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THE STORY OF
THE BARBARY CORSAIRS
XII.
DRAGUT REÏS.
1543-1560.
The name of Dragut has already
occurred more than once in this history: it was destined to become as notorious
as Barbarossa’s as the century advanced. Dragut—or Torghūd—was born on the
Caramanian coast opposite the island of Rhodes. Unlike many of his colleagues
he seems to have been the son of Mohammedan parents, tillers of the earth.
Being adventurous by nature, he took service as a boy in the Turkish fleet and
became “a good pilot and a most excellent gunner.” At last he contrived to
purchase and man a galleot, with which he cruised the waters of the Levant,
where his intimate acquaintance with all the coasts and islands enabled him to
seize and dispose of many prizes. Kheyr-ed-dīn Barbarossa soon came to
hear of his exploits, and welcomed him heartily when he came to pay his
respects at Algiers, in so far that he gave him the conduct of various
expeditions and eventually appointed him his lieutenant with the command of
twelve galleys. “From thenceforward this redoubtable Corsair passed not one
summer without ravaging the coasts of Naples and Sicily: nor
durst any Christian vessels attempt to pass between Spain and Italy; for if
they offered it, he infallibly snapped them up: and when he missed any of his
prey at sea, he made himself amends by making descents along the coasts,
plundering villages and towns, and dragging away multitudes of inhabitants into
captivity.”
In 1540, as we have seen, Dragut was
caught by Giannettino Doria, who made him a present to his great kinsman
Andrea, on whose galleys he was forced to toil in chains. La Valette,
afterwards Grand Master of Malta, who had once pulled the captive’s oar on Barbarossa’s
ships and knew Dragut well, one day saw the ex-Corsair straining on the galley
bank: “Señor Dragut,” said he, “usanza de guerra!—’tis the custom of war!” And
the prisoner, remembering his visitor’s former apprenticeship, replied
cheerfully, “Y mudanza de fortuna—a change of luck!” He did not lose heart, and
in 1543 Barbarossa ransomed him for 3000 crowns, and made him chief of the
galleys of the western Corsairs. Imprisonment had sharpened his appetite for
Christians, and he harried the Italian coasts with more than his ancient zeal.
Surrounded by bold spirits and commanding a fleet of his own, Dragut had the
Mediterranean in his grasp, and even ventured to seize the most dreaded of all
foes, a Maltese galley, wherein he found 70,000 ducats intended for the repair
of the fortifications of Tripoli, which then belonged to “the
Religion.” As the Turkish annalist says, “Torghūd had become the drawn
sword of Islam.”
Dragut’s lair was at the island of
Jerba, which tradition links with the lotus-eaters, perhaps because of the
luxuriant fertility of the soil. The people of Jerba, despite their simple
agricultural pursuits, were impatient of control, and, as often as not, were
independent of the neighbouring kingdom of Tunis or any other state. Here, with
or without their leave, Dragut took up his position, probably in the very
castle which Roger Doria, when lord of the island, began to build in 1289; and
from out the wide lake at the back the Corsair’s galleots issued to ravage the
lands which were under the protection of Roger Doria’s descendants. Not content
with the rich spoils of Europe, Dragut took the Spanish outposts in Africa, one
by one—Susa, Sfax, Monastir; and finally set forth to conquer “Africa.”
It is not uncommon in Arabic to call
a country and its capital by the same name. Thus Misr meant and still means
both Egypt and Cairo; El-Andalus, both Spain and Cordova. Similarly “Africa”
meant to the Arabs the province of Carthage or Tunis and its capital, which was
not at first Tunis but successively Kayrawān and Mahdīya. Throughout
the later middle ages the name “Africa” is applied by Christian writers to the
latter city. Here it was that in 1390 a “grand and noble enterprize” came to an
untimely end. “The Genoese,” says Froissart, “bore great enmity to this town;
for its Corsairs frequently watched them at sea, and when strongest fell on and
plundered their ships, carrying their spoils to this town of
Africa, which was and is now their place of deposit and may be called their
warren.” It was “beyond measure strong, surrounded by high walls, gates, and
deep ditches.” The chivalry of Christendom hearkened to the prayer of the
Genoese and the people of Majorca and Sardinia and Ischia, and the many islands
that groaned beneath the Corsairs’ devastations; the Duke of Bourbon took
command of an expedition (at the cost of the Genoese) which included names as
famous as the Count d’Auvergne, the Lord de Courcy, Sir John de Vienne, the
Count of Eu, and our own Henry of Beaufort; and on St. John Baptist’s Day, with
much pomp, with flying banners and the blowing of trumpets, they sailed on
three hundred galleys for Barbary. Arrived before Africa, not without the
hindrance of a storm, they beheld the city in the form of a bow, reaching out
its arms to the sea; high were its ramparts; and a colossal tower, armed
with stone-projectiles, guarded the harbour. Nevertheless the
Knights landed in good heart, after a cup of Grecian or Malmsey wine, on the
Vigil of Magdalen Day (July 22nd), unopposed, and each great lord set up his
pennon before his tent over against the fortress, with the Genoese crossbows on
the right. Here they remained nine weeks. The Saracens never offered battle,
but harassed the enemy with their skirmishers, who fired their arrows, then
dropped down behind their targets of Cappadocian leather to avoid the enemy’s
return volley; then, rising again, cast their javelins with deadly
aim. What was to be done? The Duke of Bourbon spent his time in sitting
crosslegged before his tent; the nobles and knights had plenty of excellent
wine and food; but it was very hot and uncomfortable—the assault had
failed—many had died—the Genoese wanted to get their galleys back safe in port
before the autumn gales came on; so they packed up their baggage, and
re-embarked, blowing their horns and beating their drums for very joy.
This was the city which Dragut took
without a blow in the spring of 1550. Mahdīya was then in an anarchic
state, ruled by a council of chiefs, each ready to betray the other, and none
owing the smallest allegiance to any king, least of all the despised king of
Tunis, Hamīd, who had deposed and blinded his father Hasan, Charles V.’s
protégé. One of these chiefs let Dragut and his merry men into the city by
night, and the inhabitants woke up to find “Africa” in the possession of the
bold Corsair whose red and white ensign, displaying a blue crescent, floated
from the battlements.
So easy a triumph roused the
emulation of Christendom. Where the Duke of Bourbon had failed, Dragut had
conspicuously succeeded. Don Garcia de Toledo dreamed of outshining the Corsair’s
glory. His father, the Viceroy of Naples, the Pope, and others, promised their
aid, and old Andrea Doria took the command. After much delay and consultation a
large body of troops was conveyed to Mahdīya, and disembarked on June 28,
1550. Dragut, though aware of the project, was at sea, devastating
the Gulf of Genoa, and paying himself in advance for any loss the Christians
might inflict in Africa: his nephew, Hisār Reïs commanded in the city.
When Dragut returned, the siege had gone on for a month, without result; a
tremendous assault had been repulsed with heavy loss to the besiegers, who were
growing disheartened. The Corsair assembled a body of Moors and Turks and
attempted to relieve the fortress; but his ambuscade failed, Hisār’s simultaneous
sally was driven back, and Dragut, seeing that he could do nothing, fled to
Jerba. His retreat gave fresh energy to the siege, and a change of attack
discovered the weak places of the defence. A vigorous assault on the 8th of
September carried the walls, a brisk street fight ensued, and the strong city
of “Africa” was in the hands of the Christians.
The Sultan, Suleymān the Great,
was little pleased to see a Moslem fortress summarily stormed by the troops of
his ally, the Emperor. Charles replied that he had fought against pirates, not
against the Sultan’s vassals; but Suleymān could not perceive the
distinction, and emphasized his disapproval by giving Dragut twenty galleys,
which soon found their way to Christian shores. The lamentations of his victims
roused Doria, who had the good fortune to surprise the Corsair as he was
greasing his keels in the strait behind Jerba. This strait was virtually a
cul-de-sac. Between the island and the great lake that lay behind it, the sea
had worn a narrow channel on the northern side, through which light vessels
could pass, with care; but to go out of the lake by the southern
side involved a voyage over what was little better than a bog, and no one ever
thought of the attempt. Doria saw he had his enemy in a trap, and was in no
hurry to venture in among the shoals and narrows of the strait. He sent joyous
messages to Europe, announcing his triumph, and cautiously, as was his habit,
awaited events.
Dragut, for his part, dared not push
out against a vastly superior force; his only chance was a ruse. Accordingly,
putting a bold face on the matter, he manned a small earthwork with cannon, and
played upon the enemy, with little or no actual injury, beyond the
all-important effect of making Doria hesitate still more. Meanwhile, in the
night, while his little battery is perplexing the foe, all is prepared at the
southern extremity of the strait. Summoning a couple of thousand field
labourers, he sets them to work; here a small canal is dug—there rollers come
into play; and in a few hours his small fleet is safely transported to the open
water on the south side of the island. Calling off his men from the illusive
battery, the Corsair is off for the Archipelago: by good luck he picks up a
fine galley on the way, which was conveying news of the reinforcements coming
to Doria. The old Genoese admiral never gets the message: he is rubbing his
eyes in sore amazement, wondering what had happened to the imprisoned fleet.
Never was admiral more cruelly cheated: never did Doria curse the nimble
Corsair with greater vehemence or better cause.
Next year, 1551, Dragut’s place was
with the Ottoman navy, then commanded by Sinān Pasha. He had
had enough of solitary roving, and found it almost too exciting: he now
preferred to hunt in couples. With nearly a hundred and fifty galleys or
galleots, ten thousand soldiers, and numerous siege guns, Sinān and Dragut
sailed out of the Dardanelles—whither bound no Christian could tell. They
ravaged, as usual, the Straits of Messina, and then revealed the point of
attack by making direct for Malta. The Knights of St. John were a perpetual
thorn in the side of the Turks, and even more vexatious to the Corsairs, whose
vessels they, and they alone, dared to tackle single-handed, and too often with
success. Sultan and Corsair were alike eager to dislodge the Knights from the
rock which they had been fortifying for twenty years, just as Suleymān had
dislodged them from Rhodes, which they had been fortifying for two hundred. In
July the Turkish fleet appeared before the Marsa, wholly unexpected by the
Knights. The Turks landed on the tongue of promontory which separates the two
great harbours, and where there was as yet no Fort St. Elmo to molest them.
Sinān was taken aback by the strong aspect of the fortress of St. Angelo
on the further side of the harbour, and almost repented of his venture. To
complete his dejection, he seems to have courted failure. Instead of boldly
throwing his whole force upon the small garrison and overwhelming them by sheer
weight, he tried a reconnaissance, and fell into an ambuscade; upon which he
incontinently abandoned all thought of a siege, and contented himself with
laying waste the interior of Malta, and taking the adjacent island of Goza.
The quantity of booty
he would bring back to Constantinople might perhaps avail, he thought, to keep
his head on his shoulders, after so conspicuous a failure; but Sinān
preferred not to trust to the chance. To wipe out his defeat, he sailed
straight for Tripoli, some sixty-four leagues away. Tripoli was the natural
antidote to Malta: for Tripoli, too, belonged to the Knights of St. John—much
against their will—inasmuch as the Emperor had made their defence of this
easternmost Barbary state a condition of their tenure of Malta. So far they had
been unable to put it into a proper state of defence, and with crumbling
battlements and a weak garrison, they had yearly expected invasion. The hour
had now come. Summoned to surrender, the Commandant, Gaspard de Villiers, of
the Auvergne Tongue, replied that the city had been entrusted to his charge,
and he would defend it to the death. He had but four hundred men to hold the
fort withal.
Six thousand Turks disembarked,
forty cannons were landed, Sinān himself directed every movement, and
arranged his batteries and earthworks. A heavy cannonade produced no effect on
the walls, and the Turkish admiral thought of the recent repulse at Malta, and
of the stern face of his master; and his head sat uneasily upon his neck. The
siege appeared to make no progress. Perhaps this venture, too, would have
failed, but for the treachery of a French renegade, who escaped into the
trenches and pointed out the weak places in the walls. His counsel was taken;
the walls fell down; the garrison, in weariness and despair, had lain down to
sleep off[Pg 138] their troubles, and no reproaches and blows could rouse
them. On August 15th Gaspard de Villiers was forced to surrender, on terms, as
he believed, identical with those which Suleymān granted to the Knights of
Rhodes. But Sinān was no Suleymān; moreover, he was in a furious
rage with the whole Order. He put the garrison—all save a few—in chains, and
carried them off to grace his triumph at Stambol.
Thus did Tripoli fall once more into
the hands of the Moslems, forty-one years after its conquest by the Count Don
Pedro Navarro.
The misfortunes of the Christians
did not end here. Year after year the Ottoman fleet appeared in Italian waters,
marshalled now by Sinān, and when he died by Piāli Pasha the Croat,
but always with Dragut in the van; year by year the coasts of Apulia and
Calabria yielded up more and more of their treasure, their youth, and their
beauty, to the Moslem ravishers; yet worse was in store. Unable as they felt
themselves to cope with the Turks at sea, the Powers of Southern Europe
resolved to strike one more blow on land, and recover Tripoli. A fleet of
nearly a hundred galleys and ships, gathered from Spain, Genoa, “the Religion,”
the Pope, from all quarters, with the Duke de Medina-Celi at the head,
assembled at Messina. Doria was too old to command, but his kinsman, Giovanni
Andrea, son of his loved and lost Giannettino, led the Genoese galleys. The
Fates seemed adverse from the outset. Five times the expedition put to sea;
five times was it driven back by contrary winds.[43] At last, on
February 10, 1560, it was fairly away for the African coast. Here fresh
troubles awaited it. Long delays in crowded vessels had produced their
disastrous effects: fevers and scurvy and dysentery were working their terrible
ravages among the crews, and two thousand corpses were flung into the sea. It
was impossible to lay siege to Tripoli with a diseased army, and when actually
in sight of their object the admirals gave orders to return to Jerba.
A sudden descent quickly gave them
the command of the beautiful island. The Arab sheykh whose people cultivated it
was as ready to pay tribute to the Spaniard as to the Corsair. Medina-Celi and
his troops accordingly set to work undisturbed at the erection of a fortress
strong enough to baffle the besieging genius even of the Turks. In two months a
strong castle was built, with all scientific earthworks, and the admiral
prepared to carry home such troops as were not needed for its defence.
Unhappily for him, he had lingered
too long. He had wished to see the defences complete, and had trusted to the
usual practice of the Turks, not to put to sea before May was advanced. He was
about to prepare for departure when news came that the Turkish fleet had been
seen at Goza. Instantly all was panic. Valiant gentlemen forgot their valour,
forgot their coolness, forgot how strong a force by sea or land they mustered:
one thought alone was uppermost—the Turks were upon them! Giovanni Doria
hurried on board and embarked his Genoese; Medina-Celi more methodically and
with something like sang froid personally supervised the
embarcation of his men; but before they could make out of the strait, where
Dragut had so narrowly escaped capture, the dread Corsair himself, and Ochiali,
and Piāli Pasha were upon them. Then ensued a scene of confusion that
baffles description. Despairing of weathering the north side of Jerba the
panic-stricken Christians ran their ships ashore, and deserted them, never
stopping even to set them on fire. The deep-draught galleons stuck fast in the
shallow water. On rowed the Turks; galleys and galleons to the number of
fifty-six fell into their hands; eighteen thousand Christians bowed down before
their scimitars; the beach, on that memorable 11th of May, 1560, was a confused
medley of stranded ships, helpless prisoners, Turks busy in looting men and
galleys—and a hideous heap of mangled bodies. The fleet and the army which had
sailed from Messina but three months ago in such gallant array were absolutely
lost. It was a dies nefas for Christendom.
Medina-Celi and young Doria made
good their escape by night. But when the old Genoese admiral learnt the
terrible news, the loss of the fleet he loved, the defeat of the nephew he
loved yet more, his dim eyes were wet. “Take me to the church,” he said; and he
soon received the last consolations of religion. Long as he had lived, and many
as had been the vicissitudes of his great career, he had willingly been spared
this last most miserable experience. On November 25, 1560, he gave up the
ghost: he was a great seaman, but still more a passionate lover of his
country;—despotic in his love, but not the less a noble Genoese patriot.
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