Jump to content

Konstantinos Nider

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lieutenant general

Konstantinos Nider
Nider (right), with his chief of staff, Colonel Theodoros Pangalos c. 1917–1918
Native name
Κωνσταντίνος Νίδερ
Bornc. 1865[a]
Missolonghi, Kingdom of Greece
Died1942 (aged 76–77)
Athens, Hellenic State
AllegianceGreece Kingdom of Greece
Service / branch Hellenic Army
Years of service1884–1922
1922–1923
Rank Lieutenant general
CommandsI Army Corps (Chief of Staff)
1st Infantry Division
Army of Asia Minor
Army of Thrace
Wars
Alma materHellenic Military Academy
Other workVice Minister of Military Affairs

Konstantinos Nider (Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Νίδερ, c. 1865–1942) was a Greek military officer. A lieutenant general in the Hellenic Army, he distinguished himself during the First World War and the Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922).

Biography

[edit]

Nider was born in Missolonghi in approximately 1865, the son of the military doctor Franz Xaver Nieder[1],[2] one of the many Bavarians who had come to Greece with King Otto. He entered the Hellenic Military Academy and graduated on 12 August 1887 as a second lieutenant of the Engineers.[2] Subsequently, Nider served for eight years in the Austro-Hungarian Geodetic Mission to Greece, which laid the foundations of the Greek Army's own Geographic Service.[2] Promoted to lieutenant in 1890 and captain in 1898, he was a member of the Greco-Ottoman boundary commission after the Greco-Turkish War of 1897, and was sent to France for further studies in 1903.[2] Upon his return he was promoted to major and placed in the newly established General Staff, and then in the staff of the 3rd Infantry Division.[2] In 1910–14, he served as head of the Personnel Office of the Army, and as chief of staff of the rear area and support troops during the First Balkan War. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in 1911.[2]In 1914 he was promoted to colonel and became chief of staff of the I Army Corps.[2]

During the National Schism, he remained loyal to King Constantine I. However, as he was not marked as an ardent monarchist, he remained in the army following the King's exile and the assumption of power by the king's rival, Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos, in June 1917. Venizelos' victory led to the immediate entry of the whole country into World War I on the side of the Entente.

In June 1917, Nider was given command of the 1st Infantry Division.[2] In December 1918, he was given command of I Army Corps, which soon after participated in the Allied intervention in Russian Civil, fighting the Bolsheviks in the Crimea and Odessa.[2] On 2 June 1919, he was appointed head of the Greek Army of Asia Minor for the zone around the city of Smyrna (İzmir). He held this post until December, when he returned to his duties as CO of I Corps, which formed part of the occupation force. From this position, Nider fought in the subsequent battles of the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–22 from the same post, until he was replaced in February 1922.[2]

Following his replacement, Nider tended his resignation, but after the Greek defeat in Asia Minor in August 1922 and the overthrow of the monarchist government by Venizelist officers, Nider was recalled to active service on 21 September and placed at the head of the Army of Thrace until his resignation on 25 December 1923.[2] He became Vice Minister of Military Affairs in 1925, and head of the Military Household of the President of Greece (at the time his former chief of staff, Theodoros Pangalos, who had become dictator in 1925) from April to August 1926, whereupon he retired from active service and public life.[2]

He died in 1942.[2]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Greece Old Style dating

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "'Dissertatio inauguralis medica de aencephalo casus singularis' - Digitalisat | MDZ". www.digitale-sammlungen.de. Retrieved 2022-02-11.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Συνοπτική Ιστορία του ΓΕΣ, 2001, p. 137.

Sources

[edit]
  • Συνοπτική Ιστορία του Γενικού Επιτελείου Στρατού 1901–2001 [A Concise History of the Hellenic Army General Staff 1901–2001] (in Greek). Athens: Hellenic Army History Directorate. 2001. ISBN 960-7897-44-7.