1883 Cypriot legislative election

Legislative elections were held in Cyprus on 6, 7 and 8 June 1883. They were the first elections to the newly established Legislative Council.

Background

The Legislative Council was formed in 1882, and consisted of six official members appointed by the High Commissioner and twelve elected members,[1] three of which were Muslims and nine of which were non-Muslims.[2]

Electoral system

The island was divided into three constituencies, each formed of two districts.[1] Each constituency elected one Muslim and three non-Muslims. Muslim voters had one vote, whilst non-Muslims could vote for up to three candidates.[3] Due to the high levels of illiteracy, voting was not secret, with voters required to tell the polling officers their candidates of choice, often in front of agents of the candidates.[3]

Suffrage was limited to men aged over 21 who had been permanent residents during the five years prior to the election, and had paid either the verghi tax (which was levied as an annual payment of one four-thousandth of a property's value, 4% of rental income or 3% on profits or salaries) or rent for a dwelling or shop within the last year.[1][3] However, of the estimated 40,000 taxpayers in the territory at the time of the elections, only those that had been able to pay their taxes on time were able to register to vote.[4] A total of 21,073 voters were registered, of which 16,727 were Greek.[5]

Campaign

The LarnacaFamagusta constituency was contested by six non-Muslim candidates; Sotiris Amfietzis (Mayor of Famagusta), Kyprianos Economides (Bishop of Kition), Richardos Matei (an agronomist and landowner), Theodoros Peristianis (a lawyer), Zenon D. Pierides (a trader) and Arthur Young, a British district commissioner.[6]

The LimassolPaphos constituency was contested by eight non-Muslim candidates; Christodoulos Karydis (Mayor of Limassol), Georgios Loukas (a teacher), Georgios Malikides (a trader), Christodoulos Modinos, Dimitrios Nikolaidis (a trader), Tourmousis Paschalidis (a trader), Dimosthenis Pilavakis (a landowner) and Kyprianos Economides, who was also running in Larnaca–Famagusta.[6]

In NicosiaKyrenia, six non-Muslim candidates contested the three seats; Efstathios Constantinides (a professor), Paschalis Constantinides (a lawyer and money lender, and brother of Efstathios), Grigorios Dimitriadis (a landowner), Ioannis Pavlidis (a teacher), Michalis Siakallis (a grain dealer), and Richardos Matei, who was also running in Larnaca–Famagusta. Although the Governor of Nicosia had pointed out to the Registrar that Matei was not registered to vote and could not be a candidate, his nomination was accepted.[6]

Results

Muslim seats

Constituency Elected member
Larnaca–FamagustaMehemet Ali Fehim
Limassol–PaphosAhmed Rashid
Nicosia–KyreniaKeoroghluzade Hussein Ata
Source: Collection of British reports[7]

Non-Muslim seats

Constituency Candidate Votes % Notes
Larnaca–FamagustaKyprianos Economides2,10874.8Elected
Zenon D. Pierides1,81764.5Elected
Theodoros Peristianis1,39249.4Elected
Richardos Matei1,37348.7
Sotiris Amfietzis1665.9
Arthur Young431.5
Limassol–PaphosGeorgios Malikides2,77386.5Elected
Dimitrios Nikolaidis2,77383.3Elected
Kyprianos Economides2,65779.9Elected
Tourmousis Paschalidis47914.4
Christodoulos Karydis39912.0
Dimosthenis Pilavakis2918.7
Georgios Loukas782.3
Christodoulos Modinos431.3
Nicosia–KyreniaMichalis Siakallis2,33777.2Elected
Paschalis Constantinides2,01366.5Elected
Efstathios Constantinides1,96564.9Elected
Richardos Matei1,09736.2
Ioannis Pavlidis1,03534.2
Grigorios Dimitriadis58019.2
Total ballots cast9,172
Registered voters/turnout16,72754.8
Source: Protopapas

Aftermath

Kyprianos Economides (Bishop of Kition), was elected in both Larnaca–Famagusta and Limassol–Paphos. He informed the High Commissioner that he intended to keep his Larnaca–Famagusta. A by-election was subsequently arranged for 17 July, which was contested by Dimostheni Chatzipavlou, Michail Efthyvoulos and Georgios Loukas, a losing candidate from the original elections. Chatzipavlou was elected with 1,172 votes to 231 for Efthyvoulos and 45 for Loukas; voter turnout was just 24.6%.[8]

Michalis Siakallis died within a year of the election, and a by-election was held in the Nicosia–Kyrenia on 4 March. Ioannis Pavlidis, who had finished fifth in the 1883 elections, was elected with 505 votes, defeating Nikolaos Róssos (429 votes) and Theodoulos Konstantinidis (85). Voter turnout was only 16.1% of the 6,324 electorate.[8]

Limassol–Paphos representative Dimostheni Chatzipavlou resigned from the Council in 1884. In the by-election on 5 November, Dimitris Pieridis was elected with 820 votes, defeating Ioannis Karemfylakis (175 votes). Voter turnout was 15.6% of the 6,533 electorate.[8]

The final by-election of the Council's first term was held on 24 December 1885 following the resignation of Pieridis. Socrates Fragoudis was elected with 686 votes, defeating Karemfylaki (60 votes). Voter turnout was 15.4% of the 4,849 electorate.[8]

References

  1. An unexplored case of political change Workshop on Electoral Processes and Cleaves in Southern Europe
  2. Thekla Kyritsi & Nikos Christofis (2018) Cypriot Nationalisms in Context: History, Identity and Politics, Springer, p96
  3. Yiannos Katsourides (2014) The History of the Communist Party in Cyprus: Colonialism, Class and the Cypriot Left, Bloomsbury, pp21, 50–52
  4. Vasileios Protopapas (2011) Εκλογική ιστορία της Κύπρου: πολιτευτές, κόμματα και εκλογές στην Αγγλοκρατία (1878-1960) p125
  5. Protopapas, p131
  6. Protopapas, p130
  7. Verzameling Britse rapporten, verslagen en andere stukken betreffende staatsadministratieve, juridische onderwerpen betrekking hebbende op Cyprus, Volume 1, p14
  8. Protopapas, pp139–140
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