Dimitrios Gounaris
Template:Use dmy dates Template:Short description Template:Expand Greek Template:Infobox Prime Minister Dimitrios Gounaris (Template:Langx; 5 January 1867 – 28 November 1922) was a Greek politician who served as the prime minister of Greece from 25 February to 10 August 1915 and 26 March 1921 to 3 May 1922. The leader of the People's Party, he was the main right-wing opponent of his contemporary Eleftherios Venizelos.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":1">Template:Cite book</ref>
Early life
He studied law at Athens University and continued his studies in Germany, France and England,<ref name="NatBio">Template:Cite book</ref> before returning to his native Patras. He was elected deputy for Achaea in 1902 and distinguished himself as an orator and a member of the so-called "Japanese Group"<ref name="NatBio"/> that opposed the Georgios Theotokis government in 1906–1908. Gounaris himself, however, joined the government in 1908 as Finance Minister, hoping to implement a reformist program,<ref name="NatBio"/> thereby causing the dissolution of the group, although he was soon forced to resign.<ref name="Enemy">Template:Cite book</ref> Despite his progressive views (he was an admirer of the Bismarckian German social laws), his conservative political thinking turned him into a leading opponent of Eleftherios Venizelos.<ref name="JSTOR1">Template:Cite journal</ref>
First premiership
He was appointed Prime Minister after Venizelos' first resignation in 1915 by King Constantine I.<ref name="Enemy"/> For his anti-Venizelist, pro-neutrality role he was exiled with other prominent anti-Venizelists to Corsica in 1917 after Venizelos' return to power in Athens.<ref name="Enemy"/> He managed to escape to Sardinia, Italy, in 1918, but was able to return to Greece only in 1920, as to partake in the crucial November elections as the de facto leader of the "United Opposition",<ref name="Migrate">Template:Cite book</ref> amidst the ongoing 1919–1922 Greco-Turkish War.
Second premiership and war against Turkey

After Venizelos' defeat, Gounaris controlled most deputies in the parliament, and was the main driving force of the following royalist governments,<ref name="Migrate"/> but himself only assumed the office of Prime Minister in March 1921. Although he was willing to compromise with the Turks, as he showed in the London talks in early 1921, in order to step up pressure on the Kemalist Turks, he agreed to the launch of the Greek offensive of March 1921. The Greek Army was not prepared, and the attack was repulsed in the Second Battle of İnönü, resulting in the first Greek defeat in the Greco-Turkish War. After the successful Greek advance towards Eskişehir and Afyon in July, he urged the continuation of the advance towards Ankara,<ref name="Migrate"/> which was however stopped in the Battle of Sakarya. After the Greeks retreated to form a new front, he appealed to the Allies, and especially to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, for assistance and mediation.
Although Gounaris threatened the British with unilateral withdrawal, his government maintained the Greek Army's positions, not being able to shoulder the political cost of abandoning Asia Minor and the many Greeks living there to Turkish reprisals. The deepening political crisis caused the fall of Gounaris' government in May 1922, after marginally surviving a vote of confidence, but the predominance of his followers in the National Assembly meant that he only exchanged the post of Prime Minister with that of Justice Minister in the government of Petros Protopapadakis.<ref name="Justice">Template:Cite book</ref>
Trial, execution and legacy
Template:Conservatism in Greece sidebar After the disaster of August 1922 and the rout of the Greeks by Mustafa Kemal's forces, the remnants of the Greek Army revolted in September, and the government was deposed. The predominantly Venizelist rebels, under the leadership of Colonel Nikolaos Plastiras, formed a military tribunal to try those that were considered as responsible for the catastrophe. The so-called "Trial of the Six", convened in November 1922, found the defendants, Gounaris among them, guilty of treason. He was executed along with the others at Goudi on the same day of the verdict, on 28 November.<ref name=":0" /> Although Gounaris undoubtedly bears a measure of responsibility for the military and diplomatic actions that led to the Greek defeat in 1922, his trial and execution are widely perceived<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> to be more an act of scapegoating in order to vent the anger of the people, as well as being mostly motivated by the hatred of the Venizelist faction towards him.<ref name="Death">Template:Cite book</ref> In 2010, the Supreme Court of Greece overturned convictions of Gounaris and other defendants.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Gounaris together with some conservative politicians were the first to propose amendment to the Greek Constitution to allow women's suffrage rights. The amendment ultimately failed to pass.<ref name=":1" /> Gounaris was the uncle of Panagiotis Kanellopoulos.<ref name="Nephew">Template:Cite book</ref>
See also
References
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- 1867 births
- 1922 deaths
- 20th-century prime ministers of Greece
- MPs of Patras
- National and Kapodistrian University of Athens alumni
- 19th-century Greek lawyers
- People's Party (Greece) politicians
- Ministers of military affairs of Greece
- Greek exiles
- Greek monarchists
- Conservatism in Greece
- Greek people of the Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922)
- People executed for treason against Greece
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