Michail Grigoriadis | |
---|---|
Prince of Samos | |
In office 1900–1902 | |
Preceded by | Konstantinos Vagianis |
Succeeded by | Alexandros Mavrogenis |
Personal details | |
Born | 1841 |
Michail Grigoriadis was the Ottoman-appointed Prince of Samos from 1900 to 1902. [1] [2]
An incompetent prince,he achieved very little during his reign and was dismissed by the Ottoman Sultan after a reign of only two years.
The House of Callimachi,Calimachi,or Kallimachi,was a Phanariote family of mixed Moldavian (Romanian) and Greek origins,whose members occupied many important positions in Moldavia,Romania and the Ottoman Empire.
Samos is a Greek island in the eastern Aegean Sea,south of Chios,north of Patmos and the Dodecanese,and off the coast of western Turkey,from which it is separated by the 1.6-kilometre-wide (1.0 mi) Mycale Strait. It is also a separate regional unit of the North Aegean region.
Alexandru Callimachi or Alexandros Kallimachis,son of Scarlat Callimachi,fled Moldavia with his mother and other members of his family in 1821,at the time of his father's death. The family sought refuge in Russia,where Alexander finished his studies,at the University of Kyiv. After traveling through Europe,he made his way to the Ottoman Empire in 1829,where his family possessions and titles were restored to him.
The Battle of Samos was a naval battle fought on August 5–17,1824 off the Greek island of Samos during the Greek War of Independence.
The Principality of Samos was an autonomous tributary state of the Ottoman Empire from 1834 to 1912. The island of Samos participated in the Greek War of Independence and had successfully resisted several Turkish and Egyptian attempts to occupy it,but it was not included with the boundaries of the newly independent Kingdom of Greece after 1832. Instead,in 1834 the island was granted self-government as a semi-independent state.
The Military-Political System of Samos was a provisional regime that existed in the island of Samos during the Greek War of Independence.
Miltiadis Stavraki Aristarchis was the Ottoman-appointed Prince of Samos from 1859 to 1866.
George Berovich,known as Berovich Pasha was a Christian Ottoman statesman who served as Governor-General (wāli) of Crete and Prince of Samos.
Pavlos Mousouros was the Ottoman-appointed Prince of Samos from 1866 to 1873.
Stephanos Mousouros (1841–1906) was an Ottoman Greek diplomatic official of the Ottoman Empire,who served as ambassador to Italy and the United Kingdom,and was the Ottoman-appointed Prince of Samos from 1896 to 1899.
Konstantinos Karatheodoris (1841–1922) was an Ottoman Greek statesman,who was a member of the distinguished Phanariote Karatheodori family. He served as the Ottoman-appointed Prince of Samos from 1906 to 1907. He was the younger brother of the diplomat and statesman Alexander Karatheodori Pasha,who also served as Prince of Samos from 1885 to 1895.
Andreas Kopasis was the Ottoman-appointed Prince of Samos from 1908 to 1912. His tenure was widely regarded as pro-Turkish and tyrannical. His bringing in of additional Ottoman troops in 1908 caused a revolt to break out among the Samians,which was quelled brutally by further Ottoman reinforcements. The leaders of the pro-Greek opposition,including Themistoklis Sophoulis,fled the island for Greece. Kopasis was assassinated by a pro-Sophoulis agent on 22 March 1912.
Georgios Georgiadis was the Ottoman-appointed Prince of Samos who reigned briefly from 1907 to 1908.
Konstantinos Vagianis or Kostaki Vayanis Éfendi was a Prince of Samos between March 7,1899,and 1900. He succeeded Stephanos Mousouros and was in turn succeeded by Michail Grigoriadis on August 16,1900.
Yanko (Ioannis) Vithynos was an Ottoman Greek statesman,who was the Ottoman-appointed Prince of Samos from 1904 to 1906.
Konstantinos Adosidis (1818–1895) was the Ottoman-appointed Prince of Samos from 1873 to 1874,and again from 1879 to 1885.
Konstantinos Photiadis was the Ottoman-appointed Prince of Samos from 1874 to 1879.
Alexandros Mavrogenis Bey was the Ottoman-appointed Prince of Samos from 1902 to 1904.
Georgios Georgiadis may refer to:
Athanasios Stavroudis was a Greek chieftain of the Macedonian Struggle,soldier of the Balkan Wars and spy of the French army during the First World War.