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THE STORY OF
THE BARBARY CORSAIRS
IX.
THE SEA-FIGHT OFF
PREVESA.
1537.
When Barbarossa returned to
Constantinople Tunis was forgotten and Minorca alone called to mind: instead of
the title of Beglerbeg of Algiers, the Sultan saluted him as Capudan Pasha or
High Admiral of the Ottoman fleets. There was work to be done in the Adriatic,
and none was fitter to do it than the great Corsair. Kheyr-ed-dīn had
acquired an added influence at Stambol since the execution of the Grand
Vezīr Ibrahīm,[33] and he used it in exactly the opposite direction.
Ibrahīm, a Dalmatian by birth, had always striven to maintain friendly
relations with Venice, his native state, and for more than thirty years there
had been peace between the Republic and the Porte. Barbarossa, on the contrary,
longed to pit his galleys against the most famous of the maritime nations of
the Middle Ages, and to make the Crescent as supreme in the waters of the
Adriatic as it was in the Aegean. Francis I. was careful to support this policy
out of his jealousy of the Empire. The Venetians, anxious to keep
on good terms with the Sultan, and to hold a neutral position between Francis
and Charles V, found themselves gradually committed to a war, and by their own
fault. Their commanders in the Adriatic and at Candia were unable to resist the
temptation of chasing Ottoman merchantmen. Canale, the Proveditore of Candia,
caught a noted Corsair, the “Young Moor of Alexander,” as his victims called
him, sunk or captured his galleys, killed his Janissaries, and severely wounded
the young Moor himself;—and all this in Turkish waters, on Turkish subjects,
and in time of peace. Of course when the too gallant Proveditore came to his
senses and perceived his folly, he patched the young Moor’s wounds and sent him
tenderly back to Algiers: but the Sultan’s ire was already roused, and when Venetian
galleys actually gave chase to a ship that carried a Turkish ambassador, no
apologies that the Signoria offered could wipe out the affront. War was
inevitable, and Venice hastily made common cause with the Pope and the Emperor
against the formidable host which now advanced upon the Adriatic.
Before this, some stirring actions
had been fought off the coasts of Greece. Doria, sallying forth from Messina,
had met the governor of Gallipoli off Paxos, and had fought him before
daybreak. Standing erect on the poop, conspicuous in his cramoisy doublet, the
tall figure of the old admiral was seen for an hour and a half directing the
conflict, sword in hand, an easy mark for sharpshooters, as a wound in the knee
reminded him. After a severe struggle the twelve galleys of the
enemy were captured and carried in triumph to Messina. Barbarossa was sorely
wanted now, and in May, 1537, he sailed with one hundred and thirty-five
galleys to avenge the insult. For a whole month he laid waste the Apulian coast
like a pestilence, and carried off ten thousand slaves, while Doria lay
helpless with a far inferior force in Messina roads. The Turks were boasting
that they might soon set up a Pope of their own, when the war with Venice broke
out, and they were called off from their devastation of Italy by the Sultan’s
command to besiege Corfu. The Ionian islands were always a bone of contention
between the Turks and their neighbours, and a war with Venice naturally began
with an attack upon Corfu. The Senate had shut its eyes as long as possible to
the destination of the huge armaments which had left Constantinople in the
spring: Tunis, or perhaps Naples, was said to be their object. But now they
were undeceived, and on the 25th of August, Captain Pasha Barbarossa landed
twenty-five thousand men and thirty cannon under Lutfi Pasha, three miles from
the castle of Corfu. Four days later the Grand Vezīr Ayās, with
twenty-five thousand more and a brilliant staff, joined the first-comers, and
the Akinji or light troops spread fire and sword around. A fifty-pounder fired
nineteen shots in three days, but only five struck the fortress: the Turks
fired too high, and many of their missiles fell harmlessly into the sea beyond.
In spite of storm and rain the Grand Vezīr would not desist from making
the round of the trenches by night. Suleymān offered liberal
terms of capitulation, but the besieged sent back his messenger
with never an answer. Alexandro Tron worked the big guns of the castle with
terrible precision. Two galleys were quickly sunk, four men were killed in the
trenches by a single shot—a new and alarming experience in those early days of
gunnery—four times the Fort of St. Angelo was attacked in vain; winter was
approaching, and the Sultan determined to raise the siege. In vain Barbarossa
remonstrated: “A thousand such castles were not worth the life of one of his
brave men,” said the Sultan, and on the 17th of September the troops began to
re-embark.
Then began a scene of devastation
such as the isles of Greece have too often witnessed,—not from Turks only, but
from Genoese and Venetians, who also came to the Archipelago for their
oarsmen,—but never perhaps on so vast a scale. Butrinto was burnt, Paxos
conquered, and then Barbarossa carried fire and sword throughout the Adriatic
and the Archipelago. With seventy galleys and thirty galleots, he raged among
the islands, most of which belonged to noble families of Venice—the Venieri,
Grispi, Pisani, Quirini. Syra, Skyros, Aegina, Paros, Naxos, Tenos, and other
Venetian possessions were overwhelmed, and thousands of their people carried
off to pull a Turkish oar. Naxos contributed five thousand dollars as her first
year’s tribute; Aegina furnished six thousand slaves. Many trophies did
Barbarossa bring home to Stambol, whose riches certainly did his own and the
Sultan’s, if not “the general coffer, fill.” Four hundred thousand
pieces of gold, a thousand girls, and fifteen hundred boys, were useful
resources when he returned to “rub his countenance against the royal
stirrup.”[35] Two hundred boys in scarlet, bearing gold and silver bowls;
thirty more laden with purses; two hundred with rolls of fine cloth: such was
the present with which the High Admiral approached the Sultan’s presence.
Suleymān’s genius was at that
time bent upon three distinct efforts: he was carrying on a campaign in
Moldavia; his Suez fleet—a novelty in Ottoman history—was invading the Indian
Ocean, with no very tangible result, it is true (unless a trophy of Indian ears
and noses may count), save the conquest of Aden on the return voyage, but still
a notable exploit, and disturbing to the Portuguese in Gujerat; and his High
Admiral was planning the destruction of the maritime power of Venice.
In the summer of 1538, Barbarossa
put off to sea, and soon had one hundred and fifty sail under his command. He
began by collecting rowers and tribute from the islands, twenty-five of which
had now been transferred from the Venetian to the Turkish allegiance, and then
laid waste eighty villages in Candia. Here news was brought that the united
fleet of the Emperor, Venice, and the Pope was cruising in the Adriatic, and
the Captain Pasha hastened to meet it. The pick of the Corsairs was with him.
Round his flagship were ranged the galleys of Dragut, Murād Reïs,
Sinān, Sālih Reïs with twenty Egyptian vessels, and others, to the
number of one hundred and twenty-two ships of war. The advance
guard sighted part of the enemy off Prevesa—a Turkish fortress opposite the
promontory of Arta or Actium, where Antony suffered his memorable defeat.
The Christian strength was really
overwhelming. Eighty Venetian, thirty-six Papal, and thirty Spanish galleys,
together with fifty sailing galleons, made up a formidable total of nearly two
hundred ships of war, and they carried scarcely less than sixty thousand men,
and two thousand five hundred guns. Doria was in chief command, and Capello and
Grimani led the Venetian and Roman contingents. Barbarossa had fortunately
received but an imperfect report of the enemy’s strength and so boldly pursued
his northerly course up the Adriatic. When he reached Prevesa, the combined
fleets had gone on to Corfu, and he was able to enter unopposed the spacious
gulf of Arta, where all the navies of the world might safely anchor and defy
pursuit.
On September 25th, the allied fleets
appeared off the entrance to the gulf, and then for the first time Barbarossa
realized his immense good fortune in being the first in the bay. Outnumbered as
he was, a fight in the open sea might have ended in the total destruction of
his navy; but secure in an ample harbour, on a friendly coast, behind a bar
which the heavier vessels of the enemy could not cross, he could wait his
opportunity and take the foe at a disadvantage. The danger was that Doria might
disembark his guns and attack from the shores of the gulf, and to meet this
risk some of the Turkish captains insisted on landing their men and
trying to erect earthworks for their protection; but the fire from
the Christian ships soon stopped this manoeuvre. Barbarossa had never expected
Doria to hazard a landing, and he was right. The old admiral of Charles V was
not likely to expose his ships to the risk of a sally from the Turks just when
he had deprived them of the men and guns that could alone defend them.
The two fleets watched each other
warily. Doria and Barbarossa had at last come face to face for a great battle,
but, strange as it may seem, neither cared to begin: Barbarossa was conscious
of serious numerical inferiority; Doria was anxious for the safety of his fifty
big sailing vessels, on the heavy artillery of which he most relied, but which
a contrary wind might drive to destruction on the hostile coast. As it was, his
guideship on the extreme left had but a fathom of water under her keel. Each
felt keenly the weighty responsibility of his position, and even the sense that
now at last the decisive day of their long rivalry had come could not stir them
from their policy of prudence. Moreover, it was no longer a question of the
prowess of hot-blooded youth: Doria and Barbarossa and Capello were all men of
nearly seventy years, and Doria was certainly not the man he once was; politics
had spoilt him.
So the two great admirals waited and
eyed each other’s strength. Will Barbarossa come out? Or must Doria risk the
passage of the bar and force his way in to the encounter? Neither event
happened: but on the morning of the 27th the Corsairs rubbed their eyes to feel
if they were asleep, as they saw the whole magnificent navy of
Christendom, anchor a-peak, sailing slowly and majestically—away! Were the
Christians afraid? Anyhow no one, not even Barbarossa, could hold the Turks
back now. Out they rushed in hot pursuit, not thinking or caring—save their
shrewd captain—whether this were not a feint of Doria’s to catch them in the
open. “Get into line,” said Barbarossa to his captains, “and do as you see me
do.” Dragut took the right wing, Sālih Reïs the left. Early on the 28th
the Christian fleet was discovered at anchor, in a foul wind, off Santa Maura,
thirty miles to the south. Doria was not at all prepared for such prompt
pursuit, and eyed with anxiety the long battle line of one hundred and forty
galleys, galleots, and brigantines, bearing down upon him before the wind. His
ships were scattered, for the sails could not keep up with the oars, and
Condulmiero’s huge Venetian carack was becalmed off Zuara, a long way behind,
and others were in no better plight. Three hours Doria hesitated, and then gave
the order to sail north and meet the enemy. Condulmiero was already fiercely
engaged, and soon his carack was a mere unrigged helmless waterlog, only saved
from instant destruction by her immense size and terrific guns, which, well
aimed, low on the water, to gain the ricochet, did fearful mischief among the
attacking galleys. Two galleons were burnt to the water’s edge, and their crews
took to the boats; a third, Boccanegra’s, lost her mainmast, and staggered away
crippled. What was Doria about? The wind was now in his favour; the enemy was
in front: but Doria continued to tack and manoeuvre at a distance.
What he aimed at is uncertain: his colleagues Grimani and Capello went on board
his flagship, and vehemently remonstrated with him, and even implored him to
depart and let them fight the battle with their own ships, but in vain. He was
bent on tactics, when what was needed was pluck; and tactics lost the day. The
Corsairs took, it is true, only seven galleys and sailing vessels, but they
held the sea. Doria sailed away in the evening for Corfu, and the whole allied
fleet followed in a gale of wind.
So, after all, the great duel was
never fairly fought between the sea-rivals. Barbarossa was willing, but Doria
held back: he preferred to show his seamanship instead of his courage. The
result was in effect a victory, a signal victory, for the Turks. Two hundred
splendid vessels of three great Christian states had fled before an inferior
force of Ottomans; and it is no wonder that Sultan Suleymān, when he learnt
the news at Yamboli, illuminated the town, and added one hundred thousand
aspres a year to the revenues of the conqueror. Barbarossa had once more proved
to the world that the Turkish fleet was invincible. The flag of Suleymān
floated supreme in all the waters of the Mediterranean Sea.
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