The
Trial of the Six ( ,
Díkē tōn Éx) was
the trial for
high treason, in late
1922, of the officials held responsible for the
Greek military defeat in
Asia Minor. The trial culminated in the death sentence and
execution of six of the nine defendants.
Background
(
See also: 1922 in
Greece)
On September 9,
1922, Turkish military and guerilla forces
entered the city of Smyrna
in Asia Minor
, which was previously mandated to
Greece
by the Treaty of
Sevres. The retreating Greek "Army of the East" and
hundreds of thousands of Greek residents of Asia Minor had fled to
Smyrna seeking transportation across the sea in order to flee.
However, transportation arrived late and in too small numbers
relative to the number of people trying to flee, resulting in
chaos and violent loss of life
by the Greek refugees. The military loss of the Asia Minor land
mandate by Greece to Turkey and the chaotic and bloody evacuation
of Greeks previously living in the area, who spent the rest of
their lives as refugees, is known as the "
Asia Minor Catastrophe" (
Greek: Μικρασιατική Καταστροφή,
Mikrasiatikē Katastrophē).
Coup
During this time a
coup d'état
unfolded in Athens and the Aegean Islands, partly as an angry civil
response to the defeat in the fields of battle. On September 11,
1922, Colonels
Nikolaos Plastiras
and
Stylianos Gonatas formed a
"Revolutionary Commitee" that demanded the abdication of the
King, the resignation of the
Royalist government, and the punishment of those responsible for
the military disaster. The coup was aided by
venizelist General
Theodoros Pangalos, then
stationed in Athens.
Backed by massive demonstrations in the
capital, the coup was successful: two days later, when Plastiras
and Gonatas disembarked in the port of Laurium
with the
military units they commanded, King Constantine abdicated in favour
of his first-born son, George,
and sailed for Sicily, never to return; the
government ministers were arrested and the new king consented to a
new administration, one favorable to the coup.
Trial
On October 12, 1922, the junta constituted an "extraordinary
military tribunal", which convened
on October 31 and carried out a two-week-long trial, in which the
five senior-most members of the overthrown administration
(
Dimitrios
Gounaris,
George Baltatzis,
Nikolaos Stratos,
Nikolaos Theotokis, and
Petros Protopapadakis) and
General
Georgios
Hatzianestis (last commander-in-chief of the Asia
Minor campaign) were tried for
high
treason, convicted, and sentenced to death. They were executed
a few hours after the verdict was handed, and before its
publication, on 15 November 1922. Two defendants, Admiral Michael
Goudas and General Xenophon Stratigos, received a life imprisonment
sentence.
Τhe ex-king's brother, Prince Andrew, also a
senior commanding officer in the failed campaign, had been indicted
as well but was in Corfu
at the
time. He was arrested, transported to Athens, tried by the
same tribunal a few days later, and found guilty of the same
crimes, but was recognised as being "completely lacking in military
command experience", a mitigating if ironic circumstance. He was
sentenced to banishment from Greece for life.
The prince and his
family (which included his infant son Prince Philip, later the Duke
of Edinburgh) were evacuated on a British warship
on December 4, leaving Corfu
island for
Brindisi
.
Aftermath
European states strongly objected to the executions; in response
the United Kingdom withdrew its ambassador to Greece for some
time.