Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Otto, König von Griechenland

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Gustav Wilhelm Kraus (artist, 1804–52)
Chromolithograph
Germany: J. B. Dresely, 1840
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


In this procession, seventeen-year-old King Otto (r. 1832–62), bedecked in Greek garb, leads the Bavarian army into Athens, the capital of his Kingdom of Greece. The mounted retinue rides past ancient columns with the Acropolis looming in the distance. The troops standing at attention in the background suggest an uncontested arrival of a victorious ruler. Despite dressing the part, Otto’s bare face betrays his youth, which caused as much controversy as his non-Greek origins. Since Otto was a minor when nominated to the Greek throne, in actuality a regency of three Bavarian ministers ruled. King Otto remained a devout Catholic throughout his life. To many, a non-Orthodox ruler on the Greek throne proved absurd. Thus, in December 1839, a group of Greek notables organized a secret society to plan an uprising against Ottoman rule in Thessaly, Macedonia, and Epirus, and the eventual replacement of King Otto by an Orthodox ruler.