Posted on 01/11/2024 3:06:13 PM PST by CheshireTheCat
The Greek socialite Kyra Frosini was executed in Ioannina on this date in 1800 as an adulteress.
Euphrosyne Vasileiou, to use her proper name, was the niece of the Bishop of Ioannina who made use of the frequent business absences of her wealthy Greek husband to carry on a torrid affair with the son of the Ottoman governor. This set her up to be the most famous prey in a dragnet when that legendary governor, Ali Pasha, decided that a morality crackdown was in order.
She was arrested along with 17 other women on January 10, and the very next night all save one were drowned at Ali Pasha’s order in Lake Pamvotida. It’s not known for certain why Ali Pasha did this, although it’s generally presumed that Kyra Frosini was the primary target for reasons surely ultimately tracing in some fashion to the sensitivity of her liaison.
Her death incensed the Greek community and it adhered itself in legend more than fact to that country’s growing national aspirations. She’s been the subject of various artistic products ever since, from verse to opera to screen; you’ll need Greek for the dialogue in this 1959 Grigoris Grigoriou product but the closing plummeting-into-water scenes translate visually.
What exactly are people celebrating here? Adultery is awful. She wasn’t hip because she was an awful person.
I love a story with a happy ending.
Pasha Ali was your typical brutish Musloid who died like the dog he was.
The son of the Ottoman governor was not drowned.
Adultery is bad, no question - but a death sentence is evil.
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