Greece | Iran |
---|---|
Diplomatic mission | |
Embassy of Greece, Tehran | Embassy of Iran, Athens |
Greece and Iran have maintained diplomatic ties ever since they were formally established between the Kingdom of Greece and the Sublime State of Iran on 19 November 1902. The Greek and Iranian governments are represented in each other's countries through embassies in Tehran and Athens, respectively. Relations were warm under Iran's Pahlavi dynasty, but quickly deteriorated after the Iranian Revolution in 1979, when the new Islamic Republic government began mutually antagonizing the United States (the "Great Satan") and the Western Bloc, of which Greece was a part during the Cold War.
More recently, the two countries have had political spats and escalations on numerous occasions. Out of all European countries, Greece has experienced the highest level of hostilities with Iran since 1979, [1] [2] and it was also the only European country to support the assassination of Qasem Soleimani by the United States in 2020. [3] In response, the Iranian government threatened Greece with retaliation if it allowed the American military to use Greek territory as a staging ground in the event of an open conflict with Iran. [4]
Modern Greece has been consistently among the top countries with an overall negative opinion of Iran. In a 2014 survey by the Pew Research Center, 73% of Greeks viewed Iran's influence negatively, with only 19% expressing a positive view. [5] In 2019, Greece expressed the highest level of support among European countries for cancelling the Iran nuclear deal. [6] A poll conducted in 2023 revealed that Iranians rank third among Greek society's most unfavourably viewed nationalities: 51% of Greek respondents held a negative opinion of Iranians, with only Pakistanis (63%) and Afghans (60%) ranking more unfavourably. [7]
In addition to their modern relationship, the Greek and Iranian nations have an extensive shared history going back thousands of years before the Arab conquest of Iran in the 7th century. The Achaemenid Empire controlled much of Greek-speaking Asia Minor and launched multiple major military campaigns in ancient Greece, where a number of independent Greek city-states fought against the Persian army and Persian-allied Greek city-states in 492 BC and again in 480 BC. Just under two centuries later, the Achaemenid Empire was conquered by Alexander the Great, who was an ardent admirer of Persian culture and of Cyrus the Great, after whose system of government he modelled his own Macedonian Empire. While Greek and Iranian culture, language, and civilization intermingled, the two sides' political rivalry intermittently resurfaced, continuing after Greece's Christianization during the Roman–Persian Wars, which ended at the time of the Byzantine Empire and the Sasanian Empire, as the latter was conquered by the Rashidun Caliphate and subsequently Islamized.
Relations between the two people date back from antiquity and well before the first Persian invasion of Greece. By the late 6th century BC, the Achaemenid Empire was in control of the entirety of Asia Minor (which included many ethnically Greek areas), as well as many of the Greek islands, Thrace, and Macedonia, the latter two of which make up large parts of modern-day northern Greece. There is also the report by the Greek geographer Strabo of a delegation being sent from Athens to the Achaemenid Empire in 432 BC. [8]
While both sides were sworn rivals during the Greco-Persian Wars, they eventually developed a strong cordiality with each other, especially after the Wars of Alexander the Great. Alexander admired Persian culture and Cyrus the Great, and wanted to create a synthesis with Greek culture that would forever bind and commemorate the Greek people and the Persian people. To this end, he even arranged the Susa weddings in the hopes that having a Persian wife would prove the legitimacy of his identification as a son of both ancient Greece and ancient Persia.
This legacy of strong cordiality would thus be found back for many more centuries in various parts of the world—a harmonious blend of both Greek and Persian cultural aspects. The Kingdom of Pontus was a prime example of an entity (in Asia Minor) where Persian and Greek culture, ethnicity, language, and identity mingled.
Warfare continued between Greece and Persia in the 3rd century BC, with the Parthian dynasty reconquering the Persian mainland and also capturing Seleucia, the capital of the Seleucid Empire, thereby turning the once-great successor of Alexander's empire into a rump state.
As the Roman Empire began to fracture along the lines of the Greek East and Latin West, and ultimately following the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the main powers in the Near East were the Greek-dominated Eastern Roman Empire (or Byzantine Empire) and the Persian Sasanian Empire. The Roman–Persian Wars, which had started between the Roman Republic and the Parthian Empire, continued intermittently between the Byzantines and the Sasanians. They were ultimately inconclusive, however, and came to an abrupt end with the rise of Islam in the Arabian Peninsula in the 7th century, as the Sasanian Empire fell to the Arab conquest of Persia and the Byzantine Empire lost a vast swath of territory to the Arab conquest of the Levant. While the Zoroastrian Sasanian Empire was annexed by the Rashidun Caliphate and subsequently Islamized, the Christian Byzantine Empire remained intact at Constantinople and in parts of Asia Minor. For the next two centuries, the Arabs maintained direct control over Iran, effectively severing contact between the Greeks and the Iranians. By the time the Iranian Intermezzo ended Arab rule in Iran, the Byzantine Empire had begun declining and later collapsed, owing to the Crusades and then to the Mongol conquests, by which Turkic tribes entered Asia Minor, eventually leading to the establishment of the Ottoman Empire and the fall of Constantinople in 1453.
There is a small Christian Greek community in Iran. [9] In Tehran, there is a Greek Orthodox church, which opens mostly during the Greek Holy Week. [9]
On May 24, 2012, the Iran-Greece Chamber of Commerce was founded to strengthen economic ties between Iran and Greece across various sectors such as industry, commerce, mining, agriculture, and services. Additionally, the Chamber seeks to promote bilateral exchanges and investments between the two countries. Mehdi Jahangiri is the chairman of the board of the Iran-Greece Chamber of Commerce. [10] [11]
In February 2016, the then Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras traveled to Tehran, becoming the first Western leader to visit Iran after the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action was signed. Tsipras met the Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and pledged that his country would become an energy, economic and trade bridge between Iran and the European Union. [12]
In January 2020, the Greek PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis stated that "Greece supports the decision of the USA for the assassination of Qasem Soleimani" causing an official protest by Iran, while the Greek opposition condemned the killing of Soleimani. [13] [14]
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Greece donated 200,000 vaccines to Iran. [15]
In May 2022, Iranian soldiers seized two Greek tankers and took the crew hostage at the Persian Gulf. This move was a punitive action after Greek authorities confiscated Iranian oil held on a Russian-operated ship docked at a port in Greece a month earlier due to European Union sanctions against Russia for the Russian invasion of Ukraine. [16]
On June 8, 2022, a Greek court overruled an earlier court order that authorized the United States to seize part of an Iranian oil cargo aboard an Iranian-flagged tanker off the Greek coast. [17]
On June 14, 2022, the Iranian-flagged Lana tanker ship, which was held by Greece in April, has been released and its oil cargo will be returned to its owner, according to Iran's Ports and Maritime Organization (PMO). [18]
On July 2, 2022, an Iranian-flagged tanker that Greece seized in April, with the United States seizing some of its cargo, was being towed to the port of Piraeus. [19]
The Persians are a Western Iranian ethnic group who comprise the majority of the population of Iran. They share a common cultural system and are native speakers of the Persian language as well as of the languages that are closely related to Persian.
The history of Iran is intertwined with Greater Iran, a sociocultural region spanning from Anatolia to the Indus River and from the Caucasus to the Persian Gulf. Central to this area is modern-day Iran, which covers the bulk of the Iranian plateau.
Ecbatana was an ancient city, the capital of the Median kingdom, and the first capital in Iranian history. It later became the summer capital of the Achaemenid and Parthian empires. It was also an important city during the Seleucid and Sasanian empires. It is believed that Ecbatana is located in the Zagros Mountains, the east of central Mesopotamia, on Hagmatana Hill. Ecbatana's strategic location and resources probably made it a popular site even before the 1st millennium BC. Along with Athens in Greece, Rome in Italy and Susa in Khuzestan, Ecbatana is one of the few ancient cities in the world that is still alive and important, representing the current-day Hamadan.
Atropatene, also known as Media Atropatene, was an ancient Iranian kingdom established in c. 323 BC by the Persian satrap Atropates. The kingdom, centered in present-day northern Iran, was ruled by Atropates' descendants until the early 1st-century AD, when the Parthian Arsacid dynasty supplanted them. It was conquered by the Sasanians in 226, and turned into a province governed by a marzban ("margrave"). Atropatene was the only Iranian region to remain under Zoroastrian authority from the Achaemenids to the Arab conquest without interruption, aside from being briefly ruled by the Macedonian king Alexander the Great.
In Greco-Roman geography, Iberia was an exonym for the Georgian kingdom of Kartli, known after its core province, which during Classical Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages was a monarchy in the Caucasus, either as an independent state or as a dependent of larger empires, notably the Sassanid and Roman empires. Iberia, centered on present-day Eastern Georgia, was bordered by Colchis in the west, Caucasian Albania in the east and Armenia in the south.
The Middle East, also known as the Near East, is home to one of the cradles of civilization and has seen many of the world's oldest cultures and civilizations. The region's history started from the earliest human settlements and continues through several major pre- and post-Islamic Empires to today's nation-states of the Middle East.
The Muslim conquest of Persia, also called the Muslim conquest of Iran, the Arab conquest of Persia, or the Arab conquest of Iran, was a major military campaign undertaken by the Rashidun Caliphate between 632 and 654. As part of the early Muslim conquests, which had begun under Muhammad in 622, it led to the fall of the Sasanian Empire and the eventual decline of Zoroastrianism, which had been predominant throughout Persia as the nation's official religion. The persecution of Zoroastrians by the early Muslims during and after this conflict prompted many of them to flee eastward to India, where they were granted refuge by various kings.
King of Kings was a ruling title employed primarily by monarchs based in the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent. Commonly associated with Iran, especially the Achaemenid and Sasanian Empires, the title was originally introduced during the Middle Assyrian Empire by king Tukulti-Ninurta I and was subsequently used in a number of different kingdoms and empires, including the aforementioned Persia, various Hellenic kingdoms, India, Armenia, Georgia, and Ethiopia.
Spāhbad is a Middle Persian title meaning "army chief" used chiefly in the Sasanian Empire. Originally there was a single spāhbad, called the Ērān-spāhbed, who functioned as the generalissimo of the Sasanian army. From the time of Khosrow I on, the office was split in four, with a spāhbad for each of the cardinal directions. After the Muslim conquest of Persia, the spāhbed of the East managed to retain his authority over the inaccessible mountainous region of Tabaristan on the southern shore of the Caspian Sea, where the title, often in its Islamic form ispahbedh, survived as a regnal title until the Mongol conquests of the 13th century. An equivalent title of Persian origin, ispahsālār or sipahsālār, gained great currency across the Muslim world in the 10th–15th centuries.
Relations between the Roman and Iranian states were established c. 92 BC. It was in 69 BC that the two states clashed for the first time; the political rivalry between the two empires would dominate much of Western Asia and Europe until 628. Initially commencing as a rivalry between the Parthians and Rome, from the 3rd to mid-7th centuries the Roman Empire and its rival Sassanid Persia were recognized as two of the leading powers in the world.
The Arsacid dynasty, called the Arshakuni in Armenian, ruled the Kingdom of Armenia from 12 to 428 AD. The dynasty was a branch of the Arsacid dynasty of Parthia. Arsacid kings reigned intermittently throughout the chaotic years following the fall of the Artaxiad dynasty until 62, when Tiridates I, brother of Parthian King Vologases I, secured Arsacid rule in Armenia as a client king of Rome. However, he did not succeed in establishing his line on the throne, and various princes of different Arsacid lineages ruled until the accession of Vologases II, who succeeded in establishing his own line on the Armenian throne, which ruled the kingdom until its abolishment by the Sasanian Empire in 428.
Touraj Daryaee is an Iranian Iranologist and historian. He currently works as the Maseeh Chair in Persian Studies and Culture and the director of the Dr. Samuel M. Jordan Center for Persian Studies at the University of California, Irvine.
The Sasanian Empire, officially Ērānšahr, was the last empire of ancient Iran. Named after the House of Sasan, it endured for over four centuries, from 224 to 651, making it the second longest-lived imperial Iranian dynasty after the directly preceding Arsacid dynasty of Parthia.
Iran–Turkey relations are the bilateral relations between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Republic of Turkey. The two states' relationship is complex and characterized by periods of both tension and cooperation, as both Iran and Turkey are fighting for influence in the Middle East through supporting opposing proxies as part of a proxy conflict. The two countries are also major trade partners and are perceived as mutually interdependent due to geographical proximity as well as historically shared cultural, linguistic, and ethnic traits.
Ganzak, is an ancient town founded in northwestern Iran. The city stood somewhere south of Lake Urmia, and it has been postulated that the Persian nobleman Atropates chose the city as his capital. The exact location, according to Minorsky, Schippmann, and Boyce, is identified as being the ruins at Leylan, Malekan County in the Miandoab plain.
Greco-Russian relations are the bilateral foreign relations between Greece and Russia. The two countries first entered into diplomatic relations in 1828. Both Greece and Russia are members of international organizations and agreements, including the United Nations, Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, and the Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation.
Iran–Iraq relations are the diplomatic and foreign relations between the two sovereign states of Iran and Iraq.
Syria was usually called Iran's "closest ally", until the fall of the Assad regime after the 2024 Syrian opposition offensives were completed on December 8th, 2024. Iran and Syria had a strategic alliance ever since the Iran–Iraq War, when Syria sided with non-Arab Iran against neighbouring Ba'ath-ruled Iraq. The two countries shared a common animosity towards then-Iraqi president Saddam Hussein and coordination against the United States and Israel.
Iran–Spain relations are the bilateral and diplomatic relations between these two countries. Iran has an embassy in Madrid, Spain has an embassy in Tehran.
On 19 April 2022, the Iranian-flagged tanker Lana, with 19 Russian crew members on board, was seized by Greek authorities near the southern island of Evia; this sparked an international incident. Greek authorities had connected Russian sanctions imposed by the European Union after the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February to the tanker seizure in Greece.
Diagram 8 shows the attitudes of the Greek public opinion (the degree of "sympathy") towards eight (8) selected nationalities, which are related either to the Muslim immigration flows that Greece accepts or to countries in its geographical surroundings.
According to the findings of the survey, the Egyptians (54%), the Palestinians (44%) and the Syrians (44%) are the nationalities most liked by Greeks today. The positive differentiation of the image of the Egyptians is not only due to the traditionally friendly relations between the two countries but probably also to the recently upgraded diplomatic relations.
In contrast, the nationalities with the lowest level of sympathy are Pakistanis (22%), Afghans (22%) and Iranians (30%).