Holy League (1535)

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Conquest of Tunis
Part of the Ottoman–Habsburg wars
and the Ottoman–Portuguese conflicts
Battle of Tunis 1535 Attack on Goletta.jpg
Attack on La Goletta, with Tunis in the background.
Charles quint a tunis.png
Entry of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor into Tunis in 1535.
DateJune 1535
Location
Tunis (present-day Tunisia)
Result Habsburg and allies' victory
Territorial
changes
Muley Hassan of the Hafsid dynasty restored as client ruler of Tunis and Spanish-Imperial tributary.[1][2]
Belligerents

Charles V Arms-personal.svg Habsburg Empire of Charles V:

  •  Holy Roman Empire
    •  Republic of Genoa
    • Flanders County of Flanders
  • Spain Habsburg Spain
    •  Kingdom of Naples
    • Kingdom of Sicily
Hafsid dynasty
Flag Portugal (1521).svg Kingdom of Portugal
 Papal States
 Knights of Malta
 Ottoman Empire
 Kingdom of France
Commanders and leaders
Charles V Arms-personal.svg Charles V
Republic of Genoa Andrea Doria
Spain Álvaro de Bazán
Spain García de Toledo
Spain Duke of Alba
Kingdom of Portugal Duke of Beja
Ottoman Empire Hayreddin Barbarossa
Strength

Total men: 30,000-60,000

  • 10,000 Spaniards
  • 8,000 Germans
  • 8,000 Italians
  • 700 Maltese
  • Unknown number of Flemings and Portuguese

Total ships: 398
Spain 207 ships[3]
10 galleys
Kingdom of Naples 6 galleys
Republic of Genoa 19 galleys
Kingdom of Portugal 1 galleon São João Baptista (galleon), 2 carracks, 20 round caravels, 8 galleys
Papal States 8 galleys
Sovereign Military Order of Malta 1 carrack, 4 galleys
Flanders 60 hulks
Ottoman Empire 82 warships[4]
Kingdom of France 2 galleys[5]
Casualties and losses
Unknown: Many fell to dysentery[citation needed] 30,000 Muslim civilians killed
9,000 Christians freed

The Holy League of 1535 was as ad hoc coalition of catholic states arranged by Pope Paul III at the urging of Charles V.

In 1533, Suleiman the Magnificent ordered Hayreddin Barbarossa, whom he had summoned from Algiers, to build a large war fleet in the arsenal of Constantinople.[6] Altogether 70 galleys were built during the winter of 1533–1534, manned by slave oarsmen, including 2,000 Jewish ones.[7] With this fleet, Barbarossa conducted aggressive raids along the coast of Italy, until he conquered Tunis on 16 August 1534, ousting the local ruler, theretofore subservient to the Spanish, Muley Hasan.[8][9]

Barbarossa thus established a strong naval base in Tunis, which could be used for raids in the region, and on nearby Malta.[8] The implications were dramatic for Madrid. Tunis would have also provided a springboard for raids and invasions of Habsburg controlled Sicily and Naples, providing a permanent presence in the western Mediterranean, which could have threatened Rome itself. It was also feared in Madrid that Tunis might be exploited by a Franco-Ottoman coalition thus tilting the balance of power in Italy in favour of Paris

Charles V, one of the most powerful men in Europe at the time, assembled a large army of some 30,000 soldiers, 74 galleys (rowed by chained Protestants[clarify] shipped in from Antwerp),[10] and 300 sailing ships, including the carrack Santa Anna and the Portuguese galleon São João Baptista, also known as Botafogo (the most powerful ship in the world at the time, with 366 bronze cannons) to drive the Ottomans from the region.[11] The expense involved for Charles V was considerable, and at 1,000,000 ducats was on par with the cost of Charles' campaign against Suleiman on the Danube.[12] Unexpectedly, the funding of the conquest of Tunis came from the galleons sailing in from the New World, in the form of a 2 million gold ducats treasure extracted by Francisco Pizarro in exchange for his releasing of the Inca king Atahualpa (whom he nevertheless executed on 29 August 1533).[12]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Roger Crowley, Empires of the Sea, faber and faber 2008 p.61
  2. ^ History of the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey Ezel Kural Shaw
  3. ^ 15 galleys of the Mediterranean Squadron, 42 ships of the Cantabrian fleet, 150 ships of the Málaga Squadron
  4. ^ Crowley, p.61
  5. ^ Garnier, p.96
  6. ^ Crowley, p.56
  7. ^ Crowley, p.57
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b Crowley, p.58
  9. ^ Also known as Muleassen in Italy, and Abu-Abd-Allah-Mohammed-el-Hasan in Tunis. Il Palazzo di Fabrizio Colonna a Mezzocannone, article by Bartolommeo Capasso in Napoli nobilissima: rivista di topografia ed arte napoletana, Volumes 1–3, page 100-104.
  10. ^ Crowley, p.59
  11. ^ Crowley, p.60
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b Crowley, p.62

Further reading[]

  • Wolf, John B., "The Barbary Coast: Algeria under the Turks," W. W. Norton, 1979; ISBN 978-0-393-01205-7
  • Cook, M.A. (ed.), "A History of the Ottoman Empire to 1730," Cambridge University Press, 1976; ISBN 978-0-521-20891-8
  • Currey, E. Hamilton, "Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean," John Murrey, 1910.
  • Norwich, John Julius, "A History of Venice," Vintage, 1982; ISBN 0-679-72197-5 (pbk.)
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