The Lord Byron reception at Missolonghi is an oil painting created by Theodoros Vryzakis in 1861.
He appears to be coming from the port, accompanied by his friend Edward John Trelawny and numerous soldiers who are cheering.
[1] There are also borrowings from other models, such as the bishop, whose form is a variation of the Germanos III of Old Patras of Peter von Hess.
[2] The naive[3] dimension and the folklore of the style and the patterns in this table, also point out the critics: abuse of dress and oplografikis storytelling, theatrical gestures and pompous attitudes.
[6] It is basically another fable its composition dictated by philhellenic demand issues from the national liberation struggle of the Greeks, to massive acclaim.