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Cretan War (1645–1669)

The Cretan War (Greek: Κρητικός Πόλεμος, romanizedKritikós Pólemos; Turkish: Girit'in Fethi), also known as the War of Candia (Italian: Guerra di Candia) or the Fifth Ottoman–Venetian War, was a conflict between the Republic of Venice and her allies (chief among them the Knights of Malta, the Papal States and France) against the Ottoman Empire and the Barbary States, because it was largely fought over the island of Crete, Venice's largest and richest overseas possession. The war lasted from 1645 to 1669 and was fought in Crete, especially in the city of Candia, and in numerous naval engagements and raids around the Aegean Sea, with Dalmatia providing a secondary theater of operations.

Cretan War
(Fifth Ottoman–Venetian War)
Part of the Ottoman–Venetian Wars

A Venetian map of Candia
Date1645–1669
Location
Result Ottoman victory
Territorial
changes
Crete conquered by the Ottoman Empire
Venetian gains in Dalmatia
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Casualties and losses
30,985 Venetian dead[2] 118,754 Ottoman dead[3]
^ Losses in Candia only, according to Venetian reports, excluding those on the Dalmatian front, at sea, and the initial operations in Crete. If included, the total number of casualties would possibly be twice as high.[4]

Although most of Crete was conquered by the Ottomans in the first few years of the war, the fortress of Candia (modern Heraklion), the capital of Crete, resisted successfully. Its prolonged siege, "Troy's rival" as Lord Byron called it,[5] forced both sides to focus their attention on the supply of their respective forces on the island. For the Venetians in particular, their only hope for victory over the larger Ottoman army in Crete lay in successfully starving it of supplies and reinforcements. Hence the war turned into a series of naval encounters between the two navies and their allies. Venice was aided by various Western European nations, who, exhorted by the Pope and in a revival of crusading spirit, sent men, ships and supplies "to defend Christendom". Throughout the war, Venice maintained overall naval superiority, winning most naval engagements, but the efforts to blockade the Dardanelles were only partially successful, and the Republic never had enough ships to fully cut off the flow of supplies and reinforcements to Crete. The Ottomans were hampered in their efforts by domestic turmoil, as well as by the diversion of their forces north towards Transylvania and the Habsburg monarchy.

The prolonged conflict exhausted the economy of the Republic, which relied on the lucrative trade with the Ottoman Empire. By the 1660s, despite increased aid from other Christian nations, war-weariness had set in. The Ottomans on the other hand, having managed to sustain their forces on Crete and reinvigorated under the capable leadership of the Köprülü family, sent a final great expedition in 1666 under the direct supervision of the Grand Vizier. This began the final and bloodiest stage of the Siege of Candia, which lasted for more than two years. It ended with the negotiated surrender of the fortress, sealing the fate of the island and ending the war in an Ottoman victory. In the final peace treaty, Venice retained a few isolated island fortresses off Crete, and made some territorial gains in Dalmatia. The Venetian desire for a revanche would lead, barely 15 years later, to a renewed war, from which Venice would emerge victorious. Crete, however, would remain under Ottoman control until 1897, when it became an autonomous state; it was finally united with Greece in 1913.

Background edit

After the loss of Cyprus to the Ottomans in the fourth Ottoman–Venetian War (1570–1573), the island of Crete (the "Kingdom of Candia") was the last major overseas possession of Venice.[6] Its important strategic position made it an obvious target for future Ottoman expansion,[7] while its size and fertile ground, together with the bad state of its fortresses, made it a more tempting prize than Malta.[8] On the Venetian side, the Serenissima, with its weak military and great dependence on uninterrupted trade, was anxious not to provoke the Ottomans. Hence Venice scrupulously observed the terms of its treaty with the Ottomans, securing over sixty years of peaceful relations.[9] By the early 17th century moreover, Venetian power had declined considerably. Its economy, which had once prospered because of its control over the Eastern spice trade, had suffered as a result of the opening of the new Atlantic trade routes, and from the loss of the important German market because of the Thirty Years' War.[6] In addition, the Republic had become embroiled in a series of wars in northern Italy like the Mantuan War and was further weakened by an outbreak of the plague in 1629–1631.[10]

The potential for conflict between the Ottomans and Venice was still present, as evidenced in 1638, when a Venetian fleet attacked and destroyed a fleet of Barbary pirates that had sought protection in the Ottoman port of Valona, bombarding the city in the process.[11] Sultan Murad IV was enraged: he threatened to execute all Venetians in the Empire, and put an embargo on Venetian trade.[12] Eventually, and given that the Ottomans were still engaged in a war with the Persians, the situation was defused with the Republic paying the Ottomans an indemnity of 250,000 sequins.[9][13]

A similar episode however in 1644 had an entirely different outcome: on 28 September, the Knights of Malta attacked an Ottoman convoy of sailing ships on its way from Constantinople to Alexandria, aboard which were a number of pilgrims bound for Mecca, including the exiled Kızlar Ağa (Chief Black Eunuch) Sünbül Ağa, the kadi of Cairo and the nurse of the future sultan Mehmed IV. During the fight, Sünbül Ağa and most of the important pilgrims were slain, while 350 men and 30 women were taken to be sold as slaves.[14] The Knights loaded their loot on a ship, which then docked at a small harbor on the southern coast of Crete for a few days, where it disembarked a number of sailors and slaves.[15] The Ottomans were enraged at the incident, and the Porte accused the Venetians of deliberate collusion with the Knights, something the Venetians vehemently denied. With the hawkish party being then dominant in the Ottoman court,[16] the incident was seen as a perfect pretext for war with a weakened Venice.[17] Despite a long period of negotiations, which lasted until well into 1645, and against the objections of the Grand Vizier Sultanzade Mehmed Pasha,[18] war was decided upon. An expedition was quickly assembled with over 50,000 troops and reputedly 416 vessels, under Kapudan Pasha Silahdar Yusuf Pasha, the Sultan's son-in-law. The Ottoman armada sailed from the Dardanelles on 30 April, heading towards the harbor of Navarino in the Peloponnese, where it remained for three weeks.[19] The fleet's target was not announced, but the Ottomans, to allay Venetian fears, implied that it would be Malta.[17]

War edit

Early operations edit

The Venetians were indeed fooled by the Ottoman subterfuge and were taken by surprise at the arrival of the Ottoman fleet at Crete on 23 June 1645.[19] Despite the efforts of the recently appointed provveditore generale, Andrea Corner, the Venetian defenses were still in a bad state.[20] The island's fortifications were substantial, but they had been long neglected, and much effort was put into repairing them.[21] Anxious about Ottoman preparations, the Republic reinforced Crete in late 1644 with 2,500 troops and provisions, and began arming its fleet, while assistance was promised in the event of war by the Pope and Tuscany.[22]

 
Map of Canea (Chania) and its fortifications, 1651

The Ottomans first landed 15 miles west of Canea (Chania), where the local militia fled before them.[19] They then attacked the small island fortress of St. Todero, the commander of which, the Istrian Blasio Zulian, blew himself, the fortress and its garrison up rather than let it fall to the Ottomans. The Ottoman army next advanced to the city of Canea itself, which fell on 22 August, after a siege that lasted for 56 days.[23] At the same time, however, the Venetians were strengthened, as the promised help started to arrive in the form of galleys from the Papal States, Tuscany, Malta and Naples. In September, the Ottoman fleet was in disarray, but the allied Christian fleet, under the cautious command of Niccolò Ludovisi, the Pope's nephew, failed to exploit the opportunity for a decisive strike.[24] When the Christian forces finally moved to retake Canea on 1 October, with a fleet of about 90 ships, the stout Ottoman defense and the Allies' lack of cooperation doomed the attack. Soon thereafter, the Venetian allies returned to their bases.[24]

 
1651 map by Francesco Basilicata depicting the Venetian Lion of St. Mark standing guard over the Regno di Candia. By that time however, all of the island, except for the capital Candia, was under Ottoman control.

In November, Silahdar Yusuf Pasha left behind a strong garrison and returned to Constantinople for the winter. There however, he fell foul of the Sultan and was executed.[25] Nevertheless, Ottoman preparations continued in order to renew and expand the war, while the Venetians were frantically trying to raise money and men, and attempting to induce other European powers to join them against the Ottomans. However, as most of Europe was locked into the fierce antagonisms of the Thirty Years' War, their pleas fell mostly on deaf ears.[26] The Venetians were hard pressed by the financial demands of the war: besides placing taxes on the Italian mainland possessions (the Terraferma), they resorted to the sale of nobility titles and state offices to fill their war coffer.[27] To lead the effort against the Ottomans, the Senate initially appointed the 80-year-old doge Francesco Erizzo, but after his death in early 1646, he was replaced by the 73-year-old Giovanni Cappello as Captain General of the Sea.[28]

Cappello's performance in 1646 was distinctly lackluster: he failed to interdict the arrival of Ottoman reinforcements under Koca Musa Pasha in June (see below),[29] and an attack on the Ottoman fleet at Chania Bay in August failed, as did his attempt to break the Ottoman blockade of Rettimo (Rethymno). As a result, the city fell on 20 October, while the citadel held out until 13 November.[30] During the winter of 1646–1647, both sides suffered from an outbreak of plague, and throughout the spring of 1647, operations did not make much headway. In mid-June however, a small Ottoman force routed a larger body of Venetian mercenaries. This Ottoman success paved the way for Gazi Hüseyin Pasha, the local commander, to conquer the eastern half of the island, except for the fortress of Siteia.[31] The Venetians and the local population suffered some grievous losses: it is estimated that by 1648, almost 40% of the Cretan population had perished of disease or warfare,[32] and in 1677, the island's pre-war population of ca. 260,000 had dropped to about 80,000.[33] By the beginning of 1648, all of Crete, except Candia and a few strongholds like the island of Gramvousa, was in Ottoman hands.[25]

Siege of Candia begins edit

 
The siege of Candia, c. 1680

The siege began in May 1648. The Ottomans spent three months investing the city, which included cutting off the water supply. Eventually, it would last until 1669, the second longest siege in history after the Siege of Ceuta (1694-1727) by the Moors under Moulay Ismail.[34] The Ottoman besiegers were adversely affected by the bad supply situation caused by the activity of the Christian fleets in the Aegean, who intercepted Ottoman convoys carrying supplies and reinforcements to the island.[35] In addition, the overall Ottoman war effort was severely hampered by increased domestic instability caused by Sultan Ibrahim's erratic policies and his summary execution of leading state officials. It ultimately led to his deposition in favor of his son Mehmed IV, ushering in a further period of confusion within the Ottoman government.[36]

The lack of supplies had forced the Ottoman commander Gazi Hüseyin Pasha to lift the siege in early 1649, but it was renewed for a short period of two months after the arrival of the Ottoman fleet in June.[37] The Ottomans assailed the fortifications, exploding over 70 mines, but the defenders held firm. The Ottomans lost over 1,000 men, and the subsequent withdrawal of 1,500 Janissaries and the lack of any further reinforcements over the course of 1650 left Hüseyin Pasha with little option but to continue maintaining as tight a blockade as possible.[37] The Ottomans strengthened their positions with the construction of three forts in the Canea area, and the arrival of reinforcements in late 1650 allowed them to keep up their tight blockade.[38] Despite the Venetian blockade of the Dardanelles and the political turmoil at the Ottoman court, the Ottoman forces were kept well supplied enough to sustain themselves, although too weak to engage in offensive actions against Candia itself. In 1653, the Ottomans took the island fortress of Selino in Suda Bay, and San Todero, captured a few years previously, was refortified.[39] The Venetian naval successes over the next few years further reduced the offensive ability of the Ottoman army in Crete, but the blockade of Candia continued, and the Ottomans retained possession of their other conquests on the island, until the arrival of a new Ottoman expeditionary force in 1666.

Naval war edit

Early clashes, 1645–1654 edit

 
A Maltese galley. Although being gradually replaced by sailing ships, galleys formed still a large part of the Mediterranean navies during the 17th century.

Venice could not directly confront the large Ottoman expeditionary force on Crete, but it did possess a fine navy, that could intervene and cut the Ottoman supply routes.[40] In 1645, the Venetians and their allies possessed a fleet of 60–70 galleys, 4 galleasses and about 36 galleons.[41] The Venetians were also superior in their use of a mixed fleet of both galleys and sailing ships, while initially, the Ottoman navy relied almost exclusively on galleys.[42] In order to bolster their forces, both opponents hired armed merchantmen from the Netherlands, and later from England (especially the Ottomans), to augment their forces.[43]

The first Venetian operation was an attempt to blockade the Dardanelles in 1646. To interdict the supplies headed to the Ottoman forces in Crete, a force of 23 Venetian ships under Tommaso Morosini scoured the Aegean for Ottoman shipping, and attempted to capture the strategically important island of Tenedos at the entrance of the Dardanelles. The Kapudan Pasha Koca Musa led a fleet of 80 warships against the Venetians, but his fleet was driven back into the Dardanelles on 26 May.[44] However, the blockading fleet was unable to stop the next exit of the Ottoman fleet on 4 June, when the lack of wind enabled the Ottoman galleys to evade the Venetian sailing ships. The Ottomans were thus able to land new troops and supplies on Crete unopposed.[45] The efforts of the Venetian fleet to counter the Ottoman land operations in Crete likewise failed, through a combination of timidity on behalf of their commanders, the delays in payment for the crews, and the effects of a widespread plague.[46]

On 27 January 1647, the Venetians lost Tommaso Morosini, when his ship was forced to face the entire Ottoman fleet of 45 galleys. In the ensuing fight, Morosini was killed, but managed to cause significant casualties to the Ottomans, including Koca Musa Pasha himself. The ship itself was rescued by the timely arrival of the Venetian fleet under the new Captain General, Giovanni Battista Grimani. This stand-off, where a single ship had caused such damage and casualties to the entire Ottoman fleet, was a major blow to Ottoman morale.[47] Despite some successes like a raid in Çeşme, the remainder of the year was a failure for the Venetians, as several attempts to blockade Ottoman harbors failed to stem the flow of supplies and reinforcements to Crete.[48]

 
Battle of the Venetian fleet against the Turks at Phocaea (Focchies) in 1649. Painting by Abraham Beerstraten, 1656.

The Venetians returned to the Dardanelles in 1648. Despite losing many ships and admiral Grimani himself in a storm in mid-March,[49] reinforcements under Giacomo da Riva brought the Venetian fleet back up to strength (some 65 vessels), and allowed them to successfully blockade the Straits for a whole year.[35] The Ottomans countered this in part by building a new fleet at Çeşme, forcing the Venetians to divide their forces,[35] and in 1649, a strengthened Ottoman fleet under Kapudan Pasha Voinok Ahmed broke the blockade.[25] Despite scoring a victory over the Ottoman fleet in its anchorage at Phocaea on 12 May 1649, capturing or destroying several ships, da Riva was not able to prevent the Ottoman armada from eventually reaching Crete.[50] This highlighted the weakness of the Venetian position: maintaining long blockades with galleys was an inherently difficult task, and the Republic did not have enough ships to control both the Dardanelles and the passage of Chios at the same time.[40] In addition, in a major development, 1648 the Ottomans decided, in a meeting chaired by the Sultan himself, to build and employ galleons in their fleet, instead of relying exclusively on oared galleys as hitherto.[51]

For most of 1650, a Venetian fleet of 41 vessels maintained the blockade of the Dardanelles, prohibiting Haideragazade Mehmed Pasha from sailing for Crete. He was replaced late in the year by Hozamzade Ali Pasha, governor of Rhodes, who used a clever ploy to get through the blockade: waiting until winter, when the Venetians withdrew their forces, he assembled a small number of ships and embarked several thousand troops with many provisions on them, and sailed unmolested to Crete.[38]

On 10 July 1651, the first significant naval battle of the war was fought south of Naxos, a three-day engagement in which the Venetians with 58 ships under Alvise Mocenigo were victorious over the twice as large Ottoman fleet.[52] The remainders of the Ottoman fleet withdrew to Rhodes, from where they were however able to reach Candia. Mocenigo was replaced soon after by Leonardo Foscolo, but both sides did not accomplish much in the next two years, although the Ottomans did succeed in supplying their forces on Crete while keeping their fleet intact.[53]

Dardanelles, 1654–1657 edit

 
Map of the Dardanelles and vicinity

For 1654, the Ottomans marshaled their strength: the Arsenal (Tersâne-i Âmire) in the Golden Horn produced new warships, and squadrons from Tripolitania and Tunis arrived to strengthen the Ottoman fleet.[54] The strengthened Ottoman fleet that sailed forth from the Dardanelles in early May numbered 79 ships (40 sailing ships, 33 galleys and 6 galleasses), and further 22 galleys from around the Aegean and 14 ships from Barbary stood by to reinforce it off the Straits.[55] This force considerably outnumbered the 26 ships of the Venetian blockade fleet under Giuseppe Dolfin.[56] Although the battle that followed resulted in an Ottoman victory, for the Venetians, given the successful escape of their fleet from the superior Ottoman force, coupled with reports of large Ottomans casualties and the great bravery displayed by the Venetian crews, it counted as a moral victory.[57] The Ottoman fleet, now reinforced by the Aegean and Barbary squadrons, plundered the Venetian island of Tinos, but retreated after only a brief skirmish with the Venetians under Alvise Mocenigo on 21 June. Kara Murad Pasha succeeded in evading the Venetians for the remainder of the year, with both fleets sailing back and forth in the Aegean, before returning to the Dardanelles in September due to agitation among the fleet's Janissaries.[58] The final months of 1654 were marked by a significant change in the Venetian leadership: Mocenigo died at Candia, and was succeeded as acting Captain General of the Sea by Francesco Morosini, who had distinguished himself in the previous battles.[59]

Morosini initiated a more energetic approach in the Venetian pursuit of the war: in the spring of 1655, he raided the Ottoman supply depot at Aigina and razed the port town of Volos in a night attack on 23 March. In early June, Morosini sailed to the Dardanelles, awaiting the sally of the Ottoman fleet, which was however delayed because of political upheaval in the Ottoman government.[59] Leaving Lazzaro Mocenigo with half the fleet (36 ships) to keep watch at the Straits, Morosini returned to the Cyclades.[60] A week after his departure however, on 21 June, the Ottoman fleet, numbering 143 ships under Mustapha Pasha, appeared.[61] The resulting battle was a clear Venetian victory. The Ottoman fleet avoided action for the remainder of the year, before it withdrew to winter quarters, leaving Morosini free to undertake an ultimately unsuccessful siege of the strategically important island fortress of Malvasia (Monemvasia) off the south-eastern coast of the Peloponnese.[62] In September, Morosini was posted as the new provveditore of Crete, with Lorenzo Marcello as the new Captain General of the Sea.[63]

 
The Third Battle of the Dardanelles, by Pieter Casteleyn, 1657

Although in the previous years the Venetians had generally held the upper hand against the Ottomans, largely controlling the Aegean and able to extract tribute and recruits from its islands,[64] they had been unable to transform this superiority into concrete results. Despite their defeats, the Ottomans were still free to roam the Aegean and resupply their forces in Crete,[65] in particular through the use of supply fleets from places like Alexandria, Rhodes, Chios or Monemvasia in the Peloponnese.[66] In June 1656 however, a combined Venetian–Maltese fleet of 67 ships under Marcello inflicted on the Ottomans, with 108 ships under Kenan Pasha, their "worst naval defeat since Lepanto":[63][67] Sixty Ottoman ships were destroyed and 24 captured and 5,000 Christian galley slaves set free, although the Venetians and Maltese suffered some casualties too, including the loss of Captain General Marcello.[68] Although in the aftermath of this victory the Maltese contingent departed, the scale of their success enabled the Venetians under Barbado Doer to seize Tenedos on 8 July and Lemnos on 20 August.[69] Using the two islands, strategically located near the entrance of the Straits, as forward bases, the Venetian blockade became much more effective. As a result, the resupply of Crete was effectively cut off, and Constantinople itself suffered a shortage of food during the following winter.[70]

In 1657, the Ottomans reversed the situation. A new and energetic Grand Vizier, Köprülü Mehmed Pasha, armed with almost dictatorial authority, had been appointed in September 1656, and reinvigorated the Ottoman war effort.[71][72] The fleet was strengthened under the new Kapudan Pasha, Topal Mehmed,[71] and in March, the Ottomans succeeded in evading the Venetian blockade of the Straits and sailed towards Tenedos. They did not attack the island however, because the Venetian garrison was too strong.[73] In May, the Venetians under Lazzaro Mocenigo achieved some minor victories, on 3 May and two weeks later at Suazich. Reinforced by Papal and Maltese ships, Mocenigo sailed to the Dardanelles, awaiting the renewed sally of the Ottoman fleet, which came on 17 July. Due to disagreements among the Christian commanders, the allied battle line had not been completely formed, and the Ottoman fleet was able to exit the Narrows before battle was joined.[74] The battle consisted of a series of actions over three days, with both fleets drifting south and west out of the Dardanelles into the Aegean. The battle ended in the evening of 19 July, when an explosion destroyed the Venetian flagship and killed Mocenigo, forcing the allied fleet to withdraw. In this battle, the Venetians had inflicted heavier casualties on the Ottomans than they had suffered, but the Ottomans had achieved their goal: the blockade was broken.[75] Under the personal direction of the Grand Vizier and strengthened by men and ships from the Barbary states,[76] the Ottoman fleet proceeded to recover Lemnos, on 31 August, and Tenedos, on 12 November, thus removing any hope the Venetians may have had of re-establishing the blockade as firmly as before.[77][78]

Stalemate, 1658–1666 edit

In 1658, Ottoman power was redirected north in a campaign against George II Rákóczi, Prince of Transylvania, which evolved into a long conflict with the Habsburgs.[78] For the next few years, the Venetian fleet, again under the command of Morosini, unsuccessfully attempted to maintain the blockade of the Straits of the Dardanelles. Morosini also resumed his tactic of attacking Ottoman strongholds: a siege of the island of Santa Maura (Lefkada) in August 1658 failed, but in 1659, the Venetians, aided by the Maniots, sacked Kalamata in the Peloponnese, followed by Torone in the Chalcidice, Karystos in Euboea, and Çeşme. However, since Venice could not spare forces to occupy these places, these raids gained the Republic nothing of substance.[77] On the Ottoman side, Köprülü Mehmed ordered the construction of two new forts, Sedd el Bahr ("Rampart of the Sea") and Kilid Bahr ("Key of the Sea"), at the European shore of the entrance of the Dardanelles, to prohibit the Venetians from entering the Straits again.[79]

In the meantime, war-weariness had set in among the Venetians, who suffered from the disruption in trade. Peace feelers were sent to the Ottomans, but their demand for the full concession of Crete as a condition for peace was unacceptable to the Republic.[78][80] With the end of the war between France and Spain however, the Venetians became encouraged, hoping to receive increased assistance in money and men, especially from the French, whose traditionally good relations with the Porte had soured of late.[77]

This support did indeed soon develop, when individuals or whole companies of men from across Western Europe volunteered for the Republic's army, while Christian rulers also felt obliged to provide men, supplies and ships.[66][81] The first French contingent of 4,200 men under Prince Almerigo d'Este arrived in April 1660, along with further contingents of German mercenaries, troops from Savoy, and Maltese, Tuscan and French ships.[72] Despite this increase in strength, Morosini's operations in 1660 were a failure: an assault on Canea in August succeeded in taking the outlying fortifications but failed to retake the city itself; similarly, an attack against the Ottoman siege lines at Candia in September achieved some success, but did not break the Ottoman siege.[72] Following the death of Prince d'Este at Naxos shortly after, the French contingent returned home, followed soon after by a disheartened Morosini, who was succeeded by his kinsman Giorgio.[82] In 1661, Giorgio Morosini scored a few minor successes: he broke an Ottoman blockade of Tinos, and, pursuing the Ottoman fleet, defeated it off Milos. The next few years however were relatively idle. Although the Ottomans were heavily engaged with the Austrians in Hungary, and that their fleet rarely sallied forth, the Venetians failed to make use of this opportunity, and, except for the intercept of a supply convoy from Alexandria off Kos in 1662, there was little action.[83]

Final phase 1666–1669 edit

 
Grand Vizier Köprülü Fazıl Ahmed Pasha

If the Venetians were idle, the Ottomans were not: with the signing of the Peace of Vasvár in 1664, they were able to focus their strength against Crete. Grand Vizier Köprülü Fazıl Ahmed initiated large preparations in the winter of 1665/66, and dispatched 9,000 men to bolster the Ottoman forces in Crete.[84] An Ottoman peace proposal, which would have allowed Venice to keep Candia against an annual payment of tribute was rejected,[85] and in May 1666, the Ottoman army, under the personal leadership of the Grand Vizier, departed from Thrace for southern Greece, whence it would embark for Crete during the winter. In February 1667, the Venetians received significant reinforcements from France and Savoy, totaling 21 warships and some 6,000 men, but, as in past years, disagreements among the leaders of the various contingents over precedence (France, the Papal States, Malta, Naples, Sicily contributed ships and men) hampered operations.[86] At the time, Catherine of Braganza, Queen of England, involved herself in the effort to relieve Candia, but failed to persuade her husband Charles II to take any action. Francesco Morosini, now again Captain General, sought to engage the Ottomans, but they avoided battle, and using their superior resources and bases, they steadily kept their forces on Crete supplied. The only allied success in 1667 was the repulsion of an Ottoman raid on Cerigo (Kythera).[87]

On 8 March 1668, the Venetians were victorious in a hard-fought night battle off the island of St Pelagia, where 2,000 Ottoman troops and 12 galleys attempted to seize a small Venetian galley squadron. Forewarned of their intentions Morosini reinforced it, and won a costly victory, which was to be Venice's last victory at sea in this war.[88] Reinforced again with Papal and Hospitaller ships, the Venetians maintained a blockade of Canea, the Ottomans' main supply base, during summer. To secure their anchorage off St Todero island, the allied forces seized the fortress island of St Marina,[89] a minor success which did not in the end prevent the Kapudan pasha's fleet, bearing fresh troops and supplies, from reaching Canea in September, after the Maltese–Papal squadron had departed.[90]

Fall of Candia edit

 
German map of the final phase of the Siege of Candia. It clearly illustrates the city's trace italienne fortifications, and the proximity of the characteristic Ottoman siege trenches, especially in the northwestern sector (bottom right), to the walls.

The new Ottoman army arrived on the island during the winter of 1666/1667, and in 22 May, the final phase of the siege, overseen by the Grand Vizier himself, began. It lasted 28 months. In the assaults sorties that followed, 108,000 Turks and 29,088 Christians lost their lives. These casualties included 280 Venetian noblemen, a figure equivalent to roughly a quarter of the Grand Council.[41] Faced with the renewed Ottoman assault and a struggling economy, despite the prospect of considerable reinforcements from Western Europe, in 1668 the Signoria hoped to end the war by striking a peace settlement with the Ottomans.[91] Indeed, the Venetians hoped to use the imminent arrival of reinforcements to secure concessions from the Ottomans.[92] Admiral Andrea Valier was at first appointed as envoy, but fell ill and was quickly replaced by the elderly nobleman Alvise da Molin.[93] Molin and his embassy traveled to Larissa, where the Ottoman court resided during one of the Sultan's hunting expeditions.[94] The Ottomans proposed that Venice keep one half of Crete, but the Signoria, emboldened by further pledges of reinforcements, especially from France, and renewed turmoil at the Ottoman court and within the Empire, refused the offer.[95] Molin, in the meantime transported by the Ottomans to Canea in Crete, was ordered to continue negotiations and to continue observing the Ottomans' strength and intentions, but not commit himself or the Republic.[96]

 
Schematics detailing the Ottoman trenches and mines and the Venetian counter-mines at Candia, by Johann Bernhard Scheither, 1672.

On 19 June, the first part of the long-awaited French contingent (in total some 6,000 soldiers and 31 ships), under the command of François, Duke of Beaufort, arrived at Candia. The second part, comprising the galley fleet, would arrive on 3 July.[97] The Ottomans had been making steady progress over the past years, having reached the outer bastions of the fortress; the defenders were in dire straits, while most of the city of Candia lay ruined.[98] The French staged their first sally on 25 June. Caught by surprise, the Ottomans were quickly routed, but the French became disorganized among the siege trenches, and an Ottoman counter-attack drove them back. The attack thus ended in disaster, costing the French some 800 dead, including the Duke of Beaufort himself, who was hit by a bullet and left on the field.[99] The arrival of the second half of the French expeditionary force revived the defenders' morale, and a combined attack was agreed upon, involving bombardment of the Ottoman siege lines by the powerful allied fleet. The attack was launched on 25 July, in an impressive display of firepower: up to 15,000 cannonballs were said to have been fired by the fleet alone.[100] The Ottomans however were well-protected by their deep earthworks, and suffered comparatively little damage, while things went awry for the Christian fleet, as an accident caused the explosion of the French flagship Thérèse, which in turn caused significant casualties among the surrounding French and Venetian ships.[101]

This failure, coupled with the disaster of the previous month, further soured the relations between the French and the Venetians. Cooperation was distinctly lacking in the few operations attempted during the next few weeks, while the bad supply situation, the spread of sickness among their troops and the continuous attrition of their forces in the everyday fighting at Candia made the French commanders especially keen to depart.[102] The French contingent eventually departed on 20 August. Two Ottoman assaults on the 25th were repulsed, but to Morosini, it was clear that the city could no longer be held.[103] After a council of war on 27 August, but without first consulting Venice, it was decided to capitulate. On 5 September 1669, the city was surrendered to the Ottomans, while the survivors of the garrison, the citizens and their treasures were evacuated.[104][105] On his own initiative, Morosini concluded a permanent peace agreement with the Ottomans, which, under the circumstances, was relatively generous: Venice would retain the Aegean islands of Tinos and Kythera and the isolated island fortresses of Spinalonga, Gramvousa and Souda off the Cretan coast, as well as the gains made in Dalmatia.[64][104]

War in Dalmatia edit

 
During the Candian War, the Venetians in Dalmatia with the support of the local population managed to compel the Ottoman garrison of Klis Fortress to surrender.

The Dalmatian front was a separate theater of operations, which was involved in the early phase of the war. The conditions there were almost reverse to those in Crete: for the Ottomans, it was too far away and relatively insignificant, while the Venetians operated near their own bases of supply and had undisputed control of the sea, being thus able to easily reinforce their coastal strongholds.[106] The Ottomans launched a large-scale attack in 1646, and made some significant gains, including the capture of the islands of Krk, Pag and Cres,[107] and most importantly, the supposedly impregnable fortress of Novigrad, which surrendered on 4 July, after only two days of bombardment.[108] The Ottomans were now able to threaten the two main Venetian strongholds in Dalmatia, Zadar and Split.[109] In the next year however, the tide turned, as the Venetian commander Leonardo Foscolo seized several forts, retook Novigrad, temporarily captured the fortress of Knin and took Klis,[25][32] while a month-long siege of the fortress of Šibenik by the Ottomans in August and September failed.[49] During the next few years, military operations stalled because of an outbreak of famine and plague amongst the Venetians at Zadar, while both sides focused their resources in the Aegean area.[110] As other fronts took priority for the Ottomans, no further operations occurred in the Dalmatian theater.[79] Peace in 1669 found the Republic of Venice with significant gains in Dalmatia, its territory tripled, and its control of the Adriatic thus secured.[64]

Greek uprisings edit

During the course of the war, the Venetians sought to instigate Greek uprisings in several regions against the Turks.[111] Such uprisings mainly took place in the Peloponnese and the Aegean islands, where the presence of Christian navy emboldened the Greeks to rebel against Ottoman rule.[111] In 1647, when the Venetian general Giovanni Battista Grimani had blocked a large part of the Ottoman navy in Argolis, there was an uprising in Nauplio which was largely unsuccessful. In 1659 there were several small uprisings in Laconia, Messenia and Argolis.[111]

During the spring of 1659, Francesco Morosini departed for Sifnos, where he met the former Patriarch of Constantinople Joannicius II and several other Greek clerics; subsequently they went to the Mani Peninsula in order to encourage a rebellion.[111] In March 1959, although initially reluctant, the Maniots invaded and conquered Kalamata with support from the Christian allies. Several villages in northeastern Pelopponese, from Mani to Elis, rebelled around the same time.[111] However, when the Ottomans counter-attacked, Morosini left the Peloponnese with several Greek notables and went to Milos.[111] In August, in order to continue the uprisings, Morosini sent two Greek clerics from Crete to the Peloponnese, promising future military interventions from Venice, which never happened.[111] Ultimately, the Ottomans closed in on the rebels, forcing them to either surrender or flee to Italy (especially Cargèse, Corsica, in modern-day France).[111]

Aftermath edit

The surrender of Candia ended the four and a half centuries of Venetian rule in Crete, and brought the Ottoman Empire to its temporary territorial zenith.[112] At the same time, the cost and casualties incurred during this prolonged war contributed greatly to the decline of the Ottoman state during the latter 17th century.[43] On the other hand, Venice had lost its greatest and most prosperous colony, its pre-eminent trading position in the Mediterranean had diminished,[113] and its treasury was exhausted, having spent some 4,253,000 ducats on the defense of Candia alone.[33] To all this, the Dalmatian gains were insufficient compensation. Upon his return to Venice in 1670, Morosini was tried on charges of insubordination and treason, but was acquitted. Fifteen years later, he would lead the Venetian forces in the Morean War, where the Republic attempted, for the last time, to reverse its losses and reestablish itself as one of the major powers of the Eastern Mediterranean.[41][114] During that war, in 1692, a Venetian fleet attempted to retake Candia, but failed. The last Venetian strongholds off Crete fell in the last Ottoman–Venetian War in 1715.[33] Crete would remain under Ottoman control until 1897, when it became an autonomous state. The island continued under nominal Ottoman suzerainty until the Balkan Wars. In their aftermath, the Ottoman Sultan dropped any claim on the island, and on 1 December 1913 it was formally united to Greece.[115]

Following the fall of Candia, fears rose that the Ottomans would attack Malta. In 1670, the Order of St. John began to improve the island's defences with the construction of the Cottonera Lines and Fort Ricasoli.[116]

References edit

  1. ^ The Dynastic Centre and the Provinces: Agents and Interactions. Brill. 17 April 2014. p. 47. ISBN 9789004272095.
  2. ^ Paoletti, Ciro (2008). A Military History of Italy. p. 33.
  3. ^ Paoletti, Ciro (2008). A Military History of Italy. p. 33.
  4. ^ Paoletti, Ciro (2008). A Military History of Italy. p. 33.
  5. ^ Lord Byron, Childe Harold, Canto IV.14
  6. ^ a b Faroqhi 2006, p. 51.
  7. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 107–108.
  8. ^ Greene (2000), p. 17
  9. ^ a b Finkel 2006, p. 222.
  10. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 104–106.
  11. ^ Lane (1973), p. 408
  12. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 108–109.
  13. ^ Parry & Cook (1976), p. 152
  14. ^ Setton 1991, p. 111.
  15. ^ Finkel 2006, p. 225.
  16. ^ Finkel 2006, p. 226.
  17. ^ a b Finlay (1856), p. 128
  18. ^ Setton 1991, p. 124.
  19. ^ a b c Setton 1991, p. 126.
  20. ^ Setton 1991, p. 120.
  21. ^ Setton 1991, p. 107.
  22. ^ Setton 1991, p. 121.
  23. ^ Setton 1991, p. 127.
  24. ^ a b Setton 1991, pp. 128–129.
  25. ^ a b c d Finkel 2006, p. 227.
  26. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 131–132.
  27. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 131, 137–138.
  28. ^ Setton 1991, p. 129.
  29. ^ Setton 1991, p. 140.
  30. ^ Setton 1991, p. 141.
  31. ^ Setton 1991, p. 147.
  32. ^ a b Setton 1991, p. 148.
  33. ^ a b c Miller 1921, p. 196.
  34. ^ The Siege of Candia is often cited as "the longest siege on record", (e.g. by "Crete" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 427.). Nevertheless, the blockade and siege of Ceuta, variously given as lasting until 1720 ("Ceuta" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 777.) or until Moulay's death in 1727 14 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, was longer.
  35. ^ a b c Setton 1991, p. 150.
  36. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 151–153.
  37. ^ a b Setton 1991, p. 158.
  38. ^ a b Setton 1991, p. 159.
  39. ^ Setton 1991, p. 167.
  40. ^ a b Turnbull, p. 85
  41. ^ a b c The War for Candia, VENIVA consortium, 1996, retrieved 27 November 2008
  42. ^ Cooper 1979, p. 231.
  43. ^ a b Holt, Lambton & Lewis 1978, p. 631.
  44. ^ Setton 1991, p. 139.
  45. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 139–140.
  46. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 140–141.
  47. ^ Setton 1991, p. 146.
  48. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 147–148.
  49. ^ a b Setton 1991, p. 149.
  50. ^ Setton 1991, p. 155.
  51. ^ Bostan 2009, pp. 426, 429.
  52. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 163–164.
  53. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 164–169.
  54. ^ Setton 1991, p. 170.
  55. ^ Setton 1991, p. 172.
  56. ^ Setton 1991, p. 173.
  57. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 174–177.
  58. ^ Setton 1991, p. 178.
  59. ^ a b Setton 1991, p. 179.
  60. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 179–180.
  61. ^ Setton 1991, p. 180.
  62. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 181–182.
  63. ^ a b Setton 1991, p. 182.
  64. ^ a b c Lane (1973), p. 409
  65. ^ Finkel 2006, p. 247.
  66. ^ a b Lane (1973), p. 410
  67. ^ Finkel 2006, p. 248.
  68. ^ Setton 1991, p. 183.
  69. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 183–184.
  70. ^ Finkel 2006, pp. 251–252.
  71. ^ a b Shaw (1976), p. 209
  72. ^ a b c Setton 1991, p. 190.
  73. ^ Setton 1991, p. 185.
  74. ^ Setton 1991, p. 186.
  75. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 186–188.
  76. ^ Shaw (1976), p. 210
  77. ^ a b c Setton 1991, p. 189.
  78. ^ a b c Finkel 2006, p. 256.
  79. ^ a b Duffy (1979), pp. 196–197
  80. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 188–189.
  81. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 214–216.
  82. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 190–191.
  83. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 192–193.
  84. ^ Setton 1991, p. 193.
  85. ^ Finkel 2006, p. 270.
  86. ^ Setton 1991, p. 194.
  87. ^ Setton 1991, p. 195.
  88. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 196–197.
  89. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 199–200.
  90. ^ Setton 1991, p. 205.
  91. ^ Setton 1991, p. 206.
  92. ^ Setton 1991, p. 214.
  93. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 206–209.
  94. ^ Setton 1991, p. 212.
  95. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 216–218.
  96. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 217–219.
  97. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 223–224.
  98. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 224–225.
  99. ^ Setton 1991, p. 225.
  100. ^ Setton 1991, p. 226.
  101. ^ Setton 1991, p. 216.
  102. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 226–227.
  103. ^ Setton 1991, pp. 227–228.
  104. ^ a b Finkel 2006, p. 271.
  105. ^ Finlay (1856), p. 132
  106. ^ Nicolle (1989), p. 40
  107. ^ Setton 1991, p. 143.
  108. ^ Setton 1991, p. 142.
  109. ^ Setton 1991, p. 144.
  110. ^ Setton 1991, p. 162.
  111. ^ a b c d e f g h Chasiotis 1974, p. 343-344.
  112. ^ Faroqhi 2006, p. 22.
  113. ^ Cooper 1979, p. 232.
  114. ^ Faroqhi 2006, pp. 58, 115.
  115. ^ Detorakis 1986, pp. 438–456.
  116. ^ Zammit, Vincent (1984). "Seventeenth Century Fortifications". Civilization. 1. Ħamrun: PEG Ltd: 118–119.

Sources edit

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  • Vakalopoulos, Apostolos E. (1968). Ιστορία του νέου ελληνισμού, Τόμος Γ': Τουρκοκρατία 1453–1669 [History of modern Hellenism, Volume III: Turkish rule 1453–1669] (in Greek). Thessaloniki: Emm. Sfakianakis & Sons.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Cretan War (1645–69) at Wikimedia Commons
  • Venice and the Sea 7 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine, by the VENIVA consortium (in English, Greek, Italian).
  • , 1645–69

cretan, 1645, 1669, other, uses, cretan, disambiguation, cretan, greek, Κρητικός, Πόλεμος, romanized, kritikós, pólemos, turkish, girit, fethi, also, known, candia, italian, guerra, candia, fifth, ottoman, venetian, conflict, between, republic, venice, allies,. For other uses see Cretan War disambiguation The Cretan War Greek Krhtikos Polemos romanized Kritikos Polemos Turkish Girit in Fethi also known as the War of Candia Italian Guerra di Candia or the Fifth Ottoman Venetian War was a conflict between the Republic of Venice and her allies chief among them the Knights of Malta the Papal States and France against the Ottoman Empire and the Barbary States because it was largely fought over the island of Crete Venice s largest and richest overseas possession The war lasted from 1645 to 1669 and was fought in Crete especially in the city of Candia and in numerous naval engagements and raids around the Aegean Sea with Dalmatia providing a secondary theater of operations Cretan War Fifth Ottoman Venetian War Part of the Ottoman Venetian WarsA Venetian map of CandiaDate1645 1669LocationCandia Crete Dalmatia and Aegean SeaResultOttoman victoryTerritorialchangesCrete conquered by the Ottoman EmpireVenetian gains in DalmatiaBelligerents Republic of Venice Knights of Malta Papal States France Greek revolutionaries Maniots Ottoman Empire Ottoman Tripolitania Ottoman Tunis Regency of Algiers 1 Commanders and leadersAndrea Corner Niccolo Ludovisi Tommaso Morosini Giovanni B Grimani Giacomo da Riva Alvise Mocenigo Leonardo Foscolo Lorenzo Marcello Lazzaro Mocenigo Francesco Morosini Almerigo d Este Duke of Beaufort Joannicius IIIbrahim Mehmed IV Silahdar Yusuf Pasha Koca Musa Pasha Gazi Huseyin Pasha Voinok Ahmed Pasha Kara Murad Pasha Koprulu Pasha Kopruluzade PashaCasualties and losses30 985 Venetian dead 2 118 754 Ottoman dead 3 Losses in Candia only according to Venetian reports excluding those on the Dalmatian front at sea and the initial operations in Crete If included the total number of casualties would possibly be twice as high 4 Although most of Crete was conquered by the Ottomans in the first few years of the war the fortress of Candia modern Heraklion the capital of Crete resisted successfully Its prolonged siege Troy s rival as Lord Byron called it 5 forced both sides to focus their attention on the supply of their respective forces on the island For the Venetians in particular their only hope for victory over the larger Ottoman army in Crete lay in successfully starving it of supplies and reinforcements Hence the war turned into a series of naval encounters between the two navies and their allies Venice was aided by various Western European nations who exhorted by the Pope and in a revival of crusading spirit sent men ships and supplies to defend Christendom Throughout the war Venice maintained overall naval superiority winning most naval engagements but the efforts to blockade the Dardanelles were only partially successful and the Republic never had enough ships to fully cut off the flow of supplies and reinforcements to Crete The Ottomans were hampered in their efforts by domestic turmoil as well as by the diversion of their forces north towards Transylvania and the Habsburg monarchy The prolonged conflict exhausted the economy of the Republic which relied on the lucrative trade with the Ottoman Empire By the 1660s despite increased aid from other Christian nations war weariness had set in The Ottomans on the other hand having managed to sustain their forces on Crete and reinvigorated under the capable leadership of the Koprulu family sent a final great expedition in 1666 under the direct supervision of the Grand Vizier This began the final and bloodiest stage of the Siege of Candia which lasted for more than two years It ended with the negotiated surrender of the fortress sealing the fate of the island and ending the war in an Ottoman victory In the final peace treaty Venice retained a few isolated island fortresses off Crete and made some territorial gains in Dalmatia The Venetian desire for a revanche would lead barely 15 years later to a renewed war from which Venice would emerge victorious Crete however would remain under Ottoman control until 1897 when it became an autonomous state it was finally united with Greece in 1913 Contents 1 Background 2 War 2 1 Early operations 2 2 Siege of Candia begins 2 3 Naval war 2 3 1 Early clashes 1645 1654 2 3 2 Dardanelles 1654 1657 2 3 3 Stalemate 1658 1666 2 3 4 Final phase 1666 1669 2 4 Fall of Candia 2 5 War in Dalmatia 2 6 Greek uprisings 3 Aftermath 4 References 5 Sources 6 External linksBackground editAfter the loss of Cyprus to the Ottomans in the fourth Ottoman Venetian War 1570 1573 the island of Crete the Kingdom of Candia was the last major overseas possession of Venice 6 Its important strategic position made it an obvious target for future Ottoman expansion 7 while its size and fertile ground together with the bad state of its fortresses made it a more tempting prize than Malta 8 On the Venetian side the Serenissima with its weak military and great dependence on uninterrupted trade was anxious not to provoke the Ottomans Hence Venice scrupulously observed the terms of its treaty with the Ottomans securing over sixty years of peaceful relations 9 By the early 17th century moreover Venetian power had declined considerably Its economy which had once prospered because of its control over the Eastern spice trade had suffered as a result of the opening of the new Atlantic trade routes and from the loss of the important German market because of the Thirty Years War 6 In addition the Republic had become embroiled in a series of wars in northern Italy like the Mantuan War and was further weakened by an outbreak of the plague in 1629 1631 10 The potential for conflict between the Ottomans and Venice was still present as evidenced in 1638 when a Venetian fleet attacked and destroyed a fleet of Barbary pirates that had sought protection in the Ottoman port of Valona bombarding the city in the process 11 Sultan Murad IV was enraged he threatened to execute all Venetians in the Empire and put an embargo on Venetian trade 12 Eventually and given that the Ottomans were still engaged in a war with the Persians the situation was defused with the Republic paying the Ottomans an indemnity of 250 000 sequins 9 13 A similar episode however in 1644 had an entirely different outcome on 28 September the Knights of Malta attacked an Ottoman convoy of sailing ships on its way from Constantinople to Alexandria aboard which were a number of pilgrims bound for Mecca including the exiled Kizlar Aga Chief Black Eunuch Sunbul Aga the kadi of Cairo and the nurse of the future sultan Mehmed IV During the fight Sunbul Aga and most of the important pilgrims were slain while 350 men and 30 women were taken to be sold as slaves 14 The Knights loaded their loot on a ship which then docked at a small harbor on the southern coast of Crete for a few days where it disembarked a number of sailors and slaves 15 The Ottomans were enraged at the incident and the Porte accused the Venetians of deliberate collusion with the Knights something the Venetians vehemently denied With the hawkish party being then dominant in the Ottoman court 16 the incident was seen as a perfect pretext for war with a weakened Venice 17 Despite a long period of negotiations which lasted until well into 1645 and against the objections of the Grand Vizier Sultanzade Mehmed Pasha 18 war was decided upon An expedition was quickly assembled with over 50 000 troops and reputedly 416 vessels under Kapudan Pasha Silahdar Yusuf Pasha the Sultan s son in law The Ottoman armada sailed from the Dardanelles on 30 April heading towards the harbor of Navarino in the Peloponnese where it remained for three weeks 19 The fleet s target was not announced but the Ottomans to allay Venetian fears implied that it would be Malta 17 War editEarly operations edit The Venetians were indeed fooled by the Ottoman subterfuge and were taken by surprise at the arrival of the Ottoman fleet at Crete on 23 June 1645 19 Despite the efforts of the recently appointed provveditore generale Andrea Corner the Venetian defenses were still in a bad state 20 The island s fortifications were substantial but they had been long neglected and much effort was put into repairing them 21 Anxious about Ottoman preparations the Republic reinforced Crete in late 1644 with 2 500 troops and provisions and began arming its fleet while assistance was promised in the event of war by the Pope and Tuscany 22 nbsp Map of Canea Chania and its fortifications 1651 The Ottomans first landed 15 miles west of Canea Chania where the local militia fled before them 19 They then attacked the small island fortress of St Todero the commander of which the Istrian Blasio Zulian blew himself the fortress and its garrison up rather than let it fall to the Ottomans The Ottoman army next advanced to the city of Canea itself which fell on 22 August after a siege that lasted for 56 days 23 At the same time however the Venetians were strengthened as the promised help started to arrive in the form of galleys from the Papal States Tuscany Malta and Naples In September the Ottoman fleet was in disarray but the allied Christian fleet under the cautious command of Niccolo Ludovisi the Pope s nephew failed to exploit the opportunity for a decisive strike 24 When the Christian forces finally moved to retake Canea on 1 October with a fleet of about 90 ships the stout Ottoman defense and the Allies lack of cooperation doomed the attack Soon thereafter the Venetian allies returned to their bases 24 nbsp 1651 map by Francesco Basilicata depicting the Venetian Lion of St Mark standing guard over the Regno di Candia By that time however all of the island except for the capital Candia was under Ottoman control In November Silahdar Yusuf Pasha left behind a strong garrison and returned to Constantinople for the winter There however he fell foul of the Sultan and was executed 25 Nevertheless Ottoman preparations continued in order to renew and expand the war while the Venetians were frantically trying to raise money and men and attempting to induce other European powers to join them against the Ottomans However as most of Europe was locked into the fierce antagonisms of the Thirty Years War their pleas fell mostly on deaf ears 26 The Venetians were hard pressed by the financial demands of the war besides placing taxes on the Italian mainland possessions the Terraferma they resorted to the sale of nobility titles and state offices to fill their war coffer 27 To lead the effort against the Ottomans the Senate initially appointed the 80 year old doge Francesco Erizzo but after his death in early 1646 he was replaced by the 73 year old Giovanni Cappello as Captain General of the Sea 28 Cappello s performance in 1646 was distinctly lackluster he failed to interdict the arrival of Ottoman reinforcements under Koca Musa Pasha in June see below 29 and an attack on the Ottoman fleet at Chania Bay in August failed as did his attempt to break the Ottoman blockade of Rettimo Rethymno As a result the city fell on 20 October while the citadel held out until 13 November 30 During the winter of 1646 1647 both sides suffered from an outbreak of plague and throughout the spring of 1647 operations did not make much headway In mid June however a small Ottoman force routed a larger body of Venetian mercenaries This Ottoman success paved the way for Gazi Huseyin Pasha the local commander to conquer the eastern half of the island except for the fortress of Siteia 31 The Venetians and the local population suffered some grievous losses it is estimated that by 1648 almost 40 of the Cretan population had perished of disease or warfare 32 and in 1677 the island s pre war population of ca 260 000 had dropped to about 80 000 33 By the beginning of 1648 all of Crete except Candia and a few strongholds like the island of Gramvousa was in Ottoman hands 25 Siege of Candia begins edit Further information Siege of Candia nbsp The siege of Candia c 1680 The siege began in May 1648 The Ottomans spent three months investing the city which included cutting off the water supply Eventually it would last until 1669 the second longest siege in history after the Siege of Ceuta 1694 1727 by the Moors under Moulay Ismail 34 The Ottoman besiegers were adversely affected by the bad supply situation caused by the activity of the Christian fleets in the Aegean who intercepted Ottoman convoys carrying supplies and reinforcements to the island 35 In addition the overall Ottoman war effort was severely hampered by increased domestic instability caused by Sultan Ibrahim s erratic policies and his summary execution of leading state officials It ultimately led to his deposition in favor of his son Mehmed IV ushering in a further period of confusion within the Ottoman government 36 The lack of supplies had forced the Ottoman commander Gazi Huseyin Pasha to lift the siege in early 1649 but it was renewed for a short period of two months after the arrival of the Ottoman fleet in June 37 The Ottomans assailed the fortifications exploding over 70 mines but the defenders held firm The Ottomans lost over 1 000 men and the subsequent withdrawal of 1 500 Janissaries and the lack of any further reinforcements over the course of 1650 left Huseyin Pasha with little option but to continue maintaining as tight a blockade as possible 37 The Ottomans strengthened their positions with the construction of three forts in the Canea area and the arrival of reinforcements in late 1650 allowed them to keep up their tight blockade 38 Despite the Venetian blockade of the Dardanelles and the political turmoil at the Ottoman court the Ottoman forces were kept well supplied enough to sustain themselves although too weak to engage in offensive actions against Candia itself In 1653 the Ottomans took the island fortress of Selino in Suda Bay and San Todero captured a few years previously was refortified 39 The Venetian naval successes over the next few years further reduced the offensive ability of the Ottoman army in Crete but the blockade of Candia continued and the Ottomans retained possession of their other conquests on the island until the arrival of a new Ottoman expeditionary force in 1666 Naval war edit For a complete list of naval engagements see List of naval battles Cretan War 1645 69 Early clashes 1645 1654 edit nbsp A Maltese galley Although being gradually replaced by sailing ships galleys formed still a large part of the Mediterranean navies during the 17th century Venice could not directly confront the large Ottoman expeditionary force on Crete but it did possess a fine navy that could intervene and cut the Ottoman supply routes 40 In 1645 the Venetians and their allies possessed a fleet of 60 70 galleys 4 galleasses and about 36 galleons 41 The Venetians were also superior in their use of a mixed fleet of both galleys and sailing ships while initially the Ottoman navy relied almost exclusively on galleys 42 In order to bolster their forces both opponents hired armed merchantmen from the Netherlands and later from England especially the Ottomans to augment their forces 43 The first Venetian operation was an attempt to blockade the Dardanelles in 1646 To interdict the supplies headed to the Ottoman forces in Crete a force of 23 Venetian ships under Tommaso Morosini scoured the Aegean for Ottoman shipping and attempted to capture the strategically important island of Tenedos at the entrance of the Dardanelles The Kapudan Pasha Koca Musa led a fleet of 80 warships against the Venetians but his fleet was driven back into the Dardanelles on 26 May 44 However the blockading fleet was unable to stop the next exit of the Ottoman fleet on 4 June when the lack of wind enabled the Ottoman galleys to evade the Venetian sailing ships The Ottomans were thus able to land new troops and supplies on Crete unopposed 45 The efforts of the Venetian fleet to counter the Ottoman land operations in Crete likewise failed through a combination of timidity on behalf of their commanders the delays in payment for the crews and the effects of a widespread plague 46 On 27 January 1647 the Venetians lost Tommaso Morosini when his ship was forced to face the entire Ottoman fleet of 45 galleys In the ensuing fight Morosini was killed but managed to cause significant casualties to the Ottomans including Koca Musa Pasha himself The ship itself was rescued by the timely arrival of the Venetian fleet under the new Captain General Giovanni Battista Grimani This stand off where a single ship had caused such damage and casualties to the entire Ottoman fleet was a major blow to Ottoman morale 47 Despite some successes like a raid in Cesme the remainder of the year was a failure for the Venetians as several attempts to blockade Ottoman harbors failed to stem the flow of supplies and reinforcements to Crete 48 nbsp Battle of the Venetian fleet against the Turks at Phocaea Focchies in 1649 Painting by Abraham Beerstraten 1656 The Venetians returned to the Dardanelles in 1648 Despite losing many ships and admiral Grimani himself in a storm in mid March 49 reinforcements under Giacomo da Riva brought the Venetian fleet back up to strength some 65 vessels and allowed them to successfully blockade the Straits for a whole year 35 The Ottomans countered this in part by building a new fleet at Cesme forcing the Venetians to divide their forces 35 and in 1649 a strengthened Ottoman fleet under Kapudan Pasha Voinok Ahmed broke the blockade 25 Despite scoring a victory over the Ottoman fleet in its anchorage at Phocaea on 12 May 1649 capturing or destroying several ships da Riva was not able to prevent the Ottoman armada from eventually reaching Crete 50 This highlighted the weakness of the Venetian position maintaining long blockades with galleys was an inherently difficult task and the Republic did not have enough ships to control both the Dardanelles and the passage of Chios at the same time 40 In addition in a major development 1648 the Ottomans decided in a meeting chaired by the Sultan himself to build and employ galleons in their fleet instead of relying exclusively on oared galleys as hitherto 51 For most of 1650 a Venetian fleet of 41 vessels maintained the blockade of the Dardanelles prohibiting Haideragazade Mehmed Pasha from sailing for Crete He was replaced late in the year by Hozamzade Ali Pasha governor of Rhodes who used a clever ploy to get through the blockade waiting until winter when the Venetians withdrew their forces he assembled a small number of ships and embarked several thousand troops with many provisions on them and sailed unmolested to Crete 38 On 10 July 1651 the first significant naval battle of the war was fought south of Naxos a three day engagement in which the Venetians with 58 ships under Alvise Mocenigo were victorious over the twice as large Ottoman fleet 52 The remainders of the Ottoman fleet withdrew to Rhodes from where they were however able to reach Candia Mocenigo was replaced soon after by Leonardo Foscolo but both sides did not accomplish much in the next two years although the Ottomans did succeed in supplying their forces on Crete while keeping their fleet intact 53 Dardanelles 1654 1657 edit nbsp Map of the Dardanelles and vicinity For 1654 the Ottomans marshaled their strength the Arsenal Tersane i Amire in the Golden Horn produced new warships and squadrons from Tripolitania and Tunis arrived to strengthen the Ottoman fleet 54 The strengthened Ottoman fleet that sailed forth from the Dardanelles in early May numbered 79 ships 40 sailing ships 33 galleys and 6 galleasses and further 22 galleys from around the Aegean and 14 ships from Barbary stood by to reinforce it off the Straits 55 This force considerably outnumbered the 26 ships of the Venetian blockade fleet under Giuseppe Dolfin 56 Although the battle that followed resulted in an Ottoman victory for the Venetians given the successful escape of their fleet from the superior Ottoman force coupled with reports of large Ottomans casualties and the great bravery displayed by the Venetian crews it counted as a moral victory 57 The Ottoman fleet now reinforced by the Aegean and Barbary squadrons plundered the Venetian island of Tinos but retreated after only a brief skirmish with the Venetians under Alvise Mocenigo on 21 June Kara Murad Pasha succeeded in evading the Venetians for the remainder of the year with both fleets sailing back and forth in the Aegean before returning to the Dardanelles in September due to agitation among the fleet s Janissaries 58 The final months of 1654 were marked by a significant change in the Venetian leadership Mocenigo died at Candia and was succeeded as acting Captain General of the Sea by Francesco Morosini who had distinguished himself in the previous battles 59 Morosini initiated a more energetic approach in the Venetian pursuit of the war in the spring of 1655 he raided the Ottoman supply depot at Aigina and razed the port town of Volos in a night attack on 23 March In early June Morosini sailed to the Dardanelles awaiting the sally of the Ottoman fleet which was however delayed because of political upheaval in the Ottoman government 59 Leaving Lazzaro Mocenigo with half the fleet 36 ships to keep watch at the Straits Morosini returned to the Cyclades 60 A week after his departure however on 21 June the Ottoman fleet numbering 143 ships under Mustapha Pasha appeared 61 The resulting battle was a clear Venetian victory The Ottoman fleet avoided action for the remainder of the year before it withdrew to winter quarters leaving Morosini free to undertake an ultimately unsuccessful siege of the strategically important island fortress of Malvasia Monemvasia off the south eastern coast of the Peloponnese 62 In September Morosini was posted as the new provveditore of Crete with Lorenzo Marcello as the new Captain General of the Sea 63 nbsp The Third Battle of the Dardanelles by Pieter Casteleyn 1657 Although in the previous years the Venetians had generally held the upper hand against the Ottomans largely controlling the Aegean and able to extract tribute and recruits from its islands 64 they had been unable to transform this superiority into concrete results Despite their defeats the Ottomans were still free to roam the Aegean and resupply their forces in Crete 65 in particular through the use of supply fleets from places like Alexandria Rhodes Chios or Monemvasia in the Peloponnese 66 In June 1656 however a combined Venetian Maltese fleet of 67 ships under Marcello inflicted on the Ottomans with 108 ships under Kenan Pasha their worst naval defeat since Lepanto 63 67 Sixty Ottoman ships were destroyed and 24 captured and 5 000 Christian galley slaves set free although the Venetians and Maltese suffered some casualties too including the loss of Captain General Marcello 68 Although in the aftermath of this victory the Maltese contingent departed the scale of their success enabled the Venetians under Barbado Doer to seize Tenedos on 8 July and Lemnos on 20 August 69 Using the two islands strategically located near the entrance of the Straits as forward bases the Venetian blockade became much more effective As a result the resupply of Crete was effectively cut off and Constantinople itself suffered a shortage of food during the following winter 70 In 1657 the Ottomans reversed the situation A new and energetic Grand Vizier Koprulu Mehmed Pasha armed with almost dictatorial authority had been appointed in September 1656 and reinvigorated the Ottoman war effort 71 72 The fleet was strengthened under the new Kapudan Pasha Topal Mehmed 71 and in March the Ottomans succeeded in evading the Venetian blockade of the Straits and sailed towards Tenedos They did not attack the island however because the Venetian garrison was too strong 73 In May the Venetians under Lazzaro Mocenigo achieved some minor victories on 3 May and two weeks later at Suazich Reinforced by Papal and Maltese ships Mocenigo sailed to the Dardanelles awaiting the renewed sally of the Ottoman fleet which came on 17 July Due to disagreements among the Christian commanders the allied battle line had not been completely formed and the Ottoman fleet was able to exit the Narrows before battle was joined 74 The battle consisted of a series of actions over three days with both fleets drifting south and west out of the Dardanelles into the Aegean The battle ended in the evening of 19 July when an explosion destroyed the Venetian flagship and killed Mocenigo forcing the allied fleet to withdraw In this battle the Venetians had inflicted heavier casualties on the Ottomans than they had suffered but the Ottomans had achieved their goal the blockade was broken 75 Under the personal direction of the Grand Vizier and strengthened by men and ships from the Barbary states 76 the Ottoman fleet proceeded to recover Lemnos on 31 August and Tenedos on 12 November thus removing any hope the Venetians may have had of re establishing the blockade as firmly as before 77 78 Stalemate 1658 1666 edit In 1658 Ottoman power was redirected north in a campaign against George II Rakoczi Prince of Transylvania which evolved into a long conflict with the Habsburgs 78 For the next few years the Venetian fleet again under the command of Morosini unsuccessfully attempted to maintain the blockade of the Straits of the Dardanelles Morosini also resumed his tactic of attacking Ottoman strongholds a siege of the island of Santa Maura Lefkada in August 1658 failed but in 1659 the Venetians aided by the Maniots sacked Kalamata in the Peloponnese followed by Torone in the Chalcidice Karystos in Euboea and Cesme However since Venice could not spare forces to occupy these places these raids gained the Republic nothing of substance 77 On the Ottoman side Koprulu Mehmed ordered the construction of two new forts Sedd el Bahr Rampart of the Sea and Kilid Bahr Key of the Sea at the European shore of the entrance of the Dardanelles to prohibit the Venetians from entering the Straits again 79 In the meantime war weariness had set in among the Venetians who suffered from the disruption in trade Peace feelers were sent to the Ottomans but their demand for the full concession of Crete as a condition for peace was unacceptable to the Republic 78 80 With the end of the war between France and Spain however the Venetians became encouraged hoping to receive increased assistance in money and men especially from the French whose traditionally good relations with the Porte had soured of late 77 This support did indeed soon develop when individuals or whole companies of men from across Western Europe volunteered for the Republic s army while Christian rulers also felt obliged to provide men supplies and ships 66 81 The first French contingent of 4 200 men under Prince Almerigo d Este arrived in April 1660 along with further contingents of German mercenaries troops from Savoy and Maltese Tuscan and French ships 72 Despite this increase in strength Morosini s operations in 1660 were a failure an assault on Canea in August succeeded in taking the outlying fortifications but failed to retake the city itself similarly an attack against the Ottoman siege lines at Candia in September achieved some success but did not break the Ottoman siege 72 Following the death of Prince d Este at Naxos shortly after the French contingent returned home followed soon after by a disheartened Morosini who was succeeded by his kinsman Giorgio 82 In 1661 Giorgio Morosini scored a few minor successes he broke an Ottoman blockade of Tinos and pursuing the Ottoman fleet defeated it off Milos The next few years however were relatively idle Although the Ottomans were heavily engaged with the Austrians in Hungary and that their fleet rarely sallied forth the Venetians failed to make use of this opportunity and except for the intercept of a supply convoy from Alexandria off Kos in 1662 there was little action 83 Final phase 1666 1669 edit nbsp Grand Vizier Koprulu Fazil Ahmed Pasha If the Venetians were idle the Ottomans were not with the signing of the Peace of Vasvar in 1664 they were able to focus their strength against Crete Grand Vizier Koprulu Fazil Ahmed initiated large preparations in the winter of 1665 66 and dispatched 9 000 men to bolster the Ottoman forces in Crete 84 An Ottoman peace proposal which would have allowed Venice to keep Candia against an annual payment of tribute was rejected 85 and in May 1666 the Ottoman army under the personal leadership of the Grand Vizier departed from Thrace for southern Greece whence it would embark for Crete during the winter In February 1667 the Venetians received significant reinforcements from France and Savoy totaling 21 warships and some 6 000 men but as in past years disagreements among the leaders of the various contingents over precedence France the Papal States Malta Naples Sicily contributed ships and men hampered operations 86 At the time Catherine of Braganza Queen of England involved herself in the effort to relieve Candia but failed to persuade her husband Charles II to take any action Francesco Morosini now again Captain General sought to engage the Ottomans but they avoided battle and using their superior resources and bases they steadily kept their forces on Crete supplied The only allied success in 1667 was the repulsion of an Ottoman raid on Cerigo Kythera 87 On 8 March 1668 the Venetians were victorious in a hard fought night battle off the island of St Pelagia where 2 000 Ottoman troops and 12 galleys attempted to seize a small Venetian galley squadron Forewarned of their intentions Morosini reinforced it and won a costly victory which was to be Venice s last victory at sea in this war 88 Reinforced again with Papal and Hospitaller ships the Venetians maintained a blockade of Canea the Ottomans main supply base during summer To secure their anchorage off St Todero island the allied forces seized the fortress island of St Marina 89 a minor success which did not in the end prevent the Kapudan pasha s fleet bearing fresh troops and supplies from reaching Canea in September after the Maltese Papal squadron had departed 90 Fall of Candia edit nbsp German map of the final phase of the Siege of Candia It clearly illustrates the city s trace italienne fortifications and the proximity of the characteristic Ottoman siege trenches especially in the northwestern sector bottom right to the walls The new Ottoman army arrived on the island during the winter of 1666 1667 and in 22 May the final phase of the siege overseen by the Grand Vizier himself began It lasted 28 months In the assaults sorties that followed 108 000 Turks and 29 088 Christians lost their lives These casualties included 280 Venetian noblemen a figure equivalent to roughly a quarter of the Grand Council 41 Faced with the renewed Ottoman assault and a struggling economy despite the prospect of considerable reinforcements from Western Europe in 1668 the Signoria hoped to end the war by striking a peace settlement with the Ottomans 91 Indeed the Venetians hoped to use the imminent arrival of reinforcements to secure concessions from the Ottomans 92 Admiral Andrea Valier was at first appointed as envoy but fell ill and was quickly replaced by the elderly nobleman Alvise da Molin 93 Molin and his embassy traveled to Larissa where the Ottoman court resided during one of the Sultan s hunting expeditions 94 The Ottomans proposed that Venice keep one half of Crete but the Signoria emboldened by further pledges of reinforcements especially from France and renewed turmoil at the Ottoman court and within the Empire refused the offer 95 Molin in the meantime transported by the Ottomans to Canea in Crete was ordered to continue negotiations and to continue observing the Ottomans strength and intentions but not commit himself or the Republic 96 nbsp Schematics detailing the Ottoman trenches and mines and the Venetian counter mines at Candia by Johann Bernhard Scheither 1672 On 19 June the first part of the long awaited French contingent in total some 6 000 soldiers and 31 ships under the command of Francois Duke of Beaufort arrived at Candia The second part comprising the galley fleet would arrive on 3 July 97 The Ottomans had been making steady progress over the past years having reached the outer bastions of the fortress the defenders were in dire straits while most of the city of Candia lay ruined 98 The French staged their first sally on 25 June Caught by surprise the Ottomans were quickly routed but the French became disorganized among the siege trenches and an Ottoman counter attack drove them back The attack thus ended in disaster costing the French some 800 dead including the Duke of Beaufort himself who was hit by a bullet and left on the field 99 The arrival of the second half of the French expeditionary force revived the defenders morale and a combined attack was agreed upon involving bombardment of the Ottoman siege lines by the powerful allied fleet The attack was launched on 25 July in an impressive display of firepower up to 15 000 cannonballs were said to have been fired by the fleet alone 100 The Ottomans however were well protected by their deep earthworks and suffered comparatively little damage while things went awry for the Christian fleet as an accident caused the explosion of the French flagship Therese which in turn caused significant casualties among the surrounding French and Venetian ships 101 This failure coupled with the disaster of the previous month further soured the relations between the French and the Venetians Cooperation was distinctly lacking in the few operations attempted during the next few weeks while the bad supply situation the spread of sickness among their troops and the continuous attrition of their forces in the everyday fighting at Candia made the French commanders especially keen to depart 102 The French contingent eventually departed on 20 August Two Ottoman assaults on the 25th were repulsed but to Morosini it was clear that the city could no longer be held 103 After a council of war on 27 August but without first consulting Venice it was decided to capitulate On 5 September 1669 the city was surrendered to the Ottomans while the survivors of the garrison the citizens and their treasures were evacuated 104 105 On his own initiative Morosini concluded a permanent peace agreement with the Ottomans which under the circumstances was relatively generous Venice would retain the Aegean islands of Tinos and Kythera and the isolated island fortresses of Spinalonga Gramvousa and Souda off the Cretan coast as well as the gains made in Dalmatia 64 104 War in Dalmatia edit nbsp During the Candian War the Venetians in Dalmatia with the support of the local population managed to compel the Ottoman garrison of Klis Fortress to surrender The Dalmatian front was a separate theater of operations which was involved in the early phase of the war The conditions there were almost reverse to those in Crete for the Ottomans it was too far away and relatively insignificant while the Venetians operated near their own bases of supply and had undisputed control of the sea being thus able to easily reinforce their coastal strongholds 106 The Ottomans launched a large scale attack in 1646 and made some significant gains including the capture of the islands of Krk Pag and Cres 107 and most importantly the supposedly impregnable fortress of Novigrad which surrendered on 4 July after only two days of bombardment 108 The Ottomans were now able to threaten the two main Venetian strongholds in Dalmatia Zadar and Split 109 In the next year however the tide turned as the Venetian commander Leonardo Foscolo seized several forts retook Novigrad temporarily captured the fortress of Knin and took Klis 25 32 while a month long siege of the fortress of Sibenik by the Ottomans in August and September failed 49 During the next few years military operations stalled because of an outbreak of famine and plague amongst the Venetians at Zadar while both sides focused their resources in the Aegean area 110 As other fronts took priority for the Ottomans no further operations occurred in the Dalmatian theater 79 Peace in 1669 found the Republic of Venice with significant gains in Dalmatia its territory tripled and its control of the Adriatic thus secured 64 Greek uprisings edit During the course of the war the Venetians sought to instigate Greek uprisings in several regions against the Turks 111 Such uprisings mainly took place in the Peloponnese and the Aegean islands where the presence of Christian navy emboldened the Greeks to rebel against Ottoman rule 111 In 1647 when the Venetian general Giovanni Battista Grimani had blocked a large part of the Ottoman navy in Argolis there was an uprising in Nauplio which was largely unsuccessful In 1659 there were several small uprisings in Laconia Messenia and Argolis 111 During the spring of 1659 Francesco Morosini departed for Sifnos where he met the former Patriarch of Constantinople Joannicius II and several other Greek clerics subsequently they went to the Mani Peninsula in order to encourage a rebellion 111 In March 1959 although initially reluctant the Maniots invaded and conquered Kalamata with support from the Christian allies Several villages in northeastern Pelopponese from Mani to Elis rebelled around the same time 111 However when the Ottomans counter attacked Morosini left the Peloponnese with several Greek notables and went to Milos 111 In August in order to continue the uprisings Morosini sent two Greek clerics from Crete to the Peloponnese promising future military interventions from Venice which never happened 111 Ultimately the Ottomans closed in on the rebels forcing them to either surrender or flee to Italy especially Cargese Corsica in modern day France 111 Aftermath editThe surrender of Candia ended the four and a half centuries of Venetian rule in Crete and brought the Ottoman Empire to its temporary territorial zenith 112 At the same time the cost and casualties incurred during this prolonged war contributed greatly to the decline of the Ottoman state during the latter 17th century 43 On the other hand Venice had lost its greatest and most prosperous colony its pre eminent trading position in the Mediterranean had diminished 113 and its treasury was exhausted having spent some 4 253 000 ducats on the defense of Candia alone 33 To all this the Dalmatian gains were insufficient compensation Upon his return to Venice in 1670 Morosini was tried on charges of insubordination and treason but was acquitted Fifteen years later he would lead the Venetian forces in the Morean War where the Republic attempted for the last time to reverse its losses and reestablish itself as one of the major powers of the Eastern Mediterranean 41 114 During that war in 1692 a Venetian fleet attempted to retake Candia but failed The last Venetian strongholds off Crete fell in the last Ottoman Venetian War in 1715 33 Crete would remain under Ottoman control until 1897 when it became an autonomous state The island continued under nominal Ottoman suzerainty until the Balkan Wars In their aftermath the Ottoman Sultan dropped any claim on the island and on 1 December 1913 it was formally united to Greece 115 Following the fall of Candia fears rose that the Ottomans would attack Malta In 1670 the Order of St John began to improve the island s defences with the construction of the Cottonera Lines and Fort Ricasoli 116 References edit The Dynastic Centre and the Provinces Agents and Interactions Brill 17 April 2014 p 47 ISBN 9789004272095 Paoletti Ciro 2008 A Military History of Italy p 33 Paoletti Ciro 2008 A Military History of Italy p 33 Paoletti Ciro 2008 A Military History of Italy p 33 Lord Byron Childe Harold Canto IV 14 a b Faroqhi 2006 p 51 Setton 1991 pp 107 108 Greene 2000 p 17 a b Finkel 2006 p 222 Setton 1991 pp 104 106 Lane 1973 p 408 Setton 1991 pp 108 109 Parry amp Cook 1976 p 152 Setton 1991 p 111 Finkel 2006 p 225 Finkel 2006 p 226 a b Finlay 1856 p 128 Setton 1991 p 124 a b c Setton 1991 p 126 Setton 1991 p 120 Setton 1991 p 107 Setton 1991 p 121 Setton 1991 p 127 a b Setton 1991 pp 128 129 a b c d Finkel 2006 p 227 Setton 1991 pp 131 132 Setton 1991 pp 131 137 138 Setton 1991 p 129 Setton 1991 p 140 Setton 1991 p 141 Setton 1991 p 147 a b Setton 1991 p 148 a b c Miller 1921 p 196 The Siege of Candia is often cited as the longest siege on record e g by Crete Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed 1911 p 427 Nevertheless the blockade and siege of Ceuta variously given as lasting until 1720 Ceuta Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed 1911 p 777 or until Moulay s death in 1727 Archived 14 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine was longer a b c Setton 1991 p 150 Setton 1991 pp 151 153 a b Setton 1991 p 158 a b Setton 1991 p 159 Setton 1991 p 167 a b Turnbull p 85 a b c The War for Candia VENIVA consortium 1996 retrieved 27 November 2008 Cooper 1979 p 231 a b Holt Lambton amp Lewis 1978 p 631 Setton 1991 p 139 Setton 1991 pp 139 140 Setton 1991 pp 140 141 Setton 1991 p 146 Setton 1991 pp 147 148 a b Setton 1991 p 149 Setton 1991 p 155 Bostan 2009 pp 426 429 Setton 1991 pp 163 164 Setton 1991 pp 164 169 Setton 1991 p 170 Setton 1991 p 172 Setton 1991 p 173 Setton 1991 pp 174 177 Setton 1991 p 178 a b Setton 1991 p 179 Setton 1991 pp 179 180 Setton 1991 p 180 Setton 1991 pp 181 182 a b Setton 1991 p 182 a b c Lane 1973 p 409 Finkel 2006 p 247 a b Lane 1973 p 410 Finkel 2006 p 248 Setton 1991 p 183 Setton 1991 pp 183 184 Finkel 2006 pp 251 252 a b Shaw 1976 p 209 a b c Setton 1991 p 190 Setton 1991 p 185 Setton 1991 p 186 Setton 1991 pp 186 188 Shaw 1976 p 210 a b c Setton 1991 p 189 a b c Finkel 2006 p 256 a b Duffy 1979 pp 196 197 Setton 1991 pp 188 189 Setton 1991 pp 214 216 Setton 1991 pp 190 191 Setton 1991 pp 192 193 Setton 1991 p 193 Finkel 2006 p 270 Setton 1991 p 194 Setton 1991 p 195 Setton 1991 pp 196 197 Setton 1991 pp 199 200 Setton 1991 p 205 Setton 1991 p 206 Setton 1991 p 214 Setton 1991 pp 206 209 Setton 1991 p 212 Setton 1991 pp 216 218 Setton 1991 pp 217 219 Setton 1991 pp 223 224 Setton 1991 pp 224 225 Setton 1991 p 225 Setton 1991 p 226 Setton 1991 p 216 Setton 1991 pp 226 227 Setton 1991 pp 227 228 a b Finkel 2006 p 271 Finlay 1856 p 132 Nicolle 1989 p 40 Setton 1991 p 143 Setton 1991 p 142 Setton 1991 p 144 Setton 1991 p 162 a b c d e f g h Chasiotis 1974 p 343 344 Faroqhi 2006 p 22 Cooper 1979 p 232 Faroqhi 2006 pp 58 115 Detorakis 1986 pp 438 456 Zammit Vincent 1984 Seventeenth Century Fortifications Civilization 1 Ħamrun PEG Ltd 118 119 Sources editAnderson R C 1952 Naval Wars in the Levant 1559 1853 Princeton Princeton University Press OCLC 1015099422 Bostan Idris 2009 Navy In Agoston Gabor Masters Bruce eds Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire New York Facts on File Inc pp 425 429 ISBN 978 0 8160 6259 1 Chasiotis Ioannis 1974 Polemikes sygkroyseis ston ellhniko xwro kai h symmetoxh twn Ellhnwn Conflicts in the Greek lands and the participation of the Greeks In Christopoulos Georgios A amp Bastias Ioannis K eds Istoria toy Ellhnikoy E8noys Tomos I O Ellhnismos ypo 3enh kyriarxia periodos 1453 1669 Toyrkokratia Latinokratia History of the Greek Nation Volume X Hellenism under Foreign Rule Period 1453 1669 Turkocracy Latinocracy in Greek Athens Ekdotiki Athinon pp 252 323 ISBN 978 960 213 106 0 Cooper J P 1979 The New Cambridge Modern History Volume IV The Decline of Spain and the Thirty Years War 1609 48 59 CUP Archive ISBN 978 0 521 29713 4 Detorakis Theocharis E 1986 Istoria ths Krhths History of Crete in Greek Athens OCLC 715204595 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Duffy Christopher 1979 Siege Warfare Routledge ISBN 978 0 7100 8871 0 Eickhoff Ekkehard 2009 Venedig Wien und die Osmanen Umbruch in Sudosteuropa 1645 1700 in German Fifth ed Klett Cotta ISBN 978 3 608 94511 9 Faroqhi Suraiya 2006 The Ottoman Empire and the World Around It I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 122 9 Finkel Caroline 2006 Osman s Dream The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1923 London John Murray ISBN 978 0 7195 6112 2 Finlay George 1856 The History of Greece under Othoman and Venetian Domination London William Blackwood and Sons Fleet Kate Faroqhi Suraiya Kasaba Resat 2006 The Cambridge history of Turkey the later Ottoman Empire 1603 1839 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 62095 6 Greene Molly 2000 A Shared World Christians and Muslims in the Early Modern Mediterranean Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00898 1 Holt P M Lambton Ann K S Lewis Bernard 1978 The Central Islamic Lands from Pre Islamic Times to the First World War Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 29135 4 Lane Frederic Chapin 1973 Venice a Maritime Republic JHU Press ISBN 978 0 8018 1460 0 Mason Norman David 1972 The War of Candia 1645 1669 PhD LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses doi 10 31390 gradschool disstheses 2351 Miller William 1921 Essays on the Latin Orient Cambridge Cambridge University Press OCLC 457893641 Murphey Rhoads Black Jeremy 1999 Ottoman warfare 1500 1700 Routledge ISBN 978 1 85728 389 1 Nicolle David 1989 The Venetian Empire 1200 1670 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 0 85045 899 2 Parry Vernon J Cook M A 1976 A History of the Ottoman Empire to 1730 Chapters from the Cambridge History of Islam and the New Cambridge Modern History CUP Archive ISBN 978 0 521 09991 2 Setton Kenneth Meyer 1991 Venice Austria and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century Philadelphia The American Philosophical Society ISBN 0 87169 192 2 Shaw Stanford Jay Shaw Ezel Kural 1976 History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Empire of the Gazis The Rise and Decline of the Ottoman Empire 1280 1808 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 29163 7 Turnbull Stephen 2003 The Ottoman Empire 1326 1699 Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 96913 0 Tzompanaki Chrysoula 2008 O Krhtikos Polemos 1645 1669 H Megalh Poliorkia kai h Epopoiia toy Xandaka The Cretan War 1645 1669 The Great Siege and Epopee of Chandax in Greek Heraklion ISBN 978 960 92052 4 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Vakalopoulos Apostolos E 1968 Istoria toy neoy ellhnismoy Tomos G Toyrkokratia 1453 1669 History of modern Hellenism Volume III Turkish rule 1453 1669 in Greek Thessaloniki Emm Sfakianakis amp Sons External links edit nbsp Media related to Cretan War 1645 69 at Wikimedia Commons Municipality of Heraklion The Cretan War Venice and the Sea Archived 7 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine by the VENIVA consortium in English Greek Italian Venice Republic Renaissance 1645 69 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cretan War 1645 1669 amp oldid 1218950135, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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