450 
ОТЧЕТЪ О ТРИДЦАТЬ СЕДЬМОМЪ ПРИСУЖДЕНІИ 
R. О. Greece ѵі. 3. 
№ 16. Aberdeen to Dawkins 31 August 1829. 
Sir! 
I enclose to von confidentially for your information the instruction 
(A 19 Aug. 2 Sth 1829), which I liave addressed to His Majesty’s Ambas- 
sador at St. Petersburgh in conséquence of the information, whicli His 
Majesty’s Government received of the conduct, pursued by the Agents of 
the Provisional Government of Greece in endeavouring to excite discontent 
among the Inhabitants of the Ioniau Islands. 
Aberdeen. 
Л" 21 Aberdeen to Dawkins 9 October 1829. 
.... I now enclose to you copies of two dispatches, which I liave received 
from Lord Heystesbury on tliat Subject (the intrigues carried on from Greece 
against the existing form of Government in the Ionian Islands) from the last 
of which you will perceive, tliat Count Boulgari disclaims any participation 
in such proceedings . . . 
R. 0. Greece vl. 5. 
№ 42 Dawkins to Aberdeen 22 June 1829. 
My Lord! 
I bave the honor to reçoive Your Lordship’s dispatch № 9 of the 16th 
Ultimo, referring to rumours, which liave been circulated in tliese parts, 
tliat an insurrection is about Άο break out in the Ionian Islands, and directin 
me to ascertain, whether the source of these rumours is to be found in Greece 
and whether the President is in any way a party to tlieir circulation. 
Although I liave received no information upon this subject, which I 
thought important enougli to transmit to Your Lordship, I have not neg- 
lected to pursue it. 
Since the month of February I have been in correspondence with the 
person, in whom, I believe, tliose rumours chiefly originated, and I have 
regularly sent copies of his letters to the Lord High Commissioner of the 
Ionian Islands. 
The last letters, which passed between this Gentleman and myself are 
dated the lOtli und 28th of April. The palpable iuaccuracy of the information, 
contained in the latter, which implicates one of the wärmest advocates, 
tliat Great Britain possesses in this Country (Zaimi) lias induced me to dis- 
continue the correspondence. 
It is notorious, tliat the present Government of Greece and especially 
tliose members of it, who are natives of the Ionian Islands, are unfriendly to 
