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The Arkadi Monastery
is one of Crete's most venerated symbols of freedom.
The defiant defence of this fortress-like monastery
during the 1866 Cretan rebellion against the Turks
is still legendary and inspirational.
By the mid-1800's, the Turks had occupied Crete
for more than two centuries, despite frequent
bloody uprisings by Cretan rebels determined to
win independence and union with Greece. Then came
the revolution of 1866, instigated by a 16 member
revolutionary committee. Arkadi Monastery became
the rebels' headquarters, owing to its central
position on the island and strategic location
atop a craggy inland gorge.
When the Turkish Pasha in Rethymnon learned of
the rebels operating out of the monastery, he
sent an ultimatum to Arkadi's Abbot Gabriel Marinakis:
either expel the revolutionary committee or the
monastery would be destroyed. But Abbot Gabriel
was himself acting as chairman of the committee.
He refused the Pasha's demand. The rebels began
preparing the monastery for the anticipated Turkish
attack. At dawn on November 8, 1866, the Arkadi
defenders awoke to find the monastery surrounded
by 15,000 Turkish soldiers armed with 30 cannons.
The monastery walls were manned by only 259 armed
men, including 45 monks and 12 of the 16 revolutionary
committee members. There were also almost 700
unarmed women and children from nearby villages,
seeking refuge from the encroaching Turks. The
Turkish commander's demand for surrender was answered
by gunfire. The battle was on. Turkish troops
stormed the monastery gate in waves and hundreds
were mown down by heavy fire from the defenders
and from seven Cretan snipers who had barricaded
themselves in a windmill outside the walls. As
night fell on the first day of the battle, the
fields around the monastery were heaped with Turkish
corpses. The snipers had died one by one. But
still the gate and walls held. In the dark of
the first night, the two Cretan rebels were lowered
by a rope from a window, dressed as Turks, to
slip through enemy lines and seek reinforcements
from a nearby town. When it was learned that no
help was coming, one of the rebels crept back
through Turkish ranks to return to Arkadi. The
second day of battle broke with a bang, as the
Turks opened fire with two heavy artillery guns
they had dragged up the gorge from Rethymnon during
the night.
As the walls and gate smashed and crumbled under
the incessant pounding of the shells, Abbot Gabriel
gathered the defenders into the Arkadi Chapel
to receive the last sacrament. The Abbot urged
them to die bravely for their cause and then went
up to the walls to do so himself. Aware that the
Pasha had ordered him to be taken alive, Abbot
Gabriel showed himself on an unprotected terrace
and opened fire on the Turks. At first the Turks
obeyed orders and did not shoot back. But at last
the big Abbot, standing in clear view in his black
flowing robes, blazing away at anything that moved,
made too inviting a target for one Turkish soldier.
A bullet caught Abbot Gabriel just above the navel
and he fell dead - but not before he had given
his blessing to a desperate plan hatched by an
imposing rebel fighter named Konstantine Giaboudakis.
What the refugees at Arkadi feared more than death
was to fall into the hands of the Turks. So when
Konstanine Giaboudakis presented his plan to the
defenders, it was unanimously approved. By the
afternoon of the second day, the Turkish heavy
artillery had pulverized the outer walls. The
defenders killed hundreds more invaders, but the
end was clearly near - ammunition was running
low and the gate was almost breached. As darkness
fell, the Turks launched a massive final assault,
pouring through the gate into the inner courtyard,
where the rebels fought them hand to hand. Meanwhile,
Giaboudakis was preparing to carry out his plan.
He led more than 600 women and children into the
monastery's gunpowder storage room, where they
said their prayers and waited until hundreds of
Turks were swarming over the roof and ramming
away at the bolted door. As the door splintered,
Giaboudakis put a spark to a gunpowder keg. The
massive explosion killed all the refugees, along
with several hundred Turkish soldiers. When the
smoke cleared, 864 Cretan men, women and children
lay dead, along with 1500 Turks. The Turks took
114 prisoners whom they immediately put to death.
Only 3 rebels managed to escape to tell the tale.
News of the slaughter at Arkadi Monastery, with
the heavy loss of women, children and clergymen
shocked the rest of Europe and won much support
for the Cretan rebels' cause. In 1898, with help
from Greece and the Great Powers (England, France,
Italy and Russia), Crete won its independence
and the Turks withdrew from the island, which
they had held since 1669.
Then in 1913, the long-fought-for goal was achieved
and Crete was united with Greece.
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