Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Greek Warriors

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Artist(s) now unknown (European in Greece or Ottoman Empire)
Watercolor on paper, c. 1825
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


This character study juxtaposes two figures in the regional costumes of Greek revolutionaries. The figure with a trim mustache on the right appears relaxed and unarmed while smoking a long opium pipe. A caption identifies the figure on the left as Nikitas (Nikitaras) Stamatelopoulos (c. 1784–1849), who gained renown as a leader after his victory at the Battle of Dervenakia (1822) and later engagements under the sobriquet Turkofaghos (Greek for “Turk-eater”). Fittingly, he stands ready for battle with his sword in hand and guns tucked into an embroidered sash. His fur kaftan further distinguishes him as a local notable of status, though he maintained a documented reputation of indifference to wealth. Following the war, his opposition to the new Bavarian Regency of Greece landed him in jail.