THE LAST DEFENCE OF HONOUR: THE SOULIOTES AT MISSOLONGHI, TWO CENTURIES ON
Two hundred years after the
Exodus of Missolonghi, the memory of that night persists as more than an
episode of military catastrophe, for it presents itself as a moment in which a
besieged community, reduced by starvation, fractured by internal tension and
abandoned by any realistic expectation of relief, nonetheless asserted a final
and deliberate authorship over its own destruction, thereby transforming what
might otherwise have been remembered as collapse into an act subsequently
interpreted as moral and political self-determination. Within that charged and
unstable theatre, the Souliotes emerge as a distinct moral and political force
whose presence shaped both the conduct of the siege and its subsequent
mythologisation, yet the Souliotes who appear in the contemporary sources are
neither uniform nor consistently disciplined, but rather a contingent,
frequently volatile aggregation of armed groups whose indispensability to the
defence coexisted with a persistent capacity to disrupt the fragile cohesion of
the besieged town.
The Souliotes were never a
conventional military corps, and any attempt to impose upon them the logic of a
centralised and hierarchical army obscures the conditions under which they
operated, for they emerged from a highland confederation organised around clans
and governed through a shifting synthesis of familial authority, ecclesiastical
influence and collective deliberation, a structure which produced fighters
capable of rapid mobilisation, effective skirmishing and sustained resistance
in difficult terrain, while at the same time ensuring that unity remained
contingent upon negotiation, reputation and, most immediately, the distribution
of pay and provisions. In practical terms, a Souliote contingent at Missolonghi
did not constitute a stable unit but rather a coalition of armed households
grouped around leading families such as the Botsaris and Tzavelas clans, each
retaining its own internal loyalties and expectations, and each requiring
continual management if it were to act in concert with the broader defensive
effort.
At Missolonghi, their presence
is attested from the earliest phases of conflict, and in the defence of 1822
their numbers were strikingly small, for Thomas Gordon records that the total
defending force amounted to approximately three hundred and eighty men, within
which only thirty five were Souliotes under the command of Markos Botsaris, a
figure which, considered purely in quantitative terms, could not materially
alter the balance of forces between besieged and besieger. Yet their
significance did not reside in number, since within a defensive system composed
of shallow earthworks, inadequate fortifications and limited artillery, the
presence of even a small body of experienced irregular fighters functioned as a
concentrated source of morale and tactical confidence, reinforcing the
willingness of the garrison to resist beyond the point at which surrender might
otherwise have appeared inevitable.
By the time of the final siege
of 1825 to 1826, their position had altered decisively, for within the
prolonged conditions of encirclement, deprivation and political uncertainty
they came to be represented, both in contemporary accounts and in later narrative,
as forming the core of resistance, not in the sense of numerical dominance,
which cannot be securely established from the available sources, but in the
sense that their leaders, most prominently Notis Botsaris and Kitsos Tzavelas,
repeatedly appear at those points in the record where decisions concerning
capitulation, continued resistance and eventual breakout were most acutely
contested. When proposals of surrender were advanced, it is recorded that
Souliote leaders rejected them with vehemence, at times threatening violence
against those who entertained negotiation, thereby converting what might have
been a strategic calculation into a moral prohibition, within which surrender
was rendered illegitimate regardless of circumstance. This response reflected a
deeper political logic, for within a clan based martial society whose authority
derived from honour, autonomy and reputation, the act of surrender risked not
only military defeat but the dissolution of the very structures that sustained
collective identity.
The siege itself imposed
conditions that strained every existing structure, as starvation, disease and
the progressive exhaustion of supplies transformed Missolonghi into a
compressed environment in which distinctions between military, political and
civilian life were increasingly difficult to maintain, and within this
environment the Souliotes’ dual character became unmistakable. They remained
indispensable as fighters, particularly in sorties and in the amphibious
engagements of the lagoon, yet contemporary evidence also attests to their
volatility, their sensitivity to arrears in pay and their capacity to exert
coercive pressure upon the civilian population required to sustain them.
The correspondence associated
with Lord Byron, together with the accounts preserved by William Parry and
Thomas Moore, indicates that Souliote troops in Byron’s pay, some of whom
functioned as his immediate guard, repeatedly refused to act in the absence of
payment, and that delays in remuneration produced episodes approaching mutiny,
including a documented instance in February 1824 in which Souliote fighters
threatened to abandon their positions unless arrears were settled, while Moore
records Byron’s observation that the inhabitants of Missolonghi resented the
Souliotes even as they were compelled to sustain them financially. In this
light, the Souliotes cannot be understood solely as heroic defenders, for
within the daily life of the besieged community they also constituted an armed
presence whose demands, rivalries and periodic insubordination complicated the
maintenance of order, so that the same qualities which rendered them effective
in combat also rendered them difficult to govern within a confined and resource
depleted urban environment.
The Battle of Klisova provides a
concentrated illustration of their operational significance, for in March 1826
a small defensive force occupying the islet, initially numbering approximately
one hundred men, resisted repeated assaults by Ottoman and Egyptian forces, and
was subsequently reinforced, bringing the total number of defenders to roughly
three hundred and fifty, within which Souliote fighters played a prominent role
in both reinforcement and sustained resistance, and the engagement, later represented
as an instance of heroic disparity between a small defending force and a vastly
larger attacking army, reflects a pattern in which Souliote participation
became associated with high risk engagements requiring both familiarity with
difficult terrain and a willingness to engage under conditions of numerical
disadvantage.
The culmination of the siege, in
the decision for the exodus of 10 April 1826, reveals their role in its most
structurally explicit form, for the surviving operational plan assigns to
Souliote leaders specific and critical functions within the execution of the
breakout, including the use of Notis Botsaris’ position as a navigational
reference point for advancing columns and the designation of Kitsos Tzavelas as
commander of the rearguard, responsible for maintaining cohesion among
withdrawing forces and for collecting those unable to move at the initial
signal. This allocation of responsibility reflects a recognition, shared among
the defenders, that in the moment at which coordinated retreat risked
dissolving into uncontrolled flight, authority would need to be exercised by
those capable of enforcing movement under conditions of extreme pressure, and
that Souliote leaders, by virtue of their standing within their own
contingents, possessed that capacity to a degree not easily replicated within
the more diffuse structures of the broader force.
The exodus itself, however,
demonstrates the limits of even the most carefully constructed plan, for
contemporary accounts describe the breakdown of coordination as enemy forces
penetrated the town, civilians misinterpreted signals and reversed direction,
and the intended columns dissolved into a series of fragmented and localised
engagements, within which the distinction between organised withdrawal and
general collapse became increasingly difficult to sustain, and in such
circumstances the assignment of the rearguard to Tzavelas places Souliote
forces at the point of greatest exposure, where the attempt to maintain order
intersected directly with the advancing enemy and the disintegration of the
defensive structure.
A purely military account of
these events remains insufficient, since the significance of the Souliotes
extends beyond their tactical role and into the domain of representation, where
their actions were reframed within broader narratives that endowed them with a
symbolic function. The concept of symbolic capital, as articulated by Pierre
Bourdieu, provides one means of understanding this process, for the Souliotes
possessed, in addition to their military capacity, a recognised status within
both Greek and European imaginaries as exemplars of martial virtue, a status
which amplified their influence within the besieged community and rendered
their refusal of capitulation not merely a tactical position but a form of
moral pressure exerted upon the collective.
At the same time, Benedict
Anderson’s notion of imagined communities assists in explaining how the events
of Missolonghi were transmitted beyond their immediate context, for through
newspapers, correspondence and artistic representation the Souliotes were
transformed from historically situated actors into symbolic figures, their
actions abstracted into a narrative of resistance and sacrifice that could
circulate within a broader European discourse. This transformation is
particularly evident in literature and visual culture, where the poetry of
Victor Hugo and the wider philhellenic corpus reframed Missolonghi as a site of
moral drama, while the paintings of Eugène Delacroix and Theodoros Vryzakis
rendered the exodus within a visual language that combined allegory with
theological suggestion, elevating the historical event into a scene of national
martyrdom.
Within this representational
field, the Souliote becomes less an individual actor than a typological figure,
defined by resistance, endurance and refusal, while the internal tensions,
disputes over pay and episodes of indiscipline recorded in contemporary sources
recede from view, displaced by an image of unity that serves the narrative
requirements of both philhellenic advocacy and later national commemoration.
A feminist reading introduces a
further layer of complexity, for the figure of the Souliotissa, as represented
in philhellenic imagery such as the works of Ary Scheffer, appears as a
recurring image of sacrificial femininity, frequently positioned at the moment
of self destruction and thereby incorporated into a narrative in which female
agency is expressed through the acceptance of death rather than through
participation in survival, and such representations may be understood as part
of a broader visual and literary tradition in which the suffering female body
becomes a vehicle for the articulation of national trauma, while the historical
experiences of women within the siege, including labour, endurance and, in some
cases, armed resistance, are subsumed within an aesthetic framework that
privileges symbolic meaning over material reality.
Two centuries on, the Souliotes
at Missolonghi stand at the intersection of history and memory, as figures who
operated within a specific and unstable set of material conditions, yet who
have been reconstituted within an enduring narrative that privileges clarity
over ambiguity and unity over fracture, and whose continued resonance depends
upon the capacity of that narrative to maintain its authority even as the
historical record complicates it.
DEAN KALIMNIOU
First published
in NKEE on Saturday 18 April 2026

