Constitutional Party
συνταγματικό Κόμμα |
|
---|---|
Leader |
Alexandros Mavrokordatos Spyridon Trikoupis Kostas Botsaris Benizelos Roufos Thrasyvoulos Zaimis |
Founded | 1843 |
Dissolved | 1873 |
Merged into | Modernist Party (de facto) |
Headquarters | Athens |
Ideology |
Liberalism Monarchism Constitutionalism Anglophilia (diplomatic) |
Political position | Centre-right |
Religion | Secularism |
The English Party (Greek: Αγγλικό Κóμμα), presenting itself as the Constitutional Party (Greek: συνταγματικό Κόμμα, SK), was one of the three informal early Greek parties that dominated the political history of the First Hellenic Republic and the first years of the Kingdom Of Greece during the early 19th century, the other two being the Russian Party and the French Party.
The creation and evolution of these Parties was the effect of the interest that the three Great Powers (the United Kingdom, France and Russia) displayed for Greek affairs. As a result, they counted on the hope that Greeks had, that by supporting them those countries would also help the Greek Kingdom to fulfill its expectations for economic progress and territorial expansion.
The establishment of the English Party should probably be considered the action that some leaders of the Greek War of Independence took in June 1825, urged by Prince Alexander Mavrocordatos and Georgios Kountouriotis, to compose a letter, whereby Greece applied for protection to the United Kingdom.
The party lacked support in mainland Greece but was very powerful among the Phanariotes and the wealthy shipowners of the Aegean Islands. During John Capodistria's period it lost much of its influence due to the establishment of the other parties, but regained most of it after the arrival of King Otto, since the political sympathies of the principal Regent, Josef Ludwig von Armansperg, lay with Britain.