in
Thessaloniki with
George Papandreou during his visit to Athens in July 2012 The United Kingdom supported Greece in the
Greek War of Independence from the
Ottoman Empire in the 1820s with the
Treaty of Constantinople being ratified at the
London Conference of 1832. In 1850, the British
Foreign Secretary Lord Palmerston sent a
Royal Navy squadron to Greece over the
Pacifico incident. When the Greek King
Otto was deposed by the Greeks in 1862,
Queen Victoria's son
Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha was chosen to succeed him by the Greek people with a referendum. However, the British government would not allow this. The last British monarch
Elizabeth II's late husband
Prince Philip was the grandson of Otto's eventual successor
George I of Greece. The United Kingdom wrested control of the
Ionian Islands from
Napoleonic France in 1815. As the "
United States of the Ionian Islands", they remained under British control, even after Greek independence. However, in 1864, the United Kingdom responded to calls for
enosis by transferring the islands to Greece as a present for the enthronement of
George I of Greece. The two countries were Allies during
World War I, and in the Paris Peace Conference at the end of the war British Prime Minister
David Lloyd George supported
Eleftherios Venizelos's
irredentist Megali Idea policies. After 1918, UK was the only Allied power that supported Greece during the
Greco-Turkish War until the end of the war. They were
Allies also during
World War II. In 1941 Britain sent an expeditionary force to aid Greece against
Fascist Italy's
attempted invasion. During negotiations with Soviet leader
Joseph Stalin in 1944, British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill convinced Stalin to allow Britain a sphere of influence after the war. During the
Greek Civil War at the
beginning of the Cold War, Britain supported the Greek monarchy against the Communist
National Liberation Front insurgency, although its weakened state after the war led the United States to take a greater role through the
Truman Doctrine. Greece and Britain were both founding members of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization. However, relations between the two states were strained due to the
Cyprus dispute. In 2000,
Stephen Saunders, the British military attaché in
Athens, was murdered by motorcycle gunmen who were members of
Revolutionary Organization 17 November. The investigation that followed led to an unprecedented level of co-operation between Greek and UK Police services, who achieved, following a lengthy investigation the arrest of members of 17N who were then brought to trial.
Conference of Hydra The Conference of Hydra took place in the island of
Hydra in March 2000 in order to boost further the friendship between Great Britain and Greece. Discussions during the conference emphasised the economic aspect of this relations and the ways to soar trade between Great Britain and Greece. ==Economic relations==