XIII
THE GRECO-TURKISH WAR BEGINS
CONSTANTINOPLE AND THE GROWTH OF GREEK
NATIONALISM—SURROUNDED BY BRITISH FORCES,
THE TURKS GO BACK TO PEACE—APPLICATION OF
THE SECRET TREATIES WHICH THE ALLIES HAD
DRAWN UP DURING THE WAR—THE OECUMENICAL
PATRIARCHATE BREAKS OFF ITS RELATIONS
WITH THE OTTOMAN GOVERNMENT.
As every body knows, a brook called the Sweet Waters of Europe ripples down into a long bay called the Golden Horn, which divides Constantinople in Europe into two parts. On the northern side, between the crowded Golden Horn and the great Bosphorus, lie the suburbs of Galata and Pera, Galata behind the thicket of masts along its quai and Pera climbing the steep streets onto the hill beyond. Galata and Pera constitute the foreign suburbs where the Embassies, armed with the Capitulations, have never permitted the Ottoman Government to govern, except during the four years of the war when they were not in a position to prevent the Government from abrogating the Capitulations. Here were the Embassies and Legations, all of them except the Persian Legation, although the Ottoman Government was not here and never has been.