(Greek:
Αλέξανδρος Σχινάς)
(Serres, 1870s, Volos - May 6, 1913), was a Greek
anarchist who assassinated King George I of Greece in
Thessaloniki in 1913.
Schinas worked in the pantry of the
Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City and a waiter
remembered him as an avid reader of socialism-related
literature and spending nights in Manhattan "making
friends with radical and fervid thinkers". Schinas was
against governments and especially against aristocracy
and monarchy.
He started an anarchist school in his
native town which the Greek government closed for
spreading anti-government ideas. Two of the leaders of
the school were sentenced to prison, but Schinas escaped
without being imprisoned. The authorities also seized a
number of books and pamphlets published by the school,
which were deemed to contain anarchist doctrine and
denounced the king.
On March 18, 1913, at around 5:15 PM,
Schinas (who was around 40 at the time) shot King George
I in the back from a distance of two paces while the
king was walking in Thessaloniki near the White Tower.
Entering below the king's shoulder blade, the bullet
pierced his heart and lungs and exited through his
stomach. By the time the king arrived at the hospital,
he was already dead.
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