Second siege of Missolonghi explained

Conflict:Second siege of Missolonghi
Partof:the Greek War of Independence
Date:20 September – 30 November 1823
Place:Missolonghi, Sanjak of Karli-Eli, Ottoman Empire (now Aetolia-Acarnania, Greece)
Result:Greek victory
Combatant1: First Hellenic Republic
Combatant2: Ottoman Empire
Commander1: Konstantinos Metaxas
Kitsos Tzavelas
Commander2: Omer Vrioni
Mustafa Pasha Bushatli
Strength1:3,500[1]
Strength2:Unknown

The Second Siege of Missolonghi was the second attempt by Ottoman forces to capture the strategically located port town of Missolonghi during the third year of the Greek War of Independence (1823). The second siege is usually ignored however, and the name is often applied to the greater siege of 1825–1826.

Background

After the first unsuccessful attempt to take the town in 1822, another expedition to western Central Greece was undertaken, this time by Mustafa Pasha of Scutari. Mustafa proceeded through the city of Trikala to Karpenisi, where a first Greek attempt to stop his advance resulted in the Battle of Karpenisi. During this battle, the Albanian casualties were 1,000 troops, but the Greeks lost their commander, Markos Botsaris. The second unsuccessful Greek attempt to stop Mustafa at Mount Kaliakouda, on 29 August 1823, resulted in 200 Greek casualties.[2]

Siege

On 17 September the Albanian army was joined by Omer Vrioni and his troops. The two pashas decided to cooperate and siege Missolonghi and Aitoliko, an island which controlled the seaways of the Missolonghi lagoon.[3] The Albanian army arrived before Missolonghi and began the siege on 20 September with a bombardment of Aitoliko. The subsequent attack on Aitoliko failed however. Thousands of cannonballs were fired against the island and only a few of them found their target.[4] [5]

On 17 November, Ottoman food supplies were seized by 250 Souliotes under command of Kitsos Tzavelas.[6] Soon, inside the Albanian camp, clashes between Ghegs and Mirdites occurred due to the lack of food.[7]

Meanwhile rumors arrived that the Ottoman campaign in Eastern Central Greece had failed and damaged the morale of those laying siege. As a result of food shortages and disease, on 20 November Mustafa Pasha lifted the siege, withdrew and retreated to modern-day North Albania.[8] The siege had taken place in early winter, so its premature end was inevitable.[9] [10] [11] [12]

Aftermath

Missolonghi remained under Greek control. Its resistance achieved wider fame when Lord Byron arrived there, dying in the town of fever in April 1824. The city was besieged for a third and final time, resisting both Ottoman and Egyptian armies for almost a year, until its final fall on 10 April 1826.

See also

References

  1. Δημήτρη Φωτιάδη,Ιστορία του 21,ΜΕΛΙΣΣΑ,1971,τομ.Β,σελ.352
  2. Μεταξά Κώστα,Ιστορικά Απομνημονέυματα εκ τής Ελληνικής Επανασταστάσεως,Αθήνα 1878 (εκδ.Β, Τσουκαλά 1956),σελ.96,97
  3. Paparigopoulos, K, History of the Greek Nation (Greek edition), vol. 6, p. 108
  4. Paparigopoulos, K, History of the Greek Nation (Greek edition), vol. 6, p. 108
  5. Δημήτρη Φωτιάδη,Ιστορία του 21,ΜΕΛΙΣΣΑ,1971,τομ.Β,σελ.352
  6. Μεταξά Κώστα,Ιστορικά Απομνημονέυματα εκ τής Ελληνικής Επανασταστάσεως,Αθήνα 1878 (εκδ.Β, Τσουκαλά 1956),σελ.107
  7. Paparigopoulos, K, History of the Greek Nation (Greek edition), vol. 6, p. 108
  8. Paparigopoulos, K, History of the Greek Nation (Greek edition), vol. 6, p. 108
  9. Paparigopoulos, K, History of the Greek Nation (Greek edition), vol. 6, p. 108
  10. Δημήτρη Φωτιάδη,Ιστορία του 21,ΜΕΛΙΣΣΑ,1971,τομ.Β,σελ.353
  11. Κουτσονίκα Λ.,Γενική Ιστορία της Ελληνικής Επαναστάσεως,Αθήνα 1863–1864 (εκδ.Β, Τσουκαλά 1956) σελ.186
  12. [Douglas Dakin]

Sources

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