Conventional Long Name: | Sanjak of Rhodes |
Common Name: | Rhodes |
Subdivision: | Sanjak |
Nation: | the Ottoman Empire |
Year Start: | 1522 |
Event Start: | Ottoman conquest of Rhodes |
Event End: | Italian capture |
Year End: | 1912 |
Capital: | Rhodes |
P1: | Hospitaller Rhodes |
Flag P1: | Flag of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta.svg |
S1: | Italian Islands of the Aegean |
Flag S1: | Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned.svg |
Flag: | Flag of Turkey |
The Sanjak of Rodos or Rhodes (Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928);: Sancak-i/Liva-i Rodos; Greek, Modern (1453-);: λιβάς/σαντζάκι Ρόδου) was a second-level Ottoman province (sanjak or liva) encompassing the Dodecanese or Southern Sporades islands, with Rhodes as its centre.
After the Ottoman conquest of Rhodes from the Knights Hospitaller in 1522, the island initially became the seat of a beylerbey, and was not subordinated to the Eyalet of the Archipelago as a sub-province (sanjak) until 1546. However, for most of the duration of Ottoman rule, apart from Rhodes itself, the other Southern Sporades islands (the remainder of the Dodecanese including Samos) were practically autonomous, and were not subject to a centralized administration until the introduction of the uniform vilayet-based administrative system in the 1860s. Rhodes itself did not enjoy this autonomy, and declined during the early Ottoman period both as a commercial centre and as a site of military importance, since the Eastern Mediterranean became an Ottoman lake. Only from the 18th century on is there evidence for an economic upturn in the island.[1] In 1748, Hungarian, Georgian and Maltese slaves on board the ship Lupa revolted and sailed the ship to Malta taking over 150 Ottomans prisoner, including the pasha Mustafa.In Malta, Mustafa plotted a revolt of Muslims prisoners for 29 June 1794.They were however discovered and punished.Mustafa returned to Rhodes after the intercession of France.[2]
During the Greek War of Independence, Rhodes and Kos did not take part in the uprising, although many Rhodians were members of the Filiki Etaireia and fled to join the Greek rebels. The other islands of the sanjak however rose up, most prominently Kasos until its destruction in 1824.[1]
Rhodes apparently became the seat of the Kapudan Pasha (the chief admiral of the Ottoman Navy, who also served as governor of the Archipelago Eyalet) in the late 17th century. In 1849, Rhodes became officially the pasha-sanjak of the Archipelago province, now separated from any relation with the Kapudan Pasha. With the introduction of the vilayet system, the capital of the new Vilayet of the Archipelago was transferred to Kale-i Sultaniye in 1867, returned to Rhodes in 1877, went to Chios in 1880, before finally returning to Rhodes in 1888.
In 1912, the year the province was occupied by the Kingdom of Italy during the Italo-Turkish War, it comprised the kazas (districts) of Rodos itself, Kasot (Kasos), Mis (Kastellorizo), Sömbeki (Symi), Kerpe (Karpathos), and Istanköy (Kos). The islands were slated to be returned to the Ottoman Empire after the Treaty of Ouchy, but Italy took advantage of the outbreak of the Balkan Wars to continue its occupation. The islands were finally ceded to Greece in 1948, in the aftermath of World War II.