Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Mrs. Greece and Her Rough Lovers

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Shortshanks (pseudonym of Robert Seymour, artist, 1798–1836)
Hand-colored etching
London, England: Thomas McLean, 1828
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


In this political satire, Greece is pictured as a short woman in braids with a Balkan kaftan cinched over a dress trimmed with a gold meander scroll on blue. She stands between the warring Ottoman and Russian Empires, personified as men in their respective military uniforms. The Ottoman, bearing a Quran in his belt, demands submission under the threat of “blood and fire,” emphasized by his scimitar and noose. Though Russia uses enticing words to persuade his fellow Orthodox Christians to leave the Ottomans, he carries a multi-tailed whip (Russian “imperial knout”) behind his back, suggesting harsh consequences for refusal. Small spectators back Russia, presumably representing European powers like Great Britain and France. Though the new Hellenic state was independent in theory, it was placed under the “protecting” powers of Britain, France and Russia, which chose the Bavarian prince Otto of Wittelsbach to become Greece’s king.