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Presenter: Dr Dimitris Kamouzis Synopsis: The period preceding the victory of the Kemalist forces and the “Asia Minor Catastrophe” (September 1922) constitutes a turning point for the history of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople and the Orthodox Greeks of the Ottoman Empire. The aim of this paper is to provide an overview of the political identification of the Patriarchate and the Constantinopolitan Greeks with Eleftherios Venizelos and the Greek irredentist plan of the Megali Idea (Great Idea). Initially the paper will focus on the endeavours of the religious and lay leaderships of the Greek Orthodox millet (ethno-religious community) to sever their ties with the Porte and propagate the unification (enosis) with ‘Mother Greece’ from the signing of the Mudros armistice (30 October 1918) until the loss of Venizelos in the Greek elections of November 1920. Afterwards it will cover the second and most dynamic phase of the Greek nationalist movement in Istanbul, which in terms of political goals was characterized by a shift from the unification with Venizelos’ Greece to the creation of a separate state for the unredeemed Greeks in Asia Minor. Bio: Dimitris Kamouzis is a Researcher at the Centre for Asia Minor Studies (Athens, Greece). He completed his PhD in History at the Department of Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, King’s College London. He has been a scholar of the Alexander S. Onassis Public Benefit Foundation, a Research Fellow of the John S. Latsis Public Benefit Foundation and the National & Kapodistrian University of Athens and a Teaching Fellow at King’s College London. He has participated in numerous conferences and has published several journal articles and book chapters on the Greek Orthodox populations of the Ottoman Empire/Turkey. His latest book is entitled Greeks in Turkey: Elite Nationalism and Minority Politics in Late Ottoman and Early Republican Istanbul (Oxon & New York: SOAS/Routledge Studies on the Middle East, 2021). He has also co-edited the forthcoming volume: Greek Soldiers and the Asia Minor Campaign: Aspects of a Painful Experience (In Greek, Ekdoseis Vivliopoleion tis Hestias, 2022). Sponsors: We thank the Ithacan Philanthropic Society for the kind donation that makes seminars like this possible. During the course of the year considerable expenses are incurred in staging the seminars. In order to mitigate these costs individuals or organisations are invited to donate against a lecture of their choice. You too can donate for one or more seminars and (optionally) let your name or brand be known as a patron of culture to our members, visitors and followers, as well as the broader artistic and cultural community of Melbourne. Please email: [email protected] or call 03 9662 2722. We thank the following corporate sponsors: Delphi Bank, Delphi Business Group, Symposiarch