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There
is now tangible evidence indicating that the settlement of Greek
merchants in Bengal
must have begun as early as the beginning of the seventeenth century.
This is substantiated by the discovery of two Greek tombstones, dated 1713
and 1728, and preserved in the aisles of the Catholic Cathedral of the
Virgin Mary of the Rosary in Murgihatta, Calcutta.[1]
A significant number of Greek families migrated to Bengal mainly from
the rich commercial Thracian cities of Adrianoupolis
and Philippoupolis,
when their properties were destroyed during the Turko-Russian War in
1774. Another steady stream of immigrants arrived in the Eastern ports
of India on the ships which carried British colonialists from the
Ionian Islands
as well as from the disaffected Greek cities in Cappadocia
and the Aegean Islands. In the beginning of the 19th century the Greek
community in Bengal
was comprised of about 120 families. Most of them were residing in the
metropolitan city of Calcutta,
which then had a population of 800,000 people.
The
British authorities identified Panagiotes Alexandros Argyres of
Philippoupolis
as the leader and true founder of the Greek mercantile community in
Bengal.
This honourable recognition was apparently bestowed upon him due to
the association of his name with an apocryphal story concerning the
erection of the first Greek
Orthodox church in Calcutta.
This
story mentions that in 1770 Panagiotes Alexandros Argyres
(also known as Chatze Alexis) accompanied Captain Thornhill
as an interpreter on the ship ‘Alexander.’ The vessel, caught in a
severe storm, was taking on water and about to sink, when Argyres
vowed to build a church in Calcutta
if he ever reached that city. His prayers were heard and the ship
landed safely. Argyres approached the Governor of Bengal,
Sir Warren Hastings,
with a petition signed by all the Greek merchants, requesting
permission to build the church. Unfortunately, he died in 1777 in
Dhaka,
before he could fulfil his promise. In spite of this, work began
with thirty thousand rupees contributed by his estate. The church was
dedicated to the Transfiguration of Christ on Mount Tabor
(Η
ΜΕΤΑΜΟΡΦΩΣΙΣ
ΤΟΥ
ΣΩΤΗΡΟΣ)
and
was built in the year
1780 in a suburb known then as Dhee Calcutta,
which was later renamed Amratollah.
The names of the founders and benefactors have been inscribed for
posterity on a marble stone which is placed in the interior of the
church. On it are mentioned H.E. Warren Hastings,[2]
the Archimandrite Parthenios of Corfu,
Alexandros Argyres,
Georgios Michael Mauroeides-Bairaktaroglou,
Christodoulos Mauroeides,
Georgios and Aggelike Leontiou,
the family of Athanasios Metsos,
Michael Andreades,
and various Greek and British merchants of Bengal in the year 1774.
The Registry of the Church with the rules and regulations of the church
and the birth and death records of the members of the Greek Community
began to be composed in 1792 and was rewritten and preserved by Father Ananias Kyriakou of Macedonia in 1891.
The
first priest to officiate in the church was
Rev.
Nikiforos
from Sinai who came to India on 11th October 1772 and
had occasionally performed the Greek liturgy in private houses before
the construction of the church.
The
Second priest was
the
Reverent Ananias a monk of Mount Sinai and his assistant Father Constantinos
Parthenios (d. 1803) a native of Corfu.
The later became popular among the foreign community in Bengal and is
said to have served as the model for the Christ in Zoffany’s famous
painting of ‘The Last Supper’ now hanging in St. John’s
church.[3]
Some other outstanding priests who served in the church at
different times
were: Nathaniel of Siphnos, who came in 1777 and died in Dhaka
in 1810 “a splendid example of learning and virtue” in the words of
Galanos;
Dionysios of Mudana, who came in 1792 and was blamed by Galanos
as “the cause of dishonour to our nation” because he was highly
critical of his predecessor Nathaniel; Gregorios of Siphnos, the only
priest sent by the Orthodox Patriarchate of Constantinople
and who officiated the first liturgy in the newly constructed church
in Dhaka
in 1812; Ambrosios Ghimouschanales
from Mount Sinai,
who replaced Gregorios of Siphnos
in
1817.
In May 1832 the monastery of Sinai sent to Dhaka the priest Ananias of
Seres, who travelled by boat with the nephew of Galanos, Pantoleon
and brought with him numerous books. The priest Joseph of Zakynthos,
who appears as the last monk of the
Sinai lineage was sent in April 1841 to replace Father Gabriel.
When
the church was not under the jurisdiction of the archbishop of Sinaiany
longer, the Greek Committee asked the Greek government to send them a
priest from Greece. The first one was Archimandrite Grigorios
Ioannidis (1852-1870); later was Father Damas Papasperopoulos
(1871-1878), who was succeeded by Archimandrite Konstantinos Vafidis
(1878-1880). He was followed by Archimandrite Kallinikos Kanellas
(1880-1886) and succeeded by Nicolaos Panas (1886-1891). After him
came Archimandrite Efthimios Platis from 1891 to 1897, replaced by
Archimandrite Germanos Kazakos (1897-1913), and later by Athanasios
Alexiou (1913-1960).[4]
In
1786, Dimitrios Gallanos, the Athenian, established the first school
for the children of the immigrants in Calcutta, while regular classes
began in Dhaka as well. Galanos was sent to Calcutta to start a
school, but after six years he departed for the holy city of Benares
where he dedicated 40 years of his life in the Study of Sanskrit. He
died in 1833 and was buried in the British Christian Cemetery. His
manuscripts are kept in the National Library of Athens. Ten of them
were published posthumously (1845-53) in seven volumes.
The
Greek immigrants faced several problems adjusting to their new homes,
but they did not forget their relatives in Greece, who were preparing
to revolt against the Ottoman rule. When the undercover network,
responsible for the revolution, known as Society of the Friends (Φιλική
Εταιρεία) asked assistance from the prosperous Greek communities
abroad, the Greeks in Bengal responded rapidly. They gathered in the
Orthodox Church in Calcutta on the second day of Easter in the year
1802 and made the following historical vow:
In
the year of our Lord 1802, in the Spring and Easter of our Lord, all
the Greek traders residing in Calcutta from Pontos,
and Bithynia, and Cappadocia,
and Aeolia,
and the land of Ionia,
and mainland Greece, and islands, and Barbaria (North Africa),
and Egypt,
and Constantinople, and from all over the world, we gathered in the
temple, in the evening after the divine service of the second day of
the Resurrection, and took a sacred vow. We shall place in custody
in Calcutta our spare money and gold and silver and other property
for the resurgence of the race of the Greeks. No one will ever put
a hand on them. They will be bestowed to the kingdom of the Greeks
so that with the grace of God it will be resurrected.[5]
The
Greeks, who were engaged in trade, were apparently very prosperous, as
is suggested by the significant capital that they handed to the Greek
authorities and by their constant support of the Greek revolution.
They also supported the refugees who escaped Kemal Ataturk’s genocide
of the Asia Minor Greeks in 1922, as well as the struggle for
liberation of the Greeks in Northern Epiros
In
the year 1920, the Greek community decided to sell the old building of
the church and the surrounding land, which was used as a cemetery, as
well as several houses, which belonged to the church. With the revenue
they bought a piece of land in the central area of Kalighat, near the
famous temple of the Hindu Goddess Kālī There, they built the new
church in a magnificent neo-classical Doric order, along with a
double-storied residence for the priest. The cemetery was moved to a
site outside the city that is now quite crowded and is located near
the crossroads of Narkeldanga and Phulbagan. The new church kept the
old name
and began functioning in 1924. The largest contribution for the
building of the new church came from the Ralli Brothers, originally
from the Aegean island of Chios, who were the owners of Rallis
Company, manufacturers of cotton and silk materials. Their company,
which numbered 3,000 people, is still present in Calcutta, but the
owner is now Indian.
Other
important Greek settlements were established in Dhaka
and in its port, Narayanganj. In 1812,[6]
the
Greek immigrants built a church dedicated to Saint Thomas,
a little distance inside the Muqim Kuttra Road (east of Chowk Bazaar)
in Dhaka and in 1840 they had their own school. Priests, who served
also as teachers for the Greek children of the community, were
appointed
from
Mount Sinai. The church was partly destroyed in a severe earthquake in
1897 and was abandoned. Two later references were found in the
archives of the Greek community for the years 1907 and 1911 which
describe the condition of the church in bleak tones. The Greek
community in Calcutta was anxious to find out why the church was
deserted and the cemetery’s tombs neglected, but they could not
prevent the final destruction. The local people stole the marble and
the tombstones and the surrounding wall collapsed.[7]
In
1913, the colonial government decided to expropriate the land of the
Greek church and the Greek-Armenian cemetery for the construction of
the Mitford Medical College
(now renamed as Sir Salimullah Medical College Hospital). According to
Father Halvatzakes-Velladios,
the architect of the college was a Greek, named Doxiades,
who requested the local authorities to convert the portico of the
church to a Greek monument. The portico of the church was probably
moved to the cite of the old Greek cemetery in Ramna, that existed
before the construction of the Greek church at Chowk Bazar, as it is
indicated by the dates given on six (out of nine) remaining
gravestones.[8]
The
first picture of the monument appeared in the Calcutta newspaper “The
Statesman” on the 28th of February 1915. This was accompanied by an
article reporting that the old Greek cemetery that existed on the
right side of the Ramna Road was abandoned and that the local people
were stealing the tombstones for the construction of their own
buildings. Father Middleton MacDonald,
a British military priest, requested the chief engineer of the East
Bengal to take better care of the place. Finally, Lord Carmichael, the
then Governor of Bengal, ordered the construction of a monument for
the protection of the tombstones. In the interior of the monument nine
gravestones of the Greek cemetery were placed. After the request of
Mr. Mangos and the Ralli brothers
(who probably donated the money for the design and construction of the
monument), Athanassios Alexiou,
the Archimandrite of the Greek community in Calcutta, came to Dhaka
for the inauguration. (The Archimandrite appears in the centre of the
photograph along with the Anglican Chaplain and members of the Greek
community.)[9]
Six
years later, in 1921, the construction of the University of Dhaka
began on the same site. The Greek monument in the Doric order was left
undisturbed and it can be seen today in the campus near the
Teacher-Student Centre (T.S.C.) facing the campus wall at Kazi Nazrul
Islam Road. The monument suffered heavy damage during the War of
Independence in 1971 (and perhaps earlier, in 1952, during the
students’ demonstration in favour of Bengali as the official
language), but it was rebuilt a few years later. Additional cosmetic
repairs were made in 1997 with expenses paid by the Greek Embassy in
New Delhi.
The
four sides of the ancient Greek temple-like building are identical. In
the interior nine gravestone inscriptions are preserved in Greek and
English. On the pediment the following Biblical inscription is written
on marble slabs, «ΜΑΚΑΡΙΟΙ ΟΥΣ ΕΞΕΛΕΞΩ ΚΑΙ ΠΡΟΣΕΛΑΒΟΥ,» which
translated means, “Blessed are those whom You chose and took with
You.”[10]
Father Halvatzakes-Velladios’s
article has a drawing showing a cross on top of the monument, but this
is no longer present.[11]
The
Greek Church in Calcutta was shut down in 1960, after Archimandrite
Athanassios Alexiou had blessed the last Greek immigrants who left for
a new permanent residence in Greece and England. Nine years later,
Father Kallistratos Adamou came from Australia on a two-year agreement
to re-open the church. He arrived in October 1969 and, as he mentions
in his small book “The History of the Greek Church in Calcutta”
(Calcutta, 1970), in his time there were only 2 Greek men and 2 Greek
ladies in Calcutta, 8 in Bombay, 2 in Delhi, 8 in Nepal and 10 in
Pakistan. However, in the port of Calcutta about 50 Greek ships
arrived every month and some of their sailors would visit and assist
him in his work in the church.
The
last priest to preside over the Greek community of Bengal was Father
Constantinos Halvatzakes-Velladios,
who, in collaboration with the Greek Embassy
in New Delhi, collected fifty thousand important documents from the
archives of the Greek community in Bengal and from other Greeks who
were living in the cities of Madras,
Bombay,
and Darjeeling.
The oldest of these documents were written on papyrus from the 18th
century and were in a dismal condition. The documents included:
administrative records of the Greek communities, management books,
bulky envelopes (containing correspondence with the Ecumenical
Patriarchate,
the monasteries of Mount Sinai,
the Greek government, and the government of Bengal), and records of
private importance.[12]
Father Halvatzakes-Velladios
and the Greek Ambassador to Delhi, Dr. Vassilis Vitsaxis, became
immediately aware of the historical significance of these documents
and, seeing the decline of the Greek community, decided to ship them
to the Archdiocese of Athens in the hope that they would be handed
over to scholars for further study. Unfortunately, these documents
were lost on the way, through negligence and bad management and never
reached their destination. However, Father Halvatzakes-Velladios would
write and publish glimpses of these documents in the Athenian Journal
“Nea Estia.” These covered topics such as the visit of the Russian
Czarevitch Alexandros to the Greek community of Bengal,
the Greek monument in Dhaka, and some information about the release of
the Greek captives who were transferred to Burma by the British after
the Asia Minor disaster.
He
incorporated valuable information in his books Elladios[13]
and The
Greeks of Pontos in India,[14],
in
which he published his memoirs as a priest in Calcutta
in the form of short essays, along with biographies of some notable
Greeks in India, and some important documents relating to the last
will of the philhellene widow Anna Rebeireo,
resident of Calcutta, who died on February 11, 1785 and donated her
property to the Greek priest Constantinos Parthenios.
The
Greek community in Bengal that became the main vehicle of
communication between the Greek and Indian peoples for two and half
centuries, came to an end with the political and economic crisis in
the state of Bengal in the middle of the twentieth century. The Ralli
brothers
sold their jute factory at Narayanganj in the 1960’s and the only
remains that exist to remind us of the Greeks in Bengal are the small
ancient Greek temple-like building on the campus of Dhaka
University, the well preserved neo-classical Orthodox church "Holy
Transfiguration", and the Cemetery Chapel of Prophet Elias in the
historic Orthodox cemetery in Calcutta with more than 100 tombs and
monuments. The tombstones, dating back to the eighteenth century, were
taken away from the old cemetery that was sold in 1920 along with the
church in Amratollah street. Most of the tombstones belong to Greeks
and some belong to Russians and Bulgarians. Some of the foreigners
buried there were sailors, while others died of leprosy and never went
back to their homeland. The Greek priests came to the leper colonies
where these men lived and gave them Holy Communion. The last Russian
leper died in 1960. Some corpses were carried from Bangladesh (Dhaka)
and buried in Calcutta. The last graves belong to Indian Orthodox.[15]
A few
long-term Greek residents are the descendants of those who had
intermarried with Indians. George Papadopoulos, from an Indian mother
and half Greek father (grandfather was Greek and grandmother Indian)
had the bakery shop “ATTIKON” in the central, most expensive area of
Calcutta, but knew very little Greek. He was very dark and tall, never
married and died a few years ago.[16]
Mr.
Pavlides had a catering company
supplying food to ships in the port of Calcutta, while Raptacos had a
pharmaceutical company. Antonios Mangos, originally from
Constantinople, who served as the last director for the Ralli
Brothers’ Company, wrote a very interesting book with the
title«Adventure Account», in which he refers to the Greek Company that
he served for several decades in Calcutta and Mumbai. For the last 40
years he has lived in Mumbai, married to a Parsee woman. He serves as
an Honourary Consulate of Greece and goes to Greece every year for a
few months.
A
predominant intellectual was Mrs. Maximiani Potras,
alias Savitri Devi Mukherjee, born in 1905 to a Greek father and
English mother. She completed her M.Sc. and Ph.D. in literature in
France and in 1940 married Asit Krishna Mukherjee,
a Calcutta
lawyer, who published the Pro-Nazi periodical "New Mercury" from 1935
until the British closed it down in 1937. In her autobiography,
Souvenirs et Reflections d’une Aryenne (Memories and
Reflections of an Aryan Lady) she expressed several ideas
concerning the natural hierarchy of the races, the Nordic Aryan
Invasion Theory,
and the purity of the caste system.[17]
In
more recent times, Paul Byron Norris,
a fifth generation descendant of Panagiotes Alexandros Argyres,
who resides permanently in London, searched with great passion through
the British historical archives to discover the cultural identity of
his ancestors in Bengal. This led him to writing a book in English
with the title Ulysses in the Raj. In it he compiles, in
a knowledgeable, enticing and pleasant manner abundant details about
the Greek trade in India, the Greek Orthodox Church in Bengal, and the
development of the Hellenic settlements in Bengal and northern India
from the beginning of the seventeenth century onwards. In this unique
account, the author follows the histories of some of the most notable
families of the Greek community in Bengal such as the Rallis, the
Corphiots, and the Paniotys, from their origins in Greece to their
settlement and development in India. He also dedicates chapters to the
founder of the Greek community, Panagiotes Alexandros Argyres, the
notable merchant, Alexander Paniotys,
the Athenian Brahmin Galanos;
the mercenary Alexander Ghika; and the ‘patriotic pirate’ Nicholas
Kephalas.
In the book’s appendices he includes details of a great number of the
known Greek merchants in Bengal between 1750 and 1853.
Another recent publication is the illustrated and bilingual study, “A
Chronicle of the Greeks in India
1750-1950” published in English and Greek and with rare
photographs by Dione Marcos Dondis. She is a descendant of the Greek
Community but has lived most of her life in Athens and Canada,
although she never stopped to serve the cause of the Greek Community
in Bengal. In the existing bibliography, Dondi’s book adds fresh
elements in the history of the Greek community, as she resorts to
personal interviews with surviving members of the Greek Community,
whom she seeks and finds in Greece, India and England. No doubt,
personal experiences constitute the most reliable historical source,
and in this case, the writer makes an important contribution as she
records these last recollections before they are lost.
The
Greek community had been flourishing in Bengal for centuries, but the
Greek priests were mainly concerned with the fulfilment of the
spiritual and religious needs of the Greek community. They did not
interfere in the beliefs and religious practices of the Indians. It
was only later, in 1980, that the systematic missionary work began by
Father Athanasios Anthides,
a Greek priest from Cairo in Egypt, who had already a life-long
experience in Christian missions in Africa especially in Uganda.
Father Athanasios, zealously inspired by his mission, came to India
and established himself in the rural area of Arambagh,
which is located one hundred and fifty kilometres northwest of
Calcutta.
There he built a small Orthodox church in the memory of the Apostle
Thomas
and a house for the appointed priest. In spite of his old age and
health problems he worked tirelessly and succeeded in developing small
Orthodox centres in fourteen villages. He also set up his own press
and translated liturgical and catechism books into the local language.
He continued to work alone without discouragement, even though his
constant letters to Greece asking for support and assistants did not
meet with any response. He lived in India for the last 10 years of his
life and died there. He was buried on November 28, 1990, at the age of
seventy.[18]
Next
to his tomb, in the jungle of Arambagh,
lies the tomb of a woman, Stamatia Papastamatiou, from Athens, who
went to help him in India and died after one month. She had diabetes
and lived without electricity and other comforts. Before he died, Fr.
Athanasios prepared and ordinated two Indians as priests in his
community.[19]
One
year after the death of Father Athanasios, Father Ignatios
Pavlos Sennis, a Greek monk from the monastery of Stavronikita
on Mount Athos,
was appointed by the Ecumenical Patriarchate
of Constantinople to take over the management of the Greek Orthodox
Church in Calcutta. Initially, he restored the building of the church
and the nearby residence of the priest, which were in bad condition
due to neglect for the past eighteen years. After restoration was
completed, he began a substantial and extensive social welfare mission
in Calcutta and its surrounding territories. Father Ignatios,
encouraged by Sister Nektaria
Paradeise’s overall dedication, and by the financial and physical
support of numerous Greeks from Greece, U.S.A., Australia, and
elsewhere, founded the Philanthropic Society of the Greek Orthodox
Church. This society provides free medical care and distributes food
and other essentials to those in need. The Philanthropic Society built
an orphanage for fifty-five boys and one orphanage for two hundred
girls, which are currently operating. Furthermore, it established
three medical centres, two elementary schools in the villages of Satal
and Arabhas,
and three new Orthodox churches, Saint Charalambos
Holy
Trinity, and St. Nicholas for the spiritual needs of the Christians
residing in the villages Akhina, Thrakuranichak,
and Nerandrachak respectively.
Also, Orthodox churches are under construction in Bandar
and Gospur.[20]
The
Greek state acknowledged the importance of the social work carried out
by the Greek church, with the official visit of H.E. the President of
the Hellenic Republic Konstantinos Stefanopoulos in January 1998 and
the then Minister of Foreign Affairs Georgios Papandreou in December
2000. Father Ignatios Pavlos Sennis left India in 2004 for Madagascar,
where he started a new mission. Nevertheless, the remarkable work that
he left behind continues to grow under the supervision of the
Philanthropic Society of the Greek Orthodox Church that is now managed
by Indian priests and the spiritual guidance of the Greek Metropolitan
of Hong Kong. At the same time, a new and independent cultural
association constituted by Indian philhellenes was set up in the
cosmopolitan city of Calcutta with the name "Cyclos”, which publishes
a periodical entitled "Parthenon" that proliferates Greek light in the
megalopolis of Bengal.
Notes
and References:
1.
Ulysses in the Raj, p. 19.
The writer in his research in the Portuguese church in 1999 found only
the
gravestone of Georgjos Ioannis Draskoglou from Philljpoupolis, who
died in Calcutta in 1728. The other Greek gravestone obviously broke
and like many others it was used for the construction of the church,
which was built above the old Christian cemetery. See photograph
Νο.
3, in
Photo
Gallery
“Memories from the Greek Community in Bengal”,
ΙΝΔΙΚΑ
2005.
2.
Governor Warren Hastings
had supported several issues of the Greek merchant community in Bengal
and donated two thousand rupees for the construction of the Greek
church in Calcutta. Subsequently, in 1788, when Hastings was impeached
on charges of corruption, two Greek priests and seventy Greek
merchants (including Galanos) signed the following supporting petition
addressed to the Honourable Court of Directors of the East India
Company: “We take the liberty of testifying and declaring by this
humble representation his Christian and universal character, his
beneficent and charitable disposition to all mankind, his just and
impartial love of all the native inhabitants, whether high or low, of
this kingdom and his fervent zeal for the prosperity of this country
in general and of every individual in it, manifesting to all and every
one of them marks of paternal affection and stretching forth his hand
to those whom he found in indigent circumstances and destitute of the
necessities of life. He was a zealous patron for the dispensation of
justice to every individual and of faithful balance of equity. In a
word, he was enriched with all human and moral endowments and famous
not only for his moral and political virtues but worthy of praise and
to be highly spoken of for his desire to preserve and improve the
literature of this country, all of which excellencies will render him
admired and immortal throughout the universal world.” Ulysses in
the Raj, pp. 31-32, and 189-190.
3.
Eardley Latimer,
Handbook to
Calcutta and Environs, pp. 88-89. See Photo no. 6 in
Photo Gallery, INDIKA 2005.
4.
Rev. Kallistatos Adamou, The History of the Greek Church in
Calcutta India, p.4. See also
Ανδρέα Τηλλυρίδη, «Το Θεοβάδιστον Όρος Σινά και ο Ελληνισμός των
Ινδιών».
5.
From the historical archives of the Greek Orthodox church, Calcutta.
For the original text in Greek, See Photo no. 8 in
Photo Gallery, INDIKA 2005. For farther details about the
Greek Community’s participation in the Greek revolution, see:
Σπύρος
Λουκάτος,:
Έλληνες και
Φιλέλληνες των Ινδιών κατά την
Ελληνικήν
Επανάστασιν.
6.
James Taylor
mentioned 1821, but according to Paul Byron Norris, he is in error in
this fact. The chief founder of the church was Alexander Paniotys
who died in 1821.
7. π. Κωνσταντίνος Χαλβατζάκης-Βελλάδιος, Πόντιοι
στις Ινδίες,
p.
17.
8.
See Helen
Abadzi’s article "Glimpses of the
Greek Community from the Dhaka University Gravestones,"
IΝΔΙΚΑ 2005,
where she
tried to outline the history of the Greek community on the basis of
information derived from nine gravestone inscriptions of the ninetieth
century Greek community in Bengal now preserved in a small ancient
Greek temple-like building on the campus of Dhaka University.
9. π. Κωνσταντίνος Χαλβατζάκης-Βελλάδιος, Πόντιοι
στις Ινδίες,
p.
18.
10.
Cf. "Blessed are those you choose and bring near to live in your
courts!" Psalms, 65: 4, NIV translation.
11.
See also: Ulysses in the Raj; James Taylor,
A Sketch of the Topography and Statistics of Dacca, pp. 87-88,
99, 254-255; and Syed Molid Taifoov,
Glimpses to Old Dhaka, pp. 20-21.
12.
See
π. Κωνσταντίνος Χαλβατζάκης-Βελλάδιος, "Τα Ιστορικά Αρχεία των Ελλήνων
των Ινδιών," σελς 1077-1084.
13. π. Κωνσταντίνος Χαλβατζάκης-Βελλάδιος,
Ελλάδιος ο της Πάσης Χώρας.
14. π. Κωνσταντίνος Χαλβατζάκης-Βελλάδιος,
Πόντιοι στις Ινδίες,
pp.
17-34. The
writings of Elias Tantalides, (Ινδική
Αλληλογραφία),
who lived in Phanari,
the Greek enclave in Constantinople,
also contain valuable information. Further details concerning the
history of the Greek community in Bengal are given by Burgi-Kyriazi,
Dementrios Galanos: Enigme de la Reinaissance Orientale,
pp. 18-21;
Σαράντος
Καργάκος,
Δημήτριος Γαλανός ο Αθηναίος
(1760-1833):
Ο
Πρώτος Έλληνας Ινδολόγος, pp. 19-25;
and the article of
Φάνης
Μιχαλόπουλος,
«Η
Ελληνική
Κοινότης της
Καλκούτας,
Ο
Δημήτριος
Γαλανός
Πρόδρομος της
Ινδολογίας».
15.
Helen Abadzi, Greeks in India (unpublished notes).
16.
Ibid.
17.
Quoted by Koenraad Elst,
Linguistic Aspects of the Aryan Non-Invasion Theory, Voice of
India, in print, pp. 23-26, references are from H. Lommel,
Les Anciens Aryens, Gallimard, Paris, 1943.
18.
See
Ιερομ. π. Ιγνάτιος Σταυρονικητιανός, «Οι Σπείροντες εν Δάκρυσιν,»
p.
δ.
19.
Helen Abadzi, Greeks in India (unpublished notes).
20.
Ιερομ.
π.
Ιγνάτιος
Σταυρονικητιανός,
«Οι
Σπείροντες εν
Δάκρυσιν,»
pp. 5-16; and 1999 Calendar of the Orthodox Metropolitan of Hong Kong
and Southeast Asia, Hong Kong, 1998.
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