Difference between revisions of "Dimitrios Ypsilantis"

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He was brother of [[Alexander Ypsilantis]] and lover of [[Manto Mavrogenous]], herself a heroine of the War of Independence .
 
He was brother of [[Alexander Ypsilantis]] and lover of [[Manto Mavrogenous]], herself a heroine of the War of Independence .
  
The city of [[Ypsilanti, Michigan]] in the [[United States|United States of America]] is named after him.  
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The city of Ypsilanti, Michigan in the United States of America is named after him.  
  
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[[Category:1793 births|Ypsilantis, Dimitrios]]
 
[[Category:1793 births|Ypsilantis, Dimitrios]]
 
[[Category:1832 deaths|Ypsilantis, Dimitrios]]
 
[[Category:1832 deaths|Ypsilantis, Dimitrios]]
 
[[Category:Greek War of Independence|Ypsilantis, Dimitrios]]
 
[[Category:Greek War of Independence|Ypsilantis, Dimitrios]]

Revision as of 09:52, October 31, 2005

Dimitrios Ypsilantis, sometimes spelled Ypsilanti, (1793 - January 3, 1832), second son of Prince Constantine, distinguished himself as a Russian officer in the campaign of 1814, and in the spring of 1821 went to the Morea, where the Greek War of Independence had just broken out. He was one of the most conspicuous of the Phanariot leaders during the earlier stages of the revolt, though he was much hampered by the local chiefs and by the civilian element headed by Alexandros Mavrokordatos. In January 1822 he was elected president of the legislative assembly; but the ill-success of his campaign in central Greece, and his failure to obtain a commanding position in the national convention of Astros, led to his retirement early in 1823. In 1828 he was appointed by Ioannis Kapodistrias commander of the troops in East Hellas. He succeeded, on the 25th of September 1829, in forcing the Turkish commander Aslan Bey to sign a capitulation at the Pass of Petra, which ended the active operations of the war. He died at Vienna on the 3rd of January 1832.

He was brother of Alexander Ypsilantis and lover of Manto Mavrogenous, herself a heroine of the War of Independence .

The city of Ypsilanti, Michigan in the United States of America is named after him.