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Ottoman invasion of Otranto

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Battle of Otranto
Part of the Ottoman wars in Europe
Ottoman-Hungarian Wars

Date 1480-1481
Location Otranto, Italy
Result Italian-Spanish-Hungarian victory
Belligerents
Ottoman Empire Kingdom of Naples
Kingdom of Aragon
Kingdom of Hungary
Commanders
Gedik Ahmed Pasha Francesco Largo †
Alphonso II of Naples
Balázs Magyar
Strength
800+ infantry
500+ cavalry
70 ships
(possibly 200 ships?)
Unknown
2,100 Hungarian heavy infantry
Casualties and losses
800+ infantry
500+ cavalry
Unknown
Civilian casualties:
12,000
aprox. 1,600 Hungarians (mostly servants)
Inside Otranto cathedral.

In 1480 and 1481 the city and fort of Otranto, in Apulia, southern Italy, were held by Ottoman troops.

Contents

[edit] Attack

On July 28, 1480 an Ottoman fleet of between 70 and 200 ships arrived near the Neapolitan/Aragonese city of Otranto, in what is now the region Apulia, Italy. Possibly these troops came from the siege of Rhodes. On July 29 the garrison and the citizens retreated to the citadel, the Castle of Otranto. The citadel had no cannons. On 11 August the citadel walls were breached by cannons. The garrison was killed.

A razzia was held to round up the male citizens. Archbishop Stefano Agricoli and others were killed in the cathedral. Bishop Stephen Pendinelli and the garrison commander, count Francesco Largo, were sawn in two alive. On August 12 800 citizens who refused to convert to Islam were taken to the Hill of the Minerva, today called Hill of the Martyrdoms, and beheaded. The cathedral was used as a stable. Some citizens were transported to Albania as slaves.

In August 70 ships of the fleet attacked Vieste. On September 12 the Monastero di San Nicholas di Casole, which accommodated one of the richer libraries of Europe, was destroyed. In October 1480 Lecce, Taranto and Brindisi were attacked.

Because of lack of food Gedik Ahmed Pasha returned with most of his troops to Albania, leaving a garrison of 800 infantry and 500 cavalry behind to defend Otranto. It was assumed he would return after the winter.

[edit] Response

Since it was only 28 years after the fall of Constantinople, there was some fear that Rome would suffer the same fate. Plans were made for the Pope and citizens of Rome evacuate the city. Pope Sixtus IV repeated his 1471 call for a crusade. Several Italian city-states, Hungary and France responded positively to this. The Republic of Venice did not, as it had signed an expensive peace treaty with the Ottomans in 1479.

In 1481 an army was raised by king Ferdinand I of Naples to be led by his son Alphonso II of Naples. A contingent of troops was provided by king Matthias Corvinus of Hungary.

[edit] Counter attack

The city was besieged starting May 1 1481. On May 3 the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, Mehmed II, died. This possibly prevented the sending of Ottoman reinforcements to Otranto. The city was recaptured in two attacks, the first on 23 August 1481 and the second on 10 September 1481. In the two battles the city was destroyed. The Ottoman garrison was killed.

[edit] Aftermath

The number citizens had decreased from 20,000 to 8,000. Out of fear of another attack, many of these 8,000 left the city.

Some of the remains of the 800 martyrs are today stored in Otranto cathedral and in the church of Santa Caterina a Formiello in Naples.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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