Silahdar Yusuf Pasha Explained

Honorific Prefix:Silahdar
Yusuf Pasha
Birth Date: 1604
Birth Place:Vrana, Croatia (Then Bosnia Eyalet of Ottoman Empire)
Birth Name:Josef Mašković
Death Date:1646
Death Place:Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Spouse:Fatma Sultan
Serviceyears: 1643–1646
Battles:Cretan War (1645–69)
Battles Label:Wars and campaigns

Silahdar Yusuf Pasha (Turkish: Silahdar Yusuf Paşa, Arabic: يوسف باشا; 1604–1646) also known as Jusuf Mašković, was an Ottoman vezir and admiral (Kapudan Pasha, grand admiral of the Ottoman fleet), known for conquering Chania in western Crete in only 54 days in 1645 during the Cretan War (1645–69). He built a large han, or Turkish inn, at Vrana in 1644, which still stands today.

Early life

A convert from Christianity, he was surnamed Mašković[1] (known in Croatian as Jusuf Mašković), and was born around 1604, in Vrana, a town in Ravni kotari in Dalmatia, at the time situated at the Venetian–Ottoman frontier. He was an ethnic Croat.[2] According to Frane Difnico, Yusuf was the servant of Durak Bey, while Girolamo Brusoni claims that his father was the servant of Halil Bey, and that Yusuf was the groomer of Ibrahim Bey Bećiragić in Nadin. Brusoni said that Yusuf eventually came into good relations with the Beys, who even claimed him as a relative and near friend ("Durachbeg, che si dice suo parente" "Il Sapitan bie Bessiraghch, suo amico"). At the service of the Bećiragići in Nadin, Josef learned Turkish and the Arabic script. Though he was a sharp and intelligent boy, he was in serious poverty; once an elder lady of Nadin saw him barefooted and gave him opanci (leather shoes). While following his master on a trip, he got to know a gatekeeper of the Porte, and decided to join Ottoman service in Constantinople.

Ottoman service

He was a silahdar at one point and was an ally of Djindji Khodja.[1]

When Yusuf Pasha returned to Constantinople in 1645, he married Fatma Sultan, the three-year-old daughter of Sultan Ibrahim I.[3] He was also given the Ibrahim Pasha Palace as a residence. However, one year later in 1646, he was executed by the Sultan at the persuasion of Yusuf Pasha's political rivals.

Legacy

He built a large han, or Turkish inn, at Vrana in 1644 named Maškovića Han.

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Molly Greene, A shared world: Christians and Muslims in the early modern Mediterranean (2002), p. 17
  2. Book: Lovett Fielding Edwards. The Yugoslav coast. 1 January 1974. Batsford. 130. 9780713428391 . Jusuf Maskovic, who was an Islamized Croat and not an ethnic Turk.
  3. Book: Evliya Çelebi. Robert Dankoff. Robert Dankoff. The Intimate Life of an Ottoman Statesman, Melek Ahmed Pasha (1588-1662): As Portrayed in Evliya Celebi's Book of Travels (Seyahat-name). 1991. SUNY Press. 978-0-7914-0640-3. 39.