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Modern: THE Greek and His

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THE MODERN GREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY.

BY ALBERT THUMB, DR.PHIL.,LITT.D.


PROFESSOR OF INDO-GERMANIC PHILOLOGY I N T H E UNIVERSITY
O F STRASSBURC.

I N the history of the Balkan Peninsula during the nineteenth and


in the present century, w e are always struck anew by the great
importance which the question of nationality has for the formation
of political frontiers. Urged by the racial consciousness of the nations,
diplomacy has not only founded the States of the Balkan Peninsula
according to that principle of nationality, but also examines and approves
the expansion of these States according to it. And just now the poli-
ticians of the Balkans base their titles to the territories won by the
present war upon that principle. For the sentence " the Ballcans for the
Balkan nations" means, that the Balkan territories must be distributed
according to what the ethnographical map requires. This, of course,
in practice is not so simple ; about the ethnographical map of such a
territory as, for instance, Macedonia, the Greeks, Servians, and Bul-
garians do not agree at all, because each of these nations thinks it
proved by science that the largest part of the country they struggle
for is populated by their own race. A n d so the Macedonian question,
which has occupied Europe for years, and which has now become
acute, is a characteristic example of " applied anthropology and
ethnography1'. T h e last example is the planned foundation of an
independent Albanian State : though it may be demanded by Austria
and Italy in the first place for political and economic reasons, yet it
is to be justified only by the fact that the Albanians with regard to
their ethnographical position are a peculiar race, plainly different from
Slavs and Creeks, forming together with the Creeks the oldest popula-
tion of the Peninsula. A n d as the Servians from their desire of ex-
pansion would like to swallow Northern Albania and uproot the
32
THE MODERN CREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 23
Albanians, the principle " Albania for the Albanians" must be
objected to : for what is right for Greeks and Slavs is just for
Albanians too.
T h e examples which I have quoted show how sometimes practical
politics and theoretical science go together in order to decide on the
"to be or not to be" of whole nations.
Greece, the one amongst the Balkan States that first freed her-
self from the Turkish Empire, also was obliged, soon after having
liberated herself, to struggle to give scientific proof of her nationality.
When the Greek people directed the attention of Europe to itself by
its heroic fight for liberty, and roused the educated men of Europe into
a passion of Philhellenic enthusiasm, it was thought an axiom that the
brave men who tried with deadly determination to break the bonds of
400 slavery were the successors of those Athenians and Spartans
who once had repelled the lust of conquest of Oriental barbarians
on the battle-fields of Marathon and Plataeae. A n d although the
Philhellenes quickly became sober in a certain sense, yet it was like a
bomb, threatening to blow new-risen Greece into the air, when, in the
year 1830, the German scholar Fallmerayer, the distinguished in-
vestigator of Medieval Creek history, quietly pronounced the sentence
that in the Balkans the Greek race had been long ago annihilated.
" Not even a drop of pure and unmixed blood flows in the veins of

the Christian population of Modern Greece. A storm like which


but few have attacked the people of Europe has spread over the whole
territory between the Ister and the inmost corner of the Peloponnesian
Peninsula a new race of inhabitants which is related to the great
Slavonic race. A n d a second revolution, perhaps not less important,
the immigration of the Albanians into Greece, has finished the scenes of
destruction. There is now in the middle of Continental Greece not
one Greek family whose ancestors were not Scyths, Slavs or Arnauts,
Almugavarians or Franks or hellenised Asiatics from Phrygia."
With these words Fallmerayer, in his " History of the Peninsula
9.
of Morea, announced his theory. T h e vehement excitement to
which the Greeks and the Philhellenes were roused, at first hindered
a cool examination of the assertion ; the pros and cons were debated
with equally imperfect arguments ; the very putting of the question
"Slavs or Creeks," and the one-sided answering of it n p ~ i o ~ i ,
did not make a disinterested solution possible.' For the Creeks the
THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
answer was from the beginning clearly provoked by the importance of
the question: for Fallmerayer himself had given a political point to
his theory, and the danger for Greece was that the brilliant essayist
should on the basis of his doctrine have emphasised the political
solidity of the Turks and their right to authority ; it was still more
dangerous for the political existence of Greece that the hypothesis
could be used in a panslavistic sense. Even to-day such tendencies
are thought dangerous by the Greeks. It is, for instance, not so long
ago (in 1900) that the translation of the Bible into the vernacular
language, which was favoured by Queen Olga of Greece, a Russian
princess, was taken as a symptom of panslavist agitation and there-
fore combated with passion by the adversaries of the popular language,
although there was no relation between the two things."
I cannot believe that panslavist or even personal motives, such as
vanity or the desire of attracting people's attention to himself, impelled
Fallmerayer to his assertion :"or his scientific merits and his name as
an author protect him against the reproach of needing such vulgar
means in order to make an impression.
Fallmerayer's hypothesis, often discussed and much disputed, has
evoked the question about the origins of the Modern Greek. T h e
theory of the Slavonisation of Greece had been also broached some
time before by the well-known Slavist Kopitar, but only in a few
words and without close investigation."nd Kopitar had already
pointed to the testimony, which was always quoted anew in this dis-
cussion, and is due to a bearer of the Imperial Byzantine Crown.
Constantinus Porphyrogennetus (9 12-959), in one of his numerous
works (De Thetlznlibus, 2, 53), says about the Peloponnesus :
r d u a Xdpa E'c~8Xa/3;0~~ a lygyove /3dppapos, "the whole
country was slavonised and barbarised ".
Let us see now what are the historical facts upon which this
saying is based."
T h e Balkan Peninsula has had such a thorough shifting of its
ethnographical conditions as few parts of Europe. A t the time when
German tribes began moving, that is, at the end of the third centuly
after Christ, a gradual immigration of Slavonic tribes into the Balkan
Peninsula began ; their invasions became more and more frequent,
since the Goths chose Western Europe as the goal of their conquering
expeditions and left to the Slavs an open passage into the Balkan
THE MODERN CREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 25
countries. T h e Slavonic tribe of the Antes swept over the Haemus
in 540, and made the first invasion into Hellas in that year. Different
Slavonic tribes spread over Moesia, Thrace, Thessaly, and Epirus
during the sixth century ; the pass of Thermopylae and the Isthmus
of Corinth did not stop them ; only at the walls of fortified towns
such as Constantinople, Thebes, Athens, Coi-inth, Nauplion, and
Patras was the rude force of the attacking hordes broken. Therefore
it is an exaggeration to say that Avars and Slavs held the Pelopon-
nesus from about the end of the sixth century for over 200 years
without interruption, and that "no Greek could put his foot there" ;
for the fortified places always remained in the hands of the Byzan-
tines. In the same way it is a legend exaggerated by Fallmerayer's
fancy that Athens was quite depopulated during 400 years from the
sixth century to the tenth centuly.'
A real Slavonisation of some Creek territories took place only in
the eighth century, and attained its highest point when a horrible
plague in 746 depopulated the Greek territories. Then it was that
Slavs came from Thessaly to establish themselves as farmers and
shepherds on the deserted country-side, perhaps settled there by the
Byzantine Government itself, and that the whole of ancient Greece
swarmed with Slavs. If the interpretation of a modern Creek historian
is right, that the imperial writer understood the word xdpa " country"
to mean "open c ~ u n t r y , "the
~ quoted words of the Emperor Con-
stantine are justified.
" Even now"-says a Byzantine author of the tenth century"'
who made a meagre epitome ol old Strabo-" even now the Skytho-
Slavs inhabit almost the whole of Epirus and Hellas (i.e. Middle
9.
Creece), the Peloponnesus and Macedonia -a sentence which
allows us some latitude of interpretation, because the saying is restricted
by the little word " almost," where a certain ignorance and inexactitude
is concealed. That the Slavonic settlements of Creece Proper have
had a different character from those of Croatia, Bulgaria, and Servia,
is proved by the fact that in the territory of ancient Creece Slavonic
States were not founded, as in Bulgaria and Servia, and that politics
and culture remained Greek throughout in the numerous cities.
Finally when more and more Slavs followed and became an ever
greater danger for the parts which had remained Greek and for the
Byzantine Empire itself, the Empress Irene, a born Athenian, widow
26 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
of Leo IV., who, as her son's guardian, reigned from 780, sent her
favourite chieftain, Staurakios, in 783, against the Slavonic inhabitants
of Thessaly, Middle Greece, and the Peloponnesus. T h e year 783
marks an epoch in the history of the Slavonic settlements of Greece.
Byzantium was trying to master the intruders. Immediately the Slavs
were driven to a new rebellion, to an attack against the city of Patras.
T h e patron saint of the town, Saint Andreas himself, saved Patras in
805 or 807, so pious tradition tells us, and preserved the Pelopon-
nesus from thorough Slavonisation. During the ninth century the
Slavs of the Peloponnesus were entirely overthrown, with the excep-
tion of the Ezerites and Milingi, who still for a long time maintained
themselves in the mountains of Laconia.
With the defeat of the Slavs, the Greek elements of Hellas were
strengthened again and began to absorb the Slavonic intruders. It is
well known that Byzantium gave Christianity and culture to the
Slavonic world : here, in the heart of Greece, Christianisation was
the means which Greeks used for absorbing the foreign elements.
The Hellenisation of the Slavonic Peloponnesus as a whole must
have been quickly executed ; if in the thirteenth century, or even still
later, some remains of Slavonic-speaking inhabitants are still mentioned
by Byzantine authors," we must not draw conclusions from the state-
ment for the whole ethnographical configuration of the Peloponnesus ;
thus, for instance, the fact that some Slavs live nowadays in the purely
German province of Brandenburg or that the Welsh live in Wales
does not allow us to conclude that Prussia is now a Slavonic country
or England a Celtic one.

I have tried to describe shortly the historical facts on the basis of


which Fallmerayer founded his hypothesis. Do these facts justify the
German historian ? A t first they might seem to do so. But we have
been already obliged to emphasise the fact that the Greek element
always was preserved in the cities, and we had especially to cite the
Peloponnesus as the place of Slavonic settlements, whereas the other
countries which were Greek in antiquity were little or not at all
touched by the Slavonic inundation.
In order to gain clear evidence about the ethnographical composi-
THE MODERN GREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 27
tion of the Modern Creek race, we ought before all to know the
local expansion and the number of the Slavs who settled on Creek
territory. But just there the proofs and documents fail, which we
might expect from historical inquiry : we are not able to make an
ethnographical map of the Slavonic epoch of Creece on the basis of
historical or better documentary tradition, that is, we cannot precisely
say in what proportion each district was inhabited by the Slavs : for
the occasional historical proofs which we quoted above, or a notice in
the journey of Bishop Willibald von Eichstatt (eighth century) saying
that the town Monembasia (called Malvasia by the Venetians) is
situated " in Sclavinia terra," i.e. in Slavonic country,'%uch testimonies
are too general and too inexact sufficiently to inform us about the
matter we want to know. Direct proofs of Slavonic inhabitants,
especially archzeological discoveries and inscriptions, are missing ; a
single inscription, called Slavonic and found near Eleusis, is of doubt-
ful value.13 So we must seek for other means of help. A starting-
point is the present grouping of the Balkan peoples. Creeks, i.e.
Creek-speaking people, live to-day in the kingdom of Greece (with
the exception of the districts inhabited by Albanians-see below),
namely, in the provinces of Hellas and Thessaly ; Creeks inhabit
exclusively the Ionian Islands and all islands of the E g e a n together
with Crete ; they form the main population of Epirus and the coast
of Macedonia and Thrace, where at some points they extend far into
the inner parts, for instance as far as Serres in Macedonia and
Adrianople and Philippopolis ; in the same manner, on the eastern
border of the Egean, i.e. t'he western coast of Asia Minor, and on the
southern coast of the Black Sea to the frontier of Armenia, there are a
number of Creek towns and villages : the line of the coast from about
Sinope to Trebizond may directly be called a continuous dominion of
the Greek language. Here and in single communities in the middle of
Asia Minor (near the Taurus Mountains) l' as well as on the southern
border of Asia Minor the Creek language and Greek nationality have
preserved and developed in quite an original manner. A n d finally
the Isle of Cyprus is almost entirely Greek, probably more so than in
the bloom of antiquity. T h e coast from Constantinople to Varna
until a few years ago was also chiefly populated by Creeks (now they
have greatly diminished here), and the towns of the northern coast of
the Black Sea have important Greek colonies." Although to-day the
THE MODERN CREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 29
Verzova in the south-east of Arcadia, Gortsa in Laconia, Tserova
and Selitsa in the territory of the Taygetus Mountains, the Kamenitsa
River in Elis, Vostitsa in Achaia-these names which I take at
random and which I could multiply to any extent, are of Slavonic
origin and prove that in all the quoted districts Slavs were once
settled. Examining these names more exactly, we observe that in
some parts of the Peloponnesus they are more frequent, whereas
Attica is almost entirely without Slavonic traces, and just there the
conservation of names of the ancient communities or demoi strikes us :
I quote the names of Kephisia, Mendeli (= Pentele), Marathonas,
Ampelokipi, which is ancient Alopeke transformed by popular
etymology. H o w in the course of time an old name can be entirely
transformed, and how in spite of it a trace of the original denomination
can be left, may be illustrated by the name of Mount Hymettus.
After it had been preserved during the barbarian invasions of the
middle age till the epoch of the Frankish conquerors, the mountain
received from the Italians (Venetians) the name of Monte Matto, the
foreigners adapting the word Hymettos to their own language, the
word nzntto meaning " mad ". T h e Italian denomination became
more and more familiar to the Greeks, and forgetting the old name
they translated again the name Monte Matto in their language as
Trelovuno, i.e. " a mad mount" ; this popular name only now is
vanishing under the ancient name Hymettos (pronounced Imit6s) which
is due to the influence of the school.
A critical inquiry into the whole material of geographical names-
a work useful and important to the historian as well as to the ethno-
graphist and to the linguist-is still to be made ; l i the statements of
Fallmerayer and of his followers, as well as of his opponents, are quite
void of a strictly scientific method, and contain many strange ideas.
For instance, the opinion must be definitely abandoned to-day, that the
modern name Morea for the Peloponnesus is of Slavonic origin ; the
word is of pure Greek origin meaning "country of mulberries ".'8
Many strange names were thought to be Slavonic, whereas they are
in reality Albanian. Only when we once have the results of such an
inquiry arranged in an ethnographical map, shall we be able to get
perfect information about the ethnography of the Creek territories.
Then we shall see in which districts Slavs have never lived, and
where Creeks preserved themselves unmixed. That the cities always
30 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
remained Creek we have seen above ; with this conclusion agrees
the fact that ancient names like Corinth, Nauplia, Patras, Lebadea,
Thebes, Athens, Phersala (in Thessaly), and so on have resisted the
storms of centuries. However, not only in the towns but also in the
open country Greeks have preserved themselves : Argolis, for instance,
is proved to have been free from Slavs by the great scarcity of Slavonic
names ; the district Kynuria (on the east side of the Parnon Mountains)
has remained quite Creek in the centre, as the existence of the curious
tribe of the Tsaconians shows : whose language is a descendant
of the ancient Laconian dialect. Furthermore an exhaustive inquiiy
made by myself into the geographical names in this district has
confirmed the fact that Slavonic traces are missing entirely or almost
entirely in Kynuria and in the southern neighbourhood of it as far
as Malvasia (Monembasia)." For the same reason the inhabitants
of the Taenaron Peninsula, about south of the line Tsimova-Gythion,
the brave Maniates, men full of love of liberty, may pride themselves
on a pure Greek ancestry." Exact inquiry, therefore, does not con-
firm the assertion that in the Peloponnesus only one Creek geographi-
cal name is to be found against ten Slavonic ones. Thus even the
condition of the Peloponnesus, which is used in the first place as a
test for the Slavonisation of ancient Greek territory, does not allow us
to say that the Creek inhabitants have been quite eradicated thereg2'
still less may be said about the other parts of Greece : large districts,
the abode of Hellenism since the oldest times, have always preserved
their Creek population. T h e Islands of the figean, the Greek
countries of Asia Minor and the Island of Cyprus were never
influenced by the waves of the Slavonic flood."

A rapid survey of Greek ethnography shows that Fallmerayer's


thesis from which we started proved a great failure : the premisses
-i.e. extirpation of the Creek race and entire Slavonisation of the
country-are false ; therefore it is wrong to conclude that no drop
of ancient Creek blood flows in the veins of the modern Greek. O n
the other hand, no one can deny that in part of the Creek territories,
especially in the Peloponnesus and generally in continental Greece, a
physical mixture of Creek and Slavonic blood took p l a ~ e . ~ Va f
THE MODERN GREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 31
serious historian of merit like the Creek Konstantinos Sathas tries to
dispute the fact of Slavonic immigration, and to erase it from medieval
Greek history, it is nothing but a caprice or a sophism. For Sathas
says that the immigrants, who were called Slavs by the Byzantines,
were not Slavs but Albanians, part of a race closely related to the
Creeks. Nobody has been convinced by the Greek scholar, and the
fact of Slavonic geographical names cannot be explained and removed
by such a theory." But even if the theory of Sathas were correct, it
would be irrelevant to the question of nationality, whether the Greeks
have mixed with Slavs or with another race ; for the opinion of many
Creeks is wrong, that the Albanians are more closely related to the
Greeks than to the Slavs : the Albanians, whose territory reaches
from about the north of Epirus to the frontiers of Montenegro and
Servia, are descendants of the ancient IUyrians, and as is proved by
modern inquiry, they are kindred to Greeks not more than, for
instance, Italians and Slavs .'"
But it is true that the Albanians also belong to the elements
which took part in the physical transformation of the Creek race.
Christian Albanians during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries
immigrated into Greece as farmers and shepherds, and settled in
Boeotia and Attica, in Euboea, and in the Peloponnesus (especially
in the eastern districts and in Arcadia). T h e German geographer,
Alfred Philippson, who has given statistics of the Albanians '"
in the kingdom of Greece, estimates their number in the Pelopon-
nesus at the time of their greatest extension (fifteenth century) as
200,000, about the half of the whole population at that time : to-day
their number in the Peloponnesus is only 90,000 against the whole
population of 730,000. Compact masses of Albanians still live to-
day in Argolis and in some other provinces of the Peloponnesus.
Moreover, the villages of Attica, the Isle of Salamis and parts of
Boeotia, Aegina, and Andros are inhabited by Albanians. But
because these Albanians from the beginning did not stand in hostile
opposition to the Greeks, their Hellenisation began quickly and with-
out difficulty : having no definite national feelings, and being connected
with their countrymen by the same religion, they are now either
totally Hellenised or have at least adopted Greek customs and Greek
feeling : they were among the most prominent champions of the Creek
war of liberty. Even those who have not yet given up their language
32 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
make use of it only in the family, but speak Greek in public life. A s
I observed myself with a young educated man of a Boeotian village,
it would be very difficult for them to use the Albanian language for
the purposes of politics and higher culture. This " diglossy9' or
bilingual condition prepares the way for comp!ete Hellenisation, which
is but a question of time.

IV.
Thus Slavs and Albanians are the two elements which were
added to the ancient Greek blood : but large districts such as the
Greek Islands and Asia Minor have remained free alike from the one
and the other. All the other foreigners, who in course of time
settled on Creek soil, were in such a minority that they are only of
a very small importance for the question of nationality : I name, for
instance, Romans and Goths before the Slavonic invasion, the so-called
Franks (especially Italians) since the crusade of 1 204,'7 the Gipsies,
Jews, and Turks. Undoubtedly there was no thorough and lasting
mixture with these peoples, partly because some of them had no
numerical importance, and ~ a r t l ybecause others such as the Turks
were always sharply separated from the Creeks by political and
religious contrasts.
From the historical and ethnographical condilions of Modern
Greece it results therefore that her inhabitants certainly do not form a
pure race of ancient Greek origin, homogeneous from an anthropological
point of view ; on the other hand, they are neither a new race nor a
new nationality on ancient ground ; on the contraiy, the native element
has absorbed the foreign intruders, has stamped them with its own
seal. That is to-day the general opinion of all scholars of repute,
although the followers of Fallmerayer have not yet died out." Now
the question for us is to fix the national character of this anthropologi-
cal crossing in order that we may know the exact relation between
ancient and modern Greeks. Therefore we must examine the question
whether and in what degree the foreign elements have influenced the
natives with regard to their physical and psychological qualities.
T h e science of anthropology must first be consulted as to whether
it can give us facts which will bring the question to an issue. It is
true that anthropological statistics, especially craniometry, no longer
THE MODERN CREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 33
enjoy to-day the high esteem which the results of that science formerly
enjoyed with regard to historical and ethnographical problems :
anthropologists, resting on their statistical tables, have often disregarded
the theories and the conclusions of historians. However, we may not
neglect anthropology, if we can compare measurements of ancient and
modern times, and if the question has reference to race mixture testified
by historical tradition.
A s for the ancient Creeks, it is the usual but not undisputed
opinion (which is based on the measuring of skulls and of ancient
statues), that on an average they were mesocephalic with the index
77, near the mark of the dolichocephalic form. In the modern
Creeks this index has changed a little, to 80, the beginning of the
brachycephalic meas~rement.'~ From a group of ancient Creek skulls
examined by Professor Virchow," the following proportion is calcu-
lated for the numbers of dolichocephalic, mesocephalic and brachy-
cephalic individuals :-
dolich~ce~halic meso- brachy-
2B010 52"1, ~0°1,

A s to the Greeks of to-day I found the following proportion, calcu-


lated from 1 12 skulls 31 :-

and I myself calculated from another group of 76 skulls 32 :-

O n the other hand, the southern Slavs are clearly broad-skulled : their
index varies from 81'6 for the Servians to 85'1 for the Croatians,
and 87 for H e r z e g ~ v i n aand
, ~ ~ on an average there are found (accord-
ing to Ranke)-
dolichoceph. meso- brachy-
3"Io 25"Io 72"1,

Now what are the conclusions from these tables ? That the Creeks
have become Slavs, that " no drop of Creek blood " is in the Modern
Creek, is certainly not proved by the quoted numbers : a mixture
only may be inferred from the change of the cranio-metrical numbers.
A n exact examination, however, does not oblige us to draw even this
conclusion as a necessary one, and French and German anthropologists
3
THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
directly oppose the concl~sion.~~ For bra~h~cephalism is not found
chiefly in districts once inhabited by Slavs, but in districts free of
Slavs, as for instance on the Ionian Islands and in a quite particular
degree with the Creeks of Kerasus (on the northern shore of Asia
M i n ~ r ) whereas
,~~ on the contrary dolichocephalism has been clearly
established in Thessaly, where great numbers of Slavs must once have
lived. Of an especial interest are the anthropometrical facts which
an English scholar recently gave about the population of Crete, an
island in which Slavonic immigration is out of the que~tion.5~H e
has measured ancient skulls from Minoan, i.e. prehistoric tombs, also a
great number (c. 2300) of modern skulls. T h e index of the Minoan
skulls is 76, the proportion between the dolichocephalic and brachy-
cephalic individuals being 5 : I , the index of modern skulls is 79, the
respective proportion being 5 :4. But there are characteristic local
differences : in the mountains doiich~ce~halism is more frequent than
in the plains-with the exception of the mountain district of the
Sphakiotes (south of Canea) : this curious tribe has the index 80'4, and
the broad-skulled ones are more numerous than the long-skulled ones
(3 :2). A s we have evidence that these Sphakiotes are a real survival
of the ancient Creek p o p u l a t i ~ n it
, ~ is
~ without doubt that brachy-
cephalism has no relation to later (medieval) immigrants. A n d as for
the Creek continent, it is more probable that mixture with broad-
skulled Albanians '' has produced the increasing bra~hyce~halism
among Creeks ; at least a Greek anthropologist 3%as observed a more
frequent bra~h~cephalism in the Albanian districts of the Kingdom.
T h e numbers I related above can therefore not be valued for Slavonic
mixture, if we consider, moreover, that brachycephalism may have its
first origin in prehistoric or at least in pre-Slavic times.40
Thus Fallmerayeis followers gain little help from anthropoIogy.
It seems almost as though the Slavs had not left any ~ h ~ s i c atraces
l :
a natural selection has perhaps taken place in such a manner, that in
mixing, only those individuals were strong enough to preserve them-
selves in whom the native Creek element was p r e d ~ m i n a n t . ~If~ a
traveller believes himself to have found Slavonic features in T h e ~ s a l y , ~ ~
this single observation may be an auto-suggestion ; much more striking
are certainly the tall and fair-coloured Albanian figures or the in-
dividuals with clearly Semitic features, whom I observed not in-
frequently. What we are accustomed to style the ancient Creek type
THE MODERN CREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 35
has been noticed by travellers in different regions, especially on the
islands, and in Asia Minor.
There is perhaps just one anthropological fact to be quoted directly
against the hypothesis of Slavonisation, but I shall not insist upon it :
whereas the fertility of the Slavs, i.e. the great number of births, is
notorious, Greece has in the whole of Europe one of the smallest birth-
rates. Other characteristics, like a rigid conservatism in religion or the
ability to learn foreign languages (of which the latter was pointed out
by Failmerayer), are too little peculiar to Creeks and Slavs to be
considered as premisses for inferring mixture of blood and race.43
But even if a large mixture of blood should prove to be a fact
from anthropological inquiries, it would be of no avail for the question
of nationality in a higher sense. For as, for instance, the belonging to
the English or German people does not depend on the evidence of
a long skull, and as the Englishman, in spite of his Celtic blood, or the
German of Prussia, in spite of his Slavonic blood, will not allow his
English or German nationality to be questioned, so must the nationality
of the modern Greek be considered from the same point of view : not
physical characteristics, but the totality of language, manner of think-
ing, ideas and customs, in short, the sum of spiritual qualities form
primarily the conception of nationality. A n d with regard to these
things we find in Greece nothing of Slavonic traces, or only such a
small remainder that they can only be detected by a vely minute
examination. First it deserves notice that there is in Greece no evidence
of great Slavonic families forming the base of a modern Creek nobility,44
whereas numerous noble families, for instance on the Ionian Islands,
have their ancestry in the Venetian nobility.

T h e most important and the most peculiar mark of a people is their


language, which is used lor ethnographical grouping also by those
ethnologists who dispute the value of this criterion with a smile of
superiority. Thus the language of the modern Greek is a very valu-
able testimony for his ancestry : Modern Greek is certainly not Ancient
Creek (which nobody could reasonably expect), but it is in spite of
many differences a legitimate child, a natural development of Ancient
Greek.4" All altempts to detect in the Modern Creek grammar, in
THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
phonology and accidence or in syntax foreign influences, Slavonic
or Albanian or others, have failed and must fail, because what has
been thought to be foreign and modern had already begun to develop
a long time before the invasion of Slavs and Albanians, partly even
before the Roman epoch. Modern Creek existed already in germ at
the end of antiquity, for Hellenistic Creek, being the medium be-
tween Attic and Modern Greek, already shows the essential charac-
teristics of grammar, which constitute the differences between the
classic and modern language. For instance, Modern Greek pro-
nunciation, the so-called Itacism, had almost developed in the epoch
of the Roman Emperors. A n d not only the common vernacular
language of to-day, but also the modern dialects (with the exception
of Tsaconian) are daughters of Hellenistic Greek. Besides it may
be observed, that the literary language used at the present in Greece
is no natural result of linguistic development, but an artificial product
of scholastic tradition, and as a matter of course, this literary language
with its intentional archaisms has nothing to do with our ethnographical
inquiry, since only the natural development of language bears on this
question.
Language, however, does not only consist of sounds and gram-
matical forms and uses, but also of words. But to know the true
character of a language the dictionary is of a smaller importance, and
the loan and foreign words which are imported into a language do
not influence the ethnographical character of a people, any more than
does the importation of coffee, tea, and tobacco. Thus English has
remained a Germanic language, although it teems with French loan-
words ; none of the European civilised languages was or is able to
keep free from the influence of foreign languages. Therefore it is
not strange that foreign words in great number have come into
Hellenistic, Medieval, and Modern Greek. First it was Rome
that imported many words, especially those of public life and trade,
into the Hellenistic and early Byzantine language : then the Frankish
conquerors, and above all the seafaring Venetians followed with
numerous naval and commercial terms ; and finally the Turks have
enlarged the Greek vocabulary in many departments of everyday
life down to the bill of fare and the words of abuse. What now
about the Slavic words ? When brought into relation with the facts
as stated they are so very trifling, that nobody would infer from their
THE MODERN GREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 37
existence the idea that Slavs and Greeks closely touched one another.
A n excellent authority on the Balkan languages, the late Professor
Gustav Meyer of Gratz, has collected the Slavic words of Modern
Greek from all sources that he could find,40yet his collection does
not number more than 273 entries, and among this number the districts
near the Slavonic frontiers, viz. Epirus, Thessaly, Macedonia, and
Thrace, where the neighbourhood of the Slavs even to-day gives
occasion to contact between the two nations, furnish the most Slavic
words, whereas those of common or nearly common use are at best
no more than seventy, a number which is very small in comparison
with the great number of Romance and Turkish elements. A n d if
we consider that a great many of the Slavic words have found their
way into Creek indirectly, namely, through the Turkish language,
there is no foundation at all for the fantastic opinion of a " mixed
Greco-Slavonic " dialect, which exists only in the imagination of
some incompetent people. T h e number OF Slavonic loan-words
formerly was hardly much greater : the Chronicle of Morea, a text
of the fourteenth century, which relates the history of the Frankish
conquest in quite a vulgar speech, contains a great many French and
Italian terms, but almost no Slavonic word, although in the epoch of
the work unhellenised Slavs still existed in the mountains of the Pelo-
ponnesus."' Slavs as well as Albanians, the influence of whom is
similar to that of the S l a ~ s , have
~ ' always received from Greeks more
than they gave to them ; those peoples, therefore, who had the closest
physical contact with the Greeks, had no influence on Greek nation-
ality and culture : this is a good example for the rule that uncivilised
tribes cannot retain their national peculiarity, much less impose it on
a higher civilisation.
T h e preservation of Greek nationality is conspicuous not only in
the language, but in all that is comprised in the term folklore, in the
thought, superstitions, and customs of the Greek people : the national
character of the ancient Greeks has not been lost even under the
levelling influence of Christianity, but has developed and survives in
modern Greek nationality, sometimes under the cover of ecclesiastical
form^.^"
T h e ancient Greek gods are indeed forgotten by the people, but
ancient ideas of Zeus and other gods are still found in popular ideas
about God and the Saints. Zeus nods and Olympus trembles, says
38 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
Homer-Cod shakes his hair and the earth trembles, so think to-day
the inhabitants of Zakynthos, who are often frightened by horrible
earthquakes. T h e Saints personate the ancient gods : Saint NikoIaos
is the protector of navigation, he saves from the dangers of storms-
who does not recall old Poseidon ? Saint George represents the
ancient god of war, the veneration of the Panagia, or the Blessed Virgin
Mary, reminds us of the virginal Pallas Athene. About Saint
Dionysios there is a charming legend which clearly belongs to the
legends of Dionysos, the old god of wine : the very name of the
saint is almost identical with the name of the ancient god. T h e tale
is so characteristic and amusing that I relate it as a whole.'O
"When Saint Dionysios was still young, he once made a journey
through Greece, in order to go to Naxia (the isle of Naxos), but the
way being very long, he got tired and sat down on a stone to rest.
While he was sitting and looking down in front of himseIf, he saw at
his feet a little plant sprouting from the earth, which seemed to him
so beautiful that he resolved at once to take it with him and to plant
it. H e took the plant out of the ground and carried it away ; but as
the sun was very hot just then, he feared that it might dry up before
his arrival in Naxia. Then he found the small bone of a bird and
put the small plant into it and went on. In his holy hand, however,
the plant grew so quickly that it peeped forth from both sides of
the bone. Then he again feared that it would dry up, and thought
of a remedy. Then he found the bone of a lion which was thicker
than the bird's bone, and he put the bird's bone together with the
plant into the bone of the lion. But the plant quickly grew even out
of the lion's bone. Then he found the bone of a donkey which was
still thicker, and he put the plant together with the bird's and lion's
bones into the donkey's bone, and so he came to Naxia. When he
was planting the plant, he saw that the roots had thickly wound
round the bones of the bird, the lion, and the donkey ; as he could
not take it out without injuring the roots, he planted it in the ground
as it was, and the ~ l a n quickly
t grew up and produced, to his delight,
the finest grapes, from which he made the first wine, and gave it to
men to drink. But what a wonder did he see now ! When men
drank of it they sang in the beginning as little merry birds ; drinking
more of it they became strong as lions, and drinking still more they
became like donkeys."
THE MODERN GREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 39
A s the ancient Greeks believed springs, rivers and lakes, woods
and trees, mountains and ravines to be filled with Nereids, Nymphs,
and Dryads, so according to the belief of the present day wild nature
is populated by a swarm of Nereids, this old name being used for
all sorts of Elves. In the Tales of Nereids many old traits live on ;
there is in them "so much undoubted antiquity, that if literary tradition
did not happen to exist, yet we could still recover a nearly true
picture of the ancient belief of the Nymphs".sl So, for instance, the
very old myth of Peleus and the Nereid Thetis is preserved in modern
fairy tales. T h e ancient Dryads are continued by the modern
Drymjes, goddesses of the forest.62 Witches such as Lamias and Striglas
and other demons terrify the superstitious people to-day as in antiquity.
Charon, the old ferry-man in the underworld, to-day Charos or
Charontas, is the god of death in modern belief; he conducts the
'
souls in a dreary procession to his realm. A s in antiquity, a copper
coin is put into the mouth of a dead person as fee for the ferry into
the other world. T h e ancient Moirai or Fates (to-day Mires) still
d o their duty : they design the fate of the new-born child, spin and
cut the thread of life. T h e bride is conducted into her new home,
the dead are buried with ceremonies which the Greeks used already
two thousand years ago. A sick person seeks recovery by lying down
to sleep in the church of a Saint, like those patients who once made
a pilgrimage to the temple of Asklepios in Epidauros. A n d it is
remarkable that even a modern folk-song has an old ancestry : the
song of the swallow which brings spring is still sung in modern
Greece slightly altered.53 This fact is the more curious as we have
but few popular songs from antiquity.
M y remarks may su6ce to show how false it would be to speak
of the extinction of the ancient race, as we see everywhere that
ancient Greece still lives on in modern Greece. O n the other hand,
Slavonic traces are hardly to be detected in the sphere of folklore ;
they are unimportant and rare at all events. Only a few points,
such as the gloomy belief in Vampyres, seem to be influenced by
Slavic ideas and features ; at least the widespread but not general
name of this ghost, Vrikolakas, ved sillt., is Slavonic (compare
Servian vukodZaR, " Vampyre '3. W e are, however, not entitled to
say that this belief is wholly taken from Slavs, for similar traits are
not at all wanting in antiquity, as the German philologist, Bernhard
THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
Schmidt, has emphasised in his brilliant work about modern Creek
folklore.
Certainly, where the same popular ideas and similar conditions
are found among different peoples, it is sometimes difficult to know
where they are original, and to which people they are peculiar :
we feel this d&culty in a high degree if we examine the origin of
the features common to Greeks and Albanians. Here we must be
guided by the general idea that the Albanians, as we said before, have
at any rate received more than they have given.
And last, not least, what does the moral character of the modern
Creek prove for their ancestry ? I do not much value this criterion
for our question. But surely the character of the modern Creek
people has no resemblance, for instance, to that of the Russian
people. T h e Russians are pessimists and brooders without activity.
O n the contrary, the mobile and active spirit of the modern Creeks
reminds us of that famous characterisation of the Athenians which
Thucydides (I, 70) puts in the mouth of a Corinthian : " T h e
Athenians are fond of innovations, and q i c k in resolve and execu-
tion, bold above their strength, braving dangers even against their
better knowledge, and in misfortune always full of hope. ... If they
.
fail in a trial, they put their hope in something else. . . Therefore,
if anybody were to say that they are by nature such as to have no
rest, nor to let others rest, he would be saying the truth." In other
things, too, the modern Creek has some features of the ancient
Athenian, as the gift of speech, also unfavourable features, such as
the tendency to superficial thinking and boasting, a quarrelsome temper
in political matters, cunning in trade and commerce.54

VI.
A s modern inquiry shows, the entire and complete ethnographicat
transformation which Greece is said by Fallmerayer to have under-
gone is out of the question. T h e Creeks have mixed with foreign
elements like all nations which have a history, but they possessed and
possess such a wonderful intensive and extensive elasticity, that in spite
of the most contrary fate they were able to absorb foreign culture and
foreign races without having their nationality or national characteristics
extinguished :65 rather, the fading race of antiquity gathered fresh
THE MODERN GREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 41
vitality for itself by the mixture and was rejuvenated." T h e Greeks
of to-day are descendants of the ancient Hellenes, not in the sense
that every modern Greek could trace his origin back to an ancient
Athenian or Spartan, and so on ; but they are descendants in
this sense, that in the modern people ancient blood flows largely
and in some districts almost purely, and they are so still more in the
higher sense that the modern race shows a natural development of
ancient Greek national character -of course developed and trans-
formed by the influence of all factors upon which depends the
transformation of " unmixed " nations-if indeed there are unmixed
nations with historical life.
O n the other hand, it would be wrong to identify and to con-
fuse Ancient and Modern Greek language, or ancient and modern
nationality, as zealous exaggerating amateurs like to do : Christianity
and the centralisation of the Greeks by the Roman Empire have
above all transformed the ancient into the modern people, and that in
quite another degree than Slavs, Albanians, and other Barbarians
could do. This influence is illustrated by the very name Ronzjds ,
(i.e. Popa;os), which the Byzantine and modern Greeks gave to
themselves : the official title of the Byzantine State as a " Roman or
Romaic Empire" has furnished the popular name Xonids for the
nation and its people, whereas the ancient name Hel/enes in popular
mind denotes the legendary heathen ancestors, the race of giant^.^'
Of course the Greeks of to-day are more closely related to the
Byzantines than these latter to the ancient Greeks. I might cite
numerous examples, but I will content myself with a characteristic
one given by the late Professor Krumbacher : the popular proverbs
of the Byzantines are closely related to Modern Greek and Oriental
proverbs, but have very little relation to the proverbs handed down
from antiquity." T h e philologists of Byzantium indeed revelled in
ancient records, as they saw the sources of education in the spiritual
treasures of antiquity ; but the mind of the people, from which the
popular proverb has its origin, went its own way. Popular historical
memory, too, does not reach beyond the radiant epoch of the By-
zantine Empire : Saint Konstantinos, the first Christian Emperor, is
the earliest hero of Modern Greek tradition. With the Byzantine
Empire is connected the " great idea" of the modern Greeks,
the idea of resurrection of a great empire with the capital on the
42 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
Bosporus. This idea, which is nourished now more than before
by the successful issue of the late war, is not only a dream of
ambitious politicians, but is rooted in popular tradition.
Thus our theme has finally led us to politics, to the Eastern Ques-
tion. T h e of the origin of the modern Greeks is connected
with this question ; it has a political as well as a scientific importance,
as I pointed out in the beginning of my Iecture. Historical and
ethnographical considerations recommend such a solution of the political
problem that the race which in antiquity and in the middle ages ruled
the E g e a n Sea, the existence and the vitality of which I hope to
have proved, should again be put in its historical position.
A t the present day, where military and political successes have
raised the credit of the Creek nation, it is easier to pronounce such an
opinion than it was some years ago," when the financial and political
condition of modern Greece made malevolent men speak of the " so-
called Greeks," who are but a " bastard nation, " a mosaic work of
9.

Vlachs, Arnauts, and Slavs ". But let me avoid speaking of political
problems, although I know that Philhellenism has not died out in the
English nation. Scientific truth is above all national and political
discussion. Yet the truth we have gained about the historical and
ethnographical position of the modern Creek, gives us reason to
hope that the talented nation that has been so often punished by fate,
and sometimes through its own fault, will now have a brighter future.

NOTES.
' However it may be observed, that a criticism of Schiinwalder in the
" Jahrbiicher fiir wissenschaftl. Kritik," I (Berlin, 1840), 3 1-47, is worth
saving from oblivion, and to be read still to-day : the author rejects sine
ira eL studio Fallmerayer's theory.
Fallrnerayer, " Gesammelte Werke " (Leipzig, 186I), 11, 14.
See A. Thumb, ' I Die jiingsten Unruhen in Athen und die neugrie-
chische Bibelubersetzung," in " Crenzboten," 1902 (11), 137-144.
'Compare R. von Hijfler, 16Erinnerungen an Jakob Philipp Fall-
merayer," in "Mitteilungen des Vereins f. Geschichte der Deutschen in
Bijhmen," XXVI (1888). 395 ff.
" Wiener Jahrbiicher," XVII (1 822), 95 1.

I follow Cregorovius in his "Geschichte der Stadt Athen im


THE MODERN GREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 43
Mittelalter ". In our own time some details only of the Slavonic
immigration into the Balkan Peninsula have been treated. So JireEek,
" Denkschriften der Wiener Akademie," XLVIII, 21 ff., gives an
excellent and solid description of the Slavonic immigration into the north-
west of the Balkans ; Gelzer, "Abhandl. d. Sichs. Gesellschaft der
Wiss.," XVlII (1899), Nr. 5, 42 ff. gives, besides general remarks,
some new material. A good orientation in quite a modern manner is
found in Bury, "History of the Later Roman Empire," I (1889), 1 14 ff.,
455 ff., and in Philippson, " Petermann's M i t t e i l ~ n ~ e n , "1890, 1 ff.
A. Cervesato, " Le colonie slave della Grecia," in " Pensiero Italiano "
(Milano), 1896, Nr. 67-68, is not accessible to me.
Gregorovius, I, 85.
Gregorovius, I, 86.
Gregorovius, I, 1 12.
loGregorovius, I, 1 14.

l1 Namely, the Ezerites and Milingi, see Gregorovius, I, 1 17.

'Tompare Gelzer in " Zeitschrift fiir wiss. Theologie," XXXV


(1892), 430 ff.
lSGregorovius, I, 122.

l4 About the Greeks of Cappadocia compare the exact statements of


Dawkins in " T h e Journal of Hellenic Studies," XXX (1 91 O), 109 ff.,
267 ff.
l6 Isolated Greek remains still exist in Southern Italy (near Reggio
and Otranto), in Corsica (in the little town Cargese north of Ajaccio), on
the Sea of Azov.
l6 About the geographical extension of the Modern Greeks compare
A. Oppel in " Globus," LXXI (1897), 249 ff., and Philippson, " Criechen-
land und seine Stellung im Orient ". T h e present grouping of races in
the Balkans is recently described and illustrated with an excellent ethno-
graphical map by J. Cvijit, "Die ethnographische Abgenzung der
Volker auf der Balkanhalbinsel," in " Petermanns Mitteilungen " (1 91 3),
I 13 ff ., 1 85 ff ., 244 ff. (includes also a bibliography).
l7 For some districts there are now monographs from a modern historical
and etymological view, compare A. Thumb, " Die ethnographische Stellung
der Zakonen," " Indogerm. Forschungen," IV (1 894), 195 ff ., ST.A+-
T ~ O F'''H
, ~vopa~oXoyla rij~
'ATTLK?~F~ a 7jl ~ T O ~ K ~ U T&V
L C 'AX,!Iav&v,"
" 'Errerqplr roc ITapvaooo~,"I (1 896), 186-192, 8.M C V ~ ~ "~Ton-o- OF,
V K ~ T ~ o u ''
V O ~ L K ~r1jq , )'A8quji,))
) XVIII (1 906), 3 1 5 ff. A s I see from
" Aaoypa+la," I, 422, a committee has been established by the Greek

Minister of Education for studying the geographical names of Greece.


ls See " Byzantin. Zeitschrift," 11, 283 ff.
lg See note 17.
20 I collected the geographical names of the Maina in 1894, and give
above the general result of my inquiry which is based upon the following
statistical table :-
THE MODERN CREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 45
gives 81 as index of the modern Greeks. Because we have but few
measurements (not general statistics), it is difficult to state the real average.
For all anthropological researches, the book of C. Stkphanos, '' La CrSce
au point de vue naturel, ethnologique, anthropologique, etc.," Paris, 1884
(Extrait du " Dictionnaire encyclopkdique des sciences mkdicales "), is
still to-day an indispensable source. For some new details compare the
authors quoted in the following notes.
30
Alt- und neugriechische Schadel," Sitzungsberichte d. Berliner
66

Akad.," 1893, 677 ff.


31 See J. Ranke, " Der Mensch," 11, 204.

32 '' A e h ~ l o vr i j ~~ T i j~~ a ~ p ~1,l a366


~ ? 8 v o X o ~ r ~t E
O P L K KU;
~ ~ F ~ , ff."
33 The last number is found in Hoernes, " Naturgeschichte, etc.," I,
350.
34 Compare "Bull. d e la Socigt; d'Anthropologie," VII, 658 ff.,
Diefenbach, Volkerkunde Osteuropas," 1, 1 42 ff. ; otherwise Zaborowski
"

in "La grande Encyclopddie," XIX (1893), 282 ff.


36 See N60phytos in " L'Anthr~polo~ie," I1 (1891), 25 ff.
36Ch. H. Hawes, "Cretan Anthropology," " Am. Journ. of
Archaeol.," XV (191 I), 65-67, and "Some Dorian Descendants,"
'' Ann. Brit. School of Athens," XVI (1 909- 1 9 1 O), 258-280. Some
other Minoan skulls have been measured by W. B. Dawkins, "Skulls
from Cave Burials at Zarko (Crete)," '' T h e Annual of the Brit. School of
Athens," VII (1 900-1 901), 105 ff.
37 Compare also Hawes, '' Some Dorian Descendants," in note 36.

38 The index of Albanians near Skutari is 89 according to Hoernes,


1.c I, 350. Other numbers (between 84 and 90) are communicated by
Hawes, "Some Dorian Descendants," 266, 276. T h e Roumanians,
too, are brachycephalic according to the tables of Pittard, " Ethnologic de
la Pgninsule des Balkans," '' L e Globe," LXIII (1 904). p. 50.
3S See C. Stdphanos, 1.c. 432 ff.

40 My remarks show how superficial is the assertion of Buschan (see


note 28), that Creek brachycephalism comes from Slav descent.
41 Compare the opinions of the Danish scholar Vodskov, summarised
by Franke in " Indog. Forsch." (Anzeiger), 111 (1 893), 1 I 1 ff.
42 See Barth in " Berliner Zeitschrift f. allgemeine Erdkunde," XVI
(1 864), 194 f.
4s Above I have not spoken about the colour of the hair, because we
have no means of obtaining a percentual comparison of ancient and modern
times. According to Hoernes, 1.c. 1, 354, in Greece there are 96 /, of
a dark complexion. This number needs criticism as much as the statement
of a French author (Castonnet des Fosses, '' La Crkte et I'HellCnisme,"
Paris, 1897, 58). that most inhabitants of Crete are of a fair complexion.
C. Stkphanos, 1.c. 458, gives a more accurate table, and remarks that
fair colour is found in some villages of Laconia (near the Eurotas) and of
the mountains of Mantinea and on Mount Dirphys (Euboea). I myself
THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
have made some observations during my travels through Maina and
Sphakia. In these districts of the Taygetus and of Crete fair colour is
more frequent than I observed elsewhere. The following table is compiled
by counting pupils of elementary schools, namely, 206 boys 3 girls of the +
schools of Vitylo, Platsa, Kampos (Maina) and 79 boys -I- 14 girls of the
schools of Sphakia town and Anopolis (Sphakia) :-
Dark. Brown. Fair.
Maina 42.1 "1, 40.2 "I, 1 7.7 "1,
Sphakia 32'3 "1, 55.9 "I, 1 1.8 'lo
My numbers for the Sphakiotes differ throughout from those of Hawes,
'' Some Dorian Descendants," 269.
In Maina fairness can be explained by mixture with Albanians (see
A. Thumb, "Die Maniaten," in " Deutsche Rundschau," 1898, 124).
But in the district of the Sphakiotes fair complexion must be of ancient
Greek or even prehistoric origin : perhaps the Sphakiotes are anthropo-
logically a survival of the Dorians who came to Crete about 1000 B.C.
A t any rate fair complexion cannot serve to support Fallmerayer's theory.
4<regorovius, I, 150.
45 A short orientation is found in my essay " Die ne~~riechische

Sprache," Freiburg, 1892.


4"1 Neugriechische Studien," I1 ('I Sitzungsber. d. Wiener Akad.,"
CXXX, 1894). Of course the list of G. Meyer could be supplemented
in some points.
47 Gregorovius, I, 153 f.

4S See G. Meyer " Neugriech. Studien," I1 (1895).

4g About the relation between the ancient and modern folklore compare
besides the well-known book of Bernhard Schmidt (" Das Volksleben der
Neugriechen "), the more recent works of N. F. n o X 1 r 7 q , " M e X h a r~e p i
70; P l o v ~ a Tl ~ y F X d u c ~ ~TOG
q g)LXTu~~coG XaoG, ~ a p a 8 d o e r q , ' ' 2 vols.,
Athens, 1904 ; Lawson, " Modern Creek Folklore and Ancient Greek
Religion," Cambridge, 1910 ; Mary Hamilton, " Creek Saints and their
Festivals," London, 1910 (with the criticisms of Delehaye in " Analecta
Bollandiana," XXIX, 460 ff. ; and Gruppe in '' Berliner philol. Wochen-
schrift," 191 1, 683 ff.) ; Hesseling, "Oud- en Nieuwgrieks Volksgeloof,"
in the " Gids," 1906, Nr. 7, and B. Schmidt, " Ne~~riechische Volks-
kunde," in " Neue Jahrbiicher f. d. klass. Altertum," XXVII (191 I),
643 ff. (the two last essays are occasioned by the quoted work of Politis).
Hesseling as well as B. Schmidt emphasises the survival of Antiquity;
the latter, explaining the principles of research, combats K. Dieterich
(" Aus neugriech. Sagen," in " Zeitschr. d. Vereins f. Volkskunde,"
1905, 380 ff., and " Neugriech. Sagenklange vom alten Griechenland."
'' Neue Jahrbiicher f. d. klass. Altertum," XVII, 80 ff.), who denies that
modern Greek tradition may reach beyond the Hellenistic times. Modern
Greek folklore is now excellently summarised in the periodical edited by
Politis, " A a o y p a + l a . A e X r l o v 7 r j ~~ X X ~ V L XK a~o~yFp a + ~ ~ Craipelaq
f~ "
THE MODERN GREEK AND HIS ANCESTRY 47
(since 1909, 4 vols.). T h e book of R. Rodd, T h e Customs and Lore
of Modern Greece," London, 1892, is not accessible to me.
See Hahn, " Griech. und albanes. Msrchen " (Leipzig, 1864), 11, 76,
I I O A L T ~ F '' IIapa86uei~,"Nr. 1 75, Hamilton, I. c. 1 5 ff.
B. Schmidt, " Neue Jahrbiicher," 1.c. 65 1.
" See B. Schmidt, 1.c. 654 ff ., Lawson, 15 1 ff., Hamilton, I.c.
187 ff.
63 Compare most recently Hamilton, I.c. 155 f.
5r In my lecture I dealt only with the Creeks as an ethnographical
unit, although I indicated sometimes local differences. There is in the
first place a remarkable (anthropological and linguistic) difference between
the Creeks of Asia Minor and those of the other countries ; it comes from
antiquity (as for instance Cobineau, I.c., 268, has already emphasised).
Especially the dialects of Pontus and Cappadocia are developed in quite
an original manner, and their moral character, too, is different from that of
the European and Insular Creeks. Moreover, some Greek tribes have a
peculiar character, as the Agraphiotes of Mount Pindos, who are but little
known, the Tsaconians in ancient Kynuria, with their strange Dorian
dialect, the Maniates in the Taygetus Peninsula, whom I studied in a
journey in 1894 (see " Deutsche Rundschau," 1898, 1 10 ff .), and the
Sphakiotes in the " White Mountains," south of Canea ; after having made
a journey there in 1912, I shall treat of this interesting tribe in the
" Deutsche Rundschau," 1 9 1 4.
55 It deserves notice, that an excellent Servian scholar, J. Cvijit (1.c.
246, see note 16). has recently acknowledged this absorbing force of
Hellenism.
6'j!3ee also Gobineau, I.c., and Gelzer, I.c.
5i About the name P o w i o y , X07?2jds, compare for instance Krum-
bacher, "Das Problem der neugriechischen Schriftsprache" (Minchen,
1903), 191 ff.
58 See Krumbacher, I' Mittelgriechische Sprichw6rter " (Miinchen.
1893), Introduction.
"See my papers " D i e heutigen Griechen," in the "Deutsche
Rundschau," 1897, 226 and " Pro Graecia," ib., 1913, 473 ff.

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