, Turkish Foreign Minisyer
Fatin Rüştü Zorlu, Turkish Prime Minister
Adnan Menderes, and Greek Foreign Minister Evangelos Averoff in 1959. Evangelos Averoff was an
Aromanian. Averoff got involved in public matters from very early on in his life and played a major role in Greek politics for almost 50 years. In 1940 he was appointed Prefect (regional governor) of Kerkyra (Corfu). During the
Axis occupation of Greece, Averoff was taken
hostage and imprisoned in Italy. This was because of his efforts to deter prominent Aromanian families from collaborating with the Italian occupation forces in the region of the
Pindus during the times of the collaborationist
Principality of the Pindus. Averoff escaped a year later and created the "
Freedom or Death"
resistance group, which aimed to liberate Greek and
Allied war hostages. In 1946, he was elected to the Greek Parliament as a representative of Ioannina and then went on to serve as deputy minister and minister of Supply, Economy and Agriculture. From 1956 to 1963 he served as Foreign Minister. During the
Greek military junta of 1967-1974, Averoff participated in one of the foremost acts of resistance against the government, the
Velos mutiny, for which he was arrested as an "instigator". After the restoration of democracy in 1974 during
metapolitefsi, Averoff participated in the
New Democracy centre-right party under
Konstantinos Karamanlis and served as Minister of National Defense in subsequent governments. Following the defeat in the
1981 Greek legislative election and
Georgios Rallis' resignation as party President, Averoff was elected President of the New Democracy party, which was then the Major Opposition in Parliament. Following the
1984 European Parliament election, he resigned citing health reasons and was subsequently declared an Honorary President. Parallel to his political career he became a prominent author of novels, short stories, theatrical plays, essays and historical analyses. Evangelos Averoff was a prominent author of political and historical works, such as "Customs Union in the Balkans" (1933), which the
Carnegie Institute awarded, "Fire and Axe, 1944–1949" (1974) dealing with the
Greek Civil War, and "A History of missed opportunities: The Cypriot Problem 1956–1963" (1981). He died on 2 January 1990 at the age of 79. ==Historical tradition==