Following the Greek defeat in the
Asia Minor Campaign against
Turkey, the
Greek Army, led by
Venizelist Colonels
Nikolaos Plastiras and
Stylianos Gonatas,
overthrew the royalist government in September 1922 and forced King
Constantine I into renewed exile. His eldest son,
George II succeeded him, but the position of the monarchy remained precarious. The military-led "Revolutionary Government"
tried and convicted six leading royalists to death as scapegoats for the country's military defeat, and gradually steered the country in the direction of a republic. On 18 October 1923, the Revolutionary Government proclaimed
elections to be held on 16 December for a National Assembly which would decide on the country's future form of government. The Revolutionary Government however, headed by Gonatas, had passed an electoral law which heavily favoured the Venizelist
Liberal Party and the other anti-monarchist parties. The prospect of the elections and an almost-certain regime change led to the creation of a heterogeneous coalition in the ranks of the army, which aimed to overthrow the government. Its main driving force was the so-called "Majors' Organization" (Οργάνωση Ταγματαρχών) of royalist middle-ranking officers, which was in close contact with the royalist former Deputy Chief of the
Army General Staff and future dictator, General
Ioannis Metaxas, but several disgruntled Venizelists, most prominently Leonardopoulos and Gargalidis, also joined. The conspirators managed to win over the bulk of the military units in northern Greece and the
Peloponnese, but failed to make inroads in the garrisons of
Athens,
Thessaloniki or the other major cities, as well as in the overwhelmingly Venizelist
Navy. == The coup attempt ==