Acknowledgments Introduction Leonidas Moiras and Nikos Christofis Part I: Historiographical Approaches of the Greek Revolution Chapter 1. Ottoman and Turkish Perceptions of the Greek Revolution and Greek Irredentism Leonidas Moiras and Alexandros Lamprou Chapter 2. Cyprus and the Greek Revolution of 1821: Narrating and Constructing the Past Nikos Christofis Chapter 3. Albanian National Narratives and "Interbalkanisms": Centers and Visions of the "Greek" in the Nineteenth Century Elias G. Skoulidas Chapter 4. The Question of the Elites in the Historiography of the 1821 Greek Revolution Dimitris Stamatopoulos Part II: The Greek Revolution in the Ottoman Context Chapter 5. The Greek Independence War, Ottoman Citizenship, and Military Conscription: The Story of a Vicious Circle Erik-Jan Zürcher Chapter 6. From the Nile to Navarino: The Greek Revolution in the Egyptian Historiography Panos Kourgiotis Chapter 7.
Across the Aegean: Muslim Migration from the Morea during the Greek War of Independence Hilal Cemile Tümer Part III: The Global Impact of the Greek Revolution Chapter 8. American Protestant Missionaries and the Greek Revolution Elmira Vasileva Chapter 9. Russian Liberalism and the Revolutions of the 1820s: The Greek 1821 Ada Dialla Chapter 10. The Greeks and Transnational Political Policing in Europe during the Age of Revolutions Christos Aliprantis Chapter 11. The Ottoman-Iranian Enmity and the Greek War of Independence Mohammed Shariat-Panahi Chapter 12. "Every Single Verse Seems to Be Speaking to the Contemporary Chinese": Perceptions of the Greek Revolution of 1821 in Japan and China Egas Moniz Bandeira Afterword: Beginnings, the End, and an Apology: A '1619 Project' for Greece Christine Philliou Index.