Ottoman invasion of the Balearic Islands (1558)
Raid of the Balearic islands | |||||||
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Part of the Ottoman-Habsburg wars | |||||||
Historic map of Minorca by Piri Reis. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Spain | Ottoman Empire | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Philip II | Turgut Reis | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
800 men.[1] 40–100 soldiers |
150 ships 15,000 men | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
4,000 inhabitants enslaved | Unknown |
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An Ottoman raid of the Balearic islands was accomplished by the Ottoman Empire in 1558, against the Spanish Habsburg territory of the Balearic islands.
Background
The Ottomans had already attacked the Balearic Islands many times previously, as in the 1501 Ottoman raid on the Balearic islands. Then followed the sacks of Pollença (in 1531 and 1550), the Sack of Mahon in 1535, Alcúdia (1551), Valldemossa (1552), Andratx (1553), Sóller (1561). Ottoman attacks only decreased after the Battle of Lepanto in 1571, although they would continue until the 17th century.[2][3]
On 30 December 1557, Henry II of France, who was in conflict with the Habsburgs in the Italian War of 1551–1559, had written a letter to Suleiman, asking him for money, saltpeter, and 150 galleys to be stationed in the West. Through the services of his ambassador Jean Cavenac de la Vigne, Henry II obtained the dispatch of an Ottoman fleet in 1558.[4]
Suleyman the Magnificent sent his fleet as a diversion to help his French allies against the Habsburgs. The Ottoman armada left Constantinople in April 1558. On June 13, 1558, the Ottoman fleet ravaged Italy, with little effect however apart from the sack of Sorrento, then part of the possessions of Spain in southern Italy, where they took 3,000 captives.[5]
Raid
In July, the fleet then started to ravage the Balearic islands.[6]
The Ottoman force consisted in 15,000 soldiers on 150 warships. The Ottomans, after renounced an attack on Mahón, attacked the citadel of Ciutadella in Menorca, which was only garrisoned with 40 soldiers.[7]
On the 9th of July 1558, the Turks under Piyale Pasha and Turgut Reis, put the town under siege for eight days entered and decimated the town. After the fall of the citadel, the city was ravaged and the population enslaved.[7] All of Ciutadella's 3,099 inhabitants who survived the siege were taken as slaves to Turkey together with other inhabitants of surrounding villages. In total, 3,452 residents were sold into slavery in the slave markets of Constantinople.
The Balearic islands were ravaged, and 4,000 people were taken as prisoners.[8]
An obelisk was set up in the 19th century by Josep Quadrado in the Plaza d'es Born in memory of the offensive, with the following inscription:
"Here we fought until death for our religion and our country in the year 1558"[7]
Every year on July 9, a commemoration takes place in Ciutadella, remembering "l’Any de sa Desgràcia", or "the Year of the Disaster".[1]
Aftermath
As a later consequence of the 1553 Franco-Ottoman Invasion of Corsica, the same Ottoman fleet was delayed from joining a French fleet in Corsica near Bastia, possibly due to the failure of the commander Dragut to honour Suleiman's orders. Suleiman would apologize in a letter to Henry at the end of the year 1558.[9][10]
See also
Notes
- 1 2 Balears Cultural Tour
- ↑ Pitcher, D.E., An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire (Leiden, 1972), p.99.
- ↑ Lee, Phil, The rough guide to Mallorca & Menorca (New York, 2004), p. 275.
- ↑ Setton, Kenneth M., The Papacy and the Levant (1204–1571) (Philadelphia, 1984), p. 698 ff
- ↑ Setton p.698 ff.
- ↑ "In 1558, after the battle of St. Quentin, Souleiman I, the old ally of Francis I, had made a diversion useful to France by sending his fleet against Italy and the Balearic Isles, which it ravaged.": Duruy, Victor, History of modern times: from the fall of Constantinople to the French revolution (New York, 1894), p.237.
- 1 2 3 "In the middle soars an obelisk commemorating the futile defence against the Turks in 1558, a brutal episode that was actually something of an accident. The Ottomans had dispatched 15000 soldiers and 150 warships west to assist their French allied against the Habsburg": Lee, p. 171 ff.
- ↑ Carr, Matthew, Blood and Faith: the Purging of Muslim Spain (Leiden, 1968), p. 120.
- ↑ Setton p. 696 ff.
- ↑ Setton p. 700 ff.