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{{Short description|Heroine of the Greek War of Independence}}
{{Infobox Military Person
{{Infobox military person
|name=Laskarina Bouboulina
| width_style = person
|image=]
| honorific_prefix = ]
|caption=19th century painting
| name = Laskarina Bouboulina
|born=] ]
| native_name_lang = el
|died=], ]
| image = Bouboulina.JPG
|placeofbirth=], ]
| caption = Oil painting of Bouboulina<br>]
|placeofdeath=], ]
| nickname = Καπετάνισσα<br>{{small|Kapetanissa}}<br>Κυρά<br>{{small|Kyra}}
|nickname=
| native_name = Λασκαρίνα Μπουμπουλίνα<br>{{small|Laskarina Bouboulina}}<ref>Zirin, Mary Fleming, ed. Women & Gender in Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, and Eurasia: Southeastern and East Central Europe. Vol. 1. ME Sharpe, 2007. pg. 122</ref>
|allegiance={{flagicon|Greece|old}} ]
| birth_name = Λασκαρίνα Πινότση<br>{{small|Laskarina Pinotsi}}
|branch=
| birth_date = {{Birth date text|1771|1771}}
|serviceyears=
| birth_place = ], ] {{small|(now ])}}
|rank= ]
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|1825|5|22|1771}}
|unit=
| death_place = ], ], ] {{small|(now ])}}
|commands=
| allegiance = {{Flagicon|Greece|old}} ]
|battles=
| branch = {{navy|Greece}}
|awards=
| serviceyears =
|relations=
| rank = ] (Revolutionary Navy)<br>] (''Posthumous'', Hellenic Navy)<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kathimerini.gr/961425/article/epikairothta/ellada/h-mpoympoylina-yponayarxos-epi-timh-me-proedriko-diatagma|date=2018-04-27|website=Η Καθημερινή|language=el|script-title=el:Η Μπουμπουλίνα υποναύαρχος επί τιμή με προεδρικό διάταγμα|trans-title=Bouboulina the Rear admiral honored with presidential decree|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180428154529/https://www.kathimerini.gr/961425/article/epikairothta/ellada/h-mpoympoylina-yponayarxos-epi-timh-me-proedriko-diatagma|archive-date=2018-04-28|access-date=2020-05-02}}</ref><br>] (''Posthumous'', Russian Navy)
|laterwork=
| unit =
| commands = ''Agamemnon''
| battles = {{tree list}}
*]{{Assassinated}}
**Siege of Nafplion
**Siege of Monemvasia
{{tree list/end}}
| awards =
| spouse = Dimitrios Yiannouzas<br>Dimitrios Bouboulis
| children = Yiannis Yiannouzas<br>Georgios Yiannouzas<br>Eleni Boubouli
| relations = ] (son-in-law)<br>] (great-granddaughter)
| laterwork = Member of the ]
| signature = ]
}} }}
'''Laskarina Bouboulina''' ({{lang-el|Λασκαρίνα Μπουμπουλίνα}}) (] ] - ] ]) was a ] heroine of the ].


'''Laskarina Pinotsi''', commonly known as '''Bouboulina''' ({{langx|el|Λασκαρίνα (Μπουμπουλίνα) Πινότση}};{{efn|{{lang|el-Latn|Laskarína (Bouboulína) Pinótsi}}, {{IPA-el|laskaˈrina bubuˈlina piˈnotsi|pron}}|name=|group=note}} 1771 – 22 May 1825), was a ] naval commander, a woman of the ] in 1821, and considered perhaps the first woman to attain the rank of ].
==Early life==
Bouboulina was born Laskarina Pinotsi, in a prison in ], where her mother, Skevo, was visiting Bouboulina's dying father, ] captain Stavrianos Pinotsis, who had been imprisoned by the ] because of his participation in the ], against the Ottoman rule. Skevo, daughter of the Hydriot dignitary, Kokkinis, travailed in the prison being exhausted and sentimentally charged, and gave birth to a girl, which was later baptized ''Laskarina'' in Constantinople by the sovereign of ], Mourtzinos. Her father died soon afterwards, and she with her mother returned to the island of their origin, ].


Bouboulina was born in Constantinople in 1771. Her father was Stavrianos Pinotsis, an ] from Hydra and her mother was Skevo Kokkini, descendant of the ] Kokkinis family. During her youth, she developed an interest in sailing which was facilitated by her stepfather's liberal attitude to education. She was widowed twice, inheriting a considerable sum of money from her second husband. She later allegedly joined the ] secret society which sought to achieve Greek independence from the ], being among the few women to do so. Following the outbreak of the Greek War of Independence she commanded a fleet of ] ships which contributed to several campaigns most notably the siege of Nafplion.
When Bouboulina was four years old, her mother married Spetsiot Dimitrios Lazarou-Orlov and they moved to the island of ]. Lazarou-Orlov would become the girl's stepfather and encouraged her to take part in the family's naval activities as a child, something that was outside the norms of the socialization of a young girl at the time. As a result, she grew up with a love for the sea and loved listening to the stories of the sailors and their talk of freedom for the ] nation, which had been suffering under the ] for more than three centuries. She was the unchallenged leader among her eight half-brothers and sisters, having a strong, untamed, almost stubborn character, a dark in colouring and with a regal stature young woman, who showed her courage and decisiveness from an early age. Bouboulina had learnt to read, which was not usual and prevented women from being self-actualized. Books written by enlightenment thinkers such as ] and ] reinforced her revolutionary ideas and reinforced the
political ideals held by her family.


Following the defeat of her faction in the ], Bouboulina was briefly imprisoned and expelled to Spetses. She was killed on 22 May 1825, during the course of a family feud.
==Pre-revolution years==
]
Dimitrios Yiannouzas, a captain, was her first husband, to whom she was married at the age of seventeen, in 1788. Yiannouzas died in a sea battle in 1797, against ]n pirates who were then raiding the coasts of ]. Life was very cruel for her, as she married for a second time at the age of thirty to Dimitrios Bouboulis, a captain as well, who was also killed in a sea battle against Algerian pirates in 1811, between ] and ]. While Bouboulis was vanquishing the pirates, looking over his ship's gunwale the destroyed enemy, a bullet hit him on the forehead and left him dead.


==Biography==
As a result, Bouboulina was twice widowed and mother of seven children, but extremely rich from the fortune of ships, land and cash, inherited from both her husbands. She used the money to create a thriving merchant fleetand due to successful management and trading, she managed to increase that fortune, becoming partner in several Spetsiot vessels and building three of her own. Among these was the first and largest warship of the ], "Agamemnon".
===Early life===
Bouboulina was born in 1771<ref>Papadimitriou, p. 44.</ref> in ]. She was the daughter of Stavrianos Pinotsis, a captain from ], and his wife Skevo (Paraskevi) Kokkini, descendant of the notable ] Kokkinis family; a large part of this family lived in the island of ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kossiori |first=Sotiria |date=2022 |title=Ο ρόλος των γυναικών στην Επανάσταση του 1821 μέσα από τη λογοτεχνία |url=https://amitos.library.uop.gr/xmlui/handle/123456789/6831 |journal=Amitos Library |language=el |page=17 |doi=10.26263/amitos-336}}</ref> From her father's side, she originated from the local native ] population of the island of Hydra.<ref>{{cite book |first=Michael L. |last=Galaty |title=Memory and Nation Building: From Ancient Times to the Islamic State |publisher=] |year=2018 |isbn=978-0759122628 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SEBiDwAAQBAJ&dq=Laskarina+albanian&pg=PA144 |page=144}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first=Robert |last=Elsie |title=A Biographical Dictionary of Albanian History, Centre for Albanian Studies |location=London, England |publisher=I.B.Tauris |year=2013 |isbn=978-1780764313 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pgf6GWJxuZgC&dq=Laskarina+albanian&pg=PA48 |page=48}}</ref>{{efn|Some scholars however dispute this, and argue that Bouboulina didn't speak ] originally but learned it later in her life by her first husband and through socializing with the Albanian-speakers of the place she lived. Researcher of the history of the Kokkinis family, Antonios Kokkinis, claims that neither of Bouboulina's parents had ] origin.<ref>{{cite book |first=April |last=Kalogeropoulos |year=2023 |title=Bouboulina and the Greek Revolution: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Heroine of 1821 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=b_7JEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA328 |page=328 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1666917659}}</ref>|group=note}} The ] had imprisoned Pinotsis for his part in the failed ] of 1769&ndash;1770 against the Ottoman rule shortly after the birth of his daughter. Her father died soon afterward and the mother and child returned to Hydra. Bouboulina's family moved to ] when she was four years old. Her mother later married Spetsiot Dimitrios Lazarou-Orlov. Lazarou had previously ] his family name to Lazarou-Orlov in order to commemorate his participation in the Orlov revolt and declare his loyalty to Russia. Bouboulina grew up alongside her half-siblings. During her youth she enjoyed swimming, fishing, riding on horseback, sailing and singing ]. Her stepfather encouraged her interest in sailing beyond the accepted social norms of the time, a decision which has been attributed to his admiration for Russian empress ]. Her home's library contained many books from ] writers including those of ] and ].<ref>Xiradaki, p. 267.</ref><ref>Kalogeropoulos Householder, pp. 3-4.</ref>


She married captain Dimitrios Yiannouzas<ref name="Elsie2013">{{cite book|author=Robert Elsie|title=A Biographical Dictionary of Albanian History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pgf6GWJxuZgC&pg=PA48|year=2013|publisher=I.B.Tauris|isbn=978-1-78076-431-3|page=48}}</ref> with whom she had three children; Yiannouzas drowned during a battle against ]n ]s. She later remarried the wealthy shipowner and captain Dimitrios Bouboulis, taking his surname. Bouboulis likewise drowned in a battle against Algerian pirates on 10 May 1811 off the shore of ]. Bouboulina took over his fortune and his trading business, acquiring shares in other Spetsiot ships. She traveled to Constantinople in 1814. The Ottomans were aware of the fortune Bouboulina had inherited from her husband and were seeking a premise to seize it in 1816. The Ottomans argued that Bouboulis' assets should be forfeited since he had fought on the Russian side during the ]. Bouboulina returned to Constantinople in 1816 to argue her case, enlisting the help of the Russian ambassador and the ]. The latter was able to convince the Ottoman officials to allow Bouboulina to retain her property.<ref>Xiradaki, pp. 267-269.</ref>
]
In 1816, the Ottoman state attempted to confiscate Bouboulina's property with the excuse that her second husband had taken part in the ], using his own vessels alongside the ]n fleet. For his service he been highly decorated, awarding the title of captain in the Russian navy and that of the honorary Russian citizen. Bouboulina sailed with her ship "Coriezos" to Constantinople, to meet the ] ambassador ], a known ], seeking for his protection in her effort to save her fortune. In recognition of Bouboulis' service to the Russian fleet and the fact that her ships were flying the ] at the time, due to a merchant treaty between Russia and the ], Stroganov sent her to ] in Russia, in order to protect her from imminent arrest. In addition to this, ] gave her an estate for her use. Before she left for Crimea, she had managed to meet the mother of ] ], ], who was extremely impressed by Bouboulina's character and personality, and convinced her son to issue a special declaration by which Bouboulina's fortune was saved. The latter after spending three months in Crimea, waiting for the crisis to defuse, left for Spetses not being under the threat of arrest anymore.


Bouboulina was visited by nationalist priest ] in 1818. Following her meeting with Papaflessas, she made her third visit to Constantinople.<ref>Kalogeropoulos Householder, p. 4.</ref> Bouboulina joined the ], an underground organization that was preparing Greece for revolution against Ottoman rule.<ref>Xiradaki, p. 269.</ref> She would have been one of a few women, but she is not named in historical members lists.{{sfn|Angelomatis-Tsougarakis|2008|p=59}} Upon her return to Spetses, she ordered the construction of a ship that was larger than Ottoman regulations would allow. The Ottomans dispatched admiral Hussein to ensure Bouboulina adhered to Ottoman law. Bouboulina proceeded to bribe Hussein, who then signed a report indicating that the ship was a long range Spetsiot trade ship. ''Agamemnon'' was armed with 18 cannons and went on to become the first warship in modern-day Greece.<ref name="X269"/>
In 1818, during a subsequent trip to Constantinople, Bouboulina joined the ], a secret organisation working to overthrow Ottoman rule over Greece, being the only woman who was allowed to be a member of it. On her return to Spetses, she began the preparations for the oncoming revolution, buying illegally arm and ammunitions from foreign ports, bringing them to Spetses in secrecy and hiding them in her home or other parts of the island. She sailed once again to Constantinople in 1819, where she met with ] and discussed the timing of the uprising.


===Greek War of Independence===
In 1820, she completed the construction of her flagship, "Agamemnon", a corvette 33m long, armed with eighteen heavy cannons. As there were restrictions by the Ottoman state on the size and the armament of Greek owned vessels, Bouboulina was accused of building secretly a warship, given away by some Spetsiots. However, she bribed the Turkish official who went to inspect the vessel and also succeeded in having her accusers expelled from Spetses. She already had her own private army composed of Spetsiots and used most of her fortune to provide food and ammunition for the sailors and soldiers under her command.
Upon the outbreak of the ], Bouboulina sailed on the ''Agamemnon,'' which was commanded by her son Yiannis Yiannouzas, to ], along with another ship commanded by her half brother Manolis Lazarou-Orlov, imposing a ] on the city on 4 April 1821. Bouboulina and ] then appealed to the Spetsiots who dispatched seven more ships to assist in the siege. Bouboulina commanded great respect among the revolutionaries who nicknamed her Kapetanissa (Captain) and Kyra (Lady). On 10 April, the besieged Ottomans exploited the fact that the Greek sentries were celebrating Orthodox Easter, breaking through the siege. Bouboulina then disembarked at ] and traveled to ] on horseback, supplying the local rebels with money and ammunition. In Argos, Bouboulina participated in a conference of local military commanders and ], where the Greeks decided to resume the siege of Nafplion.<ref name="X269">Xiradaki, pp. 269-273.</ref>


The siege of Nafplion continued until the rebels became aware of the Kehaya Bey's force which had reached ] and was heading to relieve the siege. Yiannis Yiannouzas then assembled troops from Argos, Spetses and ] in order to check the Kehaya Bey's advance and was killed in May in the ensuing battle outside Argos. Bouboulina subsequently traveled to the battlefield in order to collect her son's remains who was beheaded in the aftermath of the battle. According to Dutch ] {{ill|Edouard Taitbout de Marigny|lt=Taitbout de Marigny|tr|Edouard Taitbout de Marigny|uk|Едуард Тетбу де Маріньї}} she personally executed three Ottoman prisoners during her son's funeral ceremony. After failing to capture Argos<ref name="X2739"/> or burning it (according to Kolokotronis),<ref>{{cite book|last1=Kolokotronis|first1=Theodoros|last2=Edmonds|first2=Elizabeth M. (trans.)|title=Kolokotrones. The Klepht and the Warrior. Sixty Years of Peril and Daring. An Autobiography|year=1892|location=London|publisher=T. Fisher Unwin|url=https://archive.org/details/kolokotronesklep00kolorich}}, p. 143</ref> the Kehaya Bey reinforced Nafplion's garrison and departed for ]. Bouboulina then resumed the naval blockade of Nafplion. In May 1821, she blockaded ] with the ''Agamemnon'', while the rest of the Spetsiot fleet remained off the shore of Nafplion.<ref name="X2739"/>{{efn|According to 19c. naval historian Anastasios K. Orlandos however, the Agamemnon was part of a six ships Spetsiot squadron that left Spetses on May 6 to operate in the gulf of Corinth<ref></ref> and was still in Galaxidi in June 18 (''Nautika'' vol 1 pp. 140)|group=note}} The garrison of Monemvasia surrendered on 25 July, at the same time another of her ships{{efn|the Agamemnon itself, according to Orlandos (''Nautika'' vol 1 pp. 140) |group=note}} resupplied ].<ref name="X2739"/> Rumors of Bouboulina's exploits spread beyond Greece and many foreign ] sought to meet her. During one such meeting in ], one foreign volunteer (]) showed her a lithograph depicting her which he had purchased in Paris. The highly romanticized and inaccurate depiction caused Bouboulina to burst out laughing.<ref name="X2739">Xiradaki, pp. 273-279.</ref>
==War of Independence==
]]]
On ] ], Bouboulina raised her own revolutionary flag on Spetses, on the main mast of "Agamemnon" and was saluted with cannon fire. That flag was based on the flag of ] dynasty of the ], showing an eagle holding an anchor at one foot and a phoenix raising from the flames at the other. This symbolized the rebirth of the nation with the help of the naval forces. On ], Spetses was the last naval force to revolt, and along with Hydra and ], counted three hundred ships, playing a leading role in the war.


In September 1821, she arrived in Tripolitsa which was ] by the troops of general ]. The Ottomans were on the brink of surrender and were requesting a safe exit of the local officials along with their harems and release of a number of prisoners. On 18 September, Kolokotronis convened a meeting of his officers to discuss the terms offered by their adversaries. Bouboulina took an active part in the negotiations, intervening to save the lives of the women from Hursit's harem upon Valide Sultan's request.{{sfn|Kalogeropoulos Householder|2006|p=5}} Kolokotronis allowed only the officials of Albanian origin to depart the city. Three days later the city fell to the Greeks who massacred the local Muslim population and looted their properties. Bouboulina was subsequently accused on taking part in the looting (which was a common practice in both Greek and Ottoman warfare of the period). After the fall of Tripolitsa, Bouboulina returned to Nafplion to personally oversee its blockade.<ref name="X279" />
Bouboulina commanded a fleet of eight vessels, five of which were hers, to sail to ] and began a naval ]. Nafplio, armed with three hundred cannons and with its three fortresses ], ] and ], was considered to be impregnable. Not only she gave courage to the land forces to keep on the siege of Nafplio with her fiery words and great enthusiasm but she fought herself. She also took part in the naval blockade and capture of ], and the blockade of ], both towns in ], and brought supplies to ], a coastal town in ], upon the ]. Bouboulina's son, Yiannis Yiannouzas, died in the battle at ], against superior numbers of Ottoman troops.


She participated to the naval section of a failed assault on Nauplia in December 1821, where she distinguished herself by her courage.<ref>Chatzēanargyrou, A. Ta Spetsiōtika, ētoi syllogē historikōn engraphōn kai hypomnēmatōn aphorōntōn ta kata tēn hellēnikēn epanastasin tou 1821, vol 1, p. ιθ'</ref> Her biographers don't provide details of her activities during the subsequent phases of the siege of Nauplia: she is not mentioned as having taken part in the events of the ] which resulted in another break of the siege of Nauplia, nor to the ] in September 1822.
Few days before the ], she arrived at the Greek camp outside the town where she was received with loud cheers and met the general ]. A mutual respect and friendship developed between them to such a degree that they became relatives later by the marriage of their children, Eleni Boubouli and ]. Bouboulina took part as an equal of the rest generals in their war meeting and decision making. On ], ] fall to the Greek rebels, and Bouboulina kept a promise back in 1816 to Valide Sultan, that if ever a ] woman asked for help, she would not refuse. Indeed, she managed to save the harem of Hursit Pasha, risking her life, after the plea of Pasha's wife to save the women of harem and their children, when her own soldiers threatened to rape and murder them.


On 22 November 1822,{{efn|30 November, according to accepted historiography|group=note}} the Ottomans surrendered the ] fortress.<ref name="X279"/> On 3 December 1822, the Ottoman population of Nafplion was allowed to safely depart for Asia Minor, surrendering the city to the Greeks.<ref name="X279" /> Bouboulina was appointed to one of the commissions tasked with redistributing the property of Nafplio's Muslim population, a position she abused for personal gain.<ref name="X279">Xiradaki, pp. 279-282.</ref>
]]] After the fall of Nafplio, on ] ], she stayed there in a house given by the state as a reward for her services to the nation. But at the end of 1824, a civil war broke out, caused by opposing factions attempting to assume leadership despite the Ottoman danger. Panos Kolokotronis, Bouboulina's son-in-law, was assassinated, while Theodoros Kolokotronis was arrested and put into prison by his political opponents, at a monastery on Hydra. Bouboulina had strongly opposed the imprisonment of Kolokotronis, so she was considered by the then government to be dangerous for the state and was arrested and imprisoned. Finally, she was expelled to Spetses.


Bouboulina then moved into a house in Nafplion. Soon afterward she gave her daughter Eleni Boubouli in marriage to Kolokotronis' son ]. Panos Kolokotronis was appointed the commander of Nafplion's garrison, making Bouboulina one of the region's most powerful people.<ref name="X283284">Xiradaki, pp. 283-284.</ref>
On ] ], ] arrived almost undisturbed with 4,400 Turko-Egyptian troops to southern Peloponnese, threatening the Greek nation, which was once again in civil war. After that the government released Theodoros Kolokotronis and offered him the leadership of the army, but most parts of the Peloponnese were recaptured by the Ottomans.


Bouboulina stayed in Nafplion until the ] during which she supported the faction of Kolokotronis.<ref name="X283284">Xiradaki, pp. 283-284.</ref> She and Panos Kolokotronis were blockaded in the city by pro-governmental forces from 8/20 March 1824, at sea by ] with two brigs and two gunboats, and on the land by 500 Kranidiots and Poriots.<ref name="Thomas Gordon p.102">Thomas Gordon, ''History of the Greek Revolution'', vol.2, p.102</ref> After the agreement that put an end to the first civil war, P. Kolokotronis eventually surrendered the fortress on June 7/19 and joined his father in Karytaina<ref>Thomas Gordon, ''History of the Greek Revolution'', vol.2, p.101</ref> Discussions about Bouboulina's treatment illustrated the growing dissent between members of the victorious governmental faction: the president Koundouriotis insisted on her expulsion from Nafplion, while Zaimis and Londos interceded in her favor, to no avail.:<ref name="Thomas Gordon p.102"/> her house in Nafplion was confiscated and she departed for Spetses.<ref name="X283284"/> She was imprisoned for some time on false charges of witchcraft and heresy by her islander political opponents before being eventually released.<ref>Kalogeropoulos Householder, p. 5.</ref>
==Death==
]]]
While Bouboulina was preparing to take part in the new fighting, death came unexpextedly. A feud between Bouboulina and Koutsis family began on Spetses, because of the elopement of a Koutsis daughter from Georgios Yiannouzas, Bouboulina's son. The father of the girl with some members of his family, went to Bouboulina's house seeking for their girl. The incident led to the death of Bouboulina on ] ]. While she was on the balcony of her house, arguing with Koutsis, someone shot her on the forehead. The killer was never identified. After her death she was given the honorary title of ] by the Greek state and became the first female Admiral in world naval history.


On 22 November 1824, during the ], Panos Kolokotronis was either (according to conflicting interpretations) murdered <ref name="X283284"/> or killed in battle.<ref>David Brewer, ''The Greek War of Independence'', p. 232.</ref> by pro-governmental troops. Although Theodoros Kolokotronis wanted to giver her in marriage to someone of his choice, Bouboulina secretly took her daughter Eleni back, leaving her dowry behind, perhaps to marry her to the Northern chieftain ] in order to secure an alliance with him, or because the two had alteady an extramarital affair{{sfn|Angelomatis-Tsougarakis|2008|p=49}} After the final defeat of his faction in the second civil war, Kolokotronis was imprisoned in February 1825.<ref>Thomas Gordon, ''History of the Greek Revolution'', vol.2, p.179</ref>
==Legacy and culture==
Descendants of Bouboulina gave the ship "Agamemnon" to the Greek state. It was renamed ''Spetses'' and became a Greek navy ]. It was burned in the naval base of ] by ] during the next Greek civil war in 1831. On the island of ] there is a museum dedicated to Bouboulina called "Bouboulina's Museum", which is housed in the 300 year-old mansion of Bouboulina's second husband, where her descendants still live. A statue of Bouboulina also stands in the harbor in Spetses. Various streets all over ] and ] were named after her, with most notable examples of: the ''Bouboulina's Street'' near the ] (the ''Polytechnion'') and the ], in central ], ''Bouboulina's Street'' in ], the largest port-city of Greece and ], capital of ]. A movie titled ''Bouboulina'' was filmed in 1959, with ] portraying the heroine. In 1930 she was immortalized on the one ] and she is also celebrated every September at the Armata festival on Spetses. Bouboulina was also referred to by several painters, filmmakers, playwirhgts and novelists including ], ], ], ], ] and ].


==Modern perception== ===Death in feud===
Eugenia Koutsi and Bouboulina's son Georgios Yiannouzas had eloped, after the former was forced by her family to betroth a man she disliked. Bouboulina had supported her son's decision. On 22 May 1825, armed members of the Koutsis family went to Bouboulina's house, believing that the couple was hiding inside. When Bouboulina confronted them from the balcony, she was shot and killed by one of the armed men.<ref>Xiradaki, pp. 284-285.</ref>
{| class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#c6dbf7; width:30em; max-width: 40%;" cellspacing="5"
| style="text-align: left;" | "...nowhere and in no other time has any woman been found in the uprisings of nations, having such a character and able to induce the world’s admiration".
|-
| style="text-align: left;" | Historian Orlandos wrote of Bouboulina's services to the nation
|}
Nowadays Bouboulina is often recognized as the first female naval admiral in history. However the ways she is represented by modern historians vary. She is sometimes subject to several stereotypes and frequently her contribution to the war for the liberation of Greece is underestimated like in ]'s ''The Greek Adventure: Lord Byron and other eccentrics in the War of Independence'', Peter Paroulakis' ''The Greek War of Independence'' and David Brewer's ''The Greek War of Independence: The struggle for freedom from Ottoman oppresion and the birth of the modern Greek nation''.


==Legacy==
{| class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#c6dbf7; width:30em; max-width: 40%;" cellspacing="5"
] of 19th century.]]
| style="text-align: left;" | "Against her, the unmanly were ashamed and the brave stepped back."

|-
A few days after her death, a Russian delegation presented her with the honorary rank of ] of the Russian Navy<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=C5Du7DxU-8kC|title=Political and Historical Encyclopedia of Women|publisher=Routledge|year=2003|isbn=978-1-135-45690-0|editor-last=Fauré|editor-first=Christine|pages=248|language=en|quote=A few days after her death, a Russian delegation arrived on Spetses to present her with the title of admiral of the Russian fleet.}}</ref> granted by Tsar ], making her perhaps the first woman in world naval history to hold this title.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Laskarina Bouboulina, Greek Rebel Admiral|url=https://www.headstuff.org/culture/history/terrible-people-from-history/laskarina-bouboulina-greek-rebel-admiral/|date=2018-07-23|website=HeadStuff|language=en-GB|access-date=2020-05-02}}</ref> In 2018 she was granted the title of ] (expressed in Greek as Υποναύαρχος) in the Hellenic Navy.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.kathimerini.gr/961425/article/epikairothta/ellada/h-mpoympoylina-yponayarxos-epi-timh-me-proedriko-diatagma|date=2018-04-27 |website=Η Καθημερινή |language=el|script-title=el:Η Μπουμπουλίνα υποναύαρχος επί τιμή με προεδρικό διάταγμα |trans-title=Bouboulina the Rear admiral honored with presidential decree |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180428154529/https://www.kathimerini.gr/961425/article/epikairothta/ellada/h-mpoympoylina-yponayarxos-epi-timh-me-proedriko-diatagma |archive-date=2018-04-28 |access-date=2020-05-02}}</ref>{{sfn|Kalogeropoulos Householder|2006|p=5}}
| style="text-align: left;" | Historian Filimon describing Bouboulina's bravery

|}
Bouboulina was depicted on the ] of both the Greek ]50 banknote of 1978 and the ₯1 coin of 1988–2001.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090328051044/http://www.bankofgreece.gr/en |date=2009-03-28 }}. Drachma Banknotes & Coins: {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090101123231/http://www.bankofgreece.gr/en/Banknotes/coin_selection.asp?Value=001-020drs |date=2009-01-01 }}. – Retrieved on 27 March 2009.</ref> A statue of Bouboulina sculpted by Natalia Mela-Konstantinidou is located at Spetses. A bust of Bouboulina created by Lazaros Lameras is located in ] while a copy of it hosted in the ].<ref>Xiradaki, p. 285.</ref> There is also a bust of her at the junction of Bouboulinas street and Emmanouil Sofroni street in Nafplion.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.google.com/maps/@37.5671942,22.7990441,3a,75y,134.97h,92.17t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sZzEp-zTkYH3wOgGz0TF8xA!2e0!7i13312!8i6656 | title=Google Maps }}</ref>
In another work of David Brewer, ''Encyclopedia of Greece and the hellenic tradition'', the author writes that Bouboulina is prominent in legend rather than reality, while the ] traveller George Waddington who met her appears to have said: ''"I am brought to confess that this warlike lady, the ] of the nineteenth century, is old, unmannerly, ugly, fat, shapeless and avaricious'. In any case Bouboulina hardly deserves to have an entry to herself..."''. On the contrary, there are many accounts which acclaim her personality. Historian Anargyros Hatzianargyrou likens her to the ] of ], while the historians Orlandos and Filimon admire her brave character.
The Greek drama film, '']'', starring ] in the titular role was released in 1959, it was directed and written by Kostas Andritsos.<ref>Papadimitriou, pp. 43-44.</ref> A documentary film based on a fictionalized account of her life and deeds, ''The Brave Stepped Back: The Life and Times of Laskarina Bouboulina'', was released in 2005, debuting at the ] in Spetses.{{sfn|Kalogeropoulos Householder|2006|p=9}}

] (sometimes spelled Karayanni or Carayannis), leader of the Greek Resistance cell ] during the Second World War, was her great-granddaughter.<ref>Kalogeropoulos Householder, pp. 7-8.</ref>

==Notes==
{{reflist|group=note}}

==References==
{{Reflist}}

== Bibliography ==
* Aliberty, Soteria (1933). Αι Ηρωίδες της Ελληνικής Επαναστάσεως, Athens
* {{cite book |first=Helen |last=Angelomatis-Tsougarakis |contribution=Women in the Greek War of Independence |title=Networks of power in modern Greece |editor-first=Mark |editor-last=Mazower |publisher=Columbia University Press |year=2008 |isbn=978-0231701037 }}
* {{cite thesis |last=Kalogeropoulos Householder |first=April |date=2006 |title=The Life and Legacy of Laskarina Bouboulina: Feminist Alternatives to Documentary Filmmaking Practices|degree=PhD|url=https://drum.lib.umd.edu/handle/1903/7432?show=full|publisher=University of Maryland |access-date=28 December 2021}}
* {{cite journal |last=Papadimitriou |first=Lydia |date=2015 |title=Heroines of the 1821 Revolution in Greek Cinema: Bouboulina (1959) and Manto Mavrogenous (1971)|url=https://www.academia.edu/14833472|journal=Eroi şi antieroi balcanici/Balkan Heroes and Anti-Heroes, Editura Fundaţiei Culturale Est-Vest, Bucureşti|pages=43–48}}
* {{cite book |last=Xiradaki|first=Koula|title=Γυναίκες του 21|trans-title=Women of 21|publisher=Dodoni|language=el|location=Athens|year=1995|isbn=960-248-781-X}}


==External links== ==External links==
* {{commons category-inline}}
{{commonscat}}
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{{Arvanites}}
{{Greek War of Independence|state=collapsed}} {{Greek War of Independence|state=collapsed}}

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Latest revision as of 14:28, 5 January 2025

Heroine of the Greek War of Independence
Rear Admiral
Laskarina Bouboulina
Oil painting of Bouboulina
National Historical Museum, Athens
Native nameΛασκαρίνα Μπουμπουλίνα
Laskarina Bouboulina
Birth nameΛασκαρίνα Πινότση
Laskarina Pinotsi
Nickname(s)Καπετάνισσα
Kapetanissa
Κυρά
Kyra
Born1771 (1771)
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire (now Turkey)
Died22 May 1825(1825-05-22) (aged 53–54)
Spetses, Eyalet of the Archipelago, Ottoman Empire (now Greece)
AllegianceGreece First Hellenic Republic
Service / branch Hellenic Navy
RankCaptain (Revolutionary Navy)
Rear Admiral (Posthumous, Hellenic Navy)
Admiral (Posthumous, Russian Navy)
CommandsAgamemnon
Battles / wars
Spouse(s)Dimitrios Yiannouzas
Dimitrios Bouboulis
ChildrenYiannis Yiannouzas
Georgios Yiannouzas
Eleni Boubouli
RelationsPanos Kolokotronis (son-in-law)
Lela Karagianni (great-granddaughter)
Other workMember of the Filiki Etaireia
Signature

Laskarina Pinotsi, commonly known as Bouboulina (Greek: Λασκαρίνα (Μπουμπουλίνα) Πινότση; 1771 – 22 May 1825), was a Greek naval commander, a woman of the Greek War of Independence in 1821, and considered perhaps the first woman to attain the rank of admiral.

Bouboulina was born in Constantinople in 1771. Her father was Stavrianos Pinotsis, an Arvanite from Hydra and her mother was Skevo Kokkini, descendant of the Byzantine Kokkinis family. During her youth, she developed an interest in sailing which was facilitated by her stepfather's liberal attitude to education. She was widowed twice, inheriting a considerable sum of money from her second husband. She later allegedly joined the Filiki Etaireia secret society which sought to achieve Greek independence from the Ottoman Empire, being among the few women to do so. Following the outbreak of the Greek War of Independence she commanded a fleet of Spetsiot ships which contributed to several campaigns most notably the siege of Nafplion.

Following the defeat of her faction in the Greek civil war in 1824, Bouboulina was briefly imprisoned and expelled to Spetses. She was killed on 22 May 1825, during the course of a family feud.

Biography

Early life

Bouboulina was born in 1771 in Constantinople. She was the daughter of Stavrianos Pinotsis, a captain from Hydra island, and his wife Skevo (Paraskevi) Kokkini, descendant of the notable Byzantine Kokkinis family; a large part of this family lived in the island of Zakynthos. From her father's side, she originated from the local native Arvanite population of the island of Hydra. The Ottomans had imprisoned Pinotsis for his part in the failed Orlov revolt of 1769–1770 against the Ottoman rule shortly after the birth of his daughter. Her father died soon afterward and the mother and child returned to Hydra. Bouboulina's family moved to Spetses when she was four years old. Her mother later married Spetsiot Dimitrios Lazarou-Orlov. Lazarou had previously double-barrelled his family name to Lazarou-Orlov in order to commemorate his participation in the Orlov revolt and declare his loyalty to Russia. Bouboulina grew up alongside her half-siblings. During her youth she enjoyed swimming, fishing, riding on horseback, sailing and singing klepht songs. Her stepfather encouraged her interest in sailing beyond the accepted social norms of the time, a decision which has been attributed to his admiration for Russian empress Catherine the Great. Her home's library contained many books from Enlightenment era writers including those of Friedrich von Schiller and Voltaire.

She married captain Dimitrios Yiannouzas with whom she had three children; Yiannouzas drowned during a battle against Algerian pirates. She later remarried the wealthy shipowner and captain Dimitrios Bouboulis, taking his surname. Bouboulis likewise drowned in a battle against Algerian pirates on 10 May 1811 off the shore of Lampedusa. Bouboulina took over his fortune and his trading business, acquiring shares in other Spetsiot ships. She traveled to Constantinople in 1814. The Ottomans were aware of the fortune Bouboulina had inherited from her husband and were seeking a premise to seize it in 1816. The Ottomans argued that Bouboulis' assets should be forfeited since he had fought on the Russian side during the last Russo-Turkish war. Bouboulina returned to Constantinople in 1816 to argue her case, enlisting the help of the Russian ambassador and the Valide Sultan. The latter was able to convince the Ottoman officials to allow Bouboulina to retain her property.

Bouboulina was visited by nationalist priest Papaflessas in 1818. Following her meeting with Papaflessas, she made her third visit to Constantinople. Bouboulina joined the Filiki Etaireia, an underground organization that was preparing Greece for revolution against Ottoman rule. She would have been one of a few women, but she is not named in historical members lists. Upon her return to Spetses, she ordered the construction of a ship that was larger than Ottoman regulations would allow. The Ottomans dispatched admiral Hussein to ensure Bouboulina adhered to Ottoman law. Bouboulina proceeded to bribe Hussein, who then signed a report indicating that the ship was a long range Spetsiot trade ship. Agamemnon was armed with 18 cannons and went on to become the first warship in modern-day Greece.

Greek War of Independence

Upon the outbreak of the Greek War of Independence, Bouboulina sailed on the Agamemnon, which was commanded by her son Yiannis Yiannouzas, to Nafplion, along with another ship commanded by her half brother Manolis Lazarou-Orlov, imposing a naval blockade on the city on 4 April 1821. Bouboulina and Staikos Staikopoulos then appealed to the Spetsiots who dispatched seven more ships to assist in the siege. Bouboulina commanded great respect among the revolutionaries who nicknamed her Kapetanissa (Captain) and Kyra (Lady). On 10 April, the besieged Ottomans exploited the fact that the Greek sentries were celebrating Orthodox Easter, breaking through the siege. Bouboulina then disembarked at Myloi and traveled to Argos on horseback, supplying the local rebels with money and ammunition. In Argos, Bouboulina participated in a conference of local military commanders and kodjabashis, where the Greeks decided to resume the siege of Nafplion.

The siege of Nafplion continued until the rebels became aware of the Kehaya Bey's force which had reached Corinth and was heading to relieve the siege. Yiannis Yiannouzas then assembled troops from Argos, Spetses and Kranidi in order to check the Kehaya Bey's advance and was killed in May in the ensuing battle outside Argos. Bouboulina subsequently traveled to the battlefield in order to collect her son's remains who was beheaded in the aftermath of the battle. According to Dutch consul Taitbout de Marigny [tr; uk] she personally executed three Ottoman prisoners during her son's funeral ceremony. After failing to capture Argos or burning it (according to Kolokotronis), the Kehaya Bey reinforced Nafplion's garrison and departed for Tripolitsa. Bouboulina then resumed the naval blockade of Nafplion. In May 1821, she blockaded Monemvasia with the Agamemnon, while the rest of the Spetsiot fleet remained off the shore of Nafplion. The garrison of Monemvasia surrendered on 25 July, at the same time another of her ships resupplied Galaxidi. Rumors of Bouboulina's exploits spread beyond Greece and many foreign philhellenes sought to meet her. During one such meeting in Astros, one foreign volunteer (Maurice Persat) showed her a lithograph depicting her which he had purchased in Paris. The highly romanticized and inaccurate depiction caused Bouboulina to burst out laughing.

In September 1821, she arrived in Tripolitsa which was besieged by the troops of general Theodoros Kolokotronis. The Ottomans were on the brink of surrender and were requesting a safe exit of the local officials along with their harems and release of a number of prisoners. On 18 September, Kolokotronis convened a meeting of his officers to discuss the terms offered by their adversaries. Bouboulina took an active part in the negotiations, intervening to save the lives of the women from Hursit's harem upon Valide Sultan's request. Kolokotronis allowed only the officials of Albanian origin to depart the city. Three days later the city fell to the Greeks who massacred the local Muslim population and looted their properties. Bouboulina was subsequently accused on taking part in the looting (which was a common practice in both Greek and Ottoman warfare of the period). After the fall of Tripolitsa, Bouboulina returned to Nafplion to personally oversee its blockade.

She participated to the naval section of a failed assault on Nauplia in December 1821, where she distinguished herself by her courage. Her biographers don't provide details of her activities during the subsequent phases of the siege of Nauplia: she is not mentioned as having taken part in the events of the Expedition of Dramali which resulted in another break of the siege of Nauplia, nor to the battle of Nauplia in September 1822.

On 22 November 1822, the Ottomans surrendered the Palamidi fortress. On 3 December 1822, the Ottoman population of Nafplion was allowed to safely depart for Asia Minor, surrendering the city to the Greeks. Bouboulina was appointed to one of the commissions tasked with redistributing the property of Nafplio's Muslim population, a position she abused for personal gain.

Bouboulina then moved into a house in Nafplion. Soon afterward she gave her daughter Eleni Boubouli in marriage to Kolokotronis' son Panos Kolokotronis. Panos Kolokotronis was appointed the commander of Nafplion's garrison, making Bouboulina one of the region's most powerful people.

Bouboulina stayed in Nafplion until the civil war of 1824 during which she supported the faction of Kolokotronis. She and Panos Kolokotronis were blockaded in the city by pro-governmental forces from 8/20 March 1824, at sea by Miaoulis with two brigs and two gunboats, and on the land by 500 Kranidiots and Poriots. After the agreement that put an end to the first civil war, P. Kolokotronis eventually surrendered the fortress on June 7/19 and joined his father in Karytaina Discussions about Bouboulina's treatment illustrated the growing dissent between members of the victorious governmental faction: the president Koundouriotis insisted on her expulsion from Nafplion, while Zaimis and Londos interceded in her favor, to no avail.: her house in Nafplion was confiscated and she departed for Spetses. She was imprisoned for some time on false charges of witchcraft and heresy by her islander political opponents before being eventually released.

On 22 November 1824, during the second civil war, Panos Kolokotronis was either (according to conflicting interpretations) murdered or killed in battle. by pro-governmental troops. Although Theodoros Kolokotronis wanted to giver her in marriage to someone of his choice, Bouboulina secretly took her daughter Eleni back, leaving her dowry behind, perhaps to marry her to the Northern chieftain Theodore Grivas in order to secure an alliance with him, or because the two had alteady an extramarital affair After the final defeat of his faction in the second civil war, Kolokotronis was imprisoned in February 1825.

Death in feud

Eugenia Koutsi and Bouboulina's son Georgios Yiannouzas had eloped, after the former was forced by her family to betroth a man she disliked. Bouboulina had supported her son's decision. On 22 May 1825, armed members of the Koutsis family went to Bouboulina's house, believing that the couple was hiding inside. When Bouboulina confronted them from the balcony, she was shot and killed by one of the armed men.

Legacy

"Bobelina". Russian lubok of 19th century.

A few days after her death, a Russian delegation presented her with the honorary rank of Admiral of the Russian Navy granted by Tsar Alexander I of Russia, making her perhaps the first woman in world naval history to hold this title. In 2018 she was granted the title of Rear Admiral (expressed in Greek as Υποναύαρχος) in the Hellenic Navy.

Bouboulina was depicted on the reverse of both the Greek 50 banknote of 1978 and the ₯1 coin of 1988–2001. A statue of Bouboulina sculpted by Natalia Mela-Konstantinidou is located at Spetses. A bust of Bouboulina created by Lazaros Lameras is located in Tinos while a copy of it hosted in the Pedion tou Areos. There is also a bust of her at the junction of Bouboulinas street and Emmanouil Sofroni street in Nafplion. The Greek drama film, Bouboulina, starring Irene Papas in the titular role was released in 1959, it was directed and written by Kostas Andritsos. A documentary film based on a fictionalized account of her life and deeds, The Brave Stepped Back: The Life and Times of Laskarina Bouboulina, was released in 2005, debuting at the Armata Festival in Spetses.

Lela Karagianni (sometimes spelled Karayanni or Carayannis), leader of the Greek Resistance cell Bouboulina during the Second World War, was her great-granddaughter.

Notes

  1. Laskarína (Bouboulína) Pinótsi, pronounced [laskaˈrina bubuˈlina piˈnotsi]
  2. Some scholars however dispute this, and argue that Bouboulina didn't speak Arvanitika originally but learned it later in her life by her first husband and through socializing with the Albanian-speakers of the place she lived. Researcher of the history of the Kokkinis family, Antonios Kokkinis, claims that neither of Bouboulina's parents had Albanian origin.
  3. According to 19c. naval historian Anastasios K. Orlandos however, the Agamemnon was part of a six ships Spetsiot squadron that left Spetses on May 6 to operate in the gulf of Corinth and was still in Galaxidi in June 18 (Nautika vol 1 pp. 140)
  4. the Agamemnon itself, according to Orlandos (Nautika vol 1 pp. 140)
  5. 30 November, according to accepted historiography

References

  1. Zirin, Mary Fleming, ed. Women & Gender in Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, and Eurasia: Southeastern and East Central Europe. Vol. 1. ME Sharpe, 2007. pg. 122
  2. Η Μπουμπουλίνα υποναύαρχος επί τιμή με προεδρικό διάταγμα [Bouboulina the Rear admiral honored with presidential decree]. Η Καθημερινή (in Greek). 2018-04-27. Archived from the original on 2018-04-28. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  3. Papadimitriou, p. 44.
  4. Kossiori, Sotiria (2022). "Ο ρόλος των γυναικών στην Επανάσταση του 1821 μέσα από τη λογοτεχνία". Amitos Library (in Greek): 17. doi:10.26263/amitos-336.
  5. Galaty, Michael L. (2018). Memory and Nation Building: From Ancient Times to the Islamic State. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 144. ISBN 978-0759122628.
  6. Elsie, Robert (2013). A Biographical Dictionary of Albanian History, Centre for Albanian Studies. London, England: I.B.Tauris. p. 48. ISBN 978-1780764313.
  7. Kalogeropoulos, April (2023). Bouboulina and the Greek Revolution: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Heroine of 1821. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 328. ISBN 978-1666917659.
  8. Xiradaki, p. 267.
  9. Kalogeropoulos Householder, pp. 3-4.
  10. Robert Elsie (2013). A Biographical Dictionary of Albanian History. I.B.Tauris. p. 48. ISBN 978-1-78076-431-3.
  11. Xiradaki, pp. 267-269.
  12. Kalogeropoulos Householder, p. 4.
  13. Xiradaki, p. 269.
  14. Angelomatis-Tsougarakis 2008, p. 59.
  15. ^ Xiradaki, pp. 269-273.
  16. ^ Xiradaki, pp. 273-279.
  17. Kolokotronis, Theodoros; Edmonds, Elizabeth M. (trans.) (1892). Kolokotrones. The Klepht and the Warrior. Sixty Years of Peril and Daring. An Autobiography. London: T. Fisher Unwin., p. 143
  18. Nautika vol. 1 (1869) pp. 113-114
  19. ^ Kalogeropoulos Householder 2006, p. 5.
  20. ^ Xiradaki, pp. 279-282.
  21. Chatzēanargyrou, A. Ta Spetsiōtika, ētoi syllogē historikōn engraphōn kai hypomnēmatōn aphorōntōn ta kata tēn hellēnikēn epanastasin tou 1821, vol 1, p. ιθ'
  22. ^ Xiradaki, pp. 283-284.
  23. ^ Thomas Gordon, History of the Greek Revolution, vol.2, p.102
  24. Thomas Gordon, History of the Greek Revolution, vol.2, p.101
  25. Kalogeropoulos Householder, p. 5.
  26. David Brewer, The Greek War of Independence, p. 232.
  27. Angelomatis-Tsougarakis 2008, p. 49.
  28. Thomas Gordon, History of the Greek Revolution, vol.2, p.179
  29. Xiradaki, pp. 284-285.
  30. Fauré, Christine, ed. (2003). Political and Historical Encyclopedia of Women. Routledge. p. 248. ISBN 978-1-135-45690-0. A few days after her death, a Russian delegation arrived on Spetses to present her with the title of admiral of the Russian fleet.
  31. "Laskarina Bouboulina, Greek Rebel Admiral". HeadStuff. 2018-07-23. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  32. Η Μπουμπουλίνα υποναύαρχος επί τιμή με προεδρικό διάταγμα [Bouboulina the Rear admiral honored with presidential decree]. Η Καθημερινή (in Greek). 2018-04-27. Archived from the original on 2018-04-28. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  33. Bank of Greece Archived 2009-03-28 at the Wayback Machine. Drachma Banknotes & Coins: 1 drachma Archived 2009-01-01 at the Wayback Machine. – Retrieved on 27 March 2009.
  34. Xiradaki, p. 285.
  35. "Google Maps".
  36. Papadimitriou, pp. 43-44.
  37. Kalogeropoulos Householder 2006, p. 9.
  38. Kalogeropoulos Householder, pp. 7-8.

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