Aristotelis Valaoritis

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Aristotelis Valaoritis
Portrait of Aristotelis Valaoritis by Spyridon Prosalentis.
Portrait of Aristotelis Valaoritis by Spyridon Prosalentis.
Born1824 (1824)
Died1879 (aged 5455)
OccupationPoet, Politician, civil servant
Signature

Aristotelis Valaoritis (Greek: Αριστοτέλης Βαλαωρίτης; 1824–1879)[1] was a Greek poet, representative of the Heptanese School, and politician. He was also the great-grandfather of Nanos Valaoritis, one of the most distinguished writers of Greece.

Aristotelis Valaoritis' bust in his birthplace, Lefkada
Bust in the National Garden, Athens

He was born in Lefkada in 1824[2] and was an Aromanian.[3][4] His father, Ioannis Valaoritis, was a rich merchant from the region of Epirus,[5] while his mother, Anastasia Typaldou-Foresti, came from a noble family in Cephalonia.[6] Valaoritis completed his school education in Lefkada and Corfu.[2] Afterwards he went to France and Italy to study law. He never worked as a lawyer though, but completely devoted himself to poetry. He spent an important part of his life in the small island of Madouri.

At the age of 25 he married the daughter of the Venetian scholar Emilio De Tipaldo, Eloisa. Using simple language he wrote many poems regarding the Greek War of Independence. He was credited as a national poet. Some of his most important works are: Stichourgimata, Mnemosina, Kira Frosini, Athanasios Diakos, O Fotinos, Astrapogiannos.

O Fotinos (or Der Helle in German), is a very famous unfinished poem relating the so-called Voukentra revolution of 1357 in Lefkada against the Venetian (Italian) occupation. Valaoritis composed this poem on the privately owned isle of Madouri.

Meanwhile, he got into politics. As a member of the Parliament of the United States of the Ionian Islands he fought for the rights of the Ionian Islands, such as the union with the Kingdom of Greece. Once the Ionian islands were united with Greece he moved to Athens, as a member of the Greek Parliament. His speeches were heavily influenced by his poetic language, making his rhetorical skills uniquely remarkable. The last years of his life, he developed action towards the integration of Epirus to Greece, a goal not fully achieved until the Balkan Wars.

He died in Lefkada in 1879 due to heart failure.

Work

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