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{{Short description|Former Greek gendarmerie and military police force}}
{| width="250" border="1" align="right" style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaaaaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 90%;"
{{More citations needed|date=March 2024}}
|-
{{Infobox law enforcement agency
! colspan="2" style="background:#ffffff;" |<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:Greek Gendarmerie emblem.png|130px|Emblem of the Greek Gendarmerie]] -->
| agencyname = Hellenic Gendarmerie
|-
| nativenamea = Ελληνική Χωροφυλακή
! scope="row" | Ministry
| logo = CoA Greek Gendarmerie.svg
| [[Minister for Public Order (Greece)|Ministry of Public Order]]
| logocaption = Emblem of Hellenic Gendarmerie, 1969–1984
|-
| flag = War flag of the Hellenic Army.svg
! scope="row" | Established
| flagcaption = War flag of the Hellenic Gendarmerie, 1951–1984
| [[1833]]
| image_size = 100
|-
| formedyear = 1833
! scope="row" | Abolished
| [[1984]]
| dissolved = 1984
| superseding = [[Hellenic Police]]
|}
| country = Greece
| gendarmerie = yes
| parentagency = [[Minister for Public Order (Greece)|Ministry of Public Order]]
| person1name = Colonel {{ill|François Graillard|el|Φραγκίσκος Γκραγιάρ}} (first)
| anniversary1 = ''St Irene's feast day'' (Annually, 5 May)
| anniversary2 = ''Commemoration of the fallen in the [[Dekemvriana|Battle of Athens]]'' (Annually, 6 December)
}}


The '''Greek Gendarmerie''' ({{lang-gr|Ελληνική Χωροφυλακή}}, ''Elliniki Chorofylaki'') was the national [[gendarmerie]] and [[military police]] force of [[Greece]].
The '''Hellenic Gendarmerie''' ({{Lang-el|Ελληνική Χωροφυλακή}}, ''Elliniki Chorofylaki'') was the national [[gendarmerie]] and [[military police]] (until 1951) force of [[Greece]].


==History==
==History==
===19th Century===
The Greek Gendarmerie was established in 1833 as the Royal Gendarmerie and its decree was based on the [[French Gendarmerie]] decree after the enthronement of [[Otto of Greece|King Otho]]. It was at that time formally part of the [[Hellenic Army|army]] and under the authority of the [[Minister for National Defence (Greece)|Defence Ministry]] (later the entirety of the organization including the Police Academy was brought under its authority). The city police force (Αστυνομία Πόλεων, ''Astynomia Poleon'') was also established but its role remained a secondary one in comparison to the Army's role (mainly dealing with illegal gambling, a severe problem at the time), several foreign advisers (particularly from [[Bavaria]], which emphasized elements of centralization and authoritarianism), were also brought in to provide training and tactical advice to the newly formed Police force. The main task of the police force under the army as a whole during this period was firstly to combat theft but also to contribute to the establishment of a strong executive government.


===19th century===
The army's links to the police and the nature of the structure of the police force and its hierarchy (that of being similar to the army) was maintained throughout the 19th century for a number of reasons. Largely the socio-political unrest that characterized the period including disproportionate poverty, governmental oppression, sporadic rebellions and political instability. As a result of this, as well as the input of the armed forces, the police force remained a largely conservative body throughout the period, there was also a certain amount of politicization during training as the police force were trained in military camps..
[[File:Chalkis 1830s.jpg|thumb|right|240px|Gendarmes in [[Chalcis]] in 1835.]]


The Greek Gendarmerie was established after the enthronement of [[Otto of Greece|King Otto]] in 1833 as the '''Royal Gendarmerie''' ({{lang-el|Βασιλική Χωροφυλακή}}) and modeled after the [[France|French]] [[National Gendarmerie]]. It was at that time formally part of the [[Hellenic Army|army]] and under the authority of the Army Ministry. Several foreign advisers (particularly from [[Kingdom of Bavaria|Bavaria]], who emphasized elements of centralization and authoritarianism), were also brought in to provide training and tactical advice to the newly formed force. The main task of the Gendarmerie under the army as a whole during this period was firstly to combat the extensive banditry which was endemic in the countryside throughout the 19th century and included kidnappings for ransom, the suppression of local revolts, and the establishment of a strong executive government. [[Dimitrios Deligeorgis]] was appointed commander in 1854.
=== 20th century ===
In [[1906]] the Greek police force underwent its first major restructuring at an administrative level. It acquired its own educational and training facilities independent of those of the army (though still remaining titularly part of the armed forces). Despite this the Gendarmarie still maintained a largely military based structured based on its involvement in the [[Greek Struggle for Macedonia|Macedonian Struggle]], and the [[Balkan Wars|Balkan]] and [[World War I|First World Wars]], as a result it tended to neglect civilian matters and was partially unresponsive to the needs of Greek society at the time. However, together with the establishment of a civilian city police force for [[Attica]] in 1920 (which would eventually be expanded to the entire country), it set a precedent for further change that came in [[1935]] because of rapid technological, demographic and economic changes which helped it to become more responsive to civilian policing needs of the time.


The army's links to the Gendarmerie and the nature of the structure of the force and its hierarchy (that of being similar to the army) was maintained throughout the 19th century for a number of reasons, primarily the socio-political unrest that characterized the period including disproportionate poverty, governmental oppression, sporadic rebellions and political instability. As a result of this, as well as the input of the armed forces, the Gendarmerie remained a largely conservative body throughout the period, there was also a certain amount of politicization during training as the Gendarmerie were trained in military camps.
However, modernization of the police force was stunted by the successive periods of political instability. The dictatorship of [[Ioannis Metaxas]], compounded with both the [[Second World War]] and the [[Greek Civil War]] led to a retardation of reform throughout the late 1930s and early to mid 1940s. After the war however, [[United Kingdom|British]] experts were brought in to help reform the police along the lines of the [[British Police]], as a result, after 1946 the police force ceased to be a part of the [[Minister for National Defence (Greece)|Defence Ministry]], however even then it did not abandon its military features and was still prevalently a military based institution. The Civil war of the period also contributed to excesses on both sides ([[Hellenic Army|Royalist]] and [[Communist Party of Greece|Communist]]), torture and abuse of human rights were widespread especially during the early periods of the war when parts of the country where in a state of near lawlessness. Despite this, after the war the police force did reach a respectable level of civilian policing throughout the mid 1960s which was stunted by the rise to power of the [[Regime of the Colonels|Military Dictatorship]] of the Colonels from [[1967]] to [[1974]] where it was largely employed as a method of quelling popular discontent along with the newly established [[Greek Military Police]] force of the dictatorship.


===20th century===
After the fall of the Colonels the Greek Military Police was eventually disbanded and Greece became a [[Republic]]. Despite strong opposition from the Gendarmarie, in 1984 both the city police and the Gendarmarie were merged into a single unified [[Greek Police|Greek Police Force]] which maintained elements of a military structure and hierarchy. Because of the long tradition of militaristic elements within the structure of the police even the [[Council of State]] of Greece ruled that the police should be regarded as a military body and that members are not civilians but members of the military engaged in a wider role together with the [[Military of Greece|Armed Forces]] to supplement the Army in defence of the homeland. This has however in recent years been relegated to policing duties such as border patrols and combating [[illegal immigration]] and is not reflective of any de facto military duties outside of that of a defensive role in the event of an invasion. Today the Greek Police assist in training other emerging Balkan police forces and Greece has one of the lowest crime rates within the [[European Union]].
[[File:Greek Gendarmerie, ca. 1900.jpg|thumb|left|Greek Gendarmerie at the turn of the 20th century]]
[[File:Papandreu-Plastiras-generel-state-archives.jpg|thumb|[[Georgios Papandreou]] and [[Nikolaos Plastiras]] with Gendarmerie officers, 1950]]


In 1906 the Gendarmerie underwent its first major restructuring at an administrative level. It acquired its own educational and training facilities independent of those of the army (though still remaining a nominal part of the armed forces). Despite this the Gendarmerie still maintained a largely military based structure, based on its involvement in the [[Macedonian Struggle]], and the [[Balkan Wars|Balkan]] and [[World War I|First World Wars]]. As a result, it tended to neglect civilian matters, something addressed with the establishment of a civilian [[Cities Police|city police force]] for [[Attica]] in 1920, which would eventually be expanded to urban centers in the entire country.
== Notes ==

Modernization of the country's police forces was stunted by the successive periods of political instability, which culminated in the [[4th of August Regime|regime]] of [[Ioannis Metaxas]] and the [[Second World War]]. After the war however, [[United Kingdom|British]] experts were brought in to help reform the police along the lines of the [[British Police]]. As a result, after 1946 the police forces ceased to be a formal part of the [[Minister for National Defence (Greece)|Defence Ministry]], although they retained several military features and were organized along military lines.

Reflecting a new emphasis on civilian policing, in 1984 both the Gendarmerie and the city police were merged into a single unified [[Hellenic Police]]<ref>(IAW Law 1481/1-10-1984, Government Gazette 152 A)</ref> which however maintained elements of the former military structure and hierarchy.

== Ranks insignia ==

=== 1908–1935 ===
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="60%"
!colspan=6| Ranks
|- align="center" - bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
|''Moirarchos''
|''Ypomoirarchos''
|''Anthypomoirarchos''
|''Enomotarchis A'''
|''Enomotarchis Β'''
|''Ypenomotarchis''
|- align="center" width="10%"
| [[image:GR-Army-OF2-1912.svg|center|60px]]
| [[image:GR-Army-OF1b-1912.svg|center|60px]]
| [[image:GR-Army-OF1-1912.svg|center|60px]]
| [[image:GR-Army-OR8-1912.svg|center|60px]]
| [[image:GR-Army-OR7-1912.svg|center|60px]]
| [[image:GR-Army-OR5-1912.svg|center|60px]]
|}

=== 1935–1970 ===
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="30%"
!colspan=16| Ranks
|- align="center" - bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
|''Lieutenant General'' (''Chief'') ''Αντιστράτηγος''
|''Major General'' (''Υποστράτηγος'')
|''Brigadier'' ''Ταξίαρχος''
|''Colonel'' (''Police director'') ''Συνταγματάρχης''
|''Lieutenant Colonel'' ''Αν/χης''
|''Major'' (''Ταγματάρχης'')
|''Commander'' ''Μοίραρχος''
|''Lieutenant'' ''Υπομοίραρχος''
|''Second Lieutenant'' ''Ανθυπομοίραρχος''
|''Warrant Officer'' ''Ανθυπασπιστής''
|''Gendarme Master Sergeant'' ''Ενωμοτάρχης Α΄''
|''Gendarme Staff Sergeant'' ''Ενωμοτάρχης''
|''Gendarme Sergeant'' ''Υπενωμοτάρχης''
|''Gendarme'' ''Χωροφύλακας''
|''Gendarme Operative'' ''Δόκιμος Χωροφύλακας''
|- align="center" width="10%"
| [[File:GR-Army-OF9-1937.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Army-OF8-1937.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Army-OF7-1937.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Army-OF5-1937.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Army-OF4-1937.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Army-OF3-1937.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Army-OF2-1937.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Army-OF1a-1937.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Army-OF1b-1937.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Army-OR9_(1965).svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Gendarm-OR8.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Gendarm-OR7.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Police-OR7.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Police-OR5.svg|center|60px]]
|
|}

=== 1975–1984 ===
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="30%"
!colspan=16| Ranks
|- align="center" - bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
|''General'' (''ret.)''
''Στρατηγός'' (ε.α.)
|''Lieutenant General'' (''Chief'') ''Αντιστράτηγος''
|''Major General'' (''Υποστράτηγος'')
|''Brigadier'' ''Ταξίαρχος''
|''Colonel'' (''Police director'') ''Συνταγματάρχης''
|''Lieutenant Colonel'' ''Αν/χης''
|''Major'' (''Ταγματάρχης'')
|''Commander'' ''Μοίραρχος''
|''Lieutenant'' ''Υπομοίραρχος''
|''Second Lieutenant'' ''Ανθυπομοίραρχος''
|''Warrant Officer'' ''Ανθυπασπιστής''
|''Ενωμοτάρχης Α΄''
|''Ενωμοτάρχης''
|''Υπενωμοτάρχης''
|''Gendarme'' ''Χωροφύλακας''
|''Gendarme in Training'' ''Δόκιμος Χωροφύλακας''
|- align="center" width="10%"
| [[File:Army-GRE-OF-09.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:Army-GRE-OF-08.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:Army-GRE-OF-07.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:Army-GRE-OF-06.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:Army-GRE-OF-05.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:Army-GRE-OF-04.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:Army-GRE-OF-03.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:Army-GRE-OF-02.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:Army-GRE-OF-01a.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:Army-GRE-OF-01b.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:Army-GRE-OR-09a.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Gendarm-OR8.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Gendarm-OR7.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Police-OR7.svg|center|60px]]
| [[File:GR-Police-OR5.svg|center|60px]]
|
|}

== Equipment ==

=== Small arms ===
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Name<ref>{{Cite book |last=Gendarmerie HQ |first=Training Directorate |title=Εγχειρίδιον διδασκαλίας οπλομηχανημάτων |publisher=Gendarmerie Printing House |year=January 1975 |location=[[Athens]] |language=el}}</ref>
!Country of origin
!Type
!Notes
!Image
|-
|Smith and Wesson № 38
|{{Flag|United States}}
|[[Revolver]]
|Length: 26&nbsp;cm
Weight: 801 gr
|
|-
|[[Mills bomb|№ 36 grenade]]
|{{Flag|United Kingdom}}
|[[Hand grenade]]
|
|[[File:N°5-MkII N°23-MkII N°36-MkI.jpg|frameless]]
|-
|[[MK3 grenade|MK3A1 grenade]]
| rowspan="8" |{{Flag|United States}}
| rowspan="8" |[[Hand grenade]]
|
|
|-
|[[United States hand grenades|CN M7 tear gas grenade]]
|
|
|-
|[[United States hand grenades|CN DM irritant grenade]]
|
|
|-
|[[United States hand grenades|AN-M14 incendiary grenade]]
|
|
|-
|[[United States hand grenades|CH (M8) smoke grenade]]
|
|
|-
|[[United States hand grenades|M15 white phosphorus smoke grenade]]
|
|
|-
|[[United States hand grenades|M18 colored smoke flare]]
|
|
|-
|AN-M3 red smoke flare [https://bulletpicker.com/grenade_-hand_-smoke_-an-m3.html]
|
|
|-
|[[Lee–Enfield]]
|{{Flag|United Kingdom}} (№ 1,3,4)
{{Flag|Canada}} (№4)
|[[Bolt action|Bolt action rifle]]
|
|[[File:Lee-Enfield No 4 Mk I (1943) - AM.032027 noBG.jpg|frameless]]
|-
|[[M1 Garand]]
|{{Flag|United States}}
|[[Semi-automatic rifle]]
|
|[[File:M1 Garand rifle USA noBG new.png|frameless]]
|-
|[[Thompson submachine gun|Thompson]]
|{{Flag|United States}}
|[[Submachine gun]]
|
|[[File:M1A1.gif|frameless]]
|-
|[[Bren light machine gun|Bren gun]]
|{{Flag|United Kingdom}}
|[[Light machine gun]]
|
|[[File:Bren wog.jpg|frameless]]
|-
|[[M19 mortar|60mm M19 mortar]]
|{{Flag|United States}}
|[[Mortar (weapon)|Mortar]]
|
|
|}

==References==
{{more footnotes needed|date=April 2017}}
{{Reflist|30em}}

==Notes==
* ''After the War was Over,'' Mark Mazower (Reconstructing the family, nation and state in Greece).
* ''After the War was Over,'' Mark Mazower (Reconstructing the family, nation and state in Greece).
<references/>
^ Law 1481/1 October 1984, Official Journal of the Hellenic Republic, A-152
^ Law 1481/1 October 1984, Official Journal of the Hellenic Republic, A-152


==External links==
{{Greece-stub}}
*[http://www.astynomia.gr/index.php?option=ozo_content&perform=view&id=34&Itemid=13&lang=EN Greek Police official site]


{{Europe topic|Law enforcement in}}
{{Greek security forces}}
{{Greece topics}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Hellenic Gendarmerie}}
[[Category:Hellenic Gendarmerie| ]]
[[Category:Military units and formations established in 1833]]
[[Category:Military units and formations established in 1833]]
[[Category:Law enforcement agencies of Greece]]
[[Category:1833 establishments in Greece]]
[[Category:1984 disestablishments in Greece]]

[[el:Ελληνική Χωροφυλακή]]

Latest revision as of 22:08, 7 April 2024

Hellenic Gendarmerie
Ελληνική Χωροφυλακή
Emblem of Hellenic Gendarmerie, 1969–1984
Emblem of Hellenic Gendarmerie, 1969–1984
War flag of the Hellenic Gendarmerie, 1951–1984
War flag of the Hellenic Gendarmerie, 1951–1984
Agency overview
Formed1833
Dissolved1984
Superseding agencyHellenic Police
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionGreece
General nature
Operational structure
Parent agencyMinistry of Public Order
Notables
Person
Anniversaries
  • St Irene's feast day (Annually, 5 May)
  • Commemoration of the fallen in the Battle of Athens (Annually, 6 December)

The Hellenic Gendarmerie (Greek: Ελληνική Χωροφυλακή, Elliniki Chorofylaki) was the national gendarmerie and military police (until 1951) force of Greece.

History[edit]

19th century[edit]

Gendarmes in Chalcis in 1835.

The Greek Gendarmerie was established after the enthronement of King Otto in 1833 as the Royal Gendarmerie (Greek: Βασιλική Χωροφυλακή) and modeled after the French National Gendarmerie. It was at that time formally part of the army and under the authority of the Army Ministry. Several foreign advisers (particularly from Bavaria, who emphasized elements of centralization and authoritarianism), were also brought in to provide training and tactical advice to the newly formed force. The main task of the Gendarmerie under the army as a whole during this period was firstly to combat the extensive banditry which was endemic in the countryside throughout the 19th century and included kidnappings for ransom, the suppression of local revolts, and the establishment of a strong executive government. Dimitrios Deligeorgis was appointed commander in 1854.

The army's links to the Gendarmerie and the nature of the structure of the force and its hierarchy (that of being similar to the army) was maintained throughout the 19th century for a number of reasons, primarily the socio-political unrest that characterized the period including disproportionate poverty, governmental oppression, sporadic rebellions and political instability. As a result of this, as well as the input of the armed forces, the Gendarmerie remained a largely conservative body throughout the period, there was also a certain amount of politicization during training as the Gendarmerie were trained in military camps.

20th century[edit]

Greek Gendarmerie at the turn of the 20th century
Georgios Papandreou and Nikolaos Plastiras with Gendarmerie officers, 1950

In 1906 the Gendarmerie underwent its first major restructuring at an administrative level. It acquired its own educational and training facilities independent of those of the army (though still remaining a nominal part of the armed forces). Despite this the Gendarmerie still maintained a largely military based structure, based on its involvement in the Macedonian Struggle, and the Balkan and First World Wars. As a result, it tended to neglect civilian matters, something addressed with the establishment of a civilian city police force for Attica in 1920, which would eventually be expanded to urban centers in the entire country.

Modernization of the country's police forces was stunted by the successive periods of political instability, which culminated in the regime of Ioannis Metaxas and the Second World War. After the war however, British experts were brought in to help reform the police along the lines of the British Police. As a result, after 1946 the police forces ceased to be a formal part of the Defence Ministry, although they retained several military features and were organized along military lines.

Reflecting a new emphasis on civilian policing, in 1984 both the Gendarmerie and the city police were merged into a single unified Hellenic Police[1] which however maintained elements of the former military structure and hierarchy.

Ranks insignia[edit]

1908–1935[edit]

Ranks
Moirarchos Ypomoirarchos Anthypomoirarchos Enomotarchis A' Enomotarchis Β' Ypenomotarchis

1935–1970[edit]

Ranks
Lieutenant General (Chief) Αντιστράτηγος Major General (Υποστράτηγος) Brigadier Ταξίαρχος Colonel (Police director) Συνταγματάρχης Lieutenant Colonel Αν/χης Major (Ταγματάρχης) Commander Μοίραρχος Lieutenant Υπομοίραρχος Second Lieutenant Ανθυπομοίραρχος Warrant Officer Ανθυπασπιστής Gendarme Master Sergeant Ενωμοτάρχης Α΄ Gendarme Staff Sergeant Ενωμοτάρχης Gendarme Sergeant Υπενωμοτάρχης Gendarme Χωροφύλακας Gendarme Operative Δόκιμος Χωροφύλακας

1975–1984[edit]

Ranks
General (ret.)

Στρατηγός (ε.α.)

Lieutenant General (Chief) Αντιστράτηγος Major General (Υποστράτηγος) Brigadier Ταξίαρχος Colonel (Police director) Συνταγματάρχης Lieutenant Colonel Αν/χης Major (Ταγματάρχης) Commander Μοίραρχος Lieutenant Υπομοίραρχος Second Lieutenant Ανθυπομοίραρχος Warrant Officer Ανθυπασπιστής Ενωμοτάρχης Α΄ Ενωμοτάρχης Υπενωμοτάρχης Gendarme Χωροφύλακας Gendarme in Training Δόκιμος Χωροφύλακας

Equipment[edit]

Small arms[edit]

Name[2] Country of origin Type Notes Image
Smith and Wesson № 38  United States Revolver Length: 26 cm

Weight: 801 gr

№ 36 grenade  United Kingdom Hand grenade
MK3A1 grenade  United States Hand grenade
CN M7 tear gas grenade
CN DM irritant grenade
AN-M14 incendiary grenade
CH (M8) smoke grenade
M15 white phosphorus smoke grenade
M18 colored smoke flare
AN-M3 red smoke flare [1]
Lee–Enfield  United Kingdom (№ 1,3,4)

 Canada (№4)

Bolt action rifle
M1 Garand  United States Semi-automatic rifle
Thompson  United States Submachine gun
Bren gun  United Kingdom Light machine gun
60mm M19 mortar  United States Mortar

References[edit]

  1. ^ (IAW Law 1481/1-10-1984, Government Gazette 152 A)
  2. ^ Gendarmerie HQ, Training Directorate (January 1975). Εγχειρίδιον διδασκαλίας οπλομηχανημάτων (in Greek). Athens: Gendarmerie Printing House.

Notes[edit]

  • After the War was Over, Mark Mazower (Reconstructing the family, nation and state in Greece).

^ Law 1481/1 October 1984, Official Journal of the Hellenic Republic, A-152

External links[edit]