Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974)

Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974) — page 1 of 11
page 1 of 11 open ↗
Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974) — page 2 of 11
page 2 of 11 open ↗
Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974) — page 3 of 11
page 3 of 11 open ↗
Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974) — page 4 of 11
page 4 of 11 open ↗
Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974) — page 5 of 11
page 5 of 11 open ↗
Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974) — page 6 of 11
page 6 of 11 open ↗
Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974) — page 7 of 11
page 7 of 11 open ↗
Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974) — page 8 of 11
page 8 of 11 open ↗
Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974) — page 9 of 11
page 9 of 11 open ↗
Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974) — page 10 of 11
page 10 of 11 open ↗
Bibliography listing — Peter Jeannopoulos's 1972 MA thesis, catalogued at EKKE (1974) — page 11 of 11
page 11 of 11 open ↗

A Greek-language bibliography of master’s and doctoral dissertations on Greece, compiled for the Modern Language Association, listing among its entries a “Peter G. Jeannopoulos” with a 1972 Hunter College thesis — “The Plight of the Anatolian Greeks: The Role of Smyrna in Allied Diplomacy, 1919.”

Now confirmed: this is our Peter Constantine Jeannopoulos. When first found, the middle initial “G.” didn’t match the family record and it was filed here only as a research clue. In 2026 the full bound thesis manuscript resurfaced in Peter’s own papers — its title page reads Peter Constantine Jeannopoulos, confirming the EKKE “G.” as a simple transcription error. This listing was, for decades, the family’s only trace that the thesis existed at all; it is what sent us looking for the manuscript in the first place. See the recovered thesis for the full account.