Constantinople Most of the Greeks in the Greek quarter of Constantinople were massacred. On
Easter Sunday, 9 April 1821,
Gregory V was hanged in the central outside portal of the
Ecumenical Patriarchate by the Ottomans. His body was mutilated and thrown into the sea, where it was rescued by Greek sailors. One week later, the former Ecumenical Patriarch
Cyril VI was hanged in the gate of the
Adrianople's cathedral. This was followed by the execution of two Metropolitans and twelve Bishops by the Turkish authorities. By the end of April, a number of prominent Greeks had been decapitated by Turkish forces in Constantinople, including Constantine
Mourousis,
Levidis Tsalikis, Dimitrios Paparigopoulos, Antonios Tsouras, and the
Phanariotes Petros Tsigris, Dimitrios Skanavis and Manuel Hotzeris, while Georgios
Mavrocordatos was hanged. In May, the Metropolitans Gregorios of Derkon, Dorotheos of Adrianople, Ioannikios of
Tyrnavos, Joseph of
Thessaloniki, and the
Phanariote Georgios
Callimachi and Nikolaos
Mourousis were decapitated on the Sultan's orders in
Constantinople.
Aegean Islands The Turks and Egyptians ravaged several Greek islands during the Greek Revolution, including those of
Samothrace (1821),
Chios (1822),
Kos, The
Chios Massacre of 1822 became one of the most notorious occurrences of the war. It is estimated that up to 100,000 Chiots were killed or enslaved during the massacre, while 20,000 escaped as refugees.
Mehmet Ali, the Pasha of
Egypt, dispatched his fleet to
Kasos and on May 27, 1824
killed the population. A few weeks later,
Koca Hüsrev Mehmed Pasha's fleet
massacred the population of Psara.
Central Greece ,
Bordeaux) Shortly after
Lord Byron's death in 1824, the Turks arrived to besiege the Greeks once more at
Missolonghi. Turkish commander
Reşid Mehmed Pasha was joined by
Ibrahim Pasha, who crossed the
Gulf of Corinth, and during the early part of 1826, Ibrahim had more artillery and supply brought in. However, his men were unable to storm the walls, and in 1826, following
a one-year siege, Turkish-Egyptian forces conquered the city on
Palm Sunday, and exterminated almost its entire population. The attack increased support for the Greek cause in western
Europe, with
Eugène Delacroix depicting the massacre in his painting
Greece Expiring on the Ruins of Missolonghi.
Crete During the great massacre of
Heraklion on 24 June 1821, remembered in the area as "the great ravage" ("ο μεγάλος αρπεντές", "o megalos arpentes"), the Turks also killed the metropolite of Crete,
Gerasimos Pardalis, and five more bishops: Neofitos of Knossos, Joachim of Herronissos, Ierotheos of Lambis, Zacharias of Sitia and Kallinikos, the titular bishop of
Diopolis. After the Sultan's vassal in Egypt was sent to intervene with the Egyptian fleet on 1825, Muhammad Ali's son, Ibrahim, landed in Crete and began to massacre the majority Greek community.
Cyprus In July 1821, the head of the
Cypriot Orthodox Church Archbishop
Kyprianos, along with 486 prominent
Greek Cypriots, amongst them the Metropolitans Chrysanthethos of
Paphos, Meletios of
Kition and Lavrentios of
Kyrenia, were executed by hanging or beheading by the Ottomans in
Nicosia. St. Clair writes: The French consul M. Méchain reported on 15 September 1821 that the local
pasha, Küçük Mehmet, carried out several days of massacres in Cyprus since July 9 and continued on for forty days, despite the Vizier's command to end the plundering since 20 July 1821. On October 15, a massive
Turkish Cypriot mob seized and hanged an archbishop, five bishops, thirty-six ecclesiastics, and hanged most of the Greek Cypriots in
Larnaca and the other towns. By September and October 1822, sixty-two Greek Cypriot villages and hamlets had entirely disappeared and many people, including clerics, were massacred.
Peloponnese Historian David Brewer writes that in the first year of the revolution, a Turkish army descended on the city of
Patras and slaughtered all of the civilians of the settlement, razing the city. The forces of Ibrahim Pasha were extremely brutal in the Peloponnese, burning the major port of
Kalamata to the ground and slaughtering the city's inhabitants; they also ravaged the countryside and were heavily involved in the slave trade.
Macedonia Greek villages in
Macedonia were destroyed, and many of the inhabitants were put to death. Thomas Gordon reports executions of Greek civilians in
Serres and
Thessaloniki, beheadings of merchants and clergy, and seventy burnt villages. In May 1821, the governor Yusuf Bey ordered his men to kill any Greeks in Thessaloniki they found in the streets. Haïroullah Effendi reported that then and "for days and nights the air was filled with shouts, wails, screams." The Metropolitan bishop was brought in chains, together with other leading notables, and they were tortured and executed in the
square of the flour market. Some were hanged from the plane trees around the
Rotonda. Others were killed in the cathedral where they had fled for refuge, and their heads were gathered together as a present for Yusuf Bey. In 1822, Abdul Abud, the Pasha of Thessaloniki, arrived on 14 March at the head of a 16,000 strong force and 12 cannons against
Naousa. The Greeks defended Naousa with a force of 4,000 under the overall command of
Zafeirakis Theodosiou and
Anastasios Karatasos. The Turks attempted to take the town on 16 March 1822, and on 18 and 19 March, without success. On 24 March the Turks began a bombardment of the city walls that lasted for days. After requests for the town's surrender were dismissed by the Greeks, the Turks charged the gate of St George on 31 March. The Turkish attack failed but on 6 April, after receiving fresh reinforcements of some 3,000 men, the Turkish army finally overcame the Greek resistance and entered the city. In an infamous incident, many of the women committed suicide by falling down a cliff over the small river Arapitsa. Abdul Abud laid the town and surrounding area to waste. The Greek population was massacred. The
destruction of Naoussa marked the end of the Greek revolution in Macedonia in 1822.
Anatolia The Greek inhabitants of
Smyrna and
Kydonies suffered from massacres in the hands of the local Turks and the Ottoman authorities. According to St. Clair: "The town [of Kydonies] was burned to the ground and thousands of Greeks were massacred. The survivors, mostly women and children, were rounded up and sent to the slave markets at Smyrna and Constantinople". Regarding Smyrna, he wrote: ==Massacres of Turks, Albanians and other Muslims==