Anastasios Papoulas | |
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Anastasios Papoulas during his command in Anatolia
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Born | 1 January 1857 Missolonghi, Kingdom of Greece |
Died | 24 April 1935 Athens, Kingdom of Greece |
(aged 78)
Allegiance | Kingdom of Greece |
Service/branch | Hellenic Army |
Years of service | 1878–1920 1920–1922 |
Rank | Lieutenant General |
Battles/wars |
Greco-Turkish War of 1897 Balkan Wars Greco-Turkish War of 1919–22 |
Awards | Commander's Cross of the Cross of Valour |
Anastasios Papoulas (Greek: Αναστάσιος Παπούλας; 1/13 January 1857 – 24 April 1935) was a Greek general, most notable as the Greek commander-in-chief during most of the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–22. Originally a firm royalist, after 1922 he shifted towards the republican Venizelists, and was executed in 1935 for supporting a failed republican coup.
Born in Missolonghi on 1 January 1857, Anastasios Papoulas enlisted in the Greek Army in 1878. He fought in the Greco-Turkish War of 1897, and later served as head of police of Athens. During the Balkan Wars of 1912–13 he commanded the 10th Infantry Regiment.
After the end of the wars he was assigned to divisional and corps commands, but in 1917 he was dismissed from the Army due to his royalist sympathies during the National Schism. With the electoral victory of the pro-royalist United Opposition in November 1920, he was recalled to active service and appointed commander-in-chief of the Greek forces (the Army of Asia Minor) in Anatolia, replacing Lt. General Leonidas Paraskevopoulos. He commanded the Greek forces in Anatolia against the Turkish nationalists in the failed Greek offensives of spring 1921 (First Battle of İnönü, Second Battle of İnönü), the Greek summer offensive of 1921 (Battle of Kütahya–Eskişehir and Battle of Sakarya) and the subsequent retreat to the lines captured in the Kütahya–Eskişehir battle.