Talk:Greek Andartes

I'm afraid this article is quite mistaken. "Andartes" means resistance fighters, that's true, but it's not restricted to the nationalist movement, it's just any guerilla, including historically the other, competing, anti-German resistance movement, the communist one. And I've never come across a form like "antarte" for the movement as such; rather "andartis" (sg.) and "andartes" (pl.) are just the words for the individual fighters. The movement as a whole would be "i andistasi" (lit. 'resistance'). Lukas 18:56, 14 January 2006 (UTC)


 * The term was used before First World War, during civil war in Macedonia, for example. The whole article should be rewritten not to concentrate on just one period. Pavel Vozenilek 15:46, 21 November 2006 (UTC)