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Ali Pasha of Ioannina

Ali Pasha, or Ali Pasha of Tepelena (Albanian: Ali Tepelena; 1740 – January 24, 1822), commonly known as Ali Pasha of Ioannina, was an Albanian ruler who served as Ottoman pasha of the Pashalik of Yanina, a large part of western Rumelia. Under his rule, it acquired a high degree of autonomy and even managed to stay de facto independent. The capital of the Pashalik was Ioannina, which, along with Tepelena, was Ali's headquarters.[2] Conceiving his territory in increasingly independent terms, Ali Pasha's correspondence and foreign Western correspondence frequently refer to the territories under Ali's control as "Albania."[3] This, by Ali's definition, included central and southern Albania, and parts of mainland Greece; in particular, most of the district of Epirus and the western parts of Thessaly and Macedonia.[4] He managed to stretch his control over the sanjaks of Yanina, Delvina, Vlora and Berat, Elbasan, Ohrid and Monastir, Görice, and Tirhala. Ali was granted the Sanjak of Tirhala in 1787, and he delegated its government in 1788 to his second-born Veli Pasha, who also became Pasha of the Morea Eyalet in 1807. Ali's eldest son, Muhtar Pasha, was granted the Sanjak of Karli-Eli and the Sanjak of Eğriboz in 1792, stretching for the first time Ali's control down to Livadia and the Gulf of Corinth, except Attica. Muhtar Pasha also became governor of the Sanjak of Ohrid in 1796–7 and of the Sanjak of Vlora and Berat in 1810.[5][6]

Ali Pasha
Ali Tepelena
Ali Pasha at the Lake of Butrint, by Louis Dupré
Pasha of Yanina
In office
1788–1822
Personal details
Born1740
Tepelena, Sanjak of Delvina, Ottoman Empire
DiedJanuary 24, 1822(1822-01-24) (aged 81–82)
Ioannina, Pashalik of Yanina, Ottoman Empire
Spouse(s)Emine (daughter of Kaplan Pasha of Gjirokastër)
(m. 1808)
RelationsMehmed (grandson), Ismail (grandson), Muhtar Bey (grandfather), Mustafa Yussuf (great grandfather), Fikret İşmen Kaygı (descendant) Husein Pasha (descendant) Fatma Hikmet İşmen (descendant)
Children
Parent(s)Veli Bey and Hamko
Signature
Nickname(s)"Aslan" (Turkish: Lion)
"Lion of Yannina"[1]
Military service
Battles/wars

Ali first appears in historical accounts as the leader of a band of Albanian brigands who became involved in many confrontations with Ottoman state officials in Albania and Epirus. He joined the administrative-military apparatus of the Ottoman Empire, holding various posts until 1788, when he was appointed pasha, ruler of the Sanjak of Ioannina. His diplomatic and administrative skills, his interest in modernist ideas and concepts, his popular Muslim piety, his respect towards other religions, his suppression of banditry, his vengefulness and harshness in imposing law and order, and his looting practices towards persons and communities in order to increase his profits caused both the admiration and the criticism of his contemporaries, as well as an ongoing controversy among historians regarding his personality. As his influence grew, his involvement in Ottoman politics increased culminating in his active opposition to the ongoing Ottoman military reforms. After being declared a rebel in 1820, he was captured and killed in 1822 at the age of 81 or 82, after a successful military campaign against his forces. In Western literature, Ali Pasha became the personification of an "oriental despot."[1]

Name edit

Ali Pasha was variously referred to as of Tepelena, of Ioannina/Janina/Yannina or the Lion of Yannina. His native name was Albanian: Ali Tepelena, and he was referred to as Ali Pashë Tepelena or Ali Pasha i Janinës; and in other local languages as Aromanian: Ali Pãshelu; Greek: Αλή Πασάς Τεπελενλής Ali Pasas Tepelenlis or Αλή Πασάς των Ιωαννίνων Ali Pasas ton Ioanninon (Ali Pasha of Ioannina); and Turkish: Tepedelenli Ali Paşa (Ottoman Turkish: تپه‌دلنلي علي پاشا).[1]

Ancestry and early life edit

 
The statue of Ali Pasha in Tepelenë

Ali Pasha was born into the Albanian Meçohysaj clan; they were Christian Albanians who embraced Islam in the Ottoman period. The family was attributed a legendary ancestry as descendants of a Mevlevi dervish named Nazif who migrated from Konya to Tepelene through Kütahya, and Ali himself would make similar claims to strangers and Ottoman Turks in order to claim legitimacy to landholdings.[7][1][8][9] Nonetheless, this tradition is unfounded, as Ali's family was of local Albanian origin.[1][10][11]

They had achieved some stature by the 17th century; Ali's great-grandfather, Mustafa Yussuf from the Gjirokastër region, was a notable brigand, warrior and clan chieftain who eventually obtained the title of bey and possibly official recognition as the deputy governor of Tepelena. Ali's grandfather, Muhtar Bey, was also a bandit chieftain who fought both for and against the Ottoman Turks.[12] Muhtar had died during the 1716 siege of Corfu.[1] Ali's father, Veli Bey, was a local ruler of Tepelena.[13]

Ali himself was born in Beçisht, although some claim that he was born in the adjacent town of Tepelena.[7][8][13] Ali's father, Veli Bey, was involved in a rivalry with his cousin, Islam Bey, who was also a local ruler.[1] Islam Bey was appointed mutasarrıf of Delvinë in 1752, but Veli Bey managed to kill him and thereby succeed his cousin as mutasarrıf in 1762.[1] Veli Bey was assassinated shortly after when Ali was ten, and Ali was brought up by his mother, Chamko (or Hanko/Hamko), who originally hailed from Konitsa.[8][1]

Ali's mother Hamko was forced to take control of Veli's band in order to retain her family's position. She was said to have poisoned Ali's half-brother (along with the boy's mother) in order to secure Ali's inheritance. She had a great impact on Ali's personality, and Ali deeply respected her. Hamko arranged a marriage between Ali and Emine, the daughter of the Kaplan Pasha of Gjirokastër. Eventually, the villages surrounding Tepelena formed a confederacy against Hamko and forced the woman and her family out of the town; she was later ambushed and defeated by the men of Hormovë and Kardhiq, two Christian and Muslim Albanian villages respectively. Hamko and Ali's sister were captured by the men of Kardhiq, raped and then humiliated by being forced to walk through the streets with a man on her back. From then on, Hamko would instil a desire for revenge in Ali, who would avenge his mother by massacring the inhabitants of Kardhiq in his later years.[14][15]

Ali would have two sons with Emine, the daughter of Kaplan Pasha of Gjirokastër. The first would be Muhtar Pasha, and the second would be Veli Pasha. Ali's youngest son, Selim, would be born to a slave much later in 1802. Both of his sons with Emine would be married to the daughters of Ibrahim Pasha of Berat. When Ali gained power, Ali's sister, Shainitza, was married off to Sulejman of Gjirokastër; Sulejman's family came from Libohovë in Zagoria, where Ali built a fortified seraglio as his sister's dowry. One claim suggests that she was first married to Sulejman's brother, also called Ali, but he died or was murdered by Sulejman with Ali Pasha's permission. Shainitza's third son, Adem, would become the governor of Libohovë, and her daughter from her first marriage was married to Veli Bey of Këlcyrë.[16]

Rise edit

 
Portrait of Ali Pasha, drawn by Charles Robert Cockerell (published in 1820), based on Thomas Smart Hughes' travels in Albania in 1813.[17]

In his early years, Ali distinguished himself as a bandit in the mountains.[13] Ali's growing reputation as a notorious bandit forced the Ottoman government to take action, and they authorised Ahmet Kurt Pasha of Berat to subdue him. He was eventually captured by Kurt, possibly twice but definitely in 1775 when it is known that Ali was actually employed in Kurt's service, due to a hostility that had arisen between the two upon Kurt's rejection of Ali's offer to marry Kurt's daughter, Miriem. Instead, Miriem would be married to Ibrahim Bey of Vlorë in 1765, and Ibrahim would later become Pasha of both Vlorë and Berat. As a result, Ibrahim and Ali also became rivals, and this rivalry continued until Ibrahim's death.[18] Ali affiliated himself with the Bektashi sect,[13] although he was not particularly anti-Christian or self-consciously Muslim and showed no favouritism to either group as a ruler.[19]

Venetian records indicate that Ali and his cousin, Islam Bey of Këlcyrë, were part of a force of 9,000 Muslim Albanians under Sulejman Çapari, the aga of Margariti, who were engaged in conflict with the Souliotes in 1772, and it is possible that Ali was also part of Ahmet Kurt Pasha's force in 1775 during Kurt's campaign against the Souliotes. The first military action in which Ali is confirmed to have participated in was Ahmet Kurt Pasha's conflict with Mehmed Pasha Bushati in 1776; Ali and his cousin Islam distinguished themselves during the subsequent engagements around Kavajë and Tirana, but Ali fell out with Kurt over the division of the spoils of war and resumed his life of banditry. In 1778, Ahmet Kurt Pasha was disgraced and dismissed as a result of the schemes employed by Mehmed 'Kalo' Pasha of Yanina, who then took over the Sanjak of Avlona. The guardianship of the mountain passes was bestowed upon a Turk from Thessaly known as Catalcali Haci Ali Pasha; the local Albanians did not like him, and so he appointed Ali Pasha – at this point Ali Bey – as his deputy to establish order amongst the Albanian brigands while Catalcali remained in his fortress in the distant Chalkis of Euboea.[20]

With this new Ottoman administrative position, Ali eliminated the military and civil officials appointed by Kurt in favour of his own men, and established a network between the leaders of Albanian bands and the captains of armatoli. Albanian fighters that refused to serve Ali were relocated to the Morea, where they could continue their occupation of plundering. Ali's new position also meant that he could orchestrate legitimate and illegitimate protection rackets that gave him enough resources to recruit mercenaries and set aside money for bribes. Around this time, Ali went to Missolonghi to collect a debt owed by Michaeles Avronites, a local sea captain who was originally from Cephallonia and therefore a Venetian subject. Ali arrived in the town with his Albanians as a show of force, and when he could not find Avronites, Ali seized a number of Venetian subjects, including the Venetian consul. They were released only after Missolonghi's leaders declared that they would pay the debt themselves, and Ali took 500 barrels of merchandise bound for the Ionian Islands as a guarantee, although these barrels were never returned to the people of Missolonghi. Similar intimidation tactics were used across Epirus by Ali, who although serving in this administrative position for only five months, managed to impose order and a systemic tax regime, as well as amass enormous personal wealth.[21]

Rivalry with Ahmet Kurt Pasha edit

In 1779, Ahmet Kurt Pasha had returned to power through intrigue and bribery of the Sublime Porte. Ali openly challenged Kurt in an effort to get the Porte to recognise that Ali had a stronger power-base. Ali marched an army of 2,000–3,000 Albanians through Thessaly, dispersing them along the journey to intimidate local towns and villages and to extract wealth from them. At Trikkala, Ali led his own detachment of 300 soldiers into the near-deserted town as many of the inhabitants had already fled upon his approach. Once a certain amount of protection money was peacefully extracted from the town, Ali and his men left and proceeded to Farsala, where he and Catalcali Haci (who was still Ali's superior) plotted against Ahmet Kurt Pasha.[22]

Ali's first action was to take the district of Acarnania, where his soldiers had already visited Missolonghi and yet again extracted more tributes from the citizens. Ali arrived with 4,000 men, occupying the regional capital of Vrachori (Agrinion) and re-joining his Albanian troops that had returned from their ravaging of the Morea. In response, Kurt moved his troops southwards in Epirus and placed pressure upon the Venetians and the armatoles to restrict Ali's approach. The Sublime Porte was forced to intervene in the situation, and Ottoman general Cezayirli Gazi Hasan Pasha, who was already dispatched to dispose of the Albanian irregulars in the Morea, was instead sent to Macedonia and Thessaly to re-establish regional order. Gazi Hasan Pasha, although aided by local Turks, armatoles and Greek peasants, was not able to defeat and drive out the Albanians. However, he later succeeded in pacifying the Albanians in the Morea, but peace was only temporarily restored as the Albanians continued to pour into the region.[23]

Meanwhile, Ali had returned to Tepelena to restore his family's position and solidify his power base. Upon learning that the Sublime Porte refused to restore him in place of Ahmet Kurt Pasha, Ali ordered his tribal and feudal allies to attack Kurt's local garrisons, ravaging the mountain districts between Tepelena and the outskirts of Yanina for the next two years. The Porte forced Kurt to directly challenge Ali's disruption, and although Kurt could muster a force of 10,000 men and 100 cavalry, he would not be able to defeat Ali in the mountain passes and resorted to besieging Tepelena. Ali had no other option but to break through the siege and make way for Butrint, which Kurt interpreted as an attempt to return to the Morea. Ali's escape caused concern throughout Greece, and Kurt responded by sending 6,000 soldiers to the Bay of Arta to cut Ali off from his southern route and to trap him next to the sea, distributing funds along the way to local chieftains. Ali also recruited his own allies, including his cousin Islam Bey of Këlcyrë, the son of Sulejman Çapari and aga of Margariti Hasan Çapari, and Demoglou of Konispol. These allies kept the pasha of Delvinë's forces occupied while Ali continued further south towards Arta and Preveza. These manoeuvres alerted the Venetians, and the pashas of Trikkala and Euboea were asked to send their armies to aid Kurt. Ali, contrary to what Kurt expected, changed direction and marched towards Yanina, subduing and fortifying important villages along the way.[24]

Kurt's troops, under the command of his son-in-law Ibrahim Bey, were unable to defeat Ali, and this resulted in a stalemate. Ali eventually retreated to Tepelena, and Kurt attempted to impress the Sublime Porte by sending severed heads as evidence of Ali's demise, but the unrest continued nonetheless. Through his actions, Ali was able to greatly undermine Kurt's authority and garner enough attention from the Venetians to establish diplomatic relations with them. In 1783, Ali sent a declaration of friendship to the Venetian administration at Corfu at the risk of an accusation of treason. Expecting to receive the title of Pasha of two tails at any moment, Ali asked them to intercede at the Sublime Porte on his behalf to hasten the process. The Venetians followed through, and in return, Ali disrupted Mustafa Koka, the Pasha of Delvinë and a political opponent of the Venetians.[25]

Initial appointment edit

The Sublime Porte was still heavily in debt to the Albanian fighters who put down the Greek revolt in the Morea in 1769–1770, with astronomical sums being owed in back pay. Ali's high prestige amongst the Albanian fighters, as well as his satisfactory diplomatic solutions that normalised Venetian-Turkish relations, highlighted the fact that he was now the de facto force in the region, bypassing both Ahmet Kurt Pasha and Kara Mahmud Pasha Bushati of Shkodër. Ali was appointed mutasarrif of Ioannina at the end of 1784 or beginning of 1785 on the condition that he led 1,000 troops on campaign, possibly as part of the military response to the Russian annexation of Crimea.[25]

Deposition and re-appointment edit

 
"Ali Pasha of Janina hunting in the lake of Butrint in March 1819" by Louis Dupré (1825)

Ali did not keep his promise to the Sublime Porte; instead of going on campaign for the Ottomans, Ali focused his attention on Hormovë as part of a greater effort to impose his rule over the villages and towns around Gjirokastër before eventually subjugating Gjirokastër itself. In an act of vengeance on the people of Hormovë for their part in the humiliation of his mother and sister, Ali would attack the village with over 1,000 men after lulling the town into a false sense of friendship. The men were killed, the women and children sold into slavery, and the leader of Hormovë was roasted alive on a spit above a fire. His actions intimidated the neighbouring villages into submission, earning him governorship of Janina soon thereafter.[26]

Additionally, the region of Himarë was seen as a point of concern for the Sublime Porte due to its support and collaboration with the Russian Empire and Venice. Serving as the governor of Delvinë, Ali claimed jurisdiction of the region and organised a campaign in 1785. Himara held out, however, as Ali had other issues to tend to. He failed to establish secure rule over Janina and made enemies of the local Turkish and Greek communities, who protested to the Sublime Porte. He was dismissed from his position in favour of his rival, Kurt Pasha, and was called upon by the Sultan to campaign against Kara Mahmud Pasha Bushati of Shkodër, whose attempts at creating an independent state forced a response from the Ottomans. Ali was then sent on another campaign in the Russo-Turkish War of 1787–1792, in which he also secretly established contacts with the Russians. In reward for his services at Banat during this war, he was granted the Sanjak of Trikala in 1787, which was suffering from brigand raids. Ali's success in the pacification of brigandage in Trikala earned him the role of supervisor of the tolls of "Toskëria and Epirus".[27][28]

In the meantime, Kurt Pasha had died and was succeeded by his ally in Berat, Ibrahim Pasha. The Porte awarded Ali with control of Janina, however, the accounts on how this occurred vary; some suggest that Ali surrounded Janina with his forces and presented a forged document from the Sultan without giving the Porte enough time to object, while others suggest that he gained enough support from the notables of Janina that they petitioned the Sultan for his appointment on his behalf. Whatever the case, the earliest known reference to Ali as the Pasha of Janina is dated to the 15th of March, 1788. In that same year, he delegated the title of Pasha of Trikala to his son, Veli.[29][28]

Early consolidation edit

 
The Palace of Ali Pasha in Tepelena, engraving by Edward Finden, based on a drawing by William Purser, early 19th century

Ali Pasha secured his position by establishing relationships with influential people and rewarding his supporters and allies. He was soon appointed to the post of Dervendji-Pasha, and he began to further consolidate his power in Epirus. He married his sons to the daughters of Ibrahim Pasha in Berat in order to secure their alliance as well as the borders of his Pashalik.[30]

During war-time, Ali Pasha could assemble an army of 50,000 Albanian men in a matter of two to three days and could double that number in two to three weeks. Leading these armed forces was Ali's Supreme Council.[31] The Commander-in-chief was the founder and financier, Ali Pasha. Council members included Muhtar Pasha, Veli Pasha, Celâleddin Bey, Abdullah Pashe Taushani and a number of his trusted men like Hasan Dervishi, Omar Vrioni, Meço Bono, Ago Myhyrdari, Thanasis Vagias, Veli Gega and Tahir Abazi.[31][32]

Ali's own perception of group identity derived from the ancient legacy of Albanian banditry along with the accompanying Albanian pseudo-nobility. Ali conceived an independent state that almost certainly would have been controlled by this Albanian military and aristocratic elite.[33] As Pasha, Ali was supported by an exclusively Albanian military establishment, which included many people who had undertaken brigandage activities earlier in their life.[34] Ali Pasha also used Albanian tribesmen to put down Greek rebellions in the Morea.[35]

Rule as Pasha edit

 
Fortifications built during Ali Pasha's reign in Butrint, Albania.

As Pasha, Ali slowly laid the foundations for the creation of an almost independent state, which included a large part of Albania and mainland Greece. During his rule, the town of Ioannina developed into a major educational, cultural, political and economic hub. In order to achieve his goals, he allied with all religious and ethnic groups in his territory. At the same time, he did not hesitate to fiercely crush any opponent, and he also developed relations with European powers.[36] By the time of his accession to the Pashalik of Yanina, several almost-independent Albanian and Greek towns of the region reversed their approach of hostility against the Ottoman rule and pledged their loyalty to Ali.[37] Ali's policy as ruler of Janina was mostly governed by expediency; he operated as a semi-independent despot and pragmatically allied himself with whoever offered the most advantage at the time. It was Ali Pasha and his Albanian soldiers and mercenaries who subdued the independent Souli.[38]

 
Serais of Ali Pasha and his two sons in Joannina in 1813, drawn by Charles Robert Cockerell, published in 1820 by Thomas Smart Hughes.

At this point, Ali Pasha's priority was to create a centralised governing system by neutralising the numerous disruptive factions vying for power in his Pashalik, including the klephts, armatoles, Christian notables, and Albanian beys and agas. For example, Ali replaced Greek armatoles from the territories under his control with almost exclusively Albanian armatoles. The discarded Greek armatoles became klephts and their subsequent anti-armatoloi activity was not only brigandage, but also a form of resistance against Ottoman rule. Ali also targeted wealthy Muslim landowners under the guise of bringing justice for the peasant population whilst increasing his own wealth.[39][40]

In 1788, Ali's troops completed the destruction of Moscopole, a once-prosperous cultural centre in south-eastern Albania that had been continuously raided by Albanian irregulars from 1769 onwards due to their pro-Russian stance and support of the Orlov Revolt. The Aromanian population of Moscopole was forced to flee from the region and find refuge in regions outside of Ali's control, both in and out of the Ottoman Empire.[41][42] Many Aromanians scattered throughout the Balkans, founding settlements such as Kruševo, but many also migrated to foreign countries, forming an Aromanian diaspora.[43][44] The same campaign of persecution was launched towards Sarakatsani communities.[44]

Ali and the Souliotes: Initial campaigns edit

At this point in time, the Souliotes, a Christian Albanian community whose lands were located in Ali's Pashalik, would pay their taxes to their spahi in Janina, Bekir Bey. Ali preferred to take the taxes directly into his own hands, and Bekir was promptly imprisoned upon his rejection of Ali's proposal. The Souliote confederacy posed a continuous threat to Ali's Pashalik by constantly raiding and terrorising the surrounding villages. The Souliotes were incited against Ali by Russian Empress Catherine the Great, who after the Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca in 1774, was acknowledged as the protector of all Orthodox Christians in the Ottoman Empire. At the behest of the Russians, the Souliotes had reportedly gathered 2,200 men who were ready to take up arms against Ali Pasha, and in response, Ali immediately mobilised his forces. With a force of 3,000 men and aided by the Çapari family of Paramythia, Ali attacked Souli, but the assault failed with considerable losses even though a Russian support fleet never materialised to help the Souliotes. The Souliotes, encouraged by their success, joined forces with klephts from the Pindus and ravaged both Greek and Albanian villages throughout Acarnania.[45][42]

 
Fortress of Ali Pasha at Argyro-Castro in 1813, drawn by Charles Robert Cockerell, published in 1820 by Thomas Smart Hughes.

After failing to defeat the Souliotes via direct assault, Ali took another approach. In 1792, Ali mustered 10,000 men to attack Gjirokastër in response to the town declining his imposition of a bey, but this was all part of an elaborate plan to lure the Souliotes from their mountains. Ali wrote a letter to the Souliote captains George Botsaris and Lambros Tzavelas, in which he feigned friendship and admiration whilst asking for their assistance. The Souliotes cautiously accepted, and Botsaris wrote that, although he could not muster enough followers to join Ali, Tzavelas would join his army with 70 men as a sign of friendship. This group was placed on the front lines before Ali had Tzavelas and his men seized, chained and sent to Janina, with some being killed on the spot.[41][42]

Ali, aided by his son Muhtar, proceeded with his attack on Souli, but Botsaris was well-prepared with solid defensive positions. The 1,300 Souliote defenders retreated from their villages and were pushed to the inner mountains of Souli. Ali attempted to coerce Lambros into betraying the Souliotes through a variety of means, and Lambros finally agreed when Ali offered him his freedom and lordship of Souli, although Lambros' 12-year-old son Fotos was taken as a guarantee. Once he was safe, Lambros sent Ali a letter revealing that he did not intend to fulfil his side of the bargain, regardless of whether he had to sacrifice his son or not, and that he would continue fighting against Ali and his men. Ali's men would fail to make further ground, and Ali would cut his losses by exchanging prisoners (including Fotos Tzavelas), paying ransoms and signing a truce. Ali's casualties were in the thousands, whereas the Souliotes suffered minimal losses, but Lambros Tzavelas himself was mortally wounded.[46] The 1792 attack ended in a Souliote victory, and in the negotiations, the Botsaris clan managed to become recognized by Ali Pasha as the lawful representative clan of Souli and George Botsaris as the one who would enforce the terms of peace among the Souliotes.[47] Ali, however, would not forget this humiliation.[48]

Consolidation edit

 
Ali, Vizier of Albania, also called Pacha of Jannina by Adam Friedel, drawn from life and published in 1828.

Despite his setback in Souli, Ali Pasha retained an influential standing in Constantinople. For example, Ali managed to use his influence to reverse the death penalty imposed on the Pasha of Negroponte after he plead to Ali for help. Although he had obtained his power through force in a lawless environment, it was crucial for Ali Pasha to maintain peace and stability to ensure that his coffers remained full. Ali would offer protection to towns and villages in return for their loyalty, thereby increasing his control over his expanding territories by appointing his representatives and negotiating appropriate terms and tax arrangements.[49]

Correspondence from Ali's subjects during this period make heavy use of flattering and obsequious phrases whilst Ali's replies are terse and factual, reflecting the power dynamic between them; villagers often wrote to Ali with complaints about the Souliotes thieving their sheep or about raids from klephts, usually from neighbouring villages. The people of Kokosi in Thessaly wrote to Ali in 1794 on behalf of Platini Scourpi, Koffi and other villages, requesting the prolonged stay of one of Ali's boluk-bashis (officers) with his men to continue protecting them from bandits. The villagers of Kato Soudena also offered to pay Ali Pasha so that they may be placed under his protection. Ali did not only provide protection from bandits, however, as he offered protection from the Sultan's tax collectors as well, interfering with the collection and disposal of government tax revenue through the bribery of officials or the allocation of tax collecting duties to his family and supporters. In fact, the higher ranks of the Greek Orthodox Church colluded with Ali to the extent that bishops were willing to act as his tax collectors. By pledging their loyalty to Ali, communities could put themselves under his jurisdiction.[50]

At times, Ali Pasha would pay to bring a community under his jurisdiction. Villages would even threaten to separate, such as in 1802 when the inhabitants of Chebelovo complained that Ali favoured their neighbours over them. Communities that were unhappy with Ali's rule were able to appeal to the Ottoman kadi courts or the central government itself, so it was crucial that Ali maintained good standing with his connections in Constantinople since his position as dervendji-pasha was never totally secure. When one of Ali's lobbyists in the Phanariot elite informed Ali that there was a rival bid for control of the passes in 1797, Ali was encouraged to make a higher offer to the treasury and to ameliorate relations with the local communities he collected taxes from, as their complaints could serve as a justification for the authorities granting control of the passes to his rival.[51]

By 1798, Ali Pasha's influence extended to Veroia. He was made governor of Thessaly in 1799 to clear the region of bandits, soon followed by all of Rumeli. Ali was able to extract taxes beyond the strictly-defined borders of his realm, as his power extended beyond the areas that were formally recognised as his. By 1803, several villages in the district of Florina were finalising the terms of their tax collection with Ali, and Ali's tax-collecting powers would eventually extend as far north as Prilep by assuming fake identities as a tax-farmer.[52]

The principal role of geography in the communal groups of his time were comprehended by Ali. He insisted that Ioannina, located in the Greek district of Epirus, was Albanian. He also considered the Albanian population who lived in the area not as immigrants but as indigenous people of the region. He tried to justify his plans on the territories under foreign protectorate on the Ionian coast also by insisting that they were part of "Albania" as well.[53]

Language was a major definiting element in Ali's identity, as well of his government and the region he controlled in general. Ali's native language was Albanian.[53] His degree of proficiency in written Greek is debatable, however he also spoke Greek.[54] Albanians and Greeks exchanging languages was quite common in the 18th century.[53] Ioannina was located in a largely Greek-speaking area, and during the Ottoman rule the Albanian language has not been officially recognized. Albanian has become a fully written language with its own script only from the mid-19th century, while written Greek was a well established language within the Ottoman Empire.[54] The formal bureaucratic language of the Empire was entirely replaced with Greek in the pashalik, and in Ali's court diplomatic business was exclusively conducted in Greek as well as much of the formal correspondence. Ali also used the Greek script to write in Albanian and to transliterate Turkish in his personal correspondence.[53] The usage of Greek, however, did not in any way make Ali Greek, just as his role as Ottoman appointee did not in any way make him Ottoman. He was first and foremost considered as an Albanian.[55]

Ali Pasha and the European powers edit

 
Audience chamber of Ali Pacha in Janina, Albania (subsequently Greece), c. 1800, by George de la Poer Beresford, published in 1855.[56][57][58][59]

The stability brought about by Ali Pasha's reign allowed the regional centre of Janina to become more cosmopolitan, connecting Ali to an international network. As his fame grew, so to did the number of foreigners in his court.[60] Ali wanted to establish a sea-power in the Mediterranean which would be a counterpart of that of the Dey of Algiers, Ahmed ben Ali.[61] However, in order to gain a seaport on the Albanian coast, Ali Pasha had to deal with Venice, which controlled the ports and the Ionian straits. The Venetians had obtained an agreement from the Sublime Porte in 1788 that barred Turkish vessels from accessing these Venetian holdings, as well as banning Ottoman gun emplacements within a mile of the coast. These conditions obstructed trade in Epirus as well as Ali Pasha's ambitions.[62]

Significant geopolitical shifts occurred in the Europe prior to Ali Pasha challenging Venice. The Treaty of Jassy in 1792, which allowed Greeks to sail under the Russian flag, significantly boosted Greek shipping and trade with the Crimea. The French Revolution's influence reached Ali's domain, with the French becoming a powerful force in the area. French consul Esprit-Marie Cousinéry, a supporter of Greek independence, and de Lassale, the consul of Preveza, discussed the possibility of French support in Ali's ambitions. Lassale's mission included securing timber from Epirus for the French Navy, thereby offering arms and ammunition to Ali for subduing Suli and Himara.[62]

By 1797, Venice fell to Napoleon, leading to the Treaty of Campo Formio, in which the Ionian Islands and neighbouring ports were transferred to France. These strategic locations, long coveted by Ali, were now under French control. Ali, using the alias 'Mustafa', allegedly held the governorship of Arta from 1796. The French established garrisons and a naval presence in the region, and were welcomed as liberators in places like Preveza. Napoleon's growing influence and victories inspired many in Europe, including the subjugated populations who saw the French advances as a liberation march. This environment set the stage for Ali Pasha's manoeuvres to strengthen his position, and he formed an alliance with Napoleon I of France, who had established François Pouqueville as his general consul in Ioannina, with the complete consent of the Ottoman Sultan Selim III. The French already had consuls at Arta and Preveza when Ali Pasha unsuccessfully tried to approach Louis XVI as a precautionary guarantee to protect him from his opponents in the Ottoman capital.[63][62]

Likewise, the British government, which opened in 1769 for the first time a consulate in Arta, established a permanent consular representation by 1803 and appointed John Philip Morrier as "General Council in the Morea and Albania", centred in Ali Pasha's capital, Janina. This probably represents the earliest official recognition of the name "Albania" by the British government.[64]

Cooperation with the French edit

 
Portrait of Ali Pasha by J. Cartwright, 1819

Ali Pasha navigated the changing political landscape as the French sought to undermine Venetian influence in the region. Professing animosity towards the Venetian aristocracy, Ali secretly communicated with Napoleon, then in northern Italy, despite the risk of treason as France and the Ottoman Empire edged towards war. The French, eager to counter the power of the Ottomans, assisted Ali in ending the independence of the Himariotes. Ali impressed the French, particularly General Antoine Gentili, with his admiration for Napoleon, and he even arranged a marriage between his alleged illegitimate daughter and a French adjutant general. In a clandestine meeting, Ali sought military assistance and naval access around Corfu.[65]

Influenced by Ali's charm and strategic considerations as well as Himara's ties to the Neapolitan Army opposing Napoleon and the French, Gentili collaborated with Ali in a surprise attack on Nivicë in 1798, a town which at this point was the most prosperous on the coastal littoral Butrint and Vlorë. Gentili ferried Ali's troops through the Ionian straits by night in contravention of the treaty between the Venetians and the Porte. Landing in the bay at Lukovë to the north, Ali's troops outflanked the town, which is situated at the entrance to the narrow valley which leads into Himara from the landward side. Ali's men attacked Nivica and Shën Vasili, the neighbouring village to the north, on Easter Sunday when the inhabitants were at prayer, taking the town and other villages and then reducing them to ruins. They ravaged as far north as Himara itself, and it was said that 6,000 unarmed civilians were slaughtered in the process (some by roasting alive and impalement) whilst the rest of the population were sent to Ali's farms near Trikkala. Their land was then divided up and partitioned for cultivation by Ali's subjects in Saranda. Ali left a small square fortress at Shën Vasili to guard the entrance to Himara and to watch over the remaining population of Nivica. This campaign led to the annexation of Himara, extending Ali's control along the coast to Vlorë.[66]

Concurrently, during the winter of 1797-1798, Ali dealt with regional conflicts at the request of the Ottomans, particularly against the rebel governor Osman Pazvantoğlu who had begun carving out his own polity centred around Vidin in modern Bulgaria. The Ottomans had already dispatched a force of 50,000-100,000 men under Küçük Hüseyin Pasha to crush the rebellion, and they sent for Ali's help. Ali, reluctant to appear subservient to the Sultan particularly in the face of the French, had his subjects in Karpenisi write to the patriarch of Constantinople and inform him that they were in fear of banditry should Ali leave them unprotected. This failed, and Ali was forced to take to the field personally with a force of 20,000 Albanians, leaving Mukhtar in charge in Janina. Despite the eventual failure of the Ottoman campaign once Ali left the Ottoman army and the subsequent pardoning of Pazvantoğlu, Ali Pasha and his Albanians distinguished themselves during the fighting, earning Ali the title "Aslan" (the Lion) from the Porte.[67]

However, Ali Pasha's engagement in this campaign and the French's anger over his actions against their ally Pazvantoğlu strained his relations with France. Ali, in turn, was also disappointed with the failure of French promises of support; aside from pledges of financial and military support, the French had even offered Ali Pasha the crown of Albania once they had taken the Morea, but it became increasingly clear that this was not going to occur. Indeed, British traveller Henry Holland reported in 1815 that during a personal conversation with Ali it apparently emerged that Napoleon, at a certain point, had promised Ali the position of King of Albania, but Holland also remarked that Ali was not convinced by the offer, because he distrusted the French.[63] As such, Ali's alliance with France continued to sour. Upon his return to Janina, Ali felt compelled to align with the Sultan's efforts to expel the French from Epirus, marking a significant shift in his regional allegiances.[67]

Conflict with the French edit

Conquest of Preveza edit

 
Ottoman Albanian horsemen display to French Lieutenant Richemont, a cut-off head of a French soldier during the fall of Preveza in 1798, by Felicien De Myrbach (1894).

In June 1798, as the French advanced their ambitions in Ottoman-controlled Egypt, Ali Pasha was engaged in the siege of Vidin along the Danube. Despite being distant, Ali received reports from his son Mukhtar on the situation in Epirus. These reports detailed subversive activities by the French, particularly their efforts to incite revolt among the Souliotes through the distribution of leaflets and tricolour cockades. Recognizing the potential threat to his rule, Ali obtained special permission from the Sultan to return to Epirus to address these issues whilst maintaining diplomatic communications with the French as he still contemplated a strategic alliance with them. He purportedly offered to join forces with the French in exchange for control over the island of Santa Maura as well as former Venetian territories on the mainland, and the right to station a garrison on Corfu. However, General Louis François Jean Chabot, the commander-in-chief of the French forces on Corfu, rejected this proposal. By September 1798, with the declaration of war between the French and the Ottomans, Ali's stance became clear.[68]

Ali Pasha quickly assembled his forces, although historical accounts differ as to whether Ali secured a commission to confront the French through diplomatic channels in Constantinople or whether the Porte's slow response led Ali to unilaterally mobilize over 20,000 troops against a potential French invasion. Ali did not wait for the French to act and strategically positioned his troops near Butrint, setting a trap for the French. He lured the French adjutant general Rose, who was temporarily in charge at Corfu, to a meeting near Igoumenitsa. Rose, wrongfully believing in Ali's professed allegiance to the French, was taken prisoner, tortured, and sent to Ioannina in chains; the same tactic would be used on the French sub-lieutenant in Butrint.[69]

In October 1798, after securing Butrint and Igoumenitsa, Ali's troops attacked the coastal town of Preveza, which was defended by a small garrison of French soldiers, Souliote fighters, Ionian islanders and local pro-French Greeks.[70] Ali's campaign was made easier by his former enemy, the Albanian chieftain George Botsaris of Souli, who allowed Ali's men passage through Souliote territory in exchange for a payment. The battle itself occurred on the 12th of October as Ali observed from a vantage point above Nicopolis in the same location where Roman Emperor Augustus had watched the Battle of Actium. Ali observed as his son Mukhtar lead a cavalry charge, and the hastily-constructed French defences were soon overwhelmed by Ali's superior forces, which aside from Albanians also included Greeks and Albanian Souliotes. The fall of Preveza was further aided by Metropolitan Ignatios of Arta, an agent of Ali, who effectively weakened the resolve of the Greek defenders through counter-propaganda.[69]

When the town was finally conquered, a major slaughter occurred against the local people as retaliation for their resistance.[70] Ali ordered the execution of 300 Greeks in front of him, and when a number of those who fled returned on the false promise of amnesty, 170 of them were executed. Survivors were marched to Janina bearing the severed and salted heads of their companions, and were subjected to jeers and abuse from the pro-Ottoman populace as they marched at the head of a grand procession organised by Ali Pasha for his victorious troops. The women and young girls were sold into slavery. Notable among the captured French was Louis-Auguste Camus de Richemont, the commander of the French engineers, who was spared due to Mukhtar's admiration for his bravery. Along with other survivors, including the captured French grenadiers and officers, they were sent to Constantinople. There, they were imprisoned in the Yedikule Fortress.[71]

The massacre at Preveza had far-reaching implications, influencing the rise of Greek nationalism and being remembered in songs and literature by figures such as Lord Byron. Preveza was left in ruins as the properties of the Greeks were seized by Ali and redistributed among his Albanians. The surviving population was displaced to the marshlands around the Ambracian Gulf, and the town's population was estimated to have drastically fallen from 16,000 to 3,000 inhabitants. Nonetheless, Ali transformed Preveza into a naval base and one of his favoured residences, earning it the moniker "Portsmouth of Albania."[72]

Corfu and the Ionian Islands edit

 
A posthumous illustration of Ali Pasha of Janina, circa 1824

After the conquest of Preveza, Ali Pasha shifted his focus to Vonica, located across the Ambracian Gulf. This time, the town capitulated without resistance, surrendering after the intervention of Archbishop Ignatios, who acted on Ali's behalf. Ali then focused on Parga, a refuge for those fleeing Turkish rule and a longstanding irritant to Epirus' rulers. Ali extended an offer of autonomy to Parga, which the inhabitants resolutely declined, citing their commitment to liberty and opposition to tyranny. This resistance would become another thorn in Ali's side. Meanwhile, Ali's ambitions extended to Aetolia-Acarnania, southeast of Vonica. His attempts to exert influence there were initially thwarted by the Ottoman government, which granted the region as a royal domain to Mihrişah Valide Sultan, Sultan Selim III's mother. This move forced Ali to retreat from direct confrontation with the Porte, despite his efforts to maintain favourable relations with Mihrişah and her associates.[73]

Ali's territorial aspirations also included Santa Maura, an Ionian island close to the mainland. However, international developments, particularly Napoleon's Egyptian campaign, complicated his plans. After joining the Second Coalition against France, the Ottoman Empire side-lined Ali as a Russian-Turkish fleet moved to capture the Ionian Islands from the French. Ali's attempts to negotiate control of the island were interrupted by the arrival of this fleet. Parga, seizing the opportunity, placed itself under Russian protection, further hindering Ali's territorial ambitions. The Russo-Turkish forces eventually captured Corfu, ending French rule in the Ionian Islands. Ali and his sons contributed to the siege, albeit in a diversionary role, which nonetheless enhanced his reputation, reportedly earning commendation from Admiral Horatio Nelson. In 1800, the Ionian Islands were formed into the Septinsular Republic, a tributary state of the Ottoman Empire, with specific conditions to respect the islands' autonomy and religious freedom. The Russians would eventually place the republic under their de facto military occupation.[74]

Despite the removal of foreign powers from the mainland, Ali faced limitations in exerting direct control over important ports. His attempts to dominate Parga were met with resistance, as the Pargians, aided by the Suliotes, preferred direct dealings with the Porte. This stalemate continued even after the Treaty of Amiens in 1802, which Britain and France briefly endorsed. The resumption of hostilities between Britain and France in 1803 saw Ali reaching out to the British Embassy for guidance, marking the beginning of official British contact with him. Ali's aggressive actions against towns under French influence were rationalized by his hagiographer Haxhi Shehreti as efforts to suppress Greek insurrection on behalf of the Sultan. However, this justification seemed redundant, given that these towns were not under Turkish rule and were embroiled in a war with France, and the situation was further complicated by increasing Greek nationalist sentiment fuelled by French interference.[75]

Other Aspects edit

 
Medallion attributed to Ali Pasha, 1807

In a diplomatic effort to win French and Russian support to get hold of the Venetian possessions on the Ionian Sea in order to build a viable Albanian state, Ali sent in 1807 Mehmed Sherif Effendi as his emissary to the negotiations at the Treaty of Tilsit. The treaty however stipulated the transfer of the Ionian Islands to France, so only Parga remained availale for Ali' demands. As a response, Ali increased the duties on the goods, including wood, grain and livestock, which from his domain were exported to the Ionian Islands.[76] Lord Byron together with John Cam Hobhouse visited Ali's court in Tepelena and Ioannina in 1809.[77] Byron recorded the encounter in his work Childe Harold. They travelled to Albania to see the country that was, until then, mostly unknown in Britain. Byron presented Albanians as a free people who lived in their state under their leader, Ali Pasha, described by Byron as a "man of first abilities who governs the whole of Albania".[78]

In a letter to his mother, Byron deplored Ali's cruelty:[79]

"His Highness is a remorseless tyrant, guilty of the most horrible cruelties, very brave, so good a general that they call him the Mahometan Buonaparte ... but as barbarous as he is successful, roasting rebels, etc, etc.."

Charles Robert Cockerell visited Albania and met Ali Pasha in 1814. Admiring Ali Pasha's governance, Cockerell explained: [80]

"There is law — for everyone admits his impartiality as compared with that of rulers in other parts of Turkey — and there is commerce. He [Ali Pasha] has made roads, fortified the borders, put down brigandage, and raised Albania into a power of some importance in Europe."

Different tales about his sexual proclivities emerged from western visitors to Pasha's court (including Lord Byron, the Baron de Vaudoncourt [fr],[81] and Frederick North, Earl of Guildford). These documenters wrote that he kept a large harem of both women and men. Such accounts may reflect the Orientalist imagination of Europe and underplay the historical role of Pasha rather than telling us anything concrete about his sexuality.[82] Ali Pasha tried to have his homosexual affairs secret from public to avoid disapproval or negative comments by western travelers and diplomats.[83]

 
Ali Pasha and his favorite wife Kira Vassiliki, by Paul Emil Jacobs

Ali Pasha, according to one opinion, "was a cruel and faithless tyrant; still, he was not a Turk, but an Albanian; he was a rebel against the Sultan (Mahmud II), and he was so far an indirect friend of the Sultan's enemies".[84] Throughout his rule he is known to have maintained close relations and corresponded with famous leaders such as Husein Gradaščević, Ibrahim Bushati, Mehmet Ali Pasha and Ibrahim Pasha.[citation needed]

Though certainly no friend to the Greek Nationalists (he had personally ordered the painful execution of the Klepht Katsantonis), his rule brought relative stability. It was only after his forceful deposition that the people of Greece objected to the rule of the Sultan Mahmud II and the newly appointed Hursid Pasha and thus began the Greek War of Independence.

A long epic poem known as the Alipashiad consisting of more than 10,000 lines is dedicated to the exploits of Ali Pasha. The Alipashiad was composed by Haxhi Shekreti, an Albanian Muslim from Delvina and was written entirely in Greek.[85]

Atrocities edit

In 1808, Mühürdar, a commanding Janissary of Ali Pasha, managed to capture one of his most renowned opponents, the Greek klepht Antonis Katsantonis, only after the later became heavily sick.[86] Katsatonis was executed in public by having his bones broken with a sledgehammer.[87] In 1809 Ali captured through treachery the klepht Thymios Vlachavas and had him executed by mutilation. As Pouqueville noted Vlachavas "was suffering under the rays of the hot sun, tied to a stake in the court of the seraglio in Ioannina, his eyes flashing with defiance before suffering the calm death of a hero". In the aftermath Ali's troops destroyed the monastery of Saint Demetrius at Meteora where Vlachavas had sought refuge.[86]

One of Ali's most notorious crimes, without a legal indictment, was the mass murder of 17 or 18 chosen young Greek girls of Ioannina. They were, without a trial, sentenced as adulteresses, tied up in sacks and drowned in Lake Pamvotis.[88] Oral Aromanian tradition (songs) tells about the cruelty of Ali Pasha's troops.[citation needed]

Rebellion and downfall edit

In 1819, Ottoman diplomat Halet Efendi brought the attention of Mahmud II (r. 1808–1839) to issues conspicuously related to Ali Pasha. Efendi accused Ali Pasha of grabbing power and influence in Ottoman Rumelia away from the Sublime Porte. In 1820, Ali Pasha, after long tensions with the Turkish Reforms, allegedly ordered the assassination of Gaskho Bey, a political opponent in Constantinople; Sultan Mahmud II, who sought to restore the authority of the Sublime Porte, took this as a major opportunity to move against Ali Pasha by ordering his immediate deposition.

 
Ali Pasha's head being presented to the Ottoman Sultan Mahmud II
 
Ali Pasha's tomb in Ioannina

Ali Pasha refused to resign his official post and put up a fierce resistance to the Sultan's troop movements as some 20,000 Ottoman troops led by Hursid Pasha were fighting Ali Pasha's small but formidable army. Ali initially mobilised a force of 40,000 but it proved disloyal and dispanded as soon as the advancing Ottomans crossed the border of his realm.[89] Most of his followers abandoned him without fighting and fled, including Androutsos and his sons Veli and Muhtar, or else joined the Ottoman army. Among these were Omer Vrioni and Alexis Noutsos, who went unopposed to Ioannina, which was besieged in August 1820.

On December 4, 1820, Ali Pasha and the Souliotes formed an anti-Ottoman coalition, to which the Souliotes contributed 3,000 soldiers. Ali Pasha gained the support of the Souliotes mainly because he offered to allow the return of the Souliotes to their land, and partly by appeal to their perceived Albanian origin.[90] Initially, the coalition was successful and managed to control most of the region, but when the Muslim Albanian troops of Ali Pasha were informed of the beginning of the Greek revolts in the Morea, it was terminated.[91]

Ali's rebellion against the Sublime Porte increased the value of the Greek military element since their services were sought by the Porte as well. He is said to have contracted the services of the Klephts and Souliots in exile in the Ionian Islands as well as the armatoles under his command.[92] However he feared that the Klephts might rout him before the arrival of the Ottoman Turks.

His separatist actions constitute a great example of the institutional corruption and dividing trends prevailing in the Ottoman Empire at the time. His effort to become an independent ruler finally caused the reaction of the Sublime Porte, which sent an army led by Hurshid Pasha against him in March 1821, which surrounded him in Ioannina.[93] During the following summer a short-lived coalition with Greek revolutionary forces had effectively checked the power of Sultan's armies and threatened Khursid Pasha's rear.[94]

By the end of 1821 after about two years of fighting, with most of his men having deserted him Ali retreated with Kyra Vassiliki and 70 guards to the citadel in the north eastern corner of Ioannina Castle.[94] By October the war of attrition had taken its toll and starved Ali in burnt Ioannina of supplies.[95] He had his men place barrels of gunpowder in the basement should it become necessary to blow up the citadel. Ali Pasha accepted a request from the Ottomans to enter into negotiations, in which he demanded that he be allowed to see the Sultan in person. Hurshid Pasha promised to pass on his request to the Sultan and in the interim issued Ali with a safe pass signed by himself and the other pashas in the army. Hurshid Pasha also sent Ali a fake imperial firman (decree), instructing him to leave the citadel while his request for a full pardon was considered.[94] Ali accepted probably thinking that he could convince the Sultan that he is still needed in the fight against the Greeks.[96]

Death edit

Despite a feeling that he was being deceived Ali agreed to a truce and left the citadel with his wife, entourage and bodyguards and settled in the Monastery of St Panteleimon on the island in Lake Pamvotis, previously taken by the Ottoman army during the siege. A few weeks later he was visited by a group of pashas and senior officials. He suspected a trap but the meeting passed without incident. A few days later on January 24, 1822[93] the Ottoman's boats returned from which a senior official called Kiose Mehmed Pasha, disembarked, claiming that he had in his possession the Sultan's firman for his execution. Ali told him to stay back until he had read the document, but the pasha ignored him and called for him to comply.[94] Ali pulled out his pistol and fired at him, the Pasha returned fire while Kaftan Agas, Hurshid's chief of his staff, managed to wound Ali in the arm with his sword.[93] Ali's bodyguards rushed to protect him and managed to pull him into the building. The resulting gunfight only ending when Ali was mortally wounded in the abdomen by a bullet.[93] This caused his men to surrender. Ali was then beheaded. His last request to his chief bodyguard Thanasis Vagias was for his wife Kyra to be killed in order to prevent her falling into the hands of his enemies, but this was ignored.[93]

Hurshid Pasha, to whom it was presented on a large dish of silver plate, rose to receive it, bowed three times before it, and respectfully kissed the beard, expressing aloud his wish that he himself might deserve a similar end. To such an extent did the admiration with which Ali's bravery inspired these men to efface the memory of his crimes.[citation needed]

Ali's head was wrapped in a cloth, put on a silver platter and displayed though the streets and the homes of the notables of Ioannina to prove that the Ali was dead. The local archbishop was having dinner with friends when Hurshid's bodyguards forced their way into the room and desposited the head on the dinner table and demanded money. After saying a prayer for Ali, the archbishop handed over a bag of gold coins. Ali Pasha's headless corpse was buried with full honors in a mausoleum next to the Fethiye Mosque, which he shares with one of his wives. His head was meanwhile sent to Constantinople where was displayed to the public on a revolving platter in a courtyard of the Sultan's palace. When the Sultan subsequently had Ali's three sons and grandson executed, Ali's head was buried with them in tombs outside the Selvyria gate in Constantinople.[94]

Religion edit

Ali Pasha was born into a Bektashi Muslim family.[97] The struggle for power and the political turmoils within the empire required for him to support non-Muslim or heterodox priests, beliefs, and orders,[98] and especially the Orthodox Christian population which formed the majority of the population in the region he ruled.[99][full citation needed]

Ali fostered religious activities by the local Greek population.[100] One of the spiritual figures which influenced him was Saint Cosmas. Ali ordered and supervised the construction of a monastery dedicated to him near Berat.[98][101] Ali Pasha maintained control over the Christian population but respected the monasteries and stayed on good terms with the upper clergy.[102]

He strongly supported the Sufi orders, well-spread in Rumelia at the time. Ali was close to the dominant Sufi orders as the Naqshbandi, Halveti, Sâdîyye, or even Alevi.[98] Specifically the famous Sufi shrines in Yanina and Parga were Naqshbandi.[103] The order that was mostly supported by him was the Bektashis and he is accepted today to have been a Bektashi follower, initiated by Baba Shemin of Fushë-Krujë.[104] Through his patronage, Bektashism spread in Thessaly, Epirus, South Albania, and in Kruja.[103][105][106][107][108] Ali's tomb headstone was capped by the crown (taj) of the Bektashi order.[109] Nasibi Tahir Babai, a Bektashi saint, is regarded as one of three spiritual advisers of Ali Pasha.[110]

Influences edit

On Albanians edit

 
Postage stamp of Albania commemorating the 250th anniversary of Ali's birth

Albanian autonomy edit

Ali Pasha was among those Albanian military leaders who were at first awarded for their loyalty to the Ottoman Empire, and who however exploited the weakness of the Sublime Porte to exercise in northern and southern Albania their gathered military and political power. While they are clearly not described as champions of national fight aiming at an independent and united Albania, but regarded as political opportunists within the context of the Ottomam Empire, nevertheless these Albanian rulers established separate states by challenging the authority of the Sublime Porte, and Ali in particular also established foreign diplomatic relations with Napoleonic France and with Britain.[111] British travellers who had met Ali Pasha noted that Ali described himself and the Albanians as friends of the British nation. Furthermore Albanians were seen as living independently and without oppression by the Porte, meanwhile Ali Pasha was aiming to form some kind of alliance with the British government.[112] Ali's separatist initiative, by conceiving his territory in increasingly independent terms referring to it as "Albania",[113] eventually aiming at creating an independent Albanian–Greek state, revealed the vulnerability of Ottoman power.[114] The Albanian rule of the Pashalik of Yanina as well as that of the Pashalik of Scutari caused the emergence of a sense of ethnic belonging among the Albanian people, which consequently led to an enduring hostility of Albanians against the Sublime Porte, also by seeking autonomy from its central power.[115]

Ismail Qemali (1833-1919), the first head of the Albanian state, stated that in the case of Ali Pasha there was a sense of wasted opportunity: "If Ali Pasha had been less a man of his time and better endowed with political forethought, he would himself have organized this coup in time, and Albania and Greece, with the whole of Thessaly and Macedonia, might have become an independent State and a kingdom of great importance."[116]

Albanian culture edit

 
Ali Pacha's seraglio and tomb, fortress, Janina, by George de la Poer Beresford, published in 1855[117][57][58]

Albanian urban songs were performed in the outer courtyards of the Albanian pashaliks, including that of Ali Pasha. It has been suggested that the Albanian Korçare songs emerged in Ali pasha's seraglio in Ioannina, and that they were probably composed by Muço, Ali's court musician.[118]

According to Pouqueville, Albanian tribal forms of social organizations disappeared with the dominion of Ali Pasha, and definitely ended in 1813.[119] In the Pashalik of Yanina, in addition to the Sharia for Muslims and Canon for Christians, Ali Pasha enforced his own laws, allowing only in rare cases the usage of local Albanian tribal customary laws. After annexing Suli and Himara into his semi-independent state in 1798, he tried to organize the judiciary in every city and province according to the principle of social equality, enforcing his laws for the entire population, Muslims and Christians. To limit blood feud killings, Ali Pasha replaced blood feuds (Alb. gjakmarrje) with other punishments such as blood payment or expulsion or the death penalty.[120] Ali Pasha also reached an agreement with the Kurveleshi population not to trespass their territories, which at that time were larger than the area they inhabit today.[121] Continually since the 18th century, blood feuds and their consequences in Labëria have been limited principally by the councils of elders.[120]

Albanian nationalism edit

Ali Pasha has been regarded by Albanian nationalists in subsequent times as a national hero who rose against Ottoman rule.[122] Although Ali Pasha's intent was not to build a nation state, the legacy left behind by him was utilized by the Albanian elite to construct their nationalist platform. After Ali Pasha's death the base of Albanian nationalist activities and uprisings against the Ottoman Empire became northern Albania and Kosovo.[123]

On Greeks edit

Modern Greek Enlightenment edit

 
A Firman issued by Ali Pasha in 1810, written in vernacular Greek. Ali always used Greek for all his courtly dealings.[124]

Although Ali Pasha's native language was Albanian he used Greek for all his courtly dealings,[124] with the effect of linking, although inchoately, the ruling class with the predominantly Greek-speaking population of the territories where Ali's rule stretched.[125] As a consequence, a part of the local Greek population showed sympathy towards his rule.[124] This also activated new educational opportunities, with businessmen of the Greek diaspora, subsidizing a number of new educational purposes.[125]

Ioannina, was among the Greek cities that had already embraced the Age of Enlightenment.[126] Education in Ioannina and its schools became renowned throughout the Greek world. Those schools were operating by prestigious staff among them philologist Athanasios Psalidas, major contributor to the modern Greek Enlightenment and Georgios Sakellarios. Ioannis Kolettis served as Ali's son Muchtar personal physician and composed several scientific works. As such an academic elite emerged which also included members of Ali's court. Many of these personalities took later prominent roles in the Greek War of Independence.[127]

Greek War of Independence edit

Revolutionary preparations and Ali Pasha edit

Ali Pasha did not sympathize with Greek rebels. He campaigned in Macedonia to exterminate the klephts and armatoles of the region in 1805, eventually managing to reduce substantially their numbers. Intense anti-Ottoman guerriglia actions arose in Macedonia during the Russo–Turkish War in 1806–1812, which caused heavy losses of Ali's Albanians against an army of armatoles and klephts at the Battle of Klinovo.[128] The inhabitants of Parga displayed continuous support for Greek revolutionary activities and cooperated with the inhabitants of Souli against Ali Pasha.[129] Coastal towns that were under French control, such as Parga and Preveza, were a source of increasing Greek nationalist sentiment enouraged through French interference.[130]

In the context of the Greek War of Independence the idea of cooperation with Ali Pasha was not new among the Greeks. Leading officials of the Filiki Eteria were considering a possible conversion of Ali to Christianity and the outbreak of the revolution under his direction. Ali's policy of exlcuding Turks from all positions of authority and replacing them with Greeks and Albanians had led many Greek advisors and military leaders that consider him of becoming the head of a Greek–Albanian kingdom.[131] However, when Ali heard of the outbreak of the Greek revolt, and sent Alexis Noutsos to propose a collaboration between Albanians and Greeks with the aim at establishing an Albanian–Greek state under the sovereignty of Ali Pasha, the Greeks refused Ali's proposal and Noutsos joined the Greek revolutionaries.[132][133] Greek captains would sign in September 1821 a more limited agreement with Ali, but it was based on obvious mutual suspicion. Albanian agents advised Ali against an alliance with the Greeks because they were militarily useless. Their conclusion about the military ineffectiveness of the Greeks and klephts turned out to be true in subsequent events in the Macedonian front.[133]

Revolutionary preparations in Epirus edit

The Filiki Etairia already had expanded widely in 1820 at the time when Ali Pasha was found in open conflict with the Sultan.[134] Its leadership decided that the conditions for the outbreak of the revolution were ideal since the conflict between Ali Pasha and the Sultan caused great unrest in Epirus, west central Greece, west Macedonia and part of Thessaly. The Filiki Eteria exploited the specific conflict in order to gain the return of the Souliotes to Epirus and as a result to have Ottoman units removed from southern Greece and especially from the Peloponnese.[135]

However, in Epirus the revolutionary outbreak was complex and difficult due to the concentration of Ottoman troops. Members of the Filiki Eteria, such as Ioannis Paparigopoulos, the Russian consul of Patras, convinced Ali that Russia would support him.[136] The return of the exiled Souliotes to their homeland in Souli in December 1820 contributed to the creation of a revolutionary center in Epirus a fact that supported the developments for the upcoming Greek revolution in southern Greece.[137] The collusions of Souliotes and Muslim Albanians for the defense of Ali Pasha, which led to a written agreement in January 15, and 1821 were in accordance with the positions of Alexandros Ypsilantis for the preparation of the Greek revolution.[137] Ali Pasha's cause was supported by Souliotes because Ali promised their return to Souli, and partly by appeal to their shared Albanian origins.[138]

Coordinated "Greek–Albanian" operations edit

Alexandros Ypsilantis anticipated that Ali would provide resistance against the Sultan's troops in Epirus.[136] On January 29, 1821, Ypsilantis ordered that Greek forces should be dispatched to Epirus to join those of Ali Pasha, temporarily and ostensibly, until they managed to defeat the Ottomans there.[136] In late March-early April 1821 Christoforos Perraivos under order by Ypsilantis urged the Souliotes to maintain their alliance with Ali Pasha, but to ignore the military priorities of the latter and concentrate to armed operations that would facilitate the spread of the revolutionary movement in Epirus.[139] Perraivos also emphasized only to the prominent Souliots the objectives of the nation due to risk of being leaked to the Muslim Albanians since that would make the later to abandon any agreement.[137]

A failure in the sector of Tzoumerka thwarted the plans of the Greek revolutionaries and Ali, however their operational capabilities in the area had not been diminished.[140] The revolutionaries of the area of Arta under Gogos Bakolas resisted the Ottoman advance at Peta on July 15.[140] Communication between the Souliote units with troops loyal to Ali Pasha as well as revolutionary leaders from Arta and Acarnania continued. Their alliance was ratified on September 1, 1821. Alexios Noutsos played a key role in this developments while the Greek revolutionary authorities of Acarnania, Aetolia and Morea agreed despite the distrust towards Ali Pasha.[140] In the beginning of September, the regional alliance reached its climax, involving Muslim Albanian beys, Souliote chieftains and Greek armatoles, who pledged to defend Ali Pasha's rebellion against the Ottoman army.[141][138] Greek singnatories evidently had not real intention to fight for Ali Pasha's cause, they rather agreed merely to exploit the opportunity this alliance offered them.[141]

The immediate objective of the alliance was the capture of Arta, which was at that time under Ottoman control.[141][140] Roughly four thousand armed men gathered to besiege Arta.[140] The city was attacked by both Muslims and Christians, Albanians and Greeks who had united their forces to pillage the city, where an indiscriminate looting of churches, mosques, shops and stores was perpetrated.[141] The lootings during the siege Arta were especially perpetrated by groups of Souliotes and Acarnanians.[142] Ottoman troops did not intervene because they knew they were not the target. During this event some of the Greek bands plundered the homes of Christians and stole their possessions, even torturing people in boiling oil in order to extort information regarding the hiding places of their valuable belongings.[141]

At the beginning of December 1821 the allied forces managed to capture a greater part of the city, however, instead of concentrating on the fall of the garrison they turned into widespread looting and the siege was weakened and finally ceased.[140]

Termination of common operations edit

Around the same time, during the Ottoman siege of Ali Pasha's forces in Ioannina, Muslim Albanian leaders were being informed about events in the Morea, which led them to start doubting about the allegiance of their Greeks allies. Indeed, visiting Mesolonghi in October to see the Greek actions, Tahir Abaxhi, a Muslim Albanian warlord and especially trusted man of Ali Pasha formerly serving as chief of Ali's police troops, noticed that many Greeks were no longer fighting for Ali's cause, as after Mesolonghi had declared for the revolution, the remaining Muslims were massacred, expelled, or enslaved. The local Greek armatole Dimitrios Makris had even ordered mass killing. Mosques were razed to the ground and desecrated, and Muslim gils were forcibly baptized. The disprespect of the alliance by the Greeks became even more clear when Elmaz Bey informed Abaxhi that on their way home from Tripolitsa, they found out that Greeks have strungled some of his soldiers. Hence, after all the evidence, Muslim Albanian leaders eventually broke with Christian Souliotes.[141][142]

Abaxhi and other Muslim Albanian military personalities that had been previously loyal to Ali Pasha approached the Ottoman commander, Khursid Pasha, asking for and receiving his pardon, promising to support him to kill Ali Pasha and drive out the Greek revolutionaries.[143]

This so-called Greek-Albanian alliance was finally dissolved and the Muslim allies of Ali Pasha as well as the warlords (oplarhichoi) of Acarnania switched sides and came to the Sultan's camp. As a consequence Ali Pasha's resistance had been broken and the fortress of Ioannina was captured easily in December 1821.[144]

Greek nationalism edit

Ali's separatist initiative, by conceiving his territory in increasingly independent terms referring to it as "Albania",[113] and eventually aiming at creating an independent Albanian-Greek state, reveal the vulnerability of Ottoman power and had direct effect on the development of Greek nationalism.[114] Though his subject population was by vast majority Greek and noted for their nationalist sentiment there is little evidence that Ali conceived of his desire for independence in such terms.[145] However, he believed that he could make use of the local Greek national sentiment to strengthen his own power and separatist tendencies.[146]

Legacy edit

 
Ali Pasha Castle in Butrint, Albania

Albania's rich archaeological heritage has been systematically explored since Ali's rule in the early 19th century. The excavations were conducted in order to find treasures for Ali's personal collection. Systematic investigations of the archaeological sites and monuments of the region have been undertaken by French consul-general François Pouqueville and British diplomat-colonel William Martin Leake, who were both introduced in Ali's court.[147]

Pouqoueville composed his Histoire were he introduced a lengthy account of Ali Pasha. It is based on personal acquaintance and multiple conversations with Ali and several other personalities associated with him. Pouqueville in this work pointed out that Ali's rule and rebellion against the Porte was a vital precondition for the Greek Revolution. While in no way a Greek Nationalist himself, Ali's rule greatly weakened Ottoman control of Greece, and his death created a vacuum which was promptly filled by the Greek revolutionaries.[148]

The former monastery in which Ali Pasha was killed is today a popular tourist attraction. The holes made by the bullets can still be seen, and the monastery has dedicated to him a museum, which includes a number of his personal possessions.[149]

A legend of Ali Pasha's supposed hidden treasure remained unresolved.[150]

 
Ismail Bey and Mehmed Pasha, the sons of Veli Pasha and grandsons of Ali Pasha, by Louis Dupré (1827)

All three of Ali's sons were killed during his downfall but most of his grandchildren were not persecuted by the Ottoman state as they were too young at that time. His grandson Tepedelenlizade Ismail Rahmi Pasha (son of Veli Pasha) had a long career in the Ottoman administration and held twice the governorship of the areas which were ruled by Ali Pasha. He was made governor of the Janina vilayet in 1850 and governor of the Thessaly Eyalet in 1864. He also was Mutasarrif of Prizren (1868–1869) and for a brief period governor of Crete.[151]

Ali Pasha in literature edit

 
Ali Pasha's mace, now at the National Historical Museum of Athens

According to the Encyclopedia of Islam, in Western literature, Ali Pasha became the personification of an "oriental despot".[1]

In the early 19th century, Ali's personal balladeer, Haxhi Shekreti,[152] composed the poem Alipashiad. The poem was written in Greek language, since the author considered it a more prestigious language in which to praise his master.[153] Alipashiad bears the unusual feature of being written from the Muslim point of view of that time.[154] It stretches to 15,000 15-syllable lines was written by his personal balladeer.[150]

Ali is the title character of the 1828 German singspiel Ali Pascha von Janina by Albert Lortzing.

Ali Pasha's deeds have inspired numerous Greek poems and plays where he is primarily portrayed as cruel tyrant. Events like the sacking and drowning of women – including Euphrosyne Vasileiou – by Ali's orders in Ioannina became the main theme of poet Aristotelis Valaoritis. The poem The drowning of Frosyne Nikolaos Mavrommatis (1770–1817) was also dedicated to the same theme, as well as the theatrical play Eufrosyne (1876). Other works describe the scorched earth policy Ali undertook in Ioannina and the burning of the city.[150]

In the novel The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, père, Ali Pasha's downfall is revealed to have been brought about by French Army officer Fernand Mondego. Unaware of Mondego's collusion with the Sultan's forces, Pasha is described as having entrusted his wife, Kyra Vassiliki, and daughter, Haydée, to Mondego, who sells them into slavery. Mondego then personally murders Ali Pasha and returns to France with a fortune. The novel's protagonist, Edmond Dantés, subsequently locates Haydée, buys her freedom, and helps her avenge her parents by testifying at Mondego's court martial in Paris. Mondego, who is found guilty of "felony, treason, and dishonor", is abandoned by his wife and son and later commits suicide.

Alexandre Dumas, père wrote a history, Ali Pacha, part of his eight-volume series Celebrated Crimes (1839–40).

Ali Pasha is also a major character in the 1854 Mór Jókai's Hungarian novel Janicsárok végnapjai ("The Last Days of the Janissaries"), translated into English by R. Nisbet Bain, 1897, under the title The Lion of Janina.

Ali Pasha and Hursid Pasha are the main characters in Ismail Kadare's historic novel The Traitor's Niche (original title Kamarja e turpit).

Ali Pasha provokes the bey Mustapha (a fictional character) in Patrick O'Brian's 1981 The Ionian Mission to come out fighting on his own account, when the British navy is in the area seeking an ally to push the French off Corfu. The Turkish expert for the British Navy visits him to learn this tangled story, which puts Captain Aubrey out to sea to take Mustapha in battle.

Many of the conflicting versions about the origin of the "Spoonmaker's Diamond", a major treasure of the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul, link it with Ali Pasha – though their historical authenticity is doubtful. [citation needed]

Loretta Chase's 1992 historical romance novel The Lion's Daughter includes Ali Pasha and a possible revolt against him by a cousin, Ismal.

The best selling graphic novel Sons of Chaos written by Chris Jaymes published in the US by Penguin Random House in 2019 and in Greece by Kaktos Publishing in 2021 surrounds the story of Ali Pasha and his relationship with the Suliotes.[155][156]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Clayer 2014.
  2. ^ Tanner 2014, p. 21: "That the word 'Albania' was known at all to the English-speaking public in the early nineteenth century was largely down to Byron, who passed through on his first expedition to Greece, aged 21. After reaching Patras in September 1809, he made a detour lasting several weeks to Ioannina, which now lies in Greece but was then considered the de facto capital of south-ern Albania, the honour normally being accorded to Shkodra in the north. He also visited Tepelena, which, alongside Ioannina, was the headquarters of the notorious warlord, Ali Pasha. He then returned to Patras and continued to Athens."
  3. ^ Fleming 2014, p. 116.
  4. ^ Fleming 2014, p. 112–113: "Ali assured Leake that were "Albania" (which, by Ali's figuring, included sizable portions of Greek Epiros, Thrace, and Macedonia) attacked, he would not hesitate in taking military action against the French."
  5. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 5, 2020. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
  6. ^ Sellheim, R. (1992). Oriens. BRILL. p. 303. ISBN 978-90-04-09651-6. Retrieved October 21, 2010.
  7. ^ a b Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 113–114.
  8. ^ a b c H. T. Norris (1993). Islam in the Balkans: Religion and Society Between Europe and the Arab World. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. pp. 231–. ISBN 978-1-85065-167-3.
  9. ^ Koçi, Dorian (September 26, 2018). "Pse e rrënoi Ali Pashë Tepelena, Hormovën?" (in Albanian). Retrieved October 5, 2022.
  10. ^ Fleming 1999, p. 60.
  11. ^ Ahmet Uzun. Ο Αλή Πασάς ο Τεπελενλής και η περιουσία του.. [Ali Pasha from Tepeleni and his fortune] (Greek), p. 3: "Εξαιτίας της μοναδικότητας του ονόματος μιας οικογένειας που μετανάστευσε από την Ανατολία στη Ρούμελη και εγκαταστάθηκε στο Τεπελένι, υπάρχουν ισχυρισμοί που τον θέλουν Τούρκο. Εντούτοις οι ισχυρισμοί αυτοί είναι αβάσιμοι αφού στην πραγματικότητα είναι αποδεδειγμένο ότι καταγόταν από τη νότια Αλβανία." [Because of the uniqueness of the name of a family which emigrated from Anatolia to Rumelia and settled in Qendër Tepelenë, there are claims that he was a Turk. However, these claims are unfounded since, in reality, it is proven that he came from southern Albania.]
  12. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, p. 115.
  13. ^ a b c d Robert Elsie (December 24, 2012). A Biographical Dictionary of Albanian History. I. B. Tauris. pp. 7–8. ISBN 978-1-78076-431-3.
  14. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 119–123.
  15. ^ Malcolm, Noel (2020). Rebels, believers, survivors: studies in the history of the Albanians (1st ed.). Oxford (GB): Oxford University Press. p. 218. ISBN 9780198857297.
  16. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 122, 140.
  17. ^ Elsie, Robert (ed.). "1813 Thomas Smart Hughes: Travels in Albania". albanianhistory.net.
  18. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 122–123.
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  20. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 123–125.
  21. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 127–128.
  22. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 128–129.
  23. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 129–130.
  24. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 130–131.
  25. ^ a b Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 131–132.
  26. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 133–134.
  27. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 134–138.
  28. ^ a b Elevating and Safeguarding Culture Using Tools of the Information Society: Dusty traces of the Muslim culture. Ioannina, Greece: Earthlab. p. 337. ISBN 978-960-233-187-3.
  29. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 137–139.
  30. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 139–140.
  31. ^ a b Historia e Popullit Shqipetar. Tirana, Albania: Shtepia Botuese Toena. 2002.
  32. ^ Studime Historike. Vol. 41. Instituti i Historisë, Universiteti Shtetëror i Tiranës. 1987. p. 140. Retrieved August 17, 2010.
  33. ^ Fleming 2014, pp. 157–158.
  34. ^ Fleming 2014, p. 40–41.
  35. ^ Howard 2017, p. 234.
  36. ^ Findley, Carter V. (2012). Modern Türkiye Tarihi İslam, Milliyetçilik ve Modernlik 1789–2007. İstanbul: Timaş Yayınları. p. 30. ISBN 978-605-114-693-5.
  37. ^ Fleming 2014, p. 171.
  38. ^ Sakellariou 1997, pp. 250–251.
  39. ^ Fleming, K.E. (2021). "Armatoloi". In Speake, Graham (ed.). Encyclopedia of Greece and the Hellenic Tradition. Routledge. pp. 169–170. ISBN 978-1-135-94206-9.
  40. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 141–142.
  41. ^ a b Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 142–143.
  42. ^ a b c Winnifrith 1987, p. 130.
  43. ^ Zeana, Corneliu (2021). Boldea, Iulian (ed.). "The Aromanians, a distinct Balkan ethnicity" (PDF). The Shades of Globalisation. Identity and Dialogue in an Intercultural World (in Romanian). Arhipelag XXI Publishing House: 39–44. ISBN 978-606-93691-3-5.
  44. ^ a b Kaser, Karl (1992). Hirten, Kämpfer, Stammeshelden: Ursprünge und Gegenwart des balkanischen Patriarchats (in German). Böhlau Verlag Wien. p. 368. ISBN 978-3-205-05545-7. Die Herrschaft des Ali Pasa ... Hunderte oder far Tausende von Vlachen- und Sarakatsanenfamilien fluchteten in entfernte Gebiete, um ihre Freiheit zu retten.
  45. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 146–147.
  46. ^ Pappas 1982, p. 253: "Ali immediately ordered an all out attack on Souli in July 1792 with... The Souliotes accepted negotiations and presented the terms which included: the exchange of hostaged Souliotes for prisoners taken from among Ali's troops, the return of all Parasouliote villages to the Souliote confederation"
  47. ^ Psimuli 2016, p. 410.
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  49. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 152.
  50. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 152–153.
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  52. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 154.
  53. ^ a b c d Fleming 2014, p. 63.
  54. ^ a b Russell & Russell 2017, p. 253.
  55. ^ Fleming 2014, p. 60.
  56. ^ "Janina, Albania (subsequently Greece): the audience chamber of Ali Pasha. Colour lithograph after G.D. Beresford, 1855". Artstor. JSTOR 24792656.
  57. ^ a b de la Poer Beresford, George (1855). Twelve Sketches in Double-tinted Lithography of Scenes in Southern Albania. London: Day and Son.
  58. ^ a b Hernandez, David R. (2019). "The Abandonment of Butrint: From Venetian Enclave to Ottoman Backwater". Hesperia. 88 (2): 365–419. doi:10.2972/hesperia.88.2.0365. S2CID 197957591. p. 408: "George de la Poer Beresford published 12 double-tinted lithographs of scenes from southern Albania in 1855.214"
  59. ^ Prokopiu, Geōrgios A. (2019). Archontika tēs Kozanēs: architektonikē kai Xyloglypta (PDF). Athens: Benaki Museum. p. 13. ISBN 978-960-476-261-3. Εικ. 11. Η αίθουσα των ακροάσεων του Αλή-Πασά στα Γιάννενα (περί το 1800).
  60. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 154–155.
  61. ^ Phillips, Walter Alison (1911). "Ali Pasha" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 659–661.
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  64. ^ Dauti 2018, p. 28.
  65. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 157–159.
  66. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 159–160.
  67. ^ a b Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 159–161.
  68. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 161.
  69. ^ a b Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 161–162.
  70. ^ a b Fleming 1999, p. 99.
  71. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 163–164.
  72. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 164–165.
  73. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 168–169.
  74. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 169–170.
  75. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 170–171.
  76. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 223–224.
  77. ^ Lord Byron's Correspondence; John Murray, editor.
  78. ^ Dauti 2018, pp. 29–30, 35.
  79. ^ Rowland E. Prothero, ed., The Works of Lord Byron: Letters and Journals, Vol. 1, 1898, "mahometan+buonaparte"&pg=PA252 p. 252 (letter dated Prevesa, 12 November 1809)
  80. ^ Dauti 2018, p. 37.
  81. ^ Vaudoncourt, Guillaume de Memoirs on the Ionian Islands ... : including the life and character of Ali Pasha. London: Baldwin, Cradock and Joy, 1816
  82. ^ Murray, Stephen O. & Roscoe, Will (1997) Islamic Homosexualities: culture, history, and literature, NYU Press, p. 189
  83. ^ Singh, Jyotsna G.; Kim, David D. (October 4, 2016). The Postcolonial World. Routledge. p. 75. ISBN 978-1-315-29767-5.
  84. ^ The Ottoman Power in Europe by Edward Augustus Freeman
  85. ^ Wace A.J.B. and Thompson M. S. (1914) The nomads of the Balkans: An account of life and customs among the Vlachs of Northern Pindus, Methuen & Co., Ltd., p. 192.
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  93. ^ a b c d e "Pre-Revolution". Paul Vrellis Greek History Museum. 2021. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  94. ^ a b c d e Mazower, 2021, p. 119–120
  95. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 228.
  96. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, pp. 229.
  97. ^ Fleming 1999, p. 32.
  98. ^ a b c Pierre Savard, Brunello Vigezzi (Commission of History of International Relations) (1999), Le Multiculturalisme Et L'histoire Des Relations Internationales Du XVIIIe Siècle À Nos Jours, Milano: Edizioni Unicopli, p. 68, ISBN 9788840005355, OCLC 43280624, Tepedelenli Ali Pasa, governor of Yanya (Yannina) who was an Alevi-Bektashi and who also had great love for the Saint.
  99. ^ Fleming (1992): 66
  100. ^ Clark, Bruce (January 4, 2022). Athens: City of Wisdom. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-64313-876-3. His native language was Albanian but the language of his court was Greek, and he fostered the educational and religious activities of the Greeks.
  101. ^ Geōrgios K. Giakoumēs; Grēgorēs Vlassas; D. A. Hardy (1996), Monuments of Orthodoxy in Albania, Athens: Doukas School, p. 68, ISBN 9789607203090, OCLC 41487098, KOLIKONTASI Monastery....thirty-four years after his tragic end, on the orders of 'his highness the Vizier Ali Pasha from Tepeleni'
  102. ^ Konstantinos, Giakoumis (2002). The monasteries of Jorgucat and Vanishte in Dropull and of Spelaio in Lunxheri as monuments and institutions during the Ottoman period in Albania (16th–19th centuries) (Doctor of Philosophy). University of Birmingham. p. 49. Retrieved July 8, 2018. Ali Pasha dealt... Pasha of Ioannina
  103. ^ a b Natalie Clayer (2002), "III", in Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers; Bernd Jürgen Fischer (eds.), Albanian Identities: Myth and History, Indiana University Press, p. 130, ISBN 9780253341891, OCLC 49663291, ...he seemed to have been closer to the Sadiyye, the Halvetiyye or even the Nakshibendiyye (the tekke of Parga was Nakshibendi, as well as a well-kbown tekke of Ioannina)....
    Ali Pasha was considered to be 'responsible for the propagation of Bektashism' in Thessaly, in South Albania and in Kruja...
  104. ^ Miranda Vickers (1999), The Albanians: A Modern History, London: I.B. Tauris, p. 22, ISBN 9781441645005, Around that time, Ali was converted to Bektashism by Baba Shemin of Kruja...
  105. ^ Robert Elsie (2004), Historical Dictionary of Albania, European historical dictionaries, Scarecrow Press, p. 40, ISBN 9780810848726, OCLC 52347600, Most of the Southern Albania and Epirus converted to Bektashism, initially under the influence of Ali Pasha Tepelena, "the Lion of Janina", who was himself a follower of the order.
  106. ^ Vassilis Nitsiakos (2010), On the Border: Transborder Mobility, Ethnic Groups and Boundaries along the Albanian-Greek Frontier (Balkan Border Crossings- Contributions to Balkan Ethnography), Berlin: Lit, p. 216, ISBN 9783643107930, OCLC 705271971, Bektashism was widespread during the reign of Ali Pasha, a Bektashi himself,...
  107. ^ Gerlachlus Duijzings (2010), Religion and the Politics of Identity in Kosovo, New York: Columbia University Press, p. 82, ISBN 9780231120982, OCLC 43513230, The most illustrious among them was Ali Pasha (1740–1822), who exploited the organisation and religious doctrine...
  108. ^ Stavro Skendi (1980), Balkan Cultural Studies, East European monographs, Boulder, p. 161, ISBN 9780914710660, OCLC 7058414, The great expandion of Bektashism in southern Albania took place during the time of Ali Pasha Tepelena, who is believed to have been a Bektashi himself
  109. ^ H.T.Norris (2006), Popular Sufism in Eastern Europe: Sufi Brotherhoods and the Dialogue with Christianity and 'Heterodoxy', Routledge Sufi series, Routledge, p. 79, ISBN 9780203961223, OCLC 85481562, ...and the tomb of Ali himself. Its headstone was capped by the crown (taj) of the Bektashi order.
  110. ^ H.T.Norris (1993), Islam in the Balkans: Religion and Society Between Europe and the Arab World, University of South Carolina Press, pp. 73, 76, 162, ISBN 9780872499775, OCLC 28067651
  111. ^ Brisku 2013, p. 23.
  112. ^ Dauti 2023, p. 16.
  113. ^ a b Fleming 2014, p. 116; pp. 112–113: "Ali assured Leake that were "Albania" (which, by Ali's figuring, included sizable portions of Greek Epiros, Thrace, and Macedonia) attacked, he would not hesitate in taking military action against the French."
  114. ^ a b Fauré, Christine (June 2, 2004). Political and Historical Encyclopedia of Women. Routledge. p. 235. ISBN 978-1-135-45691-7.
  115. ^ Dauti 2018, p. 32.
  116. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, p. 231.
  117. ^ Beresford, G. de la Poer. "Janina, Albania (subsequently Greece): the seraglio and tomb of Ali Pasha. Colour lithograph after G.D. Beresford, 1855". Artstor.
  118. ^ Koço 2018, pp. 6–7.
  119. ^ Valentini 1956, pp. 102, 103.
  120. ^ a b Elezi, Ismet (2006). "Zhvillimi historik i Kanunit të Labërisë". Kanuni i Labërisë (in Albanian). Tirana: Botimet Toena.
  121. ^ Mangalakova 2004, p. 7.
  122. ^ Yaycioglu 2016, p. 112.
  123. ^ Dauti 2018, p. 62.
  124. ^ a b c Fleming 1999, p. 63.
  125. ^ a b Fleming 1999, p. 64: "The population of Ali's territories was predominantly Greek speaking, and the use of its common tongue by the ruling class had the effect of linking them, albeit inchoately, with that ruling class."
  126. ^ Anemoudora, 2020, p. 20
  127. ^ Fleming 1999, p. 65.
  128. ^ Palairet, Michael (2016). Macedonia: A Voyage through History: From the Fifteenth Century to the Present. Vol. 2. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 97. ISBN 9781443888493.
  129. ^ Fleming 2014, pp. 70–71: "Parga, Vonitza, Preveza, and Butrinto. In 1401 the peoples of Parga had established the precedent of colluding with Venice by placing themselves voluntarily under Venetian protection, thus staying the advance of the Ottomans... These territories came to be known for their staunch support of the Greek revolutionary cause and Parga colluded with the independent Orthodox peoples of Souli in their chronic battles with Ali Pasha."
  130. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, p. 182.
  131. ^ Skiotis 1976, pp. 102
  132. ^ Russell & Russell 2017, p. 196.
  133. ^ a b Palairet 2016, p. 98.
  134. ^ Kitromilides 2021, p. 115.
  135. ^ Kitromilides 2021, p. 140.
  136. ^ a b c Kitromilides 2021, p. 208.
  137. ^ a b c Skoulidas 2001, p. 17.
  138. ^ a b Fleming 2014, p. 59.
  139. ^ Kitromilides 2021, p. 210.
  140. ^ a b c d e f Kitromilides 2021, p. 212.
  141. ^ a b c d e f Mazower 2021, pp. 118–119.
  142. ^ a b Skoulidas 2001, p. 21.
  143. ^ Mazower 2021, p. 119: "The Muslim Albanians now abandoned not only their pact with the Greeks but also Ali Pasha himself in order to fight for the sultan. Ambatzis and the others approached the Ottoman commander in chief , Khurshid Pasha , asking for his pardon and pledging to help him kill Ali and drive out the Greeks."
  144. ^ Kitromilides 2021, pp. 212–232.
  145. ^ Fleming 2014, p. 157: Although his subject population – the vast majority of whom were Greek – have been noted for their nationalist impulses and cultural links to Enlightenment Europe, there is little evidence that Ali conceived of his desire for independence in such terms.
  146. ^ Murray-Miller, Gavin (February 6, 2020). Revolutionary Europe: Politics, Community and Culture in Transnational Context, 1775-1922. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 75. ISBN 978-1-350-02002-3. His plan drew the support of the regional Ottoman potentate, Ali Pasha, who calculated that stoking the flames of Greek nationalism would strengthen his own local power base and furnish independence from Istanbul.
  147. ^ Stubbs & Makaš 2011, p. 389.
  148. ^ Kitromilides 2021, p. 669.
  149. ^ Νήσος Ιωαννίνων. (2009). Μουσεία (in Greek). from the original on November 3, 2009. Retrieved November 12, 2009.
  150. ^ a b c Merry, Bruce (May 30, 2004). Encyclopedia of Modern Greek Literature. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-313-30813-0.
  151. ^ Yaycioglu 2016, pp. 239–248.
  152. ^ Ruches, Pyrrhus J., ed. (1967). Albanian Historical Folksongs, 1716–1943: a survey of oral epic poetry from southern Albania, with original texts. Chicago: Argonaut. p. 123.
  153. ^ Tziovas, Dēmētrēs (2003). Greece and the Balkans: identities, perceptions and cultural encounters since the Enlightenment. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-7546-0998-8.
  154. ^ Merry, Bruce (2004). Encyclopedia of modern Greek literature. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-313-30813-0.
  155. ^ "Sons of Chaos".
  156. ^ "Review: SONS OF CHAOS is an Epic Tale of Revolution". August 4, 2019.

Sources edit

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  • Aravantinos, S. (1979) [1895]. Istoria Ali Pasa tou Tepelenli [the history of Ali Pasha Tepelenli based on the unpublished texts by Panagiotis Arantinos] (photographic reprint ed.). Athens.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Brisku, Adrian (2013). Bittersweet Europe: Albanian and Georgian Discourses on Europe, 1878–2008. Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-0-85745-985-5.
  • Clayer, Nathalie (2014). "Ali Paşa Tepedelenli". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. doi:10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_23950. ISSN 1873-9830.
  • Dauti, Daut (January 30, 2018). Britain, the Albanian Question and the Demise of the Ottoman Empire 1876–1914 (phd). University of Leeds.
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  • Fleming, Katherine Elizabeth (1999). The Muslim Bonaparte: diplomacy and orientalism in Ali Pasha's Greece. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00194-4.
    • Fleming, K. E. (2014). The Muslim Bonaparte: Diplomacy and Orientalism in Ali Pasha's Greece. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-6497-3.
  • Howard, Douglas A. (2017). A History of the Ottoman Empire. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781108107471.
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  • Koliopoulos, John S. (1987). Brigands with a Cause, Brigandage and Irredentism in Modern Greece 1821–1912. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-822863-5.
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  • Leake, W. M. (1967). Travels in northern Greece (photographic reprint ed.). Amsterdam: Α.Μ.Ηakkert. pp. Vol. 1, pp. 295, Vol. 4, pp. 260.
  • Mangalakova, Tanya (2004). "The Kanun in Present-Day Albania, Kosovo, and Montenegro". International Centre for Minority Studies and Intercultural Relations. Sofia.
  • Mazower, Mark (2021). The Greek Revolution: 1821 and the Making of Modern Europe (Hardback). Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-241-00410-4.
  • Papastavros, A. (2013). Ali Pasas, apo listarchos igemonas [Ali Pasha, from bandit to leader]. Apeirotan.
  • Pappas, Nicholas Charles (1982). Greeks in Russian Military Service in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries. Stanford University.
  • Plataris, G. (1982). Kodikas Choras Metsovou ton eton 1708–1907 [Chora Metsovou Log of the years 1708–1907]. Athens. pp. 105, 120.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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  • Russell, Quentin; Russell, Eugenia (September 30, 2017). Ali Pasha, Lion of Ioannina: The Remarkable Life of the Balkan Napoleon. Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-4738-7722-1.
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  • Skiotis, Dennis N. (July 1971). "From Bandit to Pasha: first steps in the rise to power of Ali of Tepelen, 1750–1784". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 2 (3): 219–244. doi:10.1017/S0020743800001112. JSTOR 162196. S2CID 159559591.
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Ali Pasha archives edit

  • Ali Pasha Archives, 2007, I. Chotzi collection, Gennadius Library, Ed. – Cpmmentary – Index: V. Panagiotopoulos with collaboration of D. Dimitropoulou, P. Michailari, Vol. 4
  • Ali Pasha Archives, I. Chotzi collection, Gennadius Library, Ed. – Commentary – Index: V. Panagiotopoulos with the collaboration of D. Dimitropoulou, P. Michailari, 2007, Vol. B’, pp. 672–674 (doc. 851), 676–677, (doc. 855), 806–807 (doc. 943).

Further reading edit

  • Brøndsted, Peter Oluf, Interviews with Ali Pacha; edited by Jacob Isager, (Athens, 1998)
  • Davenport, Richard, The Life of Ali Pasha, Late Vizier of Jannina; Surnamed Aslan, Or the Lion, (2nd ed, Relfe, London, 1822)
  • Dumas père, Alexandre, Ali Pacha, Celebrated Crimes
  • Fauriel, Claude Charles: Die Sulioten und ihre Kriege mit Ali Pascha von Janina, (Breslau, 1834)
  • Glenny, Misha The Balkans 1804–1999 Granta Books, London 1999.
  • Ilıcak, Şükrü, ed. (2021). Those Infidel Greeks: The Greek War of Independence through Ottoman Archival Documents. Brill. doi:10.1163/9789004471306. ISBN 978-90-04-47129-0.
  • Jóka, Mór: Janicsárok végnapjai, Pest, 1854. (in English: Maurus Jókai: The Lion of Janina, translated by R. Nisbet Bain, 1897). [1]
  • Manzour, Ibrahim, Mémoires sur la Grèce et l'Albanie pendant le gouvernement d'Ali Pacha, (Paris, 1827)
  • Plomer, William The Diamond of Jannina: Ali Pasha 1741–1822 (New York, Taplinger, 1970)
  • Pouqueville, François, Voyage en Morée, à Constantinople, en Albanie, et dans plusieurs autres parties de l'Empire Ottoman (Paris, 1805, 3 vol. in-8°), translated in English, German, Greek, Italian, Swedish, etc. available on line at Gallica
  • Pouqueville, François, Travels in Epirus, Albania, Macedonia, and Thessaly (London: printed for Sir Richard Phillips and Co, 1820), an English denatured and truncated edition available on line
  • Pouqueville, François, Voyage en Grèce (Paris, 1820–1822, 5 vol. in-8° ; 20 édit., 1826–1827, 6 vol. in-8°), his capital work
  • Pouqueville, François, Histoire de la régénération de la Grèce (Paris, 1824, 4 vol. in-8°), translated in many languages. French original edition available on Google books [2]
  • Pouqueville, François, Notice sur la fin tragique d’Ali-Tébélen (Paris 1822, in-8°)
  • Vaudoncourt, Guillaume de Memoirs on the Ionian Islands ... : including the life and character of Ali Pacha. London: Baldwin, Cradock and Joy, 1816
  • . Stanford University. Archived from the original on October 14, 2022. Retrieved June 2, 2021.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Tepedelenli Ali Paşa at Wikimedia Commons

pasha, ioannina, pasha, pasha, tepelena, albanian, tepelena, 1740, january, 1822, commonly, known, albanian, ruler, served, ottoman, pasha, pashalik, yanina, large, part, western, rumelia, under, rule, acquired, high, degree, autonomy, even, managed, stay, fac. Ali Pasha or Ali Pasha of Tepelena Albanian Ali Tepelena 1740 January 24 1822 commonly known as Ali Pasha of Ioannina was an Albanian ruler who served as Ottoman pasha of the Pashalik of Yanina a large part of western Rumelia Under his rule it acquired a high degree of autonomy and even managed to stay de facto independent The capital of the Pashalik was Ioannina which along with Tepelena was Ali s headquarters 2 Conceiving his territory in increasingly independent terms Ali Pasha s correspondence and foreign Western correspondence frequently refer to the territories under Ali s control as Albania 3 This by Ali s definition included central and southern Albania and parts of mainland Greece in particular most of the district of Epirus and the western parts of Thessaly and Macedonia 4 He managed to stretch his control over the sanjaks of Yanina Delvina Vlora and Berat Elbasan Ohrid and Monastir Gorice and Tirhala Ali was granted the Sanjak of Tirhala in 1787 and he delegated its government in 1788 to his second born Veli Pasha who also became Pasha of the Morea Eyalet in 1807 Ali s eldest son Muhtar Pasha was granted the Sanjak of Karli Eli and the Sanjak of Egriboz in 1792 stretching for the first time Ali s control down to Livadia and the Gulf of Corinth except Attica Muhtar Pasha also became governor of the Sanjak of Ohrid in 1796 7 and of the Sanjak of Vlora and Berat in 1810 5 6 Ali PashaAli TepelenaAli Pasha at the Lake of Butrint by Louis DuprePasha of YaninaIn office 1788 1822Personal detailsBorn1740Tepelena Sanjak of Delvina Ottoman EmpireDiedJanuary 24 1822 1822 01 24 aged 81 82 Ioannina Pashalik of Yanina Ottoman EmpireSpouse s Emine daughter of Kaplan Pasha of Gjirokaster Kyra Vassiliki m 1808 wbr RelationsMehmed grandson Ismail grandson Muhtar Bey grandfather Mustafa Yussuf great grandfather Fikret Ismen Kaygi descendant Husein Pasha descendant Fatma Hikmet Ismen descendant ChildrenMuhtarVeliSelimParent s Veli Bey and HamkoSignatureNickname s Aslan Turkish Lion Lion of Yannina 1 Military serviceBattles warsFirst Scutari Berat War First Scutari Ottoman War Ali Pasha Tepelena s campaigns Souliote War 1789 1793 War of the Second Coalition Ali Pasha s Invasion of Butrint Battle of Nicopolis 1798 Siege of Corfu 1798 1799 Souliote War 1803 Ali Pasha s Invasion of the Pashalik of Berat Ali Pasha s Rebellion Siege of Ioannina Ali first appears in historical accounts as the leader of a band of Albanian brigands who became involved in many confrontations with Ottoman state officials in Albania and Epirus He joined the administrative military apparatus of the Ottoman Empire holding various posts until 1788 when he was appointed pasha ruler of the Sanjak of Ioannina His diplomatic and administrative skills his interest in modernist ideas and concepts his popular Muslim piety his respect towards other religions his suppression of banditry his vengefulness and harshness in imposing law and order and his looting practices towards persons and communities in order to increase his profits caused both the admiration and the criticism of his contemporaries as well as an ongoing controversy among historians regarding his personality As his influence grew his involvement in Ottoman politics increased culminating in his active opposition to the ongoing Ottoman military reforms After being declared a rebel in 1820 he was captured and killed in 1822 at the age of 81 or 82 after a successful military campaign against his forces In Western literature Ali Pasha became the personification of an oriental despot 1 Contents 1 Name 2 Ancestry and early life 3 Rise 3 1 Rivalry with Ahmet Kurt Pasha 3 2 Initial appointment 4 Deposition and re appointment 4 1 Early consolidation 5 Rule as Pasha 5 1 Ali and the Souliotes Initial campaigns 5 2 Consolidation 5 3 Ali Pasha and the European powers 5 3 1 Cooperation with the French 5 4 Conflict with the French 5 4 1 Conquest of Preveza 5 4 2 Corfu and the Ionian Islands 5 5 Other Aspects 5 6 Atrocities 6 Rebellion and downfall 6 1 Death 7 Religion 8 Influences 8 1 On Albanians 8 1 1 Albanian autonomy 8 1 2 Albanian culture 8 1 3 Albanian nationalism 8 2 On Greeks 8 2 1 Modern Greek Enlightenment 8 2 2 Greek War of Independence 8 2 2 1 Revolutionary preparations and Ali Pasha 8 2 3 Revolutionary preparations in Epirus 8 2 3 1 Coordinated Greek Albanian operations 8 2 4 Termination of common operations 8 2 5 Greek nationalism 9 Legacy 10 Ali Pasha in literature 11 See also 12 Notes 13 Sources 13 1 Ali Pasha archives 14 Further reading 15 External linksName editAli Pasha was variously referred to as of Tepelena of Ioannina Janina Yannina or the Lion of Yannina His native name was Albanian Ali Tepelena and he was referred to as Ali Pashe Tepelena or Ali Pasha i Janines and in other local languages as Aromanian Ali Pashelu Greek Alh Pasas Tepelenlhs Ali Pasas Tepelenlis or Alh Pasas twn Iwanninwn Ali Pasas ton Ioanninon Ali Pasha of Ioannina and Turkish Tepedelenli Ali Pasa Ottoman Turkish تپه دلنلي علي پاشا 1 Ancestry and early life edit nbsp The statue of Ali Pasha in Tepelene Ali Pasha was born into the Albanian Mecohysaj clan they were Christian Albanians who embraced Islam in the Ottoman period The family was attributed a legendary ancestry as descendants of a Mevlevi dervish named Nazif who migrated from Konya to Tepelene through Kutahya and Ali himself would make similar claims to strangers and Ottoman Turks in order to claim legitimacy to landholdings 7 1 8 9 Nonetheless this tradition is unfounded as Ali s family was of local Albanian origin 1 10 11 They had achieved some stature by the 17th century Ali s great grandfather Mustafa Yussuf from the Gjirokaster region was a notable brigand warrior and clan chieftain who eventually obtained the title of bey and possibly official recognition as the deputy governor of Tepelena Ali s grandfather Muhtar Bey was also a bandit chieftain who fought both for and against the Ottoman Turks 12 Muhtar had died during the 1716 siege of Corfu 1 Ali s father Veli Bey was a local ruler of Tepelena 13 Ali himself was born in Becisht although some claim that he was born in the adjacent town of Tepelena 7 8 13 Ali s father Veli Bey was involved in a rivalry with his cousin Islam Bey who was also a local ruler 1 Islam Bey was appointed mutasarrif of Delvine in 1752 but Veli Bey managed to kill him and thereby succeed his cousin as mutasarrif in 1762 1 Veli Bey was assassinated shortly after when Ali was ten and Ali was brought up by his mother Chamko or Hanko Hamko who originally hailed from Konitsa 8 1 Ali s mother Hamko was forced to take control of Veli s band in order to retain her family s position She was said to have poisoned Ali s half brother along with the boy s mother in order to secure Ali s inheritance She had a great impact on Ali s personality and Ali deeply respected her Hamko arranged a marriage between Ali and Emine the daughter of the Kaplan Pasha of Gjirokaster Eventually the villages surrounding Tepelena formed a confederacy against Hamko and forced the woman and her family out of the town she was later ambushed and defeated by the men of Hormove and Kardhiq two Christian and Muslim Albanian villages respectively Hamko and Ali s sister were captured by the men of Kardhiq raped and then humiliated by being forced to walk through the streets with a man on her back From then on Hamko would instil a desire for revenge in Ali who would avenge his mother by massacring the inhabitants of Kardhiq in his later years 14 15 Ali would have two sons with Emine the daughter of Kaplan Pasha of Gjirokaster The first would be Muhtar Pasha and the second would be Veli Pasha Ali s youngest son Selim would be born to a slave much later in 1802 Both of his sons with Emine would be married to the daughters of Ibrahim Pasha of Berat When Ali gained power Ali s sister Shainitza was married off to Sulejman of Gjirokaster Sulejman s family came from Libohove in Zagoria where Ali built a fortified seraglio as his sister s dowry One claim suggests that she was first married to Sulejman s brother also called Ali but he died or was murdered by Sulejman with Ali Pasha s permission Shainitza s third son Adem would become the governor of Libohove and her daughter from her first marriage was married to Veli Bey of Kelcyre 16 Rise edit nbsp Portrait of Ali Pasha drawn by Charles Robert Cockerell published in 1820 based on Thomas Smart Hughes travels in Albania in 1813 17 In his early years Ali distinguished himself as a bandit in the mountains 13 Ali s growing reputation as a notorious bandit forced the Ottoman government to take action and they authorised Ahmet Kurt Pasha of Berat to subdue him He was eventually captured by Kurt possibly twice but definitely in 1775 when it is known that Ali was actually employed in Kurt s service due to a hostility that had arisen between the two upon Kurt s rejection of Ali s offer to marry Kurt s daughter Miriem Instead Miriem would be married to Ibrahim Bey of Vlore in 1765 and Ibrahim would later become Pasha of both Vlore and Berat As a result Ibrahim and Ali also became rivals and this rivalry continued until Ibrahim s death 18 Ali affiliated himself with the Bektashi sect 13 although he was not particularly anti Christian or self consciously Muslim and showed no favouritism to either group as a ruler 19 Venetian records indicate that Ali and his cousin Islam Bey of Kelcyre were part of a force of 9 000 Muslim Albanians under Sulejman Capari the aga of Margariti who were engaged in conflict with the Souliotes in 1772 and it is possible that Ali was also part of Ahmet Kurt Pasha s force in 1775 during Kurt s campaign against the Souliotes The first military action in which Ali is confirmed to have participated in was Ahmet Kurt Pasha s conflict with Mehmed Pasha Bushati in 1776 Ali and his cousin Islam distinguished themselves during the subsequent engagements around Kavaje and Tirana but Ali fell out with Kurt over the division of the spoils of war and resumed his life of banditry In 1778 Ahmet Kurt Pasha was disgraced and dismissed as a result of the schemes employed by Mehmed Kalo Pasha of Yanina who then took over the Sanjak of Avlona The guardianship of the mountain passes was bestowed upon a Turk from Thessaly known as Catalcali Haci Ali Pasha the local Albanians did not like him and so he appointed Ali Pasha at this point Ali Bey as his deputy to establish order amongst the Albanian brigands while Catalcali remained in his fortress in the distant Chalkis of Euboea 20 With this new Ottoman administrative position Ali eliminated the military and civil officials appointed by Kurt in favour of his own men and established a network between the leaders of Albanian bands and the captains of armatoli Albanian fighters that refused to serve Ali were relocated to the Morea where they could continue their occupation of plundering Ali s new position also meant that he could orchestrate legitimate and illegitimate protection rackets that gave him enough resources to recruit mercenaries and set aside money for bribes Around this time Ali went to Missolonghi to collect a debt owed by Michaeles Avronites a local sea captain who was originally from Cephallonia and therefore a Venetian subject Ali arrived in the town with his Albanians as a show of force and when he could not find Avronites Ali seized a number of Venetian subjects including the Venetian consul They were released only after Missolonghi s leaders declared that they would pay the debt themselves and Ali took 500 barrels of merchandise bound for the Ionian Islands as a guarantee although these barrels were never returned to the people of Missolonghi Similar intimidation tactics were used across Epirus by Ali who although serving in this administrative position for only five months managed to impose order and a systemic tax regime as well as amass enormous personal wealth 21 Rivalry with Ahmet Kurt Pasha edit In 1779 Ahmet Kurt Pasha had returned to power through intrigue and bribery of the Sublime Porte Ali openly challenged Kurt in an effort to get the Porte to recognise that Ali had a stronger power base Ali marched an army of 2 000 3 000 Albanians through Thessaly dispersing them along the journey to intimidate local towns and villages and to extract wealth from them At Trikkala Ali led his own detachment of 300 soldiers into the near deserted town as many of the inhabitants had already fled upon his approach Once a certain amount of protection money was peacefully extracted from the town Ali and his men left and proceeded to Farsala where he and Catalcali Haci who was still Ali s superior plotted against Ahmet Kurt Pasha 22 Ali s first action was to take the district of Acarnania where his soldiers had already visited Missolonghi and yet again extracted more tributes from the citizens Ali arrived with 4 000 men occupying the regional capital of Vrachori Agrinion and re joining his Albanian troops that had returned from their ravaging of the Morea In response Kurt moved his troops southwards in Epirus and placed pressure upon the Venetians and the armatoles to restrict Ali s approach The Sublime Porte was forced to intervene in the situation and Ottoman general Cezayirli Gazi Hasan Pasha who was already dispatched to dispose of the Albanian irregulars in the Morea was instead sent to Macedonia and Thessaly to re establish regional order Gazi Hasan Pasha although aided by local Turks armatoles and Greek peasants was not able to defeat and drive out the Albanians However he later succeeded in pacifying the Albanians in the Morea but peace was only temporarily restored as the Albanians continued to pour into the region 23 Meanwhile Ali had returned to Tepelena to restore his family s position and solidify his power base Upon learning that the Sublime Porte refused to restore him in place of Ahmet Kurt Pasha Ali ordered his tribal and feudal allies to attack Kurt s local garrisons ravaging the mountain districts between Tepelena and the outskirts of Yanina for the next two years The Porte forced Kurt to directly challenge Ali s disruption and although Kurt could muster a force of 10 000 men and 100 cavalry he would not be able to defeat Ali in the mountain passes and resorted to besieging Tepelena Ali had no other option but to break through the siege and make way for Butrint which Kurt interpreted as an attempt to return to the Morea Ali s escape caused concern throughout Greece and Kurt responded by sending 6 000 soldiers to the Bay of Arta to cut Ali off from his southern route and to trap him next to the sea distributing funds along the way to local chieftains Ali also recruited his own allies including his cousin Islam Bey of Kelcyre the son of Sulejman Capari and aga of Margariti Hasan Capari and Demoglou of Konispol These allies kept the pasha of Delvine s forces occupied while Ali continued further south towards Arta and Preveza These manoeuvres alerted the Venetians and the pashas of Trikkala and Euboea were asked to send their armies to aid Kurt Ali contrary to what Kurt expected changed direction and marched towards Yanina subduing and fortifying important villages along the way 24 Kurt s troops under the command of his son in law Ibrahim Bey were unable to defeat Ali and this resulted in a stalemate Ali eventually retreated to Tepelena and Kurt attempted to impress the Sublime Porte by sending severed heads as evidence of Ali s demise but the unrest continued nonetheless Through his actions Ali was able to greatly undermine Kurt s authority and garner enough attention from the Venetians to establish diplomatic relations with them In 1783 Ali sent a declaration of friendship to the Venetian administration at Corfu at the risk of an accusation of treason Expecting to receive the title of Pasha of two tails at any moment Ali asked them to intercede at the Sublime Porte on his behalf to hasten the process The Venetians followed through and in return Ali disrupted Mustafa Koka the Pasha of Delvine and a political opponent of the Venetians 25 Initial appointment edit The Sublime Porte was still heavily in debt to the Albanian fighters who put down the Greek revolt in the Morea in 1769 1770 with astronomical sums being owed in back pay Ali s high prestige amongst the Albanian fighters as well as his satisfactory diplomatic solutions that normalised Venetian Turkish relations highlighted the fact that he was now the de facto force in the region bypassing both Ahmet Kurt Pasha and Kara Mahmud Pasha Bushati of Shkoder Ali was appointed mutasarrif of Ioannina at the end of 1784 or beginning of 1785 on the condition that he led 1 000 troops on campaign possibly as part of the military response to the Russian annexation of Crimea 25 Deposition and re appointment edit nbsp Ali Pasha of Janina hunting in the lake of Butrint in March 1819 by Louis Dupre 1825 Ali did not keep his promise to the Sublime Porte instead of going on campaign for the Ottomans Ali focused his attention on Hormove as part of a greater effort to impose his rule over the villages and towns around Gjirokaster before eventually subjugating Gjirokaster itself In an act of vengeance on the people of Hormove for their part in the humiliation of his mother and sister Ali would attack the village with over 1 000 men after lulling the town into a false sense of friendship The men were killed the women and children sold into slavery and the leader of Hormove was roasted alive on a spit above a fire His actions intimidated the neighbouring villages into submission earning him governorship of Janina soon thereafter 26 Additionally the region of Himare was seen as a point of concern for the Sublime Porte due to its support and collaboration with the Russian Empire and Venice Serving as the governor of Delvine Ali claimed jurisdiction of the region and organised a campaign in 1785 Himara held out however as Ali had other issues to tend to He failed to establish secure rule over Janina and made enemies of the local Turkish and Greek communities who protested to the Sublime Porte He was dismissed from his position in favour of his rival Kurt Pasha and was called upon by the Sultan to campaign against Kara Mahmud Pasha Bushati of Shkoder whose attempts at creating an independent state forced a response from the Ottomans Ali was then sent on another campaign in the Russo Turkish War of 1787 1792 in which he also secretly established contacts with the Russians In reward for his services at Banat during this war he was granted the Sanjak of Trikala in 1787 which was suffering from brigand raids Ali s success in the pacification of brigandage in Trikala earned him the role of supervisor of the tolls of Toskeria and Epirus 27 28 In the meantime Kurt Pasha had died and was succeeded by his ally in Berat Ibrahim Pasha The Porte awarded Ali with control of Janina however the accounts on how this occurred vary some suggest that Ali surrounded Janina with his forces and presented a forged document from the Sultan without giving the Porte enough time to object while others suggest that he gained enough support from the notables of Janina that they petitioned the Sultan for his appointment on his behalf Whatever the case the earliest known reference to Ali as the Pasha of Janina is dated to the 15th of March 1788 In that same year he delegated the title of Pasha of Trikala to his son Veli 29 28 Early consolidation edit nbsp The Palace of Ali Pasha in Tepelena engraving by Edward Finden based on a drawing by William Purser early 19th century Ali Pasha secured his position by establishing relationships with influential people and rewarding his supporters and allies He was soon appointed to the post of Dervendji Pasha and he began to further consolidate his power in Epirus He married his sons to the daughters of Ibrahim Pasha in Berat in order to secure their alliance as well as the borders of his Pashalik 30 During war time Ali Pasha could assemble an army of 50 000 Albanian men in a matter of two to three days and could double that number in two to three weeks Leading these armed forces was Ali s Supreme Council 31 The Commander in chief was the founder and financier Ali Pasha Council members included Muhtar Pasha Veli Pasha Celaleddin Bey Abdullah Pashe Taushani and a number of his trusted men like Hasan Dervishi Omar Vrioni Meco Bono Ago Myhyrdari Thanasis Vagias Veli Gega and Tahir Abazi 31 32 Ali s own perception of group identity derived from the ancient legacy of Albanian banditry along with the accompanying Albanian pseudo nobility Ali conceived an independent state that almost certainly would have been controlled by this Albanian military and aristocratic elite 33 As Pasha Ali was supported by an exclusively Albanian military establishment which included many people who had undertaken brigandage activities earlier in their life 34 Ali Pasha also used Albanian tribesmen to put down Greek rebellions in the Morea 35 Rule as Pasha edit nbsp Fortifications built during Ali Pasha s reign in Butrint Albania As Pasha Ali slowly laid the foundations for the creation of an almost independent state which included a large part of Albania and mainland Greece During his rule the town of Ioannina developed into a major educational cultural political and economic hub In order to achieve his goals he allied with all religious and ethnic groups in his territory At the same time he did not hesitate to fiercely crush any opponent and he also developed relations with European powers 36 By the time of his accession to the Pashalik of Yanina several almost independent Albanian and Greek towns of the region reversed their approach of hostility against the Ottoman rule and pledged their loyalty to Ali 37 Ali s policy as ruler of Janina was mostly governed by expediency he operated as a semi independent despot and pragmatically allied himself with whoever offered the most advantage at the time It was Ali Pasha and his Albanian soldiers and mercenaries who subdued the independent Souli 38 nbsp Serais of Ali Pasha and his two sons in Joannina in 1813 drawn by Charles Robert Cockerell published in 1820 by Thomas Smart Hughes At this point Ali Pasha s priority was to create a centralised governing system by neutralising the numerous disruptive factions vying for power in his Pashalik including the klephts armatoles Christian notables and Albanian beys and agas For example Ali replaced Greek armatoles from the territories under his control with almost exclusively Albanian armatoles The discarded Greek armatoles became klephts and their subsequent anti armatoloi activity was not only brigandage but also a form of resistance against Ottoman rule Ali also targeted wealthy Muslim landowners under the guise of bringing justice for the peasant population whilst increasing his own wealth 39 40 In 1788 Ali s troops completed the destruction of Moscopole a once prosperous cultural centre in south eastern Albania that had been continuously raided by Albanian irregulars from 1769 onwards due to their pro Russian stance and support of the Orlov Revolt The Aromanian population of Moscopole was forced to flee from the region and find refuge in regions outside of Ali s control both in and out of the Ottoman Empire 41 42 Many Aromanians scattered throughout the Balkans founding settlements such as Krusevo but many also migrated to foreign countries forming an Aromanian diaspora 43 44 The same campaign of persecution was launched towards Sarakatsani communities 44 Ali and the Souliotes Initial campaigns edit At this point in time the Souliotes a Christian Albanian community whose lands were located in Ali s Pashalik would pay their taxes to their spahi in Janina Bekir Bey Ali preferred to take the taxes directly into his own hands and Bekir was promptly imprisoned upon his rejection of Ali s proposal The Souliote confederacy posed a continuous threat to Ali s Pashalik by constantly raiding and terrorising the surrounding villages The Souliotes were incited against Ali by Russian Empress Catherine the Great who after the Treaty of Kucuk Kaynarca in 1774 was acknowledged as the protector of all Orthodox Christians in the Ottoman Empire At the behest of the Russians the Souliotes had reportedly gathered 2 200 men who were ready to take up arms against Ali Pasha and in response Ali immediately mobilised his forces With a force of 3 000 men and aided by the Capari family of Paramythia Ali attacked Souli but the assault failed with considerable losses even though a Russian support fleet never materialised to help the Souliotes The Souliotes encouraged by their success joined forces with klephts from the Pindus and ravaged both Greek and Albanian villages throughout Acarnania 45 42 nbsp Fortress of Ali Pasha at Argyro Castro in 1813 drawn by Charles Robert Cockerell published in 1820 by Thomas Smart Hughes After failing to defeat the Souliotes via direct assault Ali took another approach In 1792 Ali mustered 10 000 men to attack Gjirokaster in response to the town declining his imposition of a bey but this was all part of an elaborate plan to lure the Souliotes from their mountains Ali wrote a letter to the Souliote captains George Botsaris and Lambros Tzavelas in which he feigned friendship and admiration whilst asking for their assistance The Souliotes cautiously accepted and Botsaris wrote that although he could not muster enough followers to join Ali Tzavelas would join his army with 70 men as a sign of friendship This group was placed on the front lines before Ali had Tzavelas and his men seized chained and sent to Janina with some being killed on the spot 41 42 Ali aided by his son Muhtar proceeded with his attack on Souli but Botsaris was well prepared with solid defensive positions The 1 300 Souliote defenders retreated from their villages and were pushed to the inner mountains of Souli Ali attempted to coerce Lambros into betraying the Souliotes through a variety of means and Lambros finally agreed when Ali offered him his freedom and lordship of Souli although Lambros 12 year old son Fotos was taken as a guarantee Once he was safe Lambros sent Ali a letter revealing that he did not intend to fulfil his side of the bargain regardless of whether he had to sacrifice his son or not and that he would continue fighting against Ali and his men Ali s men would fail to make further ground and Ali would cut his losses by exchanging prisoners including Fotos Tzavelas paying ransoms and signing a truce Ali s casualties were in the thousands whereas the Souliotes suffered minimal losses but Lambros Tzavelas himself was mortally wounded 46 The 1792 attack ended in a Souliote victory and in the negotiations the Botsaris clan managed to become recognized by Ali Pasha as the lawful representative clan of Souli and George Botsaris as the one who would enforce the terms of peace among the Souliotes 47 Ali however would not forget this humiliation 48 Consolidation edit nbsp Ali Vizier of Albania also called Pacha of Jannina by Adam Friedel drawn from life and published in 1828 Despite his setback in Souli Ali Pasha retained an influential standing in Constantinople For example Ali managed to use his influence to reverse the death penalty imposed on the Pasha of Negroponte after he plead to Ali for help Although he had obtained his power through force in a lawless environment it was crucial for Ali Pasha to maintain peace and stability to ensure that his coffers remained full Ali would offer protection to towns and villages in return for their loyalty thereby increasing his control over his expanding territories by appointing his representatives and negotiating appropriate terms and tax arrangements 49 Correspondence from Ali s subjects during this period make heavy use of flattering and obsequious phrases whilst Ali s replies are terse and factual reflecting the power dynamic between them villagers often wrote to Ali with complaints about the Souliotes thieving their sheep or about raids from klephts usually from neighbouring villages The people of Kokosi in Thessaly wrote to Ali in 1794 on behalf of Platini Scourpi Koffi and other villages requesting the prolonged stay of one of Ali s boluk bashis officers with his men to continue protecting them from bandits The villagers of Kato Soudena also offered to pay Ali Pasha so that they may be placed under his protection Ali did not only provide protection from bandits however as he offered protection from the Sultan s tax collectors as well interfering with the collection and disposal of government tax revenue through the bribery of officials or the allocation of tax collecting duties to his family and supporters In fact the higher ranks of the Greek Orthodox Church colluded with Ali to the extent that bishops were willing to act as his tax collectors By pledging their loyalty to Ali communities could put themselves under his jurisdiction 50 At times Ali Pasha would pay to bring a community under his jurisdiction Villages would even threaten to separate such as in 1802 when the inhabitants of Chebelovo complained that Ali favoured their neighbours over them Communities that were unhappy with Ali s rule were able to appeal to the Ottoman kadi courts or the central government itself so it was crucial that Ali maintained good standing with his connections in Constantinople since his position as dervendji pasha was never totally secure When one of Ali s lobbyists in the Phanariot elite informed Ali that there was a rival bid for control of the passes in 1797 Ali was encouraged to make a higher offer to the treasury and to ameliorate relations with the local communities he collected taxes from as their complaints could serve as a justification for the authorities granting control of the passes to his rival 51 By 1798 Ali Pasha s influence extended to Veroia He was made governor of Thessaly in 1799 to clear the region of bandits soon followed by all of Rumeli Ali was able to extract taxes beyond the strictly defined borders of his realm as his power extended beyond the areas that were formally recognised as his By 1803 several villages in the district of Florina were finalising the terms of their tax collection with Ali and Ali s tax collecting powers would eventually extend as far north as Prilep by assuming fake identities as a tax farmer 52 The principal role of geography in the communal groups of his time were comprehended by Ali He insisted that Ioannina located in the Greek district of Epirus was Albanian He also considered the Albanian population who lived in the area not as immigrants but as indigenous people of the region He tried to justify his plans on the territories under foreign protectorate on the Ionian coast also by insisting that they were part of Albania as well 53 Language was a major definiting element in Ali s identity as well of his government and the region he controlled in general Ali s native language was Albanian 53 His degree of proficiency in written Greek is debatable however he also spoke Greek 54 Albanians and Greeks exchanging languages was quite common in the 18th century 53 Ioannina was located in a largely Greek speaking area and during the Ottoman rule the Albanian language has not been officially recognized Albanian has become a fully written language with its own script only from the mid 19th century while written Greek was a well established language within the Ottoman Empire 54 The formal bureaucratic language of the Empire was entirely replaced with Greek in the pashalik and in Ali s court diplomatic business was exclusively conducted in Greek as well as much of the formal correspondence Ali also used the Greek script to write in Albanian and to transliterate Turkish in his personal correspondence 53 The usage of Greek however did not in any way make Ali Greek just as his role as Ottoman appointee did not in any way make him Ottoman He was first and foremost considered as an Albanian 55 Ali Pasha and the European powers edit nbsp Audience chamber of Ali Pacha in Janina Albania subsequently Greece c 1800 by George de la Poer Beresford published in 1855 56 57 58 59 The stability brought about by Ali Pasha s reign allowed the regional centre of Janina to become more cosmopolitan connecting Ali to an international network As his fame grew so to did the number of foreigners in his court 60 Ali wanted to establish a sea power in the Mediterranean which would be a counterpart of that of the Dey of Algiers Ahmed ben Ali 61 However in order to gain a seaport on the Albanian coast Ali Pasha had to deal with Venice which controlled the ports and the Ionian straits The Venetians had obtained an agreement from the Sublime Porte in 1788 that barred Turkish vessels from accessing these Venetian holdings as well as banning Ottoman gun emplacements within a mile of the coast These conditions obstructed trade in Epirus as well as Ali Pasha s ambitions 62 Significant geopolitical shifts occurred in the Europe prior to Ali Pasha challenging Venice The Treaty of Jassy in 1792 which allowed Greeks to sail under the Russian flag significantly boosted Greek shipping and trade with the Crimea The French Revolution s influence reached Ali s domain with the French becoming a powerful force in the area French consul Esprit Marie Cousinery a supporter of Greek independence and de Lassale the consul of Preveza discussed the possibility of French support in Ali s ambitions Lassale s mission included securing timber from Epirus for the French Navy thereby offering arms and ammunition to Ali for subduing Suli and Himara 62 By 1797 Venice fell to Napoleon leading to the Treaty of Campo Formio in which the Ionian Islands and neighbouring ports were transferred to France These strategic locations long coveted by Ali were now under French control Ali using the alias Mustafa allegedly held the governorship of Arta from 1796 The French established garrisons and a naval presence in the region and were welcomed as liberators in places like Preveza Napoleon s growing influence and victories inspired many in Europe including the subjugated populations who saw the French advances as a liberation march This environment set the stage for Ali Pasha s manoeuvres to strengthen his position and he formed an alliance with Napoleon I of France who had established Francois Pouqueville as his general consul in Ioannina with the complete consent of the Ottoman Sultan Selim III The French already had consuls at Arta and Preveza when Ali Pasha unsuccessfully tried to approach Louis XVI as a precautionary guarantee to protect him from his opponents in the Ottoman capital 63 62 Likewise the British government which opened in 1769 for the first time a consulate in Arta established a permanent consular representation by 1803 and appointed John Philip Morrier as General Council in the Morea and Albania centred in Ali Pasha s capital Janina This probably represents the earliest official recognition of the name Albania by the British government 64 Cooperation with the French edit nbsp Portrait of Ali Pasha by J Cartwright 1819 Ali Pasha navigated the changing political landscape as the French sought to undermine Venetian influence in the region Professing animosity towards the Venetian aristocracy Ali secretly communicated with Napoleon then in northern Italy despite the risk of treason as France and the Ottoman Empire edged towards war The French eager to counter the power of the Ottomans assisted Ali in ending the independence of the Himariotes Ali impressed the French particularly General Antoine Gentili with his admiration for Napoleon and he even arranged a marriage between his alleged illegitimate daughter and a French adjutant general In a clandestine meeting Ali sought military assistance and naval access around Corfu 65 Influenced by Ali s charm and strategic considerations as well as Himara s ties to the Neapolitan Army opposing Napoleon and the French Gentili collaborated with Ali in a surprise attack on Nivice in 1798 a town which at this point was the most prosperous on the coastal littoral Butrint and Vlore Gentili ferried Ali s troops through the Ionian straits by night in contravention of the treaty between the Venetians and the Porte Landing in the bay at Lukove to the north Ali s troops outflanked the town which is situated at the entrance to the narrow valley which leads into Himara from the landward side Ali s men attacked Nivica and Shen Vasili the neighbouring village to the north on Easter Sunday when the inhabitants were at prayer taking the town and other villages and then reducing them to ruins They ravaged as far north as Himara itself and it was said that 6 000 unarmed civilians were slaughtered in the process some by roasting alive and impalement whilst the rest of the population were sent to Ali s farms near Trikkala Their land was then divided up and partitioned for cultivation by Ali s subjects in Saranda Ali left a small square fortress at Shen Vasili to guard the entrance to Himara and to watch over the remaining population of Nivica This campaign led to the annexation of Himara extending Ali s control along the coast to Vlore 66 Concurrently during the winter of 1797 1798 Ali dealt with regional conflicts at the request of the Ottomans particularly against the rebel governor Osman Pazvantoglu who had begun carving out his own polity centred around Vidin in modern Bulgaria The Ottomans had already dispatched a force of 50 000 100 000 men under Kucuk Huseyin Pasha to crush the rebellion and they sent for Ali s help Ali reluctant to appear subservient to the Sultan particularly in the face of the French had his subjects in Karpenisi write to the patriarch of Constantinople and inform him that they were in fear of banditry should Ali leave them unprotected This failed and Ali was forced to take to the field personally with a force of 20 000 Albanians leaving Mukhtar in charge in Janina Despite the eventual failure of the Ottoman campaign once Ali left the Ottoman army and the subsequent pardoning of Pazvantoglu Ali Pasha and his Albanians distinguished themselves during the fighting earning Ali the title Aslan the Lion from the Porte 67 However Ali Pasha s engagement in this campaign and the French s anger over his actions against their ally Pazvantoglu strained his relations with France Ali in turn was also disappointed with the failure of French promises of support aside from pledges of financial and military support the French had even offered Ali Pasha the crown of Albania once they had taken the Morea but it became increasingly clear that this was not going to occur Indeed British traveller Henry Holland reported in 1815 that during a personal conversation with Ali it apparently emerged that Napoleon at a certain point had promised Ali the position of King of Albania but Holland also remarked that Ali was not convinced by the offer because he distrusted the French 63 As such Ali s alliance with France continued to sour Upon his return to Janina Ali felt compelled to align with the Sultan s efforts to expel the French from Epirus marking a significant shift in his regional allegiances 67 Conflict with the French edit Conquest of Preveza edit nbsp Ottoman Albanian horsemen display to French Lieutenant Richemont a cut off head of a French soldier during the fall of Preveza in 1798 by Felicien De Myrbach 1894 In June 1798 as the French advanced their ambitions in Ottoman controlled Egypt Ali Pasha was engaged in the siege of Vidin along the Danube Despite being distant Ali received reports from his son Mukhtar on the situation in Epirus These reports detailed subversive activities by the French particularly their efforts to incite revolt among the Souliotes through the distribution of leaflets and tricolour cockades Recognizing the potential threat to his rule Ali obtained special permission from the Sultan to return to Epirus to address these issues whilst maintaining diplomatic communications with the French as he still contemplated a strategic alliance with them He purportedly offered to join forces with the French in exchange for control over the island of Santa Maura as well as former Venetian territories on the mainland and the right to station a garrison on Corfu However General Louis Francois Jean Chabot the commander in chief of the French forces on Corfu rejected this proposal By September 1798 with the declaration of war between the French and the Ottomans Ali s stance became clear 68 Ali Pasha quickly assembled his forces although historical accounts differ as to whether Ali secured a commission to confront the French through diplomatic channels in Constantinople or whether the Porte s slow response led Ali to unilaterally mobilize over 20 000 troops against a potential French invasion Ali did not wait for the French to act and strategically positioned his troops near Butrint setting a trap for the French He lured the French adjutant general Rose who was temporarily in charge at Corfu to a meeting near Igoumenitsa Rose wrongfully believing in Ali s professed allegiance to the French was taken prisoner tortured and sent to Ioannina in chains the same tactic would be used on the French sub lieutenant in Butrint 69 In October 1798 after securing Butrint and Igoumenitsa Ali s troops attacked the coastal town of Preveza which was defended by a small garrison of French soldiers Souliote fighters Ionian islanders and local pro French Greeks 70 Ali s campaign was made easier by his former enemy the Albanian chieftain George Botsaris of Souli who allowed Ali s men passage through Souliote territory in exchange for a payment The battle itself occurred on the 12th of October as Ali observed from a vantage point above Nicopolis in the same location where Roman Emperor Augustus had watched the Battle of Actium Ali observed as his son Mukhtar lead a cavalry charge and the hastily constructed French defences were soon overwhelmed by Ali s superior forces which aside from Albanians also included Greeks and Albanian Souliotes The fall of Preveza was further aided by Metropolitan Ignatios of Arta an agent of Ali who effectively weakened the resolve of the Greek defenders through counter propaganda 69 When the town was finally conquered a major slaughter occurred against the local people as retaliation for their resistance 70 Ali ordered the execution of 300 Greeks in front of him and when a number of those who fled returned on the false promise of amnesty 170 of them were executed Survivors were marched to Janina bearing the severed and salted heads of their companions and were subjected to jeers and abuse from the pro Ottoman populace as they marched at the head of a grand procession organised by Ali Pasha for his victorious troops The women and young girls were sold into slavery Notable among the captured French was Louis Auguste Camus de Richemont the commander of the French engineers who was spared due to Mukhtar s admiration for his bravery Along with other survivors including the captured French grenadiers and officers they were sent to Constantinople There they were imprisoned in the Yedikule Fortress 71 The massacre at Preveza had far reaching implications influencing the rise of Greek nationalism and being remembered in songs and literature by figures such as Lord Byron Preveza was left in ruins as the properties of the Greeks were seized by Ali and redistributed among his Albanians The surviving population was displaced to the marshlands around the Ambracian Gulf and the town s population was estimated to have drastically fallen from 16 000 to 3 000 inhabitants Nonetheless Ali transformed Preveza into a naval base and one of his favoured residences earning it the moniker Portsmouth of Albania 72 Corfu and the Ionian Islands edit nbsp A posthumous illustration of Ali Pasha of Janina circa 1824 After the conquest of Preveza Ali Pasha shifted his focus to Vonica located across the Ambracian Gulf This time the town capitulated without resistance surrendering after the intervention of Archbishop Ignatios who acted on Ali s behalf Ali then focused on Parga a refuge for those fleeing Turkish rule and a longstanding irritant to Epirus rulers Ali extended an offer of autonomy to Parga which the inhabitants resolutely declined citing their commitment to liberty and opposition to tyranny This resistance would become another thorn in Ali s side Meanwhile Ali s ambitions extended to Aetolia Acarnania southeast of Vonica His attempts to exert influence there were initially thwarted by the Ottoman government which granted the region as a royal domain to Mihrisah Valide Sultan Sultan Selim III s mother This move forced Ali to retreat from direct confrontation with the Porte despite his efforts to maintain favourable relations with Mihrisah and her associates 73 Ali s territorial aspirations also included Santa Maura an Ionian island close to the mainland However international developments particularly Napoleon s Egyptian campaign complicated his plans After joining the Second Coalition against France the Ottoman Empire side lined Ali as a Russian Turkish fleet moved to capture the Ionian Islands from the French Ali s attempts to negotiate control of the island were interrupted by the arrival of this fleet Parga seizing the opportunity placed itself under Russian protection further hindering Ali s territorial ambitions The Russo Turkish forces eventually captured Corfu ending French rule in the Ionian Islands Ali and his sons contributed to the siege albeit in a diversionary role which nonetheless enhanced his reputation reportedly earning commendation from Admiral Horatio Nelson In 1800 the Ionian Islands were formed into the Septinsular Republic a tributary state of the Ottoman Empire with specific conditions to respect the islands autonomy and religious freedom The Russians would eventually place the republic under their de facto military occupation 74 Despite the removal of foreign powers from the mainland Ali faced limitations in exerting direct control over important ports His attempts to dominate Parga were met with resistance as the Pargians aided by the Suliotes preferred direct dealings with the Porte This stalemate continued even after the Treaty of Amiens in 1802 which Britain and France briefly endorsed The resumption of hostilities between Britain and France in 1803 saw Ali reaching out to the British Embassy for guidance marking the beginning of official British contact with him Ali s aggressive actions against towns under French influence were rationalized by his hagiographer Haxhi Shehreti as efforts to suppress Greek insurrection on behalf of the Sultan However this justification seemed redundant given that these towns were not under Turkish rule and were embroiled in a war with France and the situation was further complicated by increasing Greek nationalist sentiment fuelled by French interference 75 Other Aspects edit nbsp Medallion attributed to Ali Pasha 1807 In a diplomatic effort to win French and Russian support to get hold of the Venetian possessions on the Ionian Sea in order to build a viable Albanian state Ali sent in 1807 Mehmed Sherif Effendi as his emissary to the negotiations at the Treaty of Tilsit The treaty however stipulated the transfer of the Ionian Islands to France so only Parga remained availale for Ali demands As a response Ali increased the duties on the goods including wood grain and livestock which from his domain were exported to the Ionian Islands 76 Lord Byron together with John Cam Hobhouse visited Ali s court in Tepelena and Ioannina in 1809 77 Byron recorded the encounter in his work Childe Harold They travelled to Albania to see the country that was until then mostly unknown in Britain Byron presented Albanians as a free people who lived in their state under their leader Ali Pasha described by Byron as a man of first abilities who governs the whole of Albania 78 In a letter to his mother Byron deplored Ali s cruelty 79 His Highness is a remorseless tyrant guilty of the most horrible cruelties very brave so good a general that they call him the Mahometan Buonaparte but as barbarous as he is successful roasting rebels etc etc Charles Robert Cockerell visited Albania and met Ali Pasha in 1814 Admiring Ali Pasha s governance Cockerell explained 80 There is law for everyone admits his impartiality as compared with that of rulers in other parts of Turkey and there is commerce He Ali Pasha has made roads fortified the borders put down brigandage and raised Albania into a power of some importance in Europe Different tales about his sexual proclivities emerged from western visitors to Pasha s court including Lord Byron the Baron de Vaudoncourt fr 81 and Frederick North Earl of Guildford These documenters wrote that he kept a large harem of both women and men Such accounts may reflect the Orientalist imagination of Europe and underplay the historical role of Pasha rather than telling us anything concrete about his sexuality 82 Ali Pasha tried to have his homosexual affairs secret from public to avoid disapproval or negative comments by western travelers and diplomats 83 nbsp Ali Pasha and his favorite wife Kira Vassiliki by Paul Emil Jacobs Ali Pasha according to one opinion was a cruel and faithless tyrant still he was not a Turk but an Albanian he was a rebel against the Sultan Mahmud II and he was so far an indirect friend of the Sultan s enemies 84 Throughout his rule he is known to have maintained close relations and corresponded with famous leaders such as Husein Gradascevic Ibrahim Bushati Mehmet Ali Pasha and Ibrahim Pasha citation needed Though certainly no friend to the Greek Nationalists he had personally ordered the painful execution of the Klepht Katsantonis his rule brought relative stability It was only after his forceful deposition that the people of Greece objected to the rule of the Sultan Mahmud II and the newly appointed Hursid Pasha and thus began the Greek War of Independence A long epic poem known as the Alipashiad consisting of more than 10 000 lines is dedicated to the exploits of Ali Pasha The Alipashiad was composed by Haxhi Shekreti an Albanian Muslim from Delvina and was written entirely in Greek 85 Atrocities edit In 1808 Muhurdar a commanding Janissary of Ali Pasha managed to capture one of his most renowned opponents the Greek klepht Antonis Katsantonis only after the later became heavily sick 86 Katsatonis was executed in public by having his bones broken with a sledgehammer 87 In 1809 Ali captured through treachery the klepht Thymios Vlachavas and had him executed by mutilation As Pouqueville noted Vlachavas was suffering under the rays of the hot sun tied to a stake in the court of the seraglio in Ioannina his eyes flashing with defiance before suffering the calm death of a hero In the aftermath Ali s troops destroyed the monastery of Saint Demetrius at Meteora where Vlachavas had sought refuge 86 One of Ali s most notorious crimes without a legal indictment was the mass murder of 17 or 18 chosen young Greek girls of Ioannina They were without a trial sentenced as adulteresses tied up in sacks and drowned in Lake Pamvotis 88 Oral Aromanian tradition songs tells about the cruelty of Ali Pasha s troops citation needed Rebellion and downfall editIn 1819 Ottoman diplomat Halet Efendi brought the attention of Mahmud II r 1808 1839 to issues conspicuously related to Ali Pasha Efendi accused Ali Pasha of grabbing power and influence in Ottoman Rumelia away from the Sublime Porte In 1820 Ali Pasha after long tensions with the Turkish Reforms allegedly ordered the assassination of Gaskho Bey a political opponent in Constantinople Sultan Mahmud II who sought to restore the authority of the Sublime Porte took this as a major opportunity to move against Ali Pasha by ordering his immediate deposition nbsp Ali Pasha s head being presented to the Ottoman Sultan Mahmud II nbsp Ali Pasha s tomb in Ioannina Ali Pasha refused to resign his official post and put up a fierce resistance to the Sultan s troop movements as some 20 000 Ottoman troops led by Hursid Pasha were fighting Ali Pasha s small but formidable army Ali initially mobilised a force of 40 000 but it proved disloyal and dispanded as soon as the advancing Ottomans crossed the border of his realm 89 Most of his followers abandoned him without fighting and fled including Androutsos and his sons Veli and Muhtar or else joined the Ottoman army Among these were Omer Vrioni and Alexis Noutsos who went unopposed to Ioannina which was besieged in August 1820 On December 4 1820 Ali Pasha and the Souliotes formed an anti Ottoman coalition to which the Souliotes contributed 3 000 soldiers Ali Pasha gained the support of the Souliotes mainly because he offered to allow the return of the Souliotes to their land and partly by appeal to their perceived Albanian origin 90 Initially the coalition was successful and managed to control most of the region but when the Muslim Albanian troops of Ali Pasha were informed of the beginning of the Greek revolts in the Morea it was terminated 91 Ali s rebellion against the Sublime Porte increased the value of the Greek military element since their services were sought by the Porte as well He is said to have contracted the services of the Klephts and Souliots in exile in the Ionian Islands as well as the armatoles under his command 92 However he feared that the Klephts might rout him before the arrival of the Ottoman Turks His separatist actions constitute a great example of the institutional corruption and dividing trends prevailing in the Ottoman Empire at the time His effort to become an independent ruler finally caused the reaction of the Sublime Porte which sent an army led by Hurshid Pasha against him in March 1821 which surrounded him in Ioannina 93 During the following summer a short lived coalition with Greek revolutionary forces had effectively checked the power of Sultan s armies and threatened Khursid Pasha s rear 94 By the end of 1821 after about two years of fighting with most of his men having deserted him Ali retreated with Kyra Vassiliki and 70 guards to the citadel in the north eastern corner of Ioannina Castle 94 By October the war of attrition had taken its toll and starved Ali in burnt Ioannina of supplies 95 He had his men place barrels of gunpowder in the basement should it become necessary to blow up the citadel Ali Pasha accepted a request from the Ottomans to enter into negotiations in which he demanded that he be allowed to see the Sultan in person Hurshid Pasha promised to pass on his request to the Sultan and in the interim issued Ali with a safe pass signed by himself and the other pashas in the army Hurshid Pasha also sent Ali a fake imperial firman decree instructing him to leave the citadel while his request for a full pardon was considered 94 Ali accepted probably thinking that he could convince the Sultan that he is still needed in the fight against the Greeks 96 Death edit Despite a feeling that he was being deceived Ali agreed to a truce and left the citadel with his wife entourage and bodyguards and settled in the Monastery of St Panteleimon on the island in Lake Pamvotis previously taken by the Ottoman army during the siege A few weeks later he was visited by a group of pashas and senior officials He suspected a trap but the meeting passed without incident A few days later on January 24 1822 93 the Ottoman s boats returned from which a senior official called Kiose Mehmed Pasha disembarked claiming that he had in his possession the Sultan s firman for his execution Ali told him to stay back until he had read the document but the pasha ignored him and called for him to comply 94 Ali pulled out his pistol and fired at him the Pasha returned fire while Kaftan Agas Hurshid s chief of his staff managed to wound Ali in the arm with his sword 93 Ali s bodyguards rushed to protect him and managed to pull him into the building The resulting gunfight only ending when Ali was mortally wounded in the abdomen by a bullet 93 This caused his men to surrender Ali was then beheaded His last request to his chief bodyguard Thanasis Vagias was for his wife Kyra to be killed in order to prevent her falling into the hands of his enemies but this was ignored 93 Hurshid Pasha to whom it was presented on a large dish of silver plate rose to receive it bowed three times before it and respectfully kissed the beard expressing aloud his wish that he himself might deserve a similar end To such an extent did the admiration with which Ali s bravery inspired these men to efface the memory of his crimes citation needed Ali s head was wrapped in a cloth put on a silver platter and displayed though the streets and the homes of the notables of Ioannina to prove that the Ali was dead The local archbishop was having dinner with friends when Hurshid s bodyguards forced their way into the room and desposited the head on the dinner table and demanded money After saying a prayer for Ali the archbishop handed over a bag of gold coins Ali Pasha s headless corpse was buried with full honors in a mausoleum next to the Fethiye Mosque which he shares with one of his wives His head was meanwhile sent to Constantinople where was displayed to the public on a revolving platter in a courtyard of the Sultan s palace When the Sultan subsequently had Ali s three sons and grandson executed Ali s head was buried with them in tombs outside the Selvyria gate in Constantinople 94 Religion editAli Pasha was born into a Bektashi Muslim family 97 The struggle for power and the political turmoils within the empire required for him to support non Muslim or heterodox priests beliefs and orders 98 and especially the Orthodox Christian population which formed the majority of the population in the region he ruled 99 full citation needed Ali fostered religious activities by the local Greek population 100 One of the spiritual figures which influenced him was Saint Cosmas Ali ordered and supervised the construction of a monastery dedicated to him near Berat 98 101 Ali Pasha maintained control over the Christian population but respected the monasteries and stayed on good terms with the upper clergy 102 He strongly supported the Sufi orders well spread in Rumelia at the time Ali was close to the dominant Sufi orders as the Naqshbandi Halveti Sadiyye or even Alevi 98 Specifically the famous Sufi shrines in Yanina and Parga were Naqshbandi 103 The order that was mostly supported by him was the Bektashis and he is accepted today to have been a Bektashi follower initiated by Baba Shemin of Fushe Kruje 104 Through his patronage Bektashism spread in Thessaly Epirus South Albania and in Kruja 103 105 106 107 108 Ali s tomb headstone was capped by the crown taj of the Bektashi order 109 Nasibi Tahir Babai a Bektashi saint is regarded as one of three spiritual advisers of Ali Pasha 110 Influences editOn Albanians edit nbsp Postage stamp of Albania commemorating the 250th anniversary of Ali s birth Albanian autonomy edit Ali Pasha was among those Albanian military leaders who were at first awarded for their loyalty to the Ottoman Empire and who however exploited the weakness of the Sublime Porte to exercise in northern and southern Albania their gathered military and political power While they are clearly not described as champions of national fight aiming at an independent and united Albania but regarded as political opportunists within the context of the Ottomam Empire nevertheless these Albanian rulers established separate states by challenging the authority of the Sublime Porte and Ali in particular also established foreign diplomatic relations with Napoleonic France and with Britain 111 British travellers who had met Ali Pasha noted that Ali described himself and the Albanians as friends of the British nation Furthermore Albanians were seen as living independently and without oppression by the Porte meanwhile Ali Pasha was aiming to form some kind of alliance with the British government 112 Ali s separatist initiative by conceiving his territory in increasingly independent terms referring to it as Albania 113 eventually aiming at creating an independent Albanian Greek state revealed the vulnerability of Ottoman power 114 The Albanian rule of the Pashalik of Yanina as well as that of the Pashalik of Scutari caused the emergence of a sense of ethnic belonging among the Albanian people which consequently led to an enduring hostility of Albanians against the Sublime Porte also by seeking autonomy from its central power 115 Ismail Qemali 1833 1919 the first head of the Albanian state stated that in the case of Ali Pasha there was a sense of wasted opportunity If Ali Pasha had been less a man of his time and better endowed with political forethought he would himself have organized this coup in time and Albania and Greece with the whole of Thessaly and Macedonia might have become an independent State and a kingdom of great importance 116 Albanian culture edit nbsp Ali Pacha s seraglio and tomb fortress Janina by George de la Poer Beresford published in 1855 117 57 58 Albanian urban songs were performed in the outer courtyards of the Albanian pashaliks including that of Ali Pasha It has been suggested that the Albanian Korcare songs emerged in Ali pasha s seraglio in Ioannina and that they were probably composed by Muco Ali s court musician 118 According to Pouqueville Albanian tribal forms of social organizations disappeared with the dominion of Ali Pasha and definitely ended in 1813 119 In the Pashalik of Yanina in addition to the Sharia for Muslims and Canon for Christians Ali Pasha enforced his own laws allowing only in rare cases the usage of local Albanian tribal customary laws After annexing Suli and Himara into his semi independent state in 1798 he tried to organize the judiciary in every city and province according to the principle of social equality enforcing his laws for the entire population Muslims and Christians To limit blood feud killings Ali Pasha replaced blood feuds Alb gjakmarrje with other punishments such as blood payment or expulsion or the death penalty 120 Ali Pasha also reached an agreement with the Kurveleshi population not to trespass their territories which at that time were larger than the area they inhabit today 121 Continually since the 18th century blood feuds and their consequences in Laberia have been limited principally by the councils of elders 120 Albanian nationalism edit Ali Pasha has been regarded by Albanian nationalists in subsequent times as a national hero who rose against Ottoman rule 122 Although Ali Pasha s intent was not to build a nation state the legacy left behind by him was utilized by the Albanian elite to construct their nationalist platform After Ali Pasha s death the base of Albanian nationalist activities and uprisings against the Ottoman Empire became northern Albania and Kosovo 123 On Greeks edit Modern Greek Enlightenment edit nbsp A Firman issued by Ali Pasha in 1810 written in vernacular Greek Ali always used Greek for all his courtly dealings 124 Although Ali Pasha s native language was Albanian he used Greek for all his courtly dealings 124 with the effect of linking although inchoately the ruling class with the predominantly Greek speaking population of the territories where Ali s rule stretched 125 As a consequence a part of the local Greek population showed sympathy towards his rule 124 This also activated new educational opportunities with businessmen of the Greek diaspora subsidizing a number of new educational purposes 125 Ioannina was among the Greek cities that had already embraced the Age of Enlightenment 126 Education in Ioannina and its schools became renowned throughout the Greek world Those schools were operating by prestigious staff among them philologist Athanasios Psalidas major contributor to the modern Greek Enlightenment and Georgios Sakellarios Ioannis Kolettis served as Ali s son Muchtar personal physician and composed several scientific works As such an academic elite emerged which also included members of Ali s court Many of these personalities took later prominent roles in the Greek War of Independence 127 Greek War of Independence edit Revolutionary preparations and Ali Pasha edit Ali Pasha did not sympathize with Greek rebels He campaigned in Macedonia to exterminate the klephts and armatoles of the region in 1805 eventually managing to reduce substantially their numbers Intense anti Ottoman guerriglia actions arose in Macedonia during the Russo Turkish War in 1806 1812 which caused heavy losses of Ali s Albanians against an army of armatoles and klephts at the Battle of Klinovo 128 The inhabitants of Parga displayed continuous support for Greek revolutionary activities and cooperated with the inhabitants of Souli against Ali Pasha 129 Coastal towns that were under French control such as Parga and Preveza were a source of increasing Greek nationalist sentiment enouraged through French interference 130 In the context of the Greek War of Independence the idea of cooperation with Ali Pasha was not new among the Greeks Leading officials of the Filiki Eteria were considering a possible conversion of Ali to Christianity and the outbreak of the revolution under his direction Ali s policy of exlcuding Turks from all positions of authority and replacing them with Greeks and Albanians had led many Greek advisors and military leaders that consider him of becoming the head of a Greek Albanian kingdom 131 However when Ali heard of the outbreak of the Greek revolt and sent Alexis Noutsos to propose a collaboration between Albanians and Greeks with the aim at establishing an Albanian Greek state under the sovereignty of Ali Pasha the Greeks refused Ali s proposal and Noutsos joined the Greek revolutionaries 132 133 Greek captains would sign in September 1821 a more limited agreement with Ali but it was based on obvious mutual suspicion Albanian agents advised Ali against an alliance with the Greeks because they were militarily useless Their conclusion about the military ineffectiveness of the Greeks and klephts turned out to be true in subsequent events in the Macedonian front 133 Revolutionary preparations in Epirus edit The Filiki Etairia already had expanded widely in 1820 at the time when Ali Pasha was found in open conflict with the Sultan 134 Its leadership decided that the conditions for the outbreak of the revolution were ideal since the conflict between Ali Pasha and the Sultan caused great unrest in Epirus west central Greece west Macedonia and part of Thessaly The Filiki Eteria exploited the specific conflict in order to gain the return of the Souliotes to Epirus and as a result to have Ottoman units removed from southern Greece and especially from the Peloponnese 135 However in Epirus the revolutionary outbreak was complex and difficult due to the concentration of Ottoman troops Members of the Filiki Eteria such as Ioannis Paparigopoulos the Russian consul of Patras convinced Ali that Russia would support him 136 The return of the exiled Souliotes to their homeland in Souli in December 1820 contributed to the creation of a revolutionary center in Epirus a fact that supported the developments for the upcoming Greek revolution in southern Greece 137 The collusions of Souliotes and Muslim Albanians for the defense of Ali Pasha which led to a written agreement in January 15 and 1821 were in accordance with the positions of Alexandros Ypsilantis for the preparation of the Greek revolution 137 Ali Pasha s cause was supported by Souliotes because Ali promised their return to Souli and partly by appeal to their shared Albanian origins 138 Coordinated Greek Albanian operations edit Alexandros Ypsilantis anticipated that Ali would provide resistance against the Sultan s troops in Epirus 136 On January 29 1821 Ypsilantis ordered that Greek forces should be dispatched to Epirus to join those of Ali Pasha temporarily and ostensibly until they managed to defeat the Ottomans there 136 In late March early April 1821 Christoforos Perraivos under order by Ypsilantis urged the Souliotes to maintain their alliance with Ali Pasha but to ignore the military priorities of the latter and concentrate to armed operations that would facilitate the spread of the revolutionary movement in Epirus 139 Perraivos also emphasized only to the prominent Souliots the objectives of the nation due to risk of being leaked to the Muslim Albanians since that would make the later to abandon any agreement 137 A failure in the sector of Tzoumerka thwarted the plans of the Greek revolutionaries and Ali however their operational capabilities in the area had not been diminished 140 The revolutionaries of the area of Arta under Gogos Bakolas resisted the Ottoman advance at Peta on July 15 140 Communication between the Souliote units with troops loyal to Ali Pasha as well as revolutionary leaders from Arta and Acarnania continued Their alliance was ratified on September 1 1821 Alexios Noutsos played a key role in this developments while the Greek revolutionary authorities of Acarnania Aetolia and Morea agreed despite the distrust towards Ali Pasha 140 In the beginning of September the regional alliance reached its climax involving Muslim Albanian beys Souliote chieftains and Greek armatoles who pledged to defend Ali Pasha s rebellion against the Ottoman army 141 138 Greek singnatories evidently had not real intention to fight for Ali Pasha s cause they rather agreed merely to exploit the opportunity this alliance offered them 141 The immediate objective of the alliance was the capture of Arta which was at that time under Ottoman control 141 140 Roughly four thousand armed men gathered to besiege Arta 140 The city was attacked by both Muslims and Christians Albanians and Greeks who had united their forces to pillage the city where an indiscriminate looting of churches mosques shops and stores was perpetrated 141 The lootings during the siege Arta were especially perpetrated by groups of Souliotes and Acarnanians 142 Ottoman troops did not intervene because they knew they were not the target During this event some of the Greek bands plundered the homes of Christians and stole their possessions even torturing people in boiling oil in order to extort information regarding the hiding places of their valuable belongings 141 At the beginning of December 1821 the allied forces managed to capture a greater part of the city however instead of concentrating on the fall of the garrison they turned into widespread looting and the siege was weakened and finally ceased 140 Termination of common operations edit Around the same time during the Ottoman siege of Ali Pasha s forces in Ioannina Muslim Albanian leaders were being informed about events in the Morea which led them to start doubting about the allegiance of their Greeks allies Indeed visiting Mesolonghi in October to see the Greek actions Tahir Abaxhi a Muslim Albanian warlord and especially trusted man of Ali Pasha formerly serving as chief of Ali s police troops noticed that many Greeks were no longer fighting for Ali s cause as after Mesolonghi had declared for the revolution the remaining Muslims were massacred expelled or enslaved The local Greek armatole Dimitrios Makris had even ordered mass killing Mosques were razed to the ground and desecrated and Muslim gils were forcibly baptized The disprespect of the alliance by the Greeks became even more clear when Elmaz Bey informed Abaxhi that on their way home from Tripolitsa they found out that Greeks have strungled some of his soldiers Hence after all the evidence Muslim Albanian leaders eventually broke with Christian Souliotes 141 142 Abaxhi and other Muslim Albanian military personalities that had been previously loyal to Ali Pasha approached the Ottoman commander Khursid Pasha asking for and receiving his pardon promising to support him to kill Ali Pasha and drive out the Greek revolutionaries 143 This so called Greek Albanian alliance was finally dissolved and the Muslim allies of Ali Pasha as well as the warlords oplarhichoi of Acarnania switched sides and came to the Sultan s camp As a consequence Ali Pasha s resistance had been broken and the fortress of Ioannina was captured easily in December 1821 144 Greek nationalism edit Ali s separatist initiative by conceiving his territory in increasingly independent terms referring to it as Albania 113 and eventually aiming at creating an independent Albanian Greek state reveal the vulnerability of Ottoman power and had direct effect on the development of Greek nationalism 114 Though his subject population was by vast majority Greek and noted for their nationalist sentiment there is little evidence that Ali conceived of his desire for independence in such terms 145 However he believed that he could make use of the local Greek national sentiment to strengthen his own power and separatist tendencies 146 Legacy edit nbsp Ali Pasha Castle in Butrint Albania Albania s rich archaeological heritage has been systematically explored since Ali s rule in the early 19th century The excavations were conducted in order to find treasures for Ali s personal collection Systematic investigations of the archaeological sites and monuments of the region have been undertaken by French consul general Francois Pouqueville and British diplomat colonel William Martin Leake who were both introduced in Ali s court 147 Pouqoueville composed his Histoire were he introduced a lengthy account of Ali Pasha It is based on personal acquaintance and multiple conversations with Ali and several other personalities associated with him Pouqueville in this work pointed out that Ali s rule and rebellion against the Porte was a vital precondition for the Greek Revolution While in no way a Greek Nationalist himself Ali s rule greatly weakened Ottoman control of Greece and his death created a vacuum which was promptly filled by the Greek revolutionaries 148 The former monastery in which Ali Pasha was killed is today a popular tourist attraction The holes made by the bullets can still be seen and the monastery has dedicated to him a museum which includes a number of his personal possessions 149 A legend of Ali Pasha s supposed hidden treasure remained unresolved 150 nbsp Ismail Bey and Mehmed Pasha the sons of Veli Pasha and grandsons of Ali Pasha by Louis Dupre 1827 All three of Ali s sons were killed during his downfall but most of his grandchildren were not persecuted by the Ottoman state as they were too young at that time His grandson Tepedelenlizade Ismail Rahmi Pasha son of Veli Pasha had a long career in the Ottoman administration and held twice the governorship of the areas which were ruled by Ali Pasha He was made governor of the Janina vilayet in 1850 and governor of the Thessaly Eyalet in 1864 He also was Mutasarrif of Prizren 1868 1869 and for a brief period governor of Crete 151 Ali Pasha in literature edit nbsp Ali Pasha s mace now at the National Historical Museum of Athens According to the Encyclopedia of Islam in Western literature Ali Pasha became the personification of an oriental despot 1 In the early 19th century Ali s personal balladeer Haxhi Shekreti 152 composed the poem Alipashiad The poem was written in Greek language since the author considered it a more prestigious language in which to praise his master 153 Alipashiad bears the unusual feature of being written from the Muslim point of view of that time 154 It stretches to 15 000 15 syllable lines was written by his personal balladeer 150 Ali is the title character of the 1828 German singspiel Ali Pascha von Janina by Albert Lortzing Ali Pasha s deeds have inspired numerous Greek poems and plays where he is primarily portrayed as cruel tyrant Events like the sacking and drowning of women including Euphrosyne Vasileiou by Ali s orders in Ioannina became the main theme of poet Aristotelis Valaoritis The poem The drowning of Frosyne Nikolaos Mavrommatis 1770 1817 was also dedicated to the same theme as well as the theatrical play Eufrosyne 1876 Other works describe the scorched earth policy Ali undertook in Ioannina and the burning of the city 150 In the novel The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas pere Ali Pasha s downfall is revealed to have been brought about by French Army officer Fernand Mondego Unaware of Mondego s collusion with the Sultan s forces Pasha is described as having entrusted his wife Kyra Vassiliki and daughter Haydee to Mondego who sells them into slavery Mondego then personally murders Ali Pasha and returns to France with a fortune The novel s protagonist Edmond Dantes subsequently locates Haydee buys her freedom and helps her avenge her parents by testifying at Mondego s court martial in Paris Mondego who is found guilty of felony treason and dishonor is abandoned by his wife and son and later commits suicide Alexandre Dumas pere wrote a history Ali Pacha part of his eight volume series Celebrated Crimes 1839 40 Ali Pasha is also a major character in the 1854 Mor Jokai s Hungarian novel Janicsarok vegnapjai The Last Days of the Janissaries translated into English by R Nisbet Bain 1897 under the title The Lion of Janina Ali Pasha and Hursid Pasha are the main characters in Ismail Kadare s historic novel The Traitor s Niche original title Kamarja e turpit Ali Pasha provokes the bey Mustapha a fictional character in Patrick O Brian s 1981 The Ionian Mission to come out fighting on his own account when the British navy is in the area seeking an ally to push the French off Corfu The Turkish expert for the British Navy visits him to learn this tangled story which puts Captain Aubrey out to sea to take Mustapha in battle Many of the conflicting versions about the origin of the Spoonmaker s Diamond a major treasure of the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul link it with Ali Pasha though their historical authenticity is doubtful citation needed Loretta Chase s 1992 historical romance novel The Lion s Daughter includes Ali Pasha and a possible revolt against him by a cousin Ismal The best selling graphic novel Sons of Chaos written by Chris Jaymes published in the US by Penguin Random House in 2019 and in Greece by Kaktos Publishing in 2021 surrounds the story of Ali Pasha and his relationship with the Suliotes 155 156 See also editAlbania under the Ottoman Empire Dimitrios Deligeorgis a secretary to Ali Pasha Greek War of Independence History of Albania History of Ottoman AlbaniaNotes edit a b c d e f g h i j Clayer 2014 Tanner 2014 p 21 That the word Albania was known at all to the English speaking public in the early nineteenth century was largely down to Byron who passed through on his first expedition to Greece aged 21 After reaching Patras in September 1809 he made a detour lasting several weeks to Ioannina which now lies in Greece but was then considered the de facto capital of south ern Albania the honour normally being accorded to Shkodra in the north He also visited Tepelena which alongside Ioannina was the headquarters of the notorious warlord Ali Pasha He then returned to Patras and continued to Athens Fleming 2014 p 116 Fleming 2014 p 112 113 Ali assured Leake that were Albania which by Ali s figuring included sizable portions of Greek Epiros Thrace and Macedonia attacked he would not hesitate in taking military action against the French TEPEDELENLI ALI PASA NIN OGULLARI PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 5 2020 Retrieved January 6 2023 Sellheim R 1992 Oriens BRILL p 303 ISBN 978 90 04 09651 6 Retrieved October 21 2010 a b Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 113 114 a b c H T Norris 1993 Islam in the Balkans Religion and Society Between Europe and the Arab World C Hurst amp Co Publishers pp 231 ISBN 978 1 85065 167 3 Koci Dorian September 26 2018 Pse e rrenoi Ali Pashe Tepelena Hormoven in Albanian Retrieved October 5 2022 Fleming 1999 p 60 Ahmet Uzun O Alh Pasas o Tepelenlhs kai h perioysia toy Ali Pasha from Tepeleni and his fortune Greek p 3 E3aitias ths monadikothtas toy onomatos mias oikogeneias poy metanasteyse apo thn Anatolia sth Roymelh kai egkatasta8hke sto Tepeleni yparxoyn isxyrismoi poy ton 8eloyn Toyrko Entoytois oi isxyrismoi aytoi einai abasimoi afoy sthn pragmatikothta einai apodedeigmeno oti katagotan apo th notia Albania Because of the uniqueness of the name of a family which emigrated from Anatolia to Rumelia and settled in Qender Tepelene there are claims that he was a Turk However these claims are unfounded since in reality it is proven that he came from southern Albania Russell amp Russell 2017 p 115 a b c d Robert Elsie December 24 2012 A Biographical Dictionary of Albanian History I B Tauris pp 7 8 ISBN 978 1 78076 431 3 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 119 123 Malcolm Noel 2020 Rebels believers survivors studies in the history of the Albanians 1st ed Oxford GB Oxford University Press p 218 ISBN 9780198857297 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 122 140 Elsie Robert ed 1813 Thomas Smart Hughes Travels in Albania albanianhistory net Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 122 123 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 115 116 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 123 125 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 127 128 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 128 129 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 129 130 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 130 131 a b Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 131 132 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 133 134 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 134 138 a b Elevating and Safeguarding Culture Using Tools of the Information Society Dusty traces of the Muslim culture Ioannina Greece Earthlab p 337 ISBN 978 960 233 187 3 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 137 139 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 139 140 a b Historia e Popullit Shqipetar Tirana Albania Shtepia Botuese Toena 2002 Studime Historike Vol 41 Instituti i Historise Universiteti Shteteror i Tiranes 1987 p 140 Retrieved August 17 2010 Fleming 2014 pp 157 158 Fleming 2014 p 40 41 Howard 2017 p 234 Findley Carter V 2012 Modern Turkiye Tarihi Islam Milliyetcilik ve Modernlik 1789 2007 Istanbul Timas Yayinlari p 30 ISBN 978 605 114 693 5 Fleming 2014 p 171 Sakellariou 1997 pp 250 251 Fleming K E 2021 Armatoloi In Speake Graham ed Encyclopedia of Greece and the Hellenic Tradition Routledge pp 169 170 ISBN 978 1 135 94206 9 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 141 142 a b Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 142 143 a b c Winnifrith 1987 p 130 Zeana Corneliu 2021 Boldea Iulian ed The Aromanians a distinct Balkan ethnicity PDF The Shades of Globalisation Identity and Dialogue in an Intercultural World in Romanian Arhipelag XXI Publishing House 39 44 ISBN 978 606 93691 3 5 a b Kaser Karl 1992 Hirten Kampfer Stammeshelden Ursprunge und Gegenwart des balkanischen Patriarchats in German Bohlau Verlag Wien p 368 ISBN 978 3 205 05545 7 Die Herrschaft des Ali Pasa Hunderte oder far Tausende von Vlachen und Sarakatsanenfamilien fluchteten in entfernte Gebiete um ihre Freiheit zu retten Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 146 147 Pappas 1982 p 253 Ali immediately ordered an all out attack on Souli in July 1792 with The Souliotes accepted negotiations and presented the terms which included the exchange of hostaged Souliotes for prisoners taken from among Ali s troops the return of all Parasouliote villages to the Souliote confederation Psimuli 2016 p 410 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 147 150 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 152 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 152 153 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 153 154 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 154 a b c d Fleming 2014 p 63 a b Russell amp Russell 2017 p 253 Fleming 2014 p 60 Janina Albania subsequently Greece the audience chamber of Ali Pasha Colour lithograph after G D Beresford 1855 Artstor JSTOR 24792656 a b de la Poer Beresford George 1855 Twelve Sketches in Double tinted Lithography of Scenes in Southern Albania London Day and Son a b Hernandez David R 2019 The Abandonment of Butrint From Venetian Enclave to Ottoman Backwater Hesperia 88 2 365 419 doi 10 2972 hesperia 88 2 0365 S2CID 197957591 p 408 George de la Poer Beresford published 12 double tinted lithographs of scenes from southern Albania in 1855 214 Prokopiu Geōrgios A 2019 Archontika tes Kozanes architektonike kai Xyloglypta PDF Athens Benaki Museum p 13 ISBN 978 960 476 261 3 Eik 11 H ai8oysa twn akroasewn toy Alh Pasa sta Giannena peri to 1800 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 154 155 Phillips Walter Alison 1911 Ali Pasha In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 659 661 a b c Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 155 156 a b Fleming 2014 p 88 Dauti 2018 p 28 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 157 159 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 159 160 a b Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 159 161 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 161 a b Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 161 162 a b Fleming 1999 p 99 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 163 164 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 164 165 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 168 169 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 169 170 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 170 171 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 223 224 Lord Byron s Correspondence John Murray editor Dauti 2018 pp 29 30 35 Rowland E Prothero ed The Works of Lord Byron Letters and Journals Vol 1 1898 mahometan buonaparte amp pg PA252 p 252 letter dated Prevesa 12 November 1809 Dauti 2018 p 37 Vaudoncourt Guillaume de Memoirs on the Ionian Islands including the life and character of Ali Pasha London Baldwin Cradock and Joy 1816 Murray Stephen O amp Roscoe Will 1997 Islamic Homosexualities culture history and literature NYU Press p 189 Singh Jyotsna G Kim David D October 4 2016 The Postcolonial World Routledge p 75 ISBN 978 1 315 29767 5 The Ottoman Power in Europe by Edward Augustus Freeman Wace A J B and Thompson M S 1914 The nomads of the Balkans An account of life and customs among the Vlachs of Northern Pindus Methuen amp Co Ltd p 192 a b Russell amp Russell 2017 p 197 Merry Bruce Encyclopedia of Modern Greek Literature Greenwood Publishing Group 2004 ISBN 978 0 313 30813 0 p 231 Fleming 1999 p 168 Smyris 2000 p 39 Fleming 1999 pp 59 63 Victor Roudometof Roland Robertson 2001 Nationalism globalization and orthodoxy the social origins of ethnic conflict in the Balkans Greenwood Publishing Group p 25 ISBN 978 0 313 31949 5 John S Koliopoulos Brigands with a Cause p 40 a b c d e Pre Revolution Paul Vrellis Greek History Museum 2021 Retrieved March 17 2022 a b c d e Mazower 2021 p 119 120 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 228 Russell amp Russell 2017 pp 229 Fleming 1999 p 32 a b c Pierre Savard Brunello Vigezzi Commission of History of International Relations 1999 Le Multiculturalisme Et L histoire Des Relations Internationales Du XVIIIe Siecle A Nos Jours Milano Edizioni Unicopli p 68 ISBN 9788840005355 OCLC 43280624 Tepedelenli Ali Pasa governor of Yanya Yannina who was an Alevi Bektashi and who also had great love for the Saint Fleming 1992 66 Clark Bruce January 4 2022 Athens City of Wisdom Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 64313 876 3 His native language was Albanian but the language of his court was Greek and he fostered the educational and religious activities of the Greeks Geōrgios K Giakoumes Gregores Vlassas D A Hardy 1996 Monuments of Orthodoxy in Albania Athens Doukas School p 68 ISBN 9789607203090 OCLC 41487098 KOLIKONTASI Monastery thirty four years after his tragic end on the orders of his highness the Vizier Ali Pasha from Tepeleni Konstantinos Giakoumis 2002 The monasteries of Jorgucat and Vanishte in Dropull and of Spelaio in Lunxheri as monuments and institutions during the Ottoman period in Albania 16th 19th centuries Doctor of Philosophy University of Birmingham p 49 Retrieved July 8 2018 Ali Pasha dealt Pasha of Ioannina a b Natalie Clayer 2002 III in Stephanie Schwandner Sievers Bernd Jurgen Fischer eds Albanian Identities Myth and History Indiana University Press p 130 ISBN 9780253341891 OCLC 49663291 he seemed to have been closer to the Sadiyye the Halvetiyye or even the Nakshibendiyye the tekke of Parga was Nakshibendi as well as a well kbown tekke of Ioannina Ali Pasha was considered to be responsible for the propagation of Bektashism in Thessaly in South Albania and in Kruja Miranda Vickers 1999 The Albanians A Modern History London I B Tauris p 22 ISBN 9781441645005 Around that time Ali was converted to Bektashism by Baba Shemin of Kruja Robert Elsie 2004 Historical Dictionary of Albania European historical dictionaries Scarecrow Press p 40 ISBN 9780810848726 OCLC 52347600 Most of the Southern Albania and Epirus converted to Bektashism initially under the influence of Ali Pasha Tepelena the Lion of Janina who was himself a follower of the order Vassilis Nitsiakos 2010 On the Border Transborder Mobility Ethnic Groups and Boundaries along the Albanian Greek Frontier Balkan Border Crossings Contributions to Balkan Ethnography Berlin Lit p 216 ISBN 9783643107930 OCLC 705271971 Bektashism was widespread during the reign of Ali Pasha a Bektashi himself Gerlachlus Duijzings 2010 Religion and the Politics of Identity in Kosovo New York Columbia University Press p 82 ISBN 9780231120982 OCLC 43513230 The most illustrious among them was Ali Pasha 1740 1822 who exploited the organisation and religious doctrine Stavro Skendi 1980 Balkan Cultural Studies East European monographs Boulder p 161 ISBN 9780914710660 OCLC 7058414 The great expandion of Bektashism in southern Albania took place during the time of Ali Pasha Tepelena who is believed to have been a Bektashi himself H T Norris 2006 Popular Sufism in Eastern Europe Sufi Brotherhoods and the Dialogue with Christianity and Heterodoxy Routledge Sufi series Routledge p 79 ISBN 9780203961223 OCLC 85481562 and the tomb of Ali himself Its headstone was capped by the crown taj of the Bektashi order H T Norris 1993 Islam in the Balkans Religion and Society Between Europe and the Arab World University of South Carolina Press pp 73 76 162 ISBN 9780872499775 OCLC 28067651 Brisku 2013 p 23 Dauti 2023 p 16 a b Fleming 2014 p 116 pp 112 113 Ali assured Leake that were Albania which by Ali s figuring included sizable portions of Greek Epiros Thrace and Macedonia attacked he would not hesitate in taking military action against the French a b Faure Christine June 2 2004 Political and Historical Encyclopedia of Women Routledge p 235 ISBN 978 1 135 45691 7 Dauti 2018 p 32 Russell amp Russell 2017 p 231 Beresford G de la Poer Janina Albania subsequently Greece the seraglio and tomb of Ali Pasha Colour lithograph after G D Beresford 1855 Artstor Koco 2018 pp 6 7 Valentini 1956 pp 102 103 a b Elezi Ismet 2006 Zhvillimi historik i Kanunit te Laberise Kanuni i Laberise in Albanian Tirana Botimet Toena Mangalakova 2004 p 7 Yaycioglu 2016 p 112 Dauti 2018 p 62 a b c Fleming 1999 p 63 a b Fleming 1999 p 64 The population of Ali s territories was predominantly Greek speaking and the use of its common tongue by the ruling class had the effect of linking them albeit inchoately with that ruling class Anemoudora 2020 p 20 Fleming 1999 p 65 Palairet Michael 2016 Macedonia A Voyage through History From the Fifteenth Century to the Present Vol 2 Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 97 ISBN 9781443888493 Fleming 2014 pp 70 71 Parga Vonitza Preveza and Butrinto In 1401 the peoples of Parga had established the precedent of colluding with Venice by placing themselves voluntarily under Venetian protection thus staying the advance of the Ottomans These territories came to be known for their staunch support of the Greek revolutionary cause and Parga colluded with the independent Orthodox peoples of Souli in their chronic battles with Ali Pasha Russell amp Russell 2017 p 182 Skiotis 1976 pp 102 Russell amp Russell 2017 p 196 a b Palairet 2016 p 98 Kitromilides 2021 p 115 Kitromilides 2021 p 140 a b c Kitromilides 2021 p 208 a b c Skoulidas 2001 p 17 a b Fleming 2014 p 59 Kitromilides 2021 p 210 a b c d e f Kitromilides 2021 p 212 a b c d e f Mazower 2021 pp 118 119 a b Skoulidas 2001 p 21 Mazower 2021 p 119 The Muslim Albanians now abandoned not only their pact with the Greeks but also Ali Pasha himself in order to fight for the sultan Ambatzis and the others approached the Ottoman commander in chief Khurshid Pasha asking for his pardon and pledging to help him kill Ali and drive out the Greeks Kitromilides 2021 pp 212 232 Fleming 2014 p 157 Although his subject population the vast majority of whom were Greek have been noted for their nationalist impulses and cultural links to Enlightenment Europe there is little evidence that Ali conceived of his desire for independence in such terms Murray Miller Gavin February 6 2020 Revolutionary Europe Politics Community and Culture in Transnational Context 1775 1922 Bloomsbury Publishing p 75 ISBN 978 1 350 02002 3 His plan drew the support of the regional Ottoman potentate Ali Pasha who calculated that stoking the flames of Greek nationalism would strengthen his own local power base and furnish independence from Istanbul Stubbs amp Makas 2011 p 389 Kitromilides 2021 p 669 Nhsos Iwanninwn 2009 Moyseia in Greek Archived from the original on November 3 2009 Retrieved November 12 2009 a b c Merry Bruce May 30 2004 Encyclopedia of Modern Greek Literature Greenwood Publishing Group p 11 ISBN 978 0 313 30813 0 Yaycioglu 2016 pp 239 248 Ruches Pyrrhus J ed 1967 Albanian Historical Folksongs 1716 1943 a survey of oral epic poetry from southern Albania with original texts Chicago Argonaut p 123 Tziovas Demetres 2003 Greece and the Balkans identities perceptions and cultural encounters since the Enlightenment Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 5 ISBN 978 0 7546 0998 8 Merry Bruce 2004 Encyclopedia of modern Greek literature Greenwood Publishing Group p 12 ISBN 978 0 313 30813 0 Sons of Chaos Review SONS OF CHAOS is an Epic Tale of Revolution August 4 2019 Sources editAnemodoura Maria 2020 Politikes kai oikonomikes domes sthn epikrateia toy Alh pasa Tepentelenlh Apo ton Anatoliko Despotismo ews th newterikothta Pergamos Library and Information Center of National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Retrieved July 21 2023 Aravantinos S 1979 1895 Istoria Ali Pasa tou Tepelenli the history of Ali Pasha Tepelenli based on the unpublished texts by Panagiotis Arantinos photographic reprint ed Athens a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Brisku Adrian 2013 Bittersweet Europe Albanian and Georgian Discourses on Europe 1878 2008 Berghahn Books ISBN 978 0 85745 985 5 Clayer Nathalie 2014 Ali Pasa Tepedelenli In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 3rd ed Brill Online doi 10 1163 1573 3912 ei3 COM 23950 ISSN 1873 9830 Dauti Daut January 30 2018 Britain the Albanian Question and the Demise of the Ottoman Empire 1876 1914 phd University of Leeds Dauti Daut 2023 Britain the Albanian National Question and the Fall of the Ottoman Empire 1876 1914 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781350349544 Fleming Katherine Elizabeth 1999 The Muslim Bonaparte diplomacy and orientalism in Ali Pasha s Greece Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00194 4 Fleming K E 2014 The Muslim Bonaparte Diplomacy and Orientalism in Ali Pasha s Greece Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 6497 3 Howard Douglas A 2017 A History of the Ottoman Empire Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108107471 Kitromilides Paschalis M March 25 2021 The Greek Revolution A Critical Dictionary Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 98743 2 Koco Eno 2018 Traditional Songs and Music of the Korce Region of Albania Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 9781527510401 Koliopoulos John S 1987 Brigands with a Cause Brigandage and Irredentism in Modern Greece 1821 1912 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 822863 5 Lampridis I 1993 1888 Malakasiaka Epirotika Meletimata Epirote Studies 5 Ioannina 2 Society for Epirote Studies EHM 25 Lars Gr 1994 I Albania kai I Epiros sta teli tou IG kai stis arches tou IH aion Ta Dytikovalkanika Pasalikia tis Othomanikis Autokratorias Albania and Epirus I the late 18th and early 19th centuries the Ottoman Eyalets of Western Balkans Translated by Dialla A Athens Gutenberg pp 144 173 Leake W M 1967 Travels in northern Greece photographic reprint ed Amsterdam A M Hakkert pp Vol 1 pp 295 Vol 4 pp 260 Mangalakova Tanya 2004 The Kanun in Present Day Albania Kosovo and Montenegro International Centre for Minority Studies and Intercultural Relations Sofia Mazower Mark 2021 The Greek Revolution 1821 and the Making of Modern Europe Hardback Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 241 00410 4 Papastavros A 2013 Ali Pasas apo listarchos igemonas Ali Pasha from bandit to leader Apeirotan Pappas Nicholas Charles 1982 Greeks in Russian Military Service in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries Stanford University Plataris G 1982 Kodikas Choras Metsovou ton eton 1708 1907 Chora Metsovou Log of the years 1708 1907 Athens pp 105 120 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Psimouli Vaso D 1998 Souli kai Souliotes Athens a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Psimuli Vaso Dh 2016 Suli dhe suljotet Souli and the Souliots Toena ISBN 9789928205728 Russell Quentin Russell Eugenia September 30 2017 Ali Pasha Lion of Ioannina The Remarkable Life of the Balkan Napoleon Pen and Sword ISBN 978 1 4738 7722 1 Sakellariou M V 1997 Epirus 4000 Years of Greek History and Civilization Ekdotike Athenon ISBN 960 213 371 6 Skafidas V 1962 Istoria tou Metsovou History of Metsovo Epirotiki Estia 11 121 122 387 Siorokas G 1999 I eksoteriki politiki tou Ali pasa ton Ioanninon Apo to Tilsit sti Vienni the internal affairs policy of Ali Pasha From Tilsit to Vienna 1807 1815 Ioannina a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Skiotis Dennis 1976 The Greek Revolution Ali Pasha s Last Gamble PDF Hellenism and the First Greek War of Liberation 1821 1830 Continuity and Change University of York Faculty of Liberal Arts amp Professional Studies 97 109 Archived from the original PDF on November 17 2015 Retrieved November 16 2015 Skiotis Dennis N July 1971 From Bandit to Pasha first steps in the rise to power of Ali of Tepelen 1750 1784 International Journal of Middle East Studies 2 3 219 244 doi 10 1017 S0020743800001112 JSTOR 162196 S2CID 159559591 Skoulidas Ilias 2001 Relations between Greeks and Albanians 1875 1897 Didaktorika gr in Greek Panepisthmio Iwanninwn Sxolh Filosofikh Tmhma Istorias kai Arxaiologias Tomeas Istorias Newterwn xronwn doi 10 12681 eadd 12856 Retrieved July 22 2023 Stubbs John H Makas Emily G 2011 Architectural Conservation in Europe and the Americas John Wiley and Sons ISBN 9780470901113 Smyris Georgios January 1 2000 The Fortification Network of the Pashalik of Ioannina 1788 1822 National Technical University of Athens in Greek E8niko Metsobio Polytexneio EMP Sxolh Arxitektonwn Mhxanikwn doi 10 12681 eadd 12426 hdl 10442 hedi 12426 Tanner Marcus 2014 Albania s mountain queen Edith Durham and the Balkans London I B Tauris ISBN 9781780768199 Tritos M 1993 Ta sozomena firmania ton pronomion tou Metsovou The surviving firmans about the privileges granted to Metsovo Minutes of the 1st Conference of Metsovite Studies Athens p 404 Ushtelenca Ilir 2009 Shteti dhe qeverisja e Ali Pashe Tepelenes State and Government of Ali Pasha of Tepelena in Albanian Ada ISBN 9789994358595 Valentini Giuseppe 1956 Il diritto delle comunita nella tradizione giuridica albanese generalita Vallecchi Winnifrith Tom 1987 The Vlachs The History of a Balkan People Duckworth ISBN 978 0 7156 2135 6 Yaycioglu Ali 2016 Partners of the Empire The Crisis of the Ottoman Order in the Age of Revolutions Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 9612 5 Zotos Dim A 1938 I dikaiosyni eis to kratos tou Ali pasa Justice in the state of Ali Pasha Athens a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ali Pasha archives edit Ali Pasha Archives 2007 I Chotzi collection Gennadius Library Ed Cpmmentary Index V Panagiotopoulos with collaboration of D Dimitropoulou P Michailari Vol 4 Ali Pasha Archives I Chotzi collection Gennadius Library Ed Commentary Index V Panagiotopoulos with the collaboration of D Dimitropoulou P Michailari 2007 Vol B pp 672 674 doc 851 676 677 doc 855 806 807 doc 943 Further reading editBrondsted Peter Oluf Interviews with Ali Pacha edited by Jacob Isager Athens 1998 Davenport Richard The Life of Ali Pasha Late Vizier of Jannina Surnamed Aslan Or the Lion 2nd ed Relfe London 1822 Dumas pere Alexandre Ali Pacha Celebrated Crimes Fauriel Claude Charles Die Sulioten und ihre Kriege mit Ali Pascha von Janina Breslau 1834 Glenny Misha The Balkans 1804 1999 Granta Books London 1999 Ilicak Sukru ed 2021 Those Infidel Greeks The Greek War of Independence through Ottoman Archival Documents Brill doi 10 1163 9789004471306 ISBN 978 90 04 47129 0 Joka Mor Janicsarok vegnapjai Pest 1854 in English Maurus Jokai The Lion of Janina translated by R Nisbet Bain 1897 1 Manzour Ibrahim Memoires sur la Grece et l Albanie pendant le gouvernement d Ali Pacha Paris 1827 Plomer William The Diamond of Jannina Ali Pasha 1741 1822 New York Taplinger 1970 Pouqueville Francois Voyage en Moree a Constantinople en Albanie et dans plusieurs autres parties de l Empire Ottoman Paris 1805 3 vol in 8 translated in English German Greek Italian Swedish etc available on line at Gallica Pouqueville Francois Travels in Epirus Albania Macedonia and Thessaly London printed for Sir Richard Phillips and Co 1820 an English denatured and truncated edition available on line Pouqueville Francois Voyage en Grece Paris 1820 1822 5 vol in 8 20 edit 1826 1827 6 vol in 8 his capital work Pouqueville Francois Histoire de la regeneration de la Grece Paris 1824 4 vol in 8 translated in many languages French original edition available on Google books 2 Pouqueville Francois Notice sur la fin tragique d Ali Tebelen Paris 1822 in 8 Vaudoncourt Guillaume de Memoirs on the Ionian Islands including the life and character of Ali Pacha London Baldwin Cradock and Joy 1816 Visualizing Ali Pasha Order Relations Networks and Scales Stanford University Archived from the original on October 14 2022 Retrieved June 2 2021 External links edit nbsp Media related to Tepedelenli Ali Pasa at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ali Pasha of Ioannina amp oldid 1224032207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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