National progress (1882–1900)
While Trikoupis followed a policy of retrenchment within the established borders of the Greek state, having learned a valuable lesson about the viccisitudes of the Great Powers, his main opponents, the
Nationalist Party led by
Theodoros Deliyannis, sought to inflame the anti-Turkish feelings of the Greeks at every opportunity. The next opportunity arose when in 1885
Bulgarians rose in revolt of their Turkish overlords and declared themselves independent. Deliyannis rode to victory over Trikoupis in elections that year saying that if the Bulgarians could defy the
Treaty of Berlin, so should the Greeks.
Deliyannis mobilized the
Hellenic Army, and the British
Royal Navy blockaded Greece. The Admiral in charge of the blockade was
Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, who had been the first choice of the Greeks to be their king in 1863, and the
First Lord of the Admiralty at the time was
George Robinson, 1st Marquess of Ripon whose brother-in-law had been murdered in Greece 16 years before. This was not the last time that King George would discover that his family ties would not always be to his advantage. Deliyannis was forced to demobilize and Trikoupis regained the premiership. Between 1882 and 1897, Trikoupis and Deliyannis would alternate the premiership as their fortunes rose and fell.
Greece in the last decades of the 19th century was increasingly prosperous and developing a sense of its role on the European stage. In 1893, the
Corinth Canal was built by a French company cutting the sea journey from the Adriatic to
Piraeus by . In 1896 the
Olympic Games were revived in Athens, and the Opening Ceremony of the
1896 Summer Olympics was presided over by the King. When
Spiridon Louis, a shepherd from just outside Athens, ran into the
Panathinaiko Stadium to win the
Marathon event, the Crown Prince ran down onto the field to run the last thousand yards beside the Greek gold medalist, while the King stood and applauded.
The popular desire to unite all Greeks within the territory of their kingdom (
Megali Idea) was never far below the surface and another revolt against Turkish rule in Crete erupted again. In February 1897, King George sent his son,
Prince George, to take possession of the island. The Greeks refused an Ottoman offer of an autonomous administration, and Deliyannis mobilized for war. The Great Powers refused the expansion of Greece, and on
February 25 1897 announced that Crete would be under an autonomous administration and ordered the Greek and Ottoman Turk militias to withdraw.
The Turks agreed, but Prime Minister Deliyannis refused and dispatched 1400 troops to Crete under the command of Colonel Timoleon Vassos. Whilst the Great Powers announced a blockade, Greek troops crossed the
Macedonian border and
Abdul Hamid II declared
war. The announcement that Greece was finally at war with the Turks was greeted by delirious displays of patriotism and spontaneous parades in honor of the king in Athens. Volunteers by the thousands streamed north to join the forces under the command of
Crown Prince Constantine.
The war went badly for the ill-prepared Greeks; the only saving grace being the swiftness with which the Hellenic Army was overrun. By the end of April 1897, the war was lost. The worst consequences of defeat for the Greeks were mitigated by the intervention of the king's relatives in Britain and Russia; nevertheless, the Greeks were forced to give up Crete to international administration, and agree to minor territorial concessions in favor of the Turks and an indemnity of 4,000,000 Turkish pounds.
The jubilation with which Greeks had hailed their king at the beginning of the war was reversed in defeat. For a time, he considered abdication. It was not until the king faced down an assassination attempt in February 1898 with great bravery that his subjects again held their monarch in high esteem.
Later that year after continued unrest in Crete, which included the murder of the British vice-consul, Prince George of Greece was made the Governor-General of Crete under the suzerainty of the Sultan, after the proposal was put forward by the Great Powers. This effectively put Greece in day-to-day control of Crete for the first time in modern history.