Konstantinos Typaldos-Alfonsatos | |
---|---|
Bust of Typaldos-Alfonsatos in Kavala
|
|
Born | 1873 Athens |
Died | 28 February 1945 |
Allegiance |
Kingdom of Greece (1891–17, 1920–22) Second Hellenic Republic (1926–31) |
Service/branch | Hellenic Navy |
Years of service | 1891–17, 1920–22, 1926–31 |
Rank | Vice Admiral |
Wars | Greco-Turkish War of 1897, Macedonian Struggle, Balkan Wars |
Konstantinos Typaldos-Alfonsatos (Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Τυπάλδος-Αλφονσάτος, 1873–1945) was a Greek Navy officer. He served briefly as Minister for Naval Affairs (1922), Chief of the Hellenic Navy General Staff (1927), and Inspector General of the Navy (1929–31), retiring with the rank of Vice Admiral.
Born in Athens in 1873, Konstantinos Typaldos-Alfonsatos entered the Hellenic Navy Academy on 2 September 1887 and graduated on 31 August 1891 as a Line Ensign. In 1897, on board torpedo boat 16, he participated in the naval operations around Crete, as well as in the subsequent Greco-Turkish War.
Promoted to Sub-Lieutenant on 9 January 1899, he was appointed captain of gunboat A in 1900, and promoted to Lieutenant on 15 November 1902. In 1903–08 he was active in the Macedonian Struggle. He participated in the Goudi coup in August 1909, but soon disagreed with the moderate leadership and launched his own abortive coup in October 1909. On 26 March 1910 he was promoted to Lieutenant I Class, and to Lt. Commander on 17 July of the same year. During the First Balkan War he commanded the destroyer Niki, with which he participated in the Battle of Lemnos and the operations for the capture of Lesbos and Samos. In early June 1913, he was given command of the newly established 29th Naval Regiment, formed of naval personnel, which he led in the Second Balkan War against Bulgaria. During the war, he was promoted to Commander, on 1 July 1913.
After the Balkan Wars, he commanded the destroyer Leon. Promoted to Captain on 13 April 1915, he went on to serve as Inspector of Port Authorities, before being forced onto suspended service on 20 June 1917 after the exile of King Constantine I of Greece and the unification of Greece under Eleftherios Venizelos. On 20 December 1917, he went into retirement. After the electoral victory of the royalist parties in November 1920, he was reinstated to active service on 10 November, and was promoted to Rear Admiral on 2 December. He was also elected an MP for Cephalonia, and in May 1922 served as Minister for Naval Affairs in the short-lived cabinet (3–9 May) of Nikolaos Stratos.