E-MAIL THIS LINK
To: 

This Week in Books
Empires of the Sea - The Siege Of Malta, the Battle Of Lapanto, and the Contest for the Center of the World

Roger Crowley
Random House, 2009

If reading the title out loud requires circular breathing, it is because there is much covered in this installment. Actually, there is much, much more than even the title suggests. I will do my best to cover as much as possible without writing a book myself, to pique your interest.

To understand the Siege of Malta, Mr. Crowley begins at Rhodes with the Knights of St. John (page 8).

"The early decades of the sixteenth century were a time of hunger in the Eastern Mediterranean, and food supplies for the capital were critical. "The said Rhodians are inflicting great losses on the sultan's subjects," noted the Venetian diarist Sanudo in 1512, the year the knights captured eighteen grain transports bound for Istanbul and forced the prices there up 50 percent."

Suleiman the Magnificent has just risen to Sultan, and the Knights of St. John had reinvented themselves as seamen-crusaders or corsairs or pirates, depending upon who was commenting on them. The Venetians despised them, as they upset commerce and poked the Ottomans.

I have been to Rhodes, and what remains of the fortifications is impressive even today. It is an ancient fortification, pre-dating the common use of gunpowder. Suleiman's father attempted to storm the fort and lost badly. However, the fortifications had been updated (page 12):

"Italian military engineers developed their discipline as a science. They mapped geometric angles of fire with compasses and used knowledge of ballistics to design radical solutions. At Rhodes, the engineers developed prototypes of this new military engineering: massive walls, angled bastions of immense thickness that commanded wide fields of fire, slanted parapets to deflect shot, mountings for long-range guns, splayed gun ports, inner defensive layers with concealed batteries, double ditches excavated to the depth of canyons, counterscarps that exposed an advancing enemy to a torrent of fire."

Mr. Crowley goes into excellent detail on the order of battle and how it plays out, including Suleiman's greatest weapon - the pick with manpower. The battle grinds, and grinds until both sides seek a diplomatic solution. This results in a truce between Grand Master L'Isle Adam and Suleiman with conditions so favorable to the knights they, and anyone who wants to, were allowed to leave with all of their possessions minus cannon, and Suleiman's ships would transport them off the island. Leaving the island is a young knight of the name Jean Parisot de La Valette.

In 1565, at the age of 70, Grand Master La Valette would be in charge of the defense of Malta (page 98):

"He had given everything to warfare in the name of Christ - he had been badly wounded in a fight with Barbary corsairs, been captured and spent a year as a galley slave, served as captain general of galleys, and as governor of Tripoli."

Coming of age also was the new King of Spain (page 23):

Charles was seventeen years old. Through the complexities of dynastic succession, he was the inheritor of the largest domain in Europe since the time of Charlemagne. His realms were the mirror image of the Ottoman Empire, and he claimed a litany of titles to equal Suleiman's. It took two long-winded pages to record them..."

Of the Barbarossas (page 27):

"The two brothers Oruch and Hizir, whom the Christians called the Barbarossas - the Redbeards - were adventurers from the Eastern Mediterranean. They had been born on the island of Lesbos on the fragmenting maritime frontier between Islam and Christendom before the seige of Rhodes, and they spanned both worlds. Their father was an Ottoman cavalryman, their mother a Greek Christian. Their commitment to piracy in the name of Islam had been shaped by the Knights of Saint John. Oruch was captured by the knights in an encounter that left another brother dead. He toiled for two years as a shackled slave on the new fortifications at Rhodes and as an oarsman in their galleys, until he filed off his chains and swam away."

Spanning from 1521 to the aftermath of Lepanto in 1571, Mr. Crowley gives excellent detail of the major players and events which took place in and affecting the Mediterranean from a mainly Catholic League approach, which nicely rounds out with his Venetian view of the world in City of Fortune and the Orthodox/Islam view in his book 1453. Indeed, we see how the Venetian approach to Cyprus comes back to haunt them in 1570 in the battle for Nicosia and Famagusta. Andrea Doria and Don Juan of Austria and Bragadin, Mustafa Pasha and Lala Mustapha and Ali Pasha. And the everyman who suffered most from this conflict (page 76-77):

"Crucially, the dynamo of maritime war was human labor; in all the motivations for slaving in the sixteenth century, snatching men for the rowing benches assumed an important role. In the heyday of Venetian sea power in the fifteenth century, galleys had been rowed by volunteers; by the sixteenth, the muscle power was generally conscripted. The Ottoman navy relied heavily on an annual levy of men from the provinces of Anatolia and Europe, and everyone employed chained labor - captured slaves, convicts, and, in the Christian ships, paupers so destitute they sold themselves to the galley captains."

There are excellent maps and drawings so that even a person unfamiliar with the subject would not be lost. The vividly written battles, especially Malta, left me leaning on the chair. There is a nice museum where the people of Malta made their last desperate stand which shows the armor used and the dings left from being struck by bullets (page 174):

"On August 28 an Italian soldier, Lorenzo Puche, was talking to the grand master when he was hit in the head by an arquebus shot. His plate helmet took the full force of the blast. The man fell to the ground stunned, picked up his dented headgear, and asked permission to carry on with a sortie - under the circumstances it was refused."

At Fort St. Elmo, lost earlier in the fight, I walked to Rabbit Medina, an ancient fort located more towards the center of the island, where a band of cavalry quite possibly saved the Mediterranean with a well timed raid led by Vincenzo Anastagi (page 165):

"The leader of this tiny force was an Italian knight called Vinceno Anastagi, a man of intelligence and enterprise, destined to a small immortality after the siege in a portrait by El Greco - and a violent end, murdered twenty years later by two of his fellow knights."

And the harrowing lead up to and the Battle of Lepanto, we have an account among others who participated (page 263):

"On the 'Marquesa', the Spaniard Miguel de Cervantes, twenty-four years old, bookish and desperately poor, was a volunteer; on the morning of the battle he was ill from fever but tottered from his bed to command a detachment of soldiers at the boat station."

If you don't have time to read, or will be on the road, the audio version on CD, narrated by John Lee, is brilliantly read and does well to bring the listener into the story.

Link is to Amazon's sale page.
Posted by: swksvolFF 2015-12-06
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=437696