Greece, the Hidden Centuries: Turkish Rule From the Fall of Constantinople to Greek Independence (17 page)

It is a horrific story, and though some details may be anti-Turk propaganda the main facts are well documented. The major question is over Lala Mustafa’s motives. He may have been infuriated because Muslim hostages in Famagusta had been killed, but he would have known this from the time when the city surrendered if not earlier. A sudden fit of temper is unlikely: anyone who had risen through the Ottoman hierarchy as he had was well used to calculating the effects of his actions. Perhaps Lala Mustafa planned this revenge from the beginning, and his original friendliness was merely a decoy. Whatever his motives, the theatricality of the retribution was clearly designed to send a message: perhaps to the Venetians (that resistance to the Turks had a high price) or to the Cypriots (that he was their master now) or to his own troops (that he had at last triumphed) or maybe to the Sultan (to dramatise his victory). The story was widely circulated at the time and for centuries afterwards,
13
and the death of Bragadino at the hands of Lala Mustafa was a characteristic element in the image of the Turk as ruthless, sadistic and probably deceitful.

 

8

 

1571 – Lepanto

 

I
n 1570 the allied fleets of Venice, Spain and the Papal States had been put together with the object of saving Cyprus from the Turks. This league – with a small ‘l’ – had failed to save Cyprus and had never even confronted the Turkish fleet. But by the beginning of the following year the attitudes of the three allies had hardened.

Spain had become increasingly aware of the Turkish threat from the sea. In 1570 the ruler of Ottoman Algiers had seized Tunis from Spain. Raiders from the nearby Barbary coast were a continuing menace and any renewed Morisco revolt might yet be supported by a Turkish fleet. Venice, by rejecting the Turkish ultimatum over Cyprus, had chosen war rather than diplomacy as the safeguard of her possessions, and for war she needed allies. The determination of Pope Pius V to fight a holy war against the infidel had only been increased by the failures of 1570.

Thus on 25 May 1571 the Pope was able to proclaim a Holy League. Its leading members were to be, as in 1570, Spain, Venice and the Papal States, and now other Italian cities and the Knights of St John of Malta also pledged support. The Holy League was to be perpetual, its forces assembling each spring to campaign against the Turks and, reflecting Spain’s concerns, against the Barbary coast. The League forces were to be 200 galleys plus 100 other warships, 50,000 infantry, and 4,500 cavalry. Costs and plunder were to be divided in the proportions Spain three, Venice two, and the Pope one, though Spain was to keep any conquests in North Africa.

Spain’s increased commitment was reflected in her contribution of ships. In the 1570 fleet of 205 vessels, Spain had provided only a third of the number from Venice: 49 against 144. In the 1571 Holy League total fleet of 316 ships (both fighting and support vessels) Spanish outnumbered Venetian by 164 to 134. But the Venetian fleet included six warships of a type newly developed, the galleasse, not yet tested in battle. Like the galley, the galleasse could be moved by oars or by sail, but the galleasse was much larger: 600 tons against the galley’s 140, longer and wider, so requiring twice as many oarsmen, and with more guns, thirteen against five. The galleasses were to play an important part at Lepanto.

 

Of the commanders, two remained from the previous year: Colonna as before led the papal contingent, and Doria commanded ten galleys leased by Spain from Genoa. The Venetian fleet command had changed as Zane, the 1570 leader, had resigned in disgrace: the new appointment was the 75-year-old Sebastiano Venier, former Venetian governor of Corfu, elected provveditor-general of Cyprus though he never reached the island; later in his eighties he briefly became Doge of Venice. Commanding the dominant Spanish contingent, and in overall command of the Holy League fleet, was the man whom Lepanto was to make famous: Don Juan of Austria, anglicised as Don John, illegitimate son of the Habsburg Emperor Charles V (hence ‘of Austria’), half-brother of Philip II of Spain, and hero of the recent suppression of the Morisco revolt.

Don Juan was not to go into battle without the agreement of a council representing the other contingents, but how a battle, once joined, was fought was up to him. It was clear that Don Juan would be far bolder than the cautious Spanish commander Doria had been a year earlier. The Pope’s representative in Madrid, meeting Don Juan before he took up his post, reported that ‘he is a Prince so desirous of glory that if the opportunity arises he will not be restrained by the Council that is to advise him and will not look so much to save galleys as to gather glory and honour.’
1

The Holy League fleet took time to assemble. The same papal representative commented that in Spain ‘the doing of things promptly is not something to be found in this country, better said its normal condition is to do everything late.’
2
Nevertheless Don Juan sailed from Barcelona on 20 June 1571 with some of his allies, and collected others as he went on to Genoa, La Spezia and Naples. The whole fleet finally assembled in the port of Messina at the north-east tip of Sicily on 23 August, three weeks after the fall of Famagusta.

The Turkish fleet, under Ali Pasha but with Pertev Pasha commanding the land forces, had earlier been stationed on the east coast of Greece at Évia, ready to intercept any attempt by the Holy League to save Cyprus. When no such attempt was made, Ali Pasha sailed round the Peloponnese and into the Adriatic as far north as Venice, raiding Venetian possessions as he went. Ali Pasha then learned that the Holy League fleet was assembled at Messina and, fearing that he might be bottled up in the Adriatic, withdrew to the shelter of the Gulf of Corinth under the fortress at Návpaktos, then known as Lepanto. By 16 September Don Juan had been instructed to seek out the Turkish fleet, and on 29 September he learned where it was – at Lepanto.

Ali Pasha would have done well to stay there. To attack him there the Holy League ships would have had to pass through the narrow entrance to the Gulf of Corinth, only a mile and a half wide, practically in single file, and been easy targets if they had tried it. The campaigning season was almost over, and if the allies had sailed home after a second year of achieving nothing the Holy League might well have unravelled. But Ali Pasha received unequivocal orders from the Sultan ‘to find and immediately attack the infidel fleet’.
3

On the morning of Sunday 7 October 1571, the Holy League and Turkish fleets faced each other just west of the mouth of the Gulf of Corinth, in two immense lines stretching some four miles. The Turks faced west, with their backs to the Greek mainland and initially with the wind behind them, while the Holy League faced east. The number of fighting ships involved – 208 Holy League and 251 Turkish – was the largest that ever took part in a naval battle.

In a novel tactic for naval warfare Don Juan stationed his galleasses singly some three quarters of a mile ahead of his line and about half a mile apart. There were six galleasses in his fleet, and four were stationed to protect his left and centre. The other two were intended to protect his right, but, as we shall see, they in fact took no part in the battle. The galleasses were to be used as floating artillery platforms. Their guns had a greater range than the Turkish, so could bombard them before they could reply, and an attacking fleet passing the galleasses could be raked broadside.

In a second innovation Don Juan had the huge beaks of his galleys removed. These had traditionally been used to ram and impale an enemy ship, but as naval gunnery had developed they had become a hindrance, obstructing the line of sight of the forward gunner and encouraging him to fire high, at the opponent’s rigging rather than the hull.

At about half past ten, after morning prayers on both sides, the battle was opened with the usual formal challenge, of a blank charge from Ali Pasha’s flagship the
Sultana
, answered by a shot from Don Juan’s
La Real
. The fighting developed into three separate actions. On the Holy League left the galleasses did their work of breaking up the Turkish advance and the League ships drove the Turks against the neighbouring shore. The wind had initially been from the east but now swung round to the west in the League’s favour, a shift attributed to divine intervention. In this sector the League commander was killed but not a single Turkish ship escaped sinking or capture.

In the centre, where Don Juan and Ali Pasha faced each other, the two forward galleasses were again effective, and then the ships became
locked in individual combat. Ali Pasha’s
Sultana
rammed Don Juan’s
La Real
and hand-to-hand fighting on the decks followed, a land battle fought on water. A contemporary wrote: ‘Battle was joined with the greatest vigour and fury, and with noise so great it seemed not only that the galleys must be tearing each other apart, but that the sea itself roared in protest at the appalling clamour, whipping its previously calm surface into foaming waves, and deafened men could no longer hear each other, and the sky vanished from their sight amid the darkening smoke from the flames.’
4
Don Juan, wielding a double-handed sword, was wounded in the ankle, an injury he claimed not to have noticed, and Ali Pasha was killed. In this sector too the League was victorious.

Things did not at first go so well for the Holy League right, commanded by Doria. He was without his protective galleasses; as the fleet sailed from the north to take up position Doria had the furthest to go, and the slow galleasses would have been an encumbrance. Also he may have foreseen that the Turks would try to outflank him and that ponderous galleasses would be no help in a battle requiring mobility. Furthermore, Doria was heavily outnumbered, with his 50 ships facing over 100. This enabled the Turkish commander Uluch Ali to spread his fleet southwards to his left and threaten to sail round Doria’s right flank, turn, and attack – with a now following wind – from the rear. Doria also moved south to prevent this, but with the result that he left a gap between his wing and the League centre, a gap that Uluch Ali now attacked. Doria has been severely criticised for this decision, but it was surely the correct one. A gap on his left could be plugged by League ships from the centre and the reserves, as in fact it was, whereas an opening on his right meant being outflanked and almost certainly defeated. But by this time it was clear to Uluch Ali that the Turkish centre and right had lost and he abandoned the fight, sailing north to Levkás and on to Préveza. The Holy League victory was complete.

A Spaniard who took part in Lepanto described the resulting carnage:

The greater fury of the battle lasted near to four hours and was so bloody and horrendous that the sea and the fire seemed as one, many Turkish galleys burning down to the water and the surface of the sea, red with blood, was covered with Moorish coats, turbans, quivers, arrows, bows, shields, oars, boxes, cases and other spoils of war, and above all many human bodies, Christian as well as Turkish, some dead, some wounded, some torn apart, and some not yet resigned to their fate struggling on the surface in their death agony, their strength ebbing away with the blood flowing from their wounds in such quantity that the sea was entirely
coloured by it, but despite all this misery our men were not moved to pity for the enemy. Although they begged for mercy they received instead arquebus shots and pike thrusts.
5

 

Some 200 of the 251 Turkish ships had been destroyed or captured, with the loss of men variously estimated between 20,000 and 30,000. The Holy League losses were much lower: about 50 ships and probably 13,000 killed or mortally wounded.

The two sides had been fairly evenly matched. The Turks had an advantage in the number of fighting ships (251 against 208) and number of soldiers (some 31,000 against 23,000) but the Holy League had more cannon (by one count 1,314 against 741).
6
So the complete Holy League victory was not due to their overwhelming force. Their use of the galleasses and the removal of the galleys’ beaks certainly contributed. So too did the discipline of holding fire. One of Don Juan’s advisers had written to him: ‘As to Your Excellency’s query about whether the artillery in our fleet should fire first or whether to await the enemy’s fire, this is my opinion that no heed should be taken of whether the enemy fires first or later, but that the gunners should hold their fire until Your Excellency gives the order.’
7

Once the gunners had done their work and the soldiers were boarding the enemy ship or repelling boarders, the Holy League had further advantages: their ships had anti-boarding nets and boarders were easy targets as they struggled to get past them; the Spanish troops wielded long pikes that could pick off a swordsman before he could use his weapon; and the Holy League soldiers were protected by metal armour, the Turks only by cloth.

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