GCM Seminar: Cyprus and 1821 – Myths, Realities, Forgetting and Remembering

·

Associate Professor Andrekos Varnava, will give the online lecture Cyprus and 1821: Myths, Realities, Forgetting and Remembering, on Thursday 24 June, 7.00pm, as part of the Greek History and Culture Seminars, offered by the Greek Community of Melbourne.

The events of 1821 and of the entire Greek War of Independence hold a very important place in the script of the imagined Greek nation in Cyprus and for Greek Cypriot nationalism. This revolves around the execution of 400 leading Cypriots in 1821 and a failed uprising in Cyprus, as well as the contribution of Cypriots to the war on the mainland.

This chapter has two aims: first to revisit the Greek Revolution in relation to Cyprus, in so doing showing how nationalist narratives have come to obscure the realities of the impact of the revolution on Cyprus and the role of the island and its people; and secondly, to explore the impact of the Greek Revolution on Cypriot society and politics since then, including in the formation of EOKA in the 1950s, and the history of its commemoration, as well as its place in the Education system.

Associate Professor Andrekos Varnava, FRHistS, was born (1979) and raised in Melbourne to Cypriot-born parents, obtained his BA(Honours) from Monash University (2001) and his PhD (2006) from the University of Melbourne. He is the author of four monographs since 2009: Assassination in Colonial Cyprus in 1934 and the Origins of EOKA (Anthem Press, ppk.2021); British Cyprus and the Long Great War, 1914-1925: Empire, Loyalties and Democratic Deficit (Routledge, 2020); Serving the Empire in the Great War: The Cypriot Mule Corps, Imperial Loyalty and Silenced Memory (ManU Press, 2017; ppk.2019) and British Imperialism in Cyprus, 1878-1915: The Inconsequential Possession (ManU Press, 2009; ppk.2012).

He has published over 50 articles/book chapters, including in English Historical Review (2017), The Historical Journal (2014), Journal of Modern History (2018), Historical Research (2014 & 2017), Contemporary British History (2019), Social History of Medicine (2020), Journal of Modern Greek Studies (2020) and International History Review (2021).

When: Thursday 24 June 2021, 7pm

Where: Online licture through Zoom, YouTube Live, Facebook Live.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Cyprus Community of NSW begin Expression of Interest process for sale of Stanmore properties

Cyprus Community of NSW have begun the Expression of Interest process for the sale of properties it owns behind The Cyprus Club at Stanmore.

NSW Governor Margaret Beazley presented with Order of the Philochrist

NSW Governor Margaret Beazley was presented with the Order of the Philochrist by Archbishop Makarios of Australia on Sunday, May 5.

Council on the Ageing Victoria’s CEO Chris Potaris steps down

Council on the Ageing (COTA) Victoria and Seniors Rights Victoria CEO, Chris Potaris, has stepped down from the role. Read more here.

Barton Park a hit as St George Saints’ resilience sees past Sydney Olympic

St George Saints defeated former NSL rivals Sydney Olympic 2-1 at the refurbished Barton Park facility on a Saturday evening. 

Ex-West Tigers Chairman Lee Hagipantelis pulls $1 million backing from club

Former Wests Tigers chairman Lee Hagipantelis has terminated his $1 million Brydens Lawyers sponsorship of the NRL club.

You May Also Like

Erdogan wants Turkey’s EU application to be shown ‘same sensitivity’ as Ukraine’s

Erdogan has called on the EU to show the "same sensitivity" for Turkey’s application to join the bloc as it showed for Ukraine’s recent bid.

Spathis Friendship Tours: How Giannis Spathis turned his love of travel into a profession

Greek migrant Giannis Spathis tells The Greek Herald how he turned his love of travelling around Australia into the Spathis Friendship Tours.

Heraklion Archaeological Museum included in the European Cultural Route

The Archaeological Museum of Heraklion on Crete has become the second Greek Museum to be included in the Iter Vitis European Cultural Route.