Conquest of Tunis (1535) explained

Conflict:Conquest of Tunis
Partof:the Ottoman–Habsburg wars
and the Ottoman–Portuguese conflicts
Date:June 1535
Place:Tunis (present-day Tunisia)
Result:Habsburg and allied victory
Territory:Muley Hassan of the Hafsid dynasty restored as client ruler of Tunis and Spanish-Imperial tributary.[1] [2]
Combatant1:

Kingdom of Portugal
Papal States
Republic of Genoa
Knights of Malta

Combatant2: Ottoman Empire
Kingdom of France
Commander1:Charles V
Andrea Doria
Alfonso d'Avalos
Álvaro de Bazán
García de Toledo
Duke of Alba
Duke of Beja
Commander2:Hayreddin Barbarossa
Strength1:Total men: 30,000–60,000
  • 10,000 Spaniards
  • 8,000 Germans
  • 8,000 Italians
  • 1,500 Portuguese[3]
  • 700 Maltese
  • Unknown number of Flemings


Total ships: 398
207 ships[4]
10 galleys
6 galleys
19 galleys
Kingdom of Portugal 1 galleon, 2 carracks, 20 round caravels, 8 galleys
8 galleys
1 carrack, 4 galleys
60 hulks

Strength2:82 warships[5]
2 galleys[6]
Casualties1:Unknown: Many fell to dysentery
Casualties2:30,000 Muslim civilians killed
9,000 Christians freed

The conquest of Tunis occurred in 1535 when the Habsburg Emperor Charles V and his allies wrestled the city away from the control of the Ottoman Empire.[7]

Background

In 1533, Suleiman the Magnificent ordered Hayreddin Barbarossa, whom he had summoned from Algiers, to build a large war fleet for Constantinople.[8] Altogether 70 galleys were built in the winter of 1533–1534, manned by slave oarsmen, including 2,000 Jews.[9] With this fleet, Barbarossa conducted aggressive raids along the coast of Italy, then conquered Tunis on 16 August 1534, ousting the theretofore local ruler, Muley Hasan, who had been subservient to the Spanish[10] [11] Barbarossa established a strong naval base in Tunis, which could be used for raids in the region, and on nearby Malta.[10]

Charles V assembled a large army of some 30,000 soldiers, 74 galleys rowed by chained Protestants shipped in from Antwerp,[12] and 300 sailing ships, including the carrack Santa Anna and the Portuguese galleon São João Baptista (the most powerful ship in the world at the time) to drive the Ottomans from the region.[13] The expense involved for Charles V was considerable, and at 1,000,000 ducats on par with the cost of Charles' campaign against Suleiman on the Danube.[14] Unexpectedly, the funding of the conquest of Tunis came from the galleons sailing in from the New World, in the form of two million gold ducats extracted by Francisco Pizarro for releasing the Inca king Atahualpa, whom he nevertheless executed on 29 August 1533.[14]

Despite a request by Charles V, Francis I denied French support to the expedition, explaining that he was under a three-year truce with Barbarossa following the 1533 Ottoman embassy to France.[15] Francis I was also in negotiations with Suleiman the Magnificent for a combined attack on Charles V following the 1534 Ottoman embassy. Francis I only agreed to Pope Paul III's request that no fight between Christians occur during the time of the expedition.[15]

Battle

Having sailed from Sardinia at the head of a Catholic coalition protected by a Genoese fleet, Charles V destroyed Barbarossa's fleet on 1 June 1535 and after a costly yet successful siege at La Goletta, captured Tunis. In the action, the Portuguese galleon São João Baptista distinguished itself by breaking the chains protecting the harbour's entrance, thereafter opening fire on La Goletta. In the ruins, the Spanish found cannonballs with the French fleur-de-lis mark, evidence of the contacts stemming from the Franco-Ottoman alliance.[13]

The resulting massacre of the city left an estimated 30,000 dead.[16] Barbarossa managed to flee to Algiers with a troop of several thousand Ottomans.[5] Muley Hasan was restored to his throne.[5] The stench of the corpses was such that Charles V soon left Tunis and moved his camp to Radès.

The siege demonstrated the power of the Habsburg dynasties at the time; Charles V had under his control much of southern Italy, Sicily, Spain, the Americas, Austria, the Netherlands, and lands in Germany. Furthermore, he was Holy Roman Emperor and had de jure control over much of Germany as well.

Ottoman defeat in Tunis motivated them to enter into a formal alliance with France against the Habsburg Empire. Ambassador Jean de La Forêt was sent to Constantinople, and for the first time was able to become permanent ambassador at the Ottoman court and to negotiate treaties.[17]

Charles V celebrated a neo-classical triumph "over the infidel" first in Sicily and then at Rome on 5 April 1536 in commemoration of his victory at Tunis.[18] [19] [20] The Spanish governor of La Goulette, Luys Peres Varga, fortified the island of Chikly in the lake of Tunis to strengthen the city's defences between 1546 and 1550.

Aftermath

See main article: Capture of Tunis (1569). Barbarossa managed to escape to the harbour of Bône, where a fleet was waiting for him. From there, he sailed to accomplish the Sack of Mahón, where he took 600 slaves and brought them to Algiers.[21]

The Ottomans recaptured the city in 1569. Spain captured it again in 1573 under John of Austria, only to lose it again in 1574. Thereafter privateers from Tunis caused discord against Christian shipping. Raiding in the Mediterranean continued until the suppression of the Barbary pirates in the early 19th century.

A French invasion led to the establishment of French Algeria in 1830, consequently France would create a protectorate over Tunisia in 1881.

See also

References

External links

36.8°N 20°W

Notes and References

  1. Roger Crowley, Empires of the Sea, faber and faber 2008 p. 61
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=Xd422lS6ezgC&pg=PA97 History of the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey Ezel Kural Shaw
  3. José Augusto Amaro Pissarra: O galeão S. João (c. 1530–1551). Dados para uma monografia, Cascais, 1999, p. 195
  4. 15 galleys of the Mediterranean Squadron, 42 ships of the Cantabrian fleet, 150 ships of the Málaga Squadron
  5. Crowley, p. 61
  6. Garnier, p. 96
  7. Bruce Ware Allen, "Emperor vs. Pirate Tunis, 1535." MHQ: Quarterly Journal of Military History (Winter 2014) 26#2 pp 58–63.
  8. Crowley, p. 56
  9. Crowley, p. 57
  10. Crowley, p. 58
  11. 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, Vol. 1–3, pp. 100–104.
  12. Crowley, p. 59
  13. Crowley, p. 60
  14. Crowley, p. 62
  15. Garnier, pp. 94–95
  16. A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East, Vol. II, ed. Spencer C. Tucker, (ABC-CLIO, 2010), 506.
  17. History of the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey Ezel Kural Shaw p. 97 https://books.google.com/books?id=Xd422lS6ezgC&pg=PA97
  18. Book: Panvinio, Onofrio. De fasti et triumphi Romanorum a Romulo usque ad Carolum V. Onofrio Panvinio. Giacomo Strada. 1557. Venice. 22 August 2013.
  19. Pinson. Yona. 2001. Imperial Ideology in the Triumphal Entry into Lille of Charles V and the Crown Prince (1549). Assaph: Studies in Art History. 6. 212. 20 August 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20140223003416/http://www2.tau.ac.il/InternetFiles/Segel/Art/UserFiles/file/09pinson.pdf. 23 February 2014. dead.
  20. Book: Frieder, Braden. Chivalry & the Perfect Prince: Tournaments, Art, and Armor at the Spanish Habsburg Court . 20 August 2013 . 2008 . Truman State University Press . 978-1931112697 . 80.
  21. https://books.google.com/books?id=7CP7fYghBFQC&pg=PA872 E.J. Brill's first encyclopaedia of Islam 1913–1936 by M. Th. Houtsma p. 872