Alexandros Schinas

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Alexandros Schinas
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Alexandros Schinas

Alexandros (Alekos) Schinas (1870s, Volos - May 6, 1913), was a Greek[1] anarchist who assassinated King George I of Greece in Thessaloniki in 1913.

Schinas worked in the pantry of the Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City and a waiter remembered him as an avid reader of socialism-related literature and spending nights in Manhattan "making friends with radical and fervid thinkers".[2] Schinas was against governments and especially against aristocracy and monarchy.

Newspaper headline from the New York Times at the time.
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Newspaper headline from the New York Times at the time.

He started an anarchist school in his native town which the Greek government closed for spreading anti-government ideas. Two of the leaders of the school were sentenced to prison, but Schinas escaped without being imprisoned. The authorities also seized a number of books and pamphlets published by the school, which were deemed to contain anarchist doctrine and denounced the king.[3]

On March 18, 1913, at around 5:15 PM[1], Schinas (who was around 40 at the time) shot King George I in the back from a distance of two paces while the king was walking in Thessaloniki near the White Tower. George I was wounded by the bullet which entered below the shoulder blade and made its exit through his stomach. The bullet pierced the heart and lungs and by the time he arrived at the hospital, he was already dead.[4]

An educated anarchist headline
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An educated anarchist headline

Schinas was taken in to custody immediately, initially refusing to explain the reason of the crime, but when asked by an officer whether he had no "pity" for his country, he answered he was against governments.[4] As Schinas remaining calm for the entire event, there have been suggestions that he was not "responsible for his actions".[4] Later, Schinas declared that he killed the king because the latter refused to give him the money he asked for.[5] The Greek government released statements claiming that Schinas was an alcoholic vagrant.[6]

Schinas was tortured throughout the following night, being "forced to undergo examinations", but he refused to give in the names of any accomplices.[7] On May 6, he allegedly committed suicide by jumping out of the window of the police station in Thessaloniki[8]; but he was possibly just defenestrated by the police.

Various theories on the motives of Schinas circulated later, including that Schinas' action was directed by Bulgaria as a form of revenge for its lost territories, Austria-Hungary for political reasons or Germany for dynastic reasons, however there is no evidence for any of them.[9]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b King of Greece Murdered at Salonika; Slayer Mad; Political Results Feared By Marconi Transatlantic Wireless Telegraph New York Times March 19, 1913; pg. 1
  2. ^ The Assassin Lived Here. Special to The New York Times. New York Times; March 20, 1913; pg. 3
  3. ^ King's Murderer Is Educated Anarchist, by Marconi Transatlantic Wireless Telegraph; New York Times; March 20, 1913; pg. 3
  4. ^ a b c Died Before Reaching Hospital. New York Times; March 19, 1913; pg. 1
  5. ^ Sorrow Throughout Greece, by Marconi Transatlantic Wireless Telegraph; New York Times; March 19, 1913; pg. 2
  6. ^ The Times (London); 20 March 1913; pg. 6
  7. ^ New York Times; March 20, 1913; pg. 3
  8. ^ King's Slayer A Suicide. New York Times; May 7, 1913; pg. 3
  9. ^ Why Powers Forced Kings on Greece, by Walter Littlefield. New York Times, March 16, 1924; pg. E7