family / greek citizenship

Greek citizenship — the documentary case

A five-generation chain of descent, supported by primary sources in Greek, French, Italian, and English drawn from three family archives.

The chain

Greek citizenship transmits by descent under the pre-1984 paternal-line rule that applies to Peter (b. 1943) and forward by the modern jus-sanguinis rule of Law 3284/2004 from Peter onward. The Greek surname is Ιωαννόπουλος (Ioannopoulos)Jeannopoulos is its French/Italian transliteration via Jean = Ιωάννης.

  1. Lazaros Jeannopoulos · b. ~1871 Akhisar, Asia Minor · d. 1939 Manhattan

    Greek physician of Soma, Asia Minor; refugee 1922, Mytilene 1923-24, SS Themistocles arrival NY March 18, 1924; US naturalization July 9, 1931.

  2. Constantine Lazaros Jeannopoulos · b. June 15, 1916 (Smyrna; refugee-re-registered Mytilene Μητρώο Αρρένων folio 35) · d. 1980

    Greek citizen on his 1937 Italian university foreigners' card; medical doctor; US Army Medical Corps WWII; US citizen as a minor by Lazaros's 1931 naturalization.

  3. Peter Constantine Jeannopoulos · b. October 14, 1943, New York City · living

    Born during the period of active registration; the keystone document holder of Constantine's three Greek baptismal certificates (1923, 1937 metropolitan re-issue, 1957 Mytilene registry re-issue).

  4. Alex Peter Jeannopoulos · b. July 21, 1971 · living

  5. Mia Alexandra Jeannopoulos · b. December 27, 2009 · living

Anticipated objection

The 1955 Μητρώο Αρρένων deletion — why the chain holds

A 1978 US Embassy Athens letter records that under Nomarchy of Lesvos Decision No. 8952 of 1955, Constantine's individual entry at Mytilene Μητρώο Αρρένων Serial No. 35 was deleted from the Greek male-registry — the standard administrative consequence for Greek citizens long-absent from Greece who had not fulfilled their military service obligation.

The deletion does not break the chain for Peter, Alex, or Mia:

  • Greek jus-sanguinis transmission depends on the parent's citizenship at the time of the child's birth, not on later administrative status. Peter was born October 14, 1943 — twelve years before the 1955 deletion. At Peter's birth, Constantine was a Greek citizen registered in Mytilene Μητρώο Αρρένων folio 35.
  • The 1955 deletion was an administrative consequence of non-fulfillment of Greek military service — not a renunciation by Constantine. Under Greek citizenship law, administrative deletion cannot retroactively un-Greek a citizen for the purpose of descendants' inherited claims.
  • The Mytilene registry entry can be administratively restored — a routine procedure of the Δήμος Μυτιλήνης (Municipality of Mytilene), supported by the 1923 baptismal certificate. The 1957 Mytilene re-issuance of the registry document already proves the entry was acknowledged after the alleged 1955 deletion.

Supporting documentation

Twenty-six primary-source documents establish, across four institutional axes, that Lazaros and Constantine were Greek citizens of Asia Minor and Mytilene; that Constantine was registered, baptized, educated, and recognized as a Greek subject through at least 1957; and that the family identity has been preserved continuously in the household archive ever since.

I. Greek state and consular recognition

Recognition by Greek state authorities — refugee committees, courts, port authorities, gendarmerie, prefecture, consulate — that Lazaros and family were Greek citizens of Asia Minor.

II. Greek Orthodox ecclesiastical recognition

Vouching by every level of the Greek Orthodox hierarchy from local parish through the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople — the highest-rank documentary establishment of Greek ethno-religious identity available to an Anatolian Greek of the era.

III. Civic and community testimonials

Recognition by Greek civic and professional bodies of Lazaros and his sons.

IV. Lazaros's own Greek-language writings

Self-attestation in Greek-language primary sources written by Lazaros himself — his polemical works, his correspondence, his curriculum vitae, his editorial direction of the principal Greek-American newspaper of the dissident faction.

V. Constantine's Greek-citizen documentary track (the keystone generation)

Constantine — born in Greek Asia Minor in 1916, refugee-re-registered in Mytilene, and actively documented as a Greek citizen through at least 1957 — is the keystone of the modern jus-sanguinis chain. His Greek citizenship at the time of Peter's birth (October 1943) is what transmits the right of descent forward.

VI. The 1924 family arrival

Filing strategy

Three sequential filings through the Greek Consulate General in Tampa (which has jurisdiction over Florida): Peter first (the living-link generation), then Alex, then Mia. Peter's file is the foundational one; once accepted, Alex and Mia's filings cite Peter's as proof of the parental Greek citizenship.

A parallel track runs through John Lazare's biological daughter Aline and her descendants — John Lazare was Greek-born (Soma 1911) and went into the Mytilene refugee registry separately from his brother Constantine, so Aline's filing is unaffected by the 1955 deletion question that conditions the Constantine track.

Why this matters

The 1922 catastrophe ended Anatolian Greek life as a contiguous civilization. The Lazaros archive — three boxes of papers his grandson Peter scanned in 2010, plus Constantine's separate Italian-academic archive, plus Peter's own correspondence — contains what survives of one family's documentary connection to that destroyed world. The Greek citizenship case is, in part, an exercise in proving on modern Greek-state paper what was always true on the ground: that the family is Greek, has been continuously documented as Greek, and never gave up the identity even after the Greek civil registry's bureaucratic forgetting.

Mia, born in 2009 in New York City — the great-great-granddaughter of a Soma physician who led a community across the Aegean in 1922 — is the fifth generation. The family moved to Plantation, Florida in 2016, where she has been raised, while keeping the Manhattan co-op the household has held since before her birth. The Greek citizenship she will, if the filings succeed, hold by descent is the same right Lazaros carried out of Mytilene in a paper portfolio on the SS Themistocles a hundred years earlier.