Klephts


Klephts

 

Greek peasant partisans who fought against Turkish domination. For the most part they attacked the local Turkish feudal lords and representatives of the Turkish administration, as well as the Greek landowners (kotsabasai), who gave them their nickname, which means “bandits.” In the 17th and 18th centuries their guerrilla movement, despite the punitive measures of the Turkish authorities, became widespread, a development that forced the Turkish government at the end of the 17th century to legalize some of their detachments, the Armatoles, and assign them the functions of an internal guard. In the Greek National Liberation Revolution of 1821–29, the klephts and Armateles constituted the backbone of the insurgent forces. Numerous folk songs about the exploits of the klephts have been preserved.