as depicted in a contemporary
lithograph The death of Britain's
Queen Victoria on 22 January 1901 left King George as the second-longest-reigning monarch in Europe, behind only Emperor
Franz Joseph I of Austria. His always cordial relations with his brother-in-law, the new King
Edward VII, continued to tie Greece to Britain. This was abundantly important in Britain's support of King George's son
Prince George as
Governor-General of Crete. Nevertheless, Prince George resigned in 1906 after a leader in the Cretan Assembly,
Eleftherios Venizelos, campaigned to have him removed. As a response to the
Young Turk Revolution of 1908, Venizelos's power base was further strengthened, and on 8 October 1908 the Cretan Assembly passed a resolution in favor of union despite both the reservations of the Athens government under
Georgios Theotokis and the objections of the Great Powers. The muted reaction of the Athens Government to the news from Crete led to an unsettled state of affairs on the mainland. In August 1909, a group of army officers that had formed a military league,
Stratiotikos Syndesmos, demanded, among other things, that the royal family be stripped of their military commissions. To save the King the embarrassment of removing his sons from their commissions, they resigned them. The military league attempted a coup d'état, and the King insisted on supporting the duly elected
Hellenic Parliament in response. Eventually, the military league joined forces with Venizelos in calling for a National Assembly to revise the constitution. King George gave way, and
new elections to the revising assembly were held in August 1910. After some political maneuvering, Venizelos became prime minister of a minority government. Just a month later, Venizelos called
new elections for , at which he won an overwhelming majority after most of the opposition parties declined to take part. Venizelos and the King were united in their belief that the nation required a strong army to repair the damage of the humiliating
defeat of 1897. Crown Prince Constantine was reinstated as Inspector-General of the Army, and later Commander-in-Chief. Under his and Venizelos's close supervision, the military was retrained and equipped with French and British help, and new ships were ordered for the
Hellenic Navy. Meanwhile, through diplomatic means, Venizelos had united the Christian countries of the Balkans in opposition to the ailing Ottoman Empire. When the
Kingdom of Montenegro declared war on Turkey on 8 October 1912, it was quickly joined by
Serbia,
Bulgaria, and Greece in what is known as the
First Balkan War. George was on vacation in Denmark, so he immediately returned to Greece via Vienna, arriving in Athens to be met by a large and enthusiastic crowd on the evening of 9 October. The results of this campaign differed radically from the Greek experience at the hands of the Turks in 1897. The well-trained Greek forces, 200,000 strong, won victory after victory. On 9 November 1912, Greek forces commanded by Crown Prince Constantine rode into
Thessaloniki, just a few hours ahead of a Bulgarian division. Three days later King George rode in triumph through the streets of Thessaloniki, the second-largest Greek city, accompanied by the Crown Prince and Venizelos. Less than two weeks before the King's death, Greek troops entered the chief Epirus town of
Ioannina on 6 March 1913. As he approached the fiftieth anniversary of his accession, the King made plans to abdicate in favor of his son Constantine immediately after the celebration of his
golden jubilee in October 1913. Just as he did in Athens, George went about Thessaloniki without any meaningful protection force. While out on an afternoon walk near the
White Tower on 18 March 1913, he was shot at close range in the back by
Alexandros Schinas, who was "said to belong to a Socialist organization" and "declared when arrested that he had killed the King because he refused to give him money". George died instantly, the bullet having penetrated his heart. The Greek government denied any political motive for the assassination, saying that Schinas was an alcoholic vagrant. Schinas was tortured in prison and fell to his death from a police station window six weeks later. The King's body was taken to Athens on the
yacht Amphitrite, escorted by a flotilla of naval vessels. For three days the coffin of the King, draped in the
Danish and
Greek flags, lay in the
Metropolitan Cathedral in Athens before his body was committed to a tomb at his palace in
Tatoi. == Honours and arms ==