote a marked and lively policy in this sense. Here are the main ones:

1) - 1864. Planned expedition of Tunis (read in detail below);

2) - 1867. Proposed occupation of Djerba (read in detail below);

3) - 1869. Attempts in New Guinea / Polynesia (read in detail below);

4) - 1875. Mission in Morocco (read in detail below);

5) - starting from 1880 the ten. Ettore Vespignani, the cap. Francesco Roberti, the ten. Carlo Borsarelli di Rifreddo resumed and collected in studies many reports of journeys made in Africa by explorers, civilians, military, published and not. Particularly interesting are the studies collected by Vespignani and relating to itineraries followed by the captains of the general staff Ferret and Galimier in Abyssinia in the distant 1840-1841-1842;

6) - in 1882 the cap. Camillo Crema was sent on a mission, still in Morocco, and brought back a diary full of information, descriptions and drawings. On the basis of the hot notes, he prepared a report on the political-military situation of the North African country;

7) - in the first months of 1884 a report on the political-military situation of Sudan was prepared, coinciding with the events that occurred in that country. It was useful when Italian troops occupied Kassala some years later (read https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kassala)

1864. Planned expedition of Tunis

It is known that the increase in taxes caused a revolt in Tunis in June 1864. The presence in the city of a large Italian colony and the initial acquiescence of France, which saw in the Tunis question the strengthening of a military alliance with Italy, offered the government the pretext to prepare an expeditionary force.

The Minister of War, Alessandro Della Rovere, instructed the Corps of Staff to study the expedition in detail. At the same time he sent Maj. Agostino Ricci, the cap. Timoteo Bettola, the cap. Antonio Milani and the 2nd class commissioner of war Luigi Bosio, with the task of preparing the future landing of the troops on the spot.

Gen. Ambrogio Longoni, as chief of staff the cap. Stanislao Mocenni. Organic units were chosen to compose the corps: the 49th and 67th infantry, the 9th bersaglieri battalion, a battery of the 5th artillery and a company of the 1st genius. The services of the train, ambulance, hospitals, and subsistence, post office and administration, the military court and the Carabinieri were established.

The col. Corrado Politi, who had previously stayed in Tunis, was commissioned to write an operational memo for the landing. For his past experiences in Algeria, Count Sanvitale was asked for information on customs and traditions.

The troops were alerted and kept ready to leave for an unknown destination; means of transport for the troops, provisions and materials were prepared. The names of Italian citizens residing in Tunis were provided, who could act as guides and interpreters, and topographic maps were procured and prepared to recognize the terrain.

It was also foreseen that, after the landing, two squadrons of cavalry, suitably equipped and armed in relation to the climate of the country, would reach the Expeditionary Corps.

The health council compiled a special "instruction for the hygiene of the troops." A curiosity about hygiene and uniforms: to avoid the inconveniences caused by excessive heat, it was agreed to give the troops an ordinary gray hat, soft and with a wide brim, and they ordered its manufacture. In practice, a type of hat that anticipates that of the Alpine.

On June 13, Maj. Ricci, having arrived in Tunis, began to send reports and memoirs for the occupation, while orders and requests were received from the Ministry of War on particular questions. Particularly interesting is a memoir by Ricci sent on 20 June from Tunis. The officer set two conditions for the success of the expedition:

- first condition, a political agreement with the other European powers, or at least a precise agreement with France, to avoid international complications;

- second condition, a direct agreement with the Bey of Tunis, who would have had to accept or request the intervention himself, otherwise the expeditionary force, as it was composed, would not have been sufficient to guarantee the success of the expedition , because inevitably the troops would have found themselves facing an Arab revolt.

It is above all this constant concern for the attitude of the Arabs - too often underestimated by the political side - that makes the annotation far-sighted, for the confirmation it will find in all future interventions.

There is no trace in the correspondence of subsequent provisions to Ricci's observations; on the contrary, on 17 August he was invited to introduce himself to the Bey in a strictly private way, as an Italian officer traveling on his own account: nothing of his mission was to leak out.

In the latest documents, as of August 24, the story ends: a letter to Ricci was stopped with a request for information, and the officer was ordered to return to Turin with the other members of the mission; which they all did on August 30th.

1867. Proposed occupation of the island of Djerba (southern Tunisia)

The consul general of Italy in Tunis, Luigi Penna, on 15 January 1867 suggested to the foreign minister Emilio Visconti Venosta to occupy the island of Djerba (in Arabic: Djerba). He gave news in correspondence of the scarce forces garrisoning the island, of the activities taking place and estimated that 1,500 men with three 2nd order "woods" would be sufficient to guarantee the success of the operation.

This operation was no longer carried out, nor is there any trace in the AUSSME documentation of the reasons that led to the project being neglected. Possibly the proposal was related to the attempt to occupy Tunis a few years earlier.

1869. Mission to Polynesia / Indonesia (New Guinea)

The expansionist interests gradually moved to the most distant continents. Mr. Emilio Cerruti, in 1869, entered into a secret agreement with the government in view of his trip to Polynesia and Indonesia. He was entrusted with the task of finding an island for the establishment of an Italian colony. Cerruti identified New Guinea as the ideal place.

In italian wikipeda we have about Cerruti travels: Nel 1869 e nel 1870 l'esploratore Giovanni Battista Cerruti si recò nella Nuova Guinea e nelle isole limitrofe (Kai, Aru e Balscicu). Ottenne degli ottimi risultati nei dialoghi con gli autoctoni, i sultani di quelle terre infatti avevano firmato dei trattati con cui cedevano i loro territori al Regno d'Italia. "La sovranità" su queste zone durò fino al 1883 quando venne chiesto al Regno Unito se accettasse la possibilità italiana di insediarsi in Nuova Guinea, alla risposta negativa il governo italiano rinunciò a ogni ulteriore colonizzazione dell'Asia Meridionale[1]. Nel 1883 il governo italiano chiese a quello britannico per via diplomatica se avesse accettato che la Nuova Guinea potesse diventare una colonia italiana: al rifiuto britannico l'Italia abbandonò ogni tentativo di colonizzazione nel Pacifico asiatico.

An engineer was also designated who was to assist him in the task, the cap. Giuseppe Di Lenna. Apparent misunderstandings between the Departments of War, Foreign Affairs and the Navy sent the enterprise upside down: the weapons and ammunition (10 rifles and 2,000 cartridges) promised to Cerruti were no longer given to him.

Cerruti promoted for a long time and with tenacity - but without results - the creation of a penal colony in New Guinea: still before the Commission of Inquiry for the Merchant Navy (1881-1883), Cerruti advocated the cause of the colonies to be founded by Italy in New Guinea and Polynesia. But all was in vain: he failed to convince his many opponents, who reproached him above all for the recklessness of judgments and for not taking any account of the inevitable international difficulties (for more information read my essay on this attempt https://researchomnia.blogspot.com/2014/08/la-tentata-colonia-italiana-nella-nuova.html).

1875. Mission in Morocco of the cap. Giulio Di Boccard

The chap. Giulio Di Boccard, on 6 March, embarked on the steamer "Doria" for a mission to Morocco. The purpose of the mission was to "gather information and collect data reflecting geography, topographical structure, statistics and the political and military situation", as he himself noted in the report. All useful elements to prepare an invasion plan.

After a wait of 48 days - the sultan, to whom he had to present himself, was busy receiving a similar English mission - he made excursions to Angera (Aniera), to the island of Pereghil (Perejil), at the head of Spartel (Sbartel) and a trip to Fez, where he also made the first panoramic photograph of the city (hitherto unpublished and unknown).

Sunday, May 2, 2021

ROMANS IN YEMEN/ADEN

Romans invaded the southwestern area of the Arabian peninsula and also had a "Client State" in this region, the "Hymiar kingdom", for a few centuries when they developed their huge commerce with India & Ceilon. Romans also occupied with their legionaries the Farasan islands, facing actual northern Yemen coast. The following is my research about this roman presence (that has not been well studied by the academics until now).

First of all we must remember the invasion of Arabia made by Aelius Gallus (the prefect of Roman Aegypt) in 25 BC. Then we have to write about the creation in the Farasan islands of a roman outpost around 110 AD and finally we have to study the Trajan conquests in the Red Sea region (with the Hymiar kingdom as a "Roman Client State").

Map showing Trajan achievements in the Red Sea region, with the Himyar kingdom as Roman Client State and the creation of the Farasan island roman outpost around 110 AD


Aelius Gallus expedition

Aelius Gallus was the 2nd ''Praefect'' of Roman Egypt in the reign of Augustus during the years 26-24 BC. His expedition to Arabia Felix, of which an account is given by his friend Strabo (Strabo, xvi. p. 780-783), unfortunately turned out to be a nearly complete failure (read http://rrimedia.org/Resources/Articles/the-romans-explore-western-and-southern-arabia).

During those years, actual Yemen was called "Arabia Felix" by the Romans who were impressed by its wealth and prosperity. Gallus undertook the expedition from Roman Egypt under Augustus, in order to conclude treaties of friendship with the Arabian people or to subdue them if they should oppose the Romans. Indeed, it was believed at the time that Arabia was full of all kinds of treasures: the success of the "Kingdom of Saba" was based on the cultivation and trade of spices and aromatics including frankincense and myrrh.

When Aelius Gallus set out with his army in 26 BC, he trusted to the guidance of a Nabataean called Syllaeus, who deceived and misled him.

A disease among the soldiers (unknown to the Romans) destroyed the greater part of the Roman Army during the initial invasion in northern Arabia. Gallus was forced to wait until next year in order to get his legionaries in healthy conditions. Only in 24 BC the Roman column of more than 10000 legionaries set off again, along the arabian routes to India, forcing the Romans to carry water on camels, due to the guide's lack of knowledge of the places. The journey lasted thirty days, but in the end the territories of the "king of the Tamudenes" were reached, and a certain Areta welcomed the Romans in a friendly way by offering Gallo gifts of welcome.

The next country invaded belonged to nomadic tribes and was totally desert. It was called Ararenê and it took 50 days to cross it, as there were no roads. Gallus then came to the city of Negrani whose territory was peaceful and fertile, and whose king had fled, leaving the city to the Romans.

He reached a river after six days, where the Arabs attacked battle leaving nearly 10,000 dead on the field, against only two dead Romans, not having adequate weapons and not being used to fighting (according to Strabo).

Successively Gallus occupied the Asca city, also abandoned by the king. Then the city Athrula, which surrendered unconditionally, where Gallus set up his own garrison to arrange the supplies of grain. He then arrived in Marsiaba (called also Ma'rib), which he besieged for six days, but had to give up due to lack of water. Gallus was thus forced to stop just two days' walk from the town that produced spices, reached at a high price after six long months of marching in inhospitable territories, mainly due to corrupt guides.

Realizing finally of Silleo's betrayal, he brought the decimated army back to Egypt. A new battle took place in Negrani. Then he reached Hepta Phreatae, which owned seven wells. From here, marching through a peaceful country, Gallus came to the village of Chaalla, and again to another village called Malotha, near a river. He crossed a deserted country with few irrigated places, to the Egra village on the sea. Strabo wrote that it took sixty days to return, against the six months of the first leg to reach Marsiaba.

Here he prepared a new fleet and crossed the Red Sea reaching Myoshormos, Coptos, and finally Alexandria in Egypt, where Silleo was tried and beheaded. Thus ended the bitter Roman adventure in the Arabian peninsula, after reaching Yemen.

Indeed the Arabs were not only not subdued, but Aelius Gallus, after having spent more than six months on his march into the country on account of his treacherous guide, was able to siege Ma'rib (the capital of the "Kingdom of Saba") for just a week. Meanwhile his Roman fleet occupied and destroyed the port of Eudaemon (actual Aden) in order to guarantee the Roman merchant route to India. He was then forced to do a retreat in sixty days, obliged to return to Alexandria of Egypt having lost the greater part of his force.

The famous historian Theodore Mommsen wrote that Aelius Gallus sailed with 10,000 legionaries from Egypt and landed at Leuce Kome, a trading port of the Nabateans in the northwestern Arabian coast. He then conquered without difficulty Iathrib (actual Medina) and the village of Mekke (actual Mecca). From there he made a march of nearly one thousand kms to the south until Marib, but was forced to abandon those conquests -according to Mommsen- not only because of diseases and epidemies, but even because he had overextended his line of supplies from Egypt in a land full of deserts.

However Augustus promoted the commerce toward India and welcomed the destruction of the Aden port by Gallus. Furthermore, he wanted to circumnavigate with his fleet the full Arabian peninsula from the Mesopotamia borders and successively reach the eastern coast of Africa toward Raphta in southern Africa (probably in order to reach the Gibraltar strait and circumnavigate Africa). But the tentative of one of his relatives finished in a sinking disaster near actual Gibuti (ex-French Somalia).

The Farasan roman garrison & castrum

Map showig the Farasan island. In the small rectangle (inset: Wadi Matar) were found 2 Roman tablets in latin language. If interested, read for photos & additional info:https://www.academia.edu/11868779/The_Farasan_Islands_Saudi_Arabia_Towards_a_Chronology_of_Settlement

The Farasan islands history goes back two thousand years. The first historical references are related to the Roman presence in the islands with a garrison and a recently discovered "castrum". The Romans created a local Prefecture under their direct control in order to fight the pirates, who attacked their merchant ships doing commerce travels from Roman Egypt and the south-eastern Mediterranean region in their commerce travels to India.

The islands were only 60 miles from the main Saba port of Muza in the western Arabia peninsula and 120 miles from the important Ethiopian port of Adulis on the western shore of the Red Sea. It was also not too far from the rich pearl fisheries in the Strait of Bab-el-Mandeb at the southern entrance of the Red Sea. The garrison, along with elements of the Roman fleet, could have helped suppress pirates and protect the nearby ports, pearl fisheries, and Nabataean trading settlements in Somalia, as well as serving as a customs outpost.
''...inscription (of 144 AD) reveals a new phase in the Roman occupation of Farasan, and also attests the existence of a Roman 'Prefecture of the harbour of Farasan and of the Herculian Sea’ :"praef(ectus) Ferresani portus(?) et Pont(i) Herculis". The prefect’s sphere of responsibility thus covered not only the Farasan islands but also an area called the Herculian Sea, which, as the editors convincingly maintained, must surely have been a term for the southernmost part of the Red Sea and the straits of Bab el Mandeb.Michael Speidel (M. Speidel, "Heer und Herrschaft im Römischen Reich der Hohen Kaiserzeit", Stuttgart 2009, 633-649)


Michael Speidel wrote in 2012 that there was a Roman garrison (with legionaries from the Legio VI Ferrata) in a "castrum" located in the Farasan main island, with a "Roman Prefect" of the Herculean sea (term related to the Bab el Mandeb strait, similar to the "Hercules strait" as roman called the Gibraltar strait). In his opinion the prefecture (that implied direct roman control) was created when Trajan conquered the Nabatean kingdom in 105 AD and had the responsibility to defend the area of southern Red sea from pirates.

According to Speidel, archeological evidences -2 tablets written in latin language- demonstrate that the Roman garrison remained for sure in the Arabian island at least for nearly half a century (and possibly until Septimius Severian times).

Successively the island remained practically deserted until the XV century, when some fishermen established a small outpost in the island.

Indeed in the Farasan Islands two latin inscriptions were discovered in 2003. The first inscription attests the presence of a vexillatio of the Legio Traiana Fortis, that in 143 AD moved from the roman province of Egypt under the emperor Antoninus Pius. While the second inscription attests the presence of the Legio VI Ferrata in 139 AD, that moved from the roman province of Arabia Petrea under the emperor Hadrian.

The second inscription recently discovered dates to 143-44 AD and was done by garrison commander Castricius Aprinus, described as "Prefect of the Port of Farasan and of the Sea of Hercules" (actual Bab-el-Mandeb). The title indicates the formality of Roman occupation and its wide ranging scope. Aprinus was also from the Roman legion stationed in Egypt.

The Himyar kingdom: a roman Client State

Professor D. Nappo wrote that "...The Roman Empire showed a very distinct interest for the Red Sea area along all its history. This was due to the crucial role played by such region in both military and commercial Roman plans to expand its own influence in the East. The first echo of a military attempt to conquer the north eastern shores of Africa beyond Egypt dates back to the age of Augustus, but it is with Trajan that such project seems to reach a new level of coherence and strategic view. Under the latter, in fact, we have evidence for a climax in the Roman control over the area, which had important consequences on the history of the region for decades ahead....

The annexation (done by Trajan) of the Nabataean Kingdom in 106 AD and its subsequent connection to the Roman road system, the restoration of the canal on the Nile (called "Trajan canal") in 110 AD, and the occupation of the Farasan Islands are not separate actions, but rather distinct components of a larger master plan. All aspects of Trajan’s policy in the East make much more sense when considered from this perspective: tighter control of the two ends of the Red Sea was the best way to secure control of the whole region of the western Arabia peninsula.

Coin of Himyar kingdom showing Roman influence and depicting a likeness of Augustus


It is noteworthy to pinpoint that the Red Sea was a key area in the international trade route between the Roman Empire and the Far East (generally referred to by the Romans as ‘India’).

This commerce was extremely important for the economy of the Roman empire and -in order to defend and promote this trade- Trajan occupied the northern region of western Arabia (recently further evidence has been discovered that Roman legions occupied Mada'in Saleh in the Hijaz Mountains area of northwestern Arabia, increasing the extension of the "Arabia Petraea" province) and promoted the creation of a Roman Client State in the actual Yemen/Aden territory (the Himyar kingdom).

Indeed in AD 106, the Romans conquered the Nabataeans and brought an end to the rule of King Rabel II. Under Roman control, Bostra —Rabel had shifted the Nabataean capital from Petra to Bostra— was renamed "Nea Traiane Bostra", after the emperor, and it was there that the base camp of the Third Cyrenaica Legion was established. For the next five years, Roman legionaries worked to fortify defense boundaries, establish control of the new province, and build the great road from Bostra to Aqaba —the "Via Nova Traiana"— which ran the length of the province. In 111 AD, Rome publicly announced the successful annexation of Roman Arabia and the completion of the great road, and issued Trajanic coinage advertising the annexation. The new province became one of Trajan's legacy in the Middle East.

Trajan also had good relations with the Himyar kingdom, located in the area of actual Yemen/Aden. The famous "Periplus of the Erythraean Sea" describes the close relationship between the king of this southeastern Arabia kingdom (named Charibael) and the Romans in the first century C.E.:

...And after nine days more there is Saphar, the metropolis, in which lives Charibael, lawful king of two tribes, the Homerites and those living next to them, called the Sabaites; through continual embassies and gifts, he is a friend of the (Roman) Emperors.


Charibael is usually identified with Kariba-il Watar Yuhan'im, who ruled Himyar sometime between AD 40 and 70 AD. According to the author of the Periplus, he is said to dwell in Saphar and to maintain friendship with the Roman emperors by means of "continual embassies and gifts"; he is said to exercise control over the towns of "Muza" (Mocha) and "Saua" (Taiz) in "Mapharitis" through a "vassal-chief" named "Cholaebus" (Kula'ib). From the Roman merchants calling at Mocha, he used to require tribute of "horses and sumpter-mules, vessels of gold and polished silver, finely woven clothing and copper vessels". In the Periplus was written that his realm included "Ocelis" at the Bab-el-Mandeb strait and the ruins at "Eudaemon Arabia".

During Trajan’s reign, the Romans established a legionary garrison on Farasan island (called "Portus Ferresanus" in Latin language), in the southern Red Sea off the coast of southern Arabia, possibly to guard the lucrative trade routes passing through the strait of Bab-el-Mandeb. Farasan—conjectured to be the southernmost point of the Roman Empire—may have originally been an outpost of the Nabataean Kingdom and initially administered from the Roman province of Arabia, but by 144 AD it was being governed from Egypt.

Probably the Romans used the garrison on the Farasan island to show support for the Himyar kingdom during Trajan years, against nearby enemies. This help was at the root behind the creation of "client states" by the Romans. How long this station lasted is uncertain from the scant archaeological record, but it was probably abandoned by the end of the Crisis of the Third Century (235–285). At the same time the friendly relations between Rome and the Himyar kingdom finished.

Sometime around 140 AD the old personal union between the Ḥimyarite Kingdom and the Kingdom of Saba seems to have broken, restoring Saba’s independence. Following this, the two kingdoms became increasingly hostile to each other, fighting wars on several occasions over the next 120 years. The breakup of this union may also have ended Roman influence in Ḥimyar, which stopped producing coins depicting the likeness of Augustus by the end of the 2nd century.

Finally it is noteworthy to pinpoint that the Romans -who mastered engineering knowledge for acqueducts- helped the Himyar kingdom to reinforce and maintain the famous "Marib Dam", according to the historian Theodore Mommsen.

Image of how was the original Marib Dam, reconstructed with Roman engineering knowledge


Indeed the dam was under the full control of the Ḥimyarites since Augustus times. They undertook further reconstruction, creating a structure 14 meters high with extensive waterworks at both the northern and southern ends, five spillway channels, two masonry-reinforced sluices, a settling pond, and a 1000-meter canal to a distribution tank. These extensive works seems to have been started at the beginning of the second century (exactly when Trajan ruled the Red Sea, with the "Himyar Kingdom Client State") and were totally finalized only around the end of the Third Century.

The Marib Dam allowed the irrigation of 25,000 acres (100 km2) and it was one of the most wonderful feats of engineering in the ancient world.