idea falsa - Übersetzung nach italienisch
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idea falsa - Übersetzung nach italienisch

IRREDENTIST CONCEPT AIMING TO ESTABLISH A GREEK STATE ENCOMPASSING ALL HISTORICALLY GREEK-INHABITED AREAS
Megale Idea; Great Idea; Megali idea; Great idea; Greater Greece; United Greeks; Megali; Meghali Idea
  • The island of Cyprus, showing the areas controlled by the ethnic Greek Cypriots  of the [[Republic of Cyprus]] (south), and the areas controlled by ethnic Turkish Cypriots (north).
  • [[Eleftherios Venizelos]] tried to realize the Megali Idea
  • Map of Megali Hellas after the [[Treaty of Sèvres]] and featuring a picture of [[Eleftherios Venizelos]].
  • Greek soldiers in Smyrna, May 1919.
  • The territorial expansion of Greece, 1832–1947.
  • Map of Megali Hellas (Great Greece) as proposed at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 by [[Eleftherios Venizelos]], the leading major proponent of the Megali Idea at the time.
  • Greek claims in Epirus and Macedonia after the first Balkan war
  • Poster celebrating the "New Hellas" after the [[Balkan Wars]].
  • [[Constantine I of Greece]] was called ''Constantine XII'' by his supporters, the purported successor to the Emperor [[Constantine XI Palaiologos]]
  • Map showing Greek ambitions at the Paris Peace Conference after WWI, 1919
  • Ethnic map of [[Asia Minor]] in 1917. Black = Bulgars and Turks. Red = Greeks. Light yellow = Armenians. Blue = Kurds. Orange = Lazes. Dark Yellow = Arabs. Green = Nestorians.
  • Mehmed II]]'s entry into Constantinople.

idea falsa      
wrong idea
bad idea         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Bad Idea(A song); Bad idea; Bad Idea (disambiguation); Bad Idea (song)
n. idea cattiva
falsehood      
n. menzogna, bugia, falsità; ipocrisia; idea falsa

Definition

idea
(ideas)
Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.
1.
An idea is a plan, suggestion, or possible course of action.
It's a good idea to plan ahead...
I really like the idea of helping people...
She told me she'd had a brilliant idea.
N-COUNT: oft adj N, N to-inf, N of n/-ing
2.
An idea is an opinion or belief about what something is like or should be like.
Some of his ideas about democracy are entirely his own.
...the idea that reading too many books ruins your eyes...
= notion
N-COUNT: usu N about/on/of n, N that
3.
If someone gives you an idea of something, they give you information about it without being very exact or giving a lot of detail.
This table will give you some idea of how levels of ability can be measured...
If you cannot remember the exact date give a rough idea of when it was.
N-SING: N of n/wh
4.
If you have an idea of something, you know about it to some extent.
No one has any real idea how much the company will make next year.
N-SING: with supp
5.
If you have an idea that something is the case, you think that it may be the case, although you are not certain.
I had an idea that he joined the army later, but I may be wrong.
N-SING: N that [vagueness]
6.
The idea of an action or activity is its aim or purpose.
The idea is to encourage people to get to know their neighbours.
= objective
N-SING: the N
7.
If you have the idea of doing something, you intend to do it.
He sent for a number of books he admired with the idea of re-reading them...
= intention
N-COUNT: N of -ing/n
8.
You can use idea in expressions such as I've no idea or I haven't the faintest idea to emphasize that you do not know something.
'Is she coming by coach?'-'Well I've no idea.'
= notion
N-SING: with brd-neg [emphasis]
9.
If someone gets the idea, they understand how to do something or they understand what you are telling them. (INFORMAL)
It isn't too difficult once you get the idea...
PHRASE: V inflects

Wikipedia

Megali Idea

The Megali Idea (Greek: Μεγάλη Ιδέα, romanized: Megáli Idéa, lit. 'Great Idea') is a nationalist and irredentist concept that expresses the goal of reviving the Byzantine Empire, by establishing a Greek state, which would include the large Greek populations that were still under Ottoman rule after the end of the Greek War of Independence (1821–1828) and all the regions that had large Greek populations (parts of the Southern Balkans, Anatolia and Cyprus).

The term appeared for the first time during the debates of Prime Minister Ioannis Kolettis with King Otto that preceded the promulgation of the 1844 constitution. It came to dominate foreign relations and played a significant role in domestic politics for much of the first century of Greek independence. The expression was new in 1844 but the concept had roots in the Greek popular psyche, which long had hopes of liberation from Ottoman rule and restoration of the Byzantine Empire.

Πάλι με χρόνια με καιρούς,

πάλι δικά μας θα 'ναι!

(Once more, as years and time go by, once more they shall be ours).

The Megali Idea implies establishing a Greek state, which would be a territory encompassing mostly the former Byzantine lands from the Ionian Sea in the west to Anatolia and the Black Sea to the east and from Thrace, Macedonia and Epirus in the north to Crete and Cyprus to the south. This new state would have Constantinople as its capital: it would be the "Greece of Two Continents and Five Seas" (Europe and Asia, the Ionian, Aegean, Marmara, Black and Libyan Seas). If realized, this would expand modern Greece to roughly the same size and extent of the later Byzantine Empire, after its restoration in 1261 AD.

The Megali Idea dominated foreign policy and domestic politics of Greece from the War of Independence in the 1820s through the Balkan wars in the beginning of the 20th century. It started to fade after the Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922), followed by the population exchange between Greece and Turkey in 1923. Despite the end of the Megali Idea project in 1922, by then the Greek state had expanded four times, either through military conquest or diplomacy (often with British support). After the creation of Greece in 1830, it annexed the Ionian Islands (Treaty of London, 1864), Thessaly (Convention of Constantinople (1881)), Macedonia, Crete, (southern) Epirus and the Eastern Aegean Islands (Treaty of Bucharest), and Western Thrace (Treaty of Neuilly, 1920). The Dodecanese were annexed after the Second World War (Treaty of Peace with Italy, 1947).

A related concept is enosis.