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Revision as of 21:31, 21 December 2024 editVbbanaz05 (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users11,233 edits Created page with '{{Infobox military conflict | conflict = Siege of Vlorë (1691) | partof = the Morean War | date = 4 February – 6 March 1691 | place = Vlorë, Republic of Venice | result = Ottoman victory | combatant1 = Ottoman Empire | combatant2 = Republic of Venice | commander1 = Koca Halil Pasha<br>Küçük Cafer Pasha<br>Süleyman Pasha | commander2 = Giralomo Cor...'  Latest revision as of 21:33, 21 December 2024 edit undoVbbanaz05 (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users11,233 editsNo edit summary 
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== Siege == == Siege ==
A ''Serdar'' was appointed to retake ] and was given 6,000 janissaries and siege guns<ref>"Venice, Austria, and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century", Kenneth Meyer Setton, American Philosophical Society (1991), p. 376</ref> Vizier Koca Halil Pasha, ] Küçük Cafer Pasha, Sanjak of İşkodra and his Guard Süleyman Pasha and Sanjak of Prizren Mahmud Bey also joined the troops under his command.<ref>"Osmanlı Tarihi", İsmail Hakkı Uzunçarşılı, Ankara (2003), v.3/1, p.545</ref> A ''Serdar'' was appointed to retake ] and was given 6,000 janissaries and siege guns<ref>"Venice, Austria, and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century", Kenneth Meyer Setton, American Philosophical Society (1991), p. 376</ref> Vizier Koca Halil Pasha, ] Küçük Cafer Pasha, Sanjak of İşkodra and his Guard Süleyman Pasha and Sanjak of Prizren Mahmud Bey also joined the troops under his command.<ref>"Ottoman History", İsmail Hakkı Uzunçarşılı, Ankara (2003), v.3/1, p.545</ref>


On March 4, the 28th day of the siege that began on February 4, 1691, the Venetian navy landed in the region and brought in reinforcements. The attack of these troops on the Shkodër soldiers under the command of Süleyman Pasha, who were in the metris, was repelled as a result of the Ottomans quickly taking up defensive positions. In addition to the prisoners, the Venetian force, which suffered approximately 4,000 casualties, fled to the ships in defeat.<ref>"Kayı 7: Kutsal İttifak Karşı", Ahmet Şimşirgil, Timaş Tarih (2015)</ref> During the siege, the garrison commander Giovanni Matteo Bembo and (Swedish) General Charles Sparre were also killed in the bombardment by Turkish artillery.<ref>"Essays on the Latin Orient", William Miller, CUP Archive, Cambridge University (1921), p.439</ref> On March 4, the 28th day of the siege that began on February 4, 1691, the Venetian navy landed in the region and brought in reinforcements. The attack of these troops on the Shkodër soldiers under the command of Süleyman Pasha, who were in the metris, was repelled as a result of the Ottomans quickly taking up defensive positions. In addition to the prisoners, the Venetian force, which suffered approximately 4,000 casualties, fled to the ships in defeat.<ref>Kayı 7: Against the Holy League", Ahmet Şimşirgil, Timaş History (2015)</ref> During the siege, the garrison commander Giovanni Matteo Bembo and (Swedish) General Charles Sparre were also killed in the bombardment by Turkish artillery.<ref>"Essays on the Latin Orient", William Miller, CUP Archive, Cambridge University (1921), p.439</ref>


As a result, the Venetian garrison in the castle of Vlorë, who had no hope of escape, destroyed the walls sewers and evacuated the castle (March 6, 1691). As a result, the Venetian garrison in the castle of Vlorë, who had no hope of escape, destroyed the walls sewers and evacuated the castle (March 6, 1691).


== After the siege == == Aftermath ==
After the capture of the castle, it was understood that the damage was extensive and needed to be repaired, so no garrison was left in ] and guards were placed in the nearby ] castle instead.<ref>"Osmanlı Tarihi", İsmail Hakkı Uzunçarşılı, Ankara (2003), v.3/1, p.546</ref> After the capture of the castle, it was understood that the damage was extensive and needed to be repaired, so no garrison was left in ] and guards were placed in the nearby ] castle instead.<ref>"Ottoman History", İsmail Hakkı Uzunçarşılı, Ankara (2003), v.3/1, p.546</ref>


The target of the ] in the following campaign season was ] in ]. The target of the ] in the following campaign season was ] in ].

Latest revision as of 21:33, 21 December 2024

Siege of Vlorë (1691)
Part of the Morean War
Date4 February – 6 March 1691
LocationVlorë, Republic of Venice
Result Ottoman victory
Belligerents
Ottoman Empire Republic of Venice
Commanders and leaders
Koca Halil Pasha
Küçük Cafer Pasha
Süleyman Pasha
Giralomo Cornaro 
Giovanni Matteo Bembo 
Charles Sparre 
Strength
6,000 Unknown
Casualties and losses
Light 4,000
Great Turkish War
Central Europe
Balkans
Eastern Europe

The Siege of Vlorë was a siege in 1691 in which the Ottoman army under the command of Koca Halil Pasha inflicted a great defeat on the Venetians and took back this important castle and port as a result of the siege carried out between February 4 and March 6, 1691.

Background

In the summer of 1690, the Ottoman garrison in Vlorë was considerably weakened, as the Governor of Rumelia and Vlorë, Küçük Cafer Pasha, joined the expedition of Köprülüzade Fazıl Mustafa Pasha against Austria with all his troops.

After the Albanians in the Sanjak informed the Venice about this situation, the Venetian fleet, consisting of 55 units, under the command of Giralomo Cornaro invaded and captured the castles of Vlorë and Kaninë on September 19, 1690. The Grand Vizier Köprülüzade Fazıl Mustafa Pasha received this news While besieging Belgrade and tasked Koca Halil Pasha with recapturing the castle.

Doche of Venice Francesco Morosini was hesitant about holding the castles of Vlorë and Kaninë, because the period when the Ottoman Empire lost territory between 1684 and 1689 was over, and Grand Vizier Köprülüzade Fazıl Mustafa Pasha had re-strengthened the Ottomans' position in the Balkans by liberating Niš, Vidin, Smederevo and Belgrade from the occupation of the Austria in his campaign of 1690. Therefore, Doçe Morosini was also concerned that the resources spent on castles in Albania could weaken the defenses of Morea in case of an Ottoman counterattack.

Siege

A Serdar was appointed to retake Vlorë and was given 6,000 janissaries and siege guns Vizier Koca Halil Pasha, Rumelia Governor Küçük Cafer Pasha, Sanjak of İşkodra and his Guard Süleyman Pasha and Sanjak of Prizren Mahmud Bey also joined the troops under his command.

On March 4, the 28th day of the siege that began on February 4, 1691, the Venetian navy landed in the region and brought in reinforcements. The attack of these troops on the Shkodër soldiers under the command of Süleyman Pasha, who were in the metris, was repelled as a result of the Ottomans quickly taking up defensive positions. In addition to the prisoners, the Venetian force, which suffered approximately 4,000 casualties, fled to the ships in defeat. During the siege, the garrison commander Giovanni Matteo Bembo and (Swedish) General Charles Sparre were also killed in the bombardment by Turkish artillery.

As a result, the Venetian garrison in the castle of Vlorë, who had no hope of escape, destroyed the walls sewers and evacuated the castle (March 6, 1691).

Aftermath

After the capture of the castle, it was understood that the damage was extensive and needed to be repaired, so no garrison was left in Vlorë and guards were placed in the nearby Kaninë castle instead.

The target of the Venetian Republic in the following campaign season was Chania in Crete.

References

  1. "Venice's Last Imperial Venture", Proceedings, American Philosophical Society (1976), v.120, no.3, p.161
  2. "Venice, Austria, and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century", Kenneth Meyer Setton, American Philosophical Society (1991), pp. 375-377
  3. "Venice, Austria, and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century", Kenneth Meyer Setton, American Philosophical Society (1991), p. 376
  4. "Ottoman History", İsmail Hakkı Uzunçarşılı, Ankara (2003), v.3/1, p.545
  5. Kayı 7: Against the Holy League", Ahmet Şimşirgil, Timaş History (2015)
  6. "Essays on the Latin Orient", William Miller, CUP Archive, Cambridge University (1921), p.439
  7. "Ottoman History", İsmail Hakkı Uzunçarşılı, Ankara (2003), v.3/1, p.546
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