Dimitrios Varis
Dimitrios Varis (Greek: Δημήτριος Βάρης, -1821) was a Greek revolutionary and member of the Filiki Eteria.
Biography
He was born in Sozopol in the late 19th century. During the Constantinople massacre of 1821, he with his brother, metropolitan of Sozopol Paisios Prikaios, organised a revolt and cooperating with the Bulgarian voivode Antonov they managed to concentrate some thousands participants.[1][2] The revolt, which took place in April 1821 failed, as the battles against the Ottomans between Ahtopol and Sozopol were unsuccessful,[2] resulting in Varis getting killed in action and the massacre of some inhabitants of the region, including the Greek kodjabashi Chatzi-Aslanis and the priest Antonakis Skouloglou.[3]
gollark: Random hardware initialization and detection, probably busy loops to spite you, sort of thing.
gollark: Due to different design constraints, fewer peripherals, and less overhead I guess.
gollark: Yes, exactly, they're typically much much faster.
gollark: Perhaps "serious" computer systems on hardware when they were made never booted that quickly, but special-purpose devices easily take less than 5 seconds for bootup.
gollark: Don't?
References
- Avramea, Anna (1994). Thrace. Idea Advertising-Marketing SA. p. 220. ISBN 9608560918.
- Mavrovitis, Jason (2017). Out of the Balkans. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-365-89016-1.
- Avramea, Anna (1993). Thrakika: syggramma periodikon ekdidomenon hypo tou en Athēnais "Thrakikou Kentrou" kai tēs "Hetairias Thrakikōn Meletōn. To Kentro. p. 70.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.