Great Siege of Malta

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TheGreat Siege of Malta(Maltese:L-Assedju l-Kbir) occurred in 1565 when theOttoman Empireattempted to conquer the island ofMalta,then held by theKnights Hospitaller.The siege lasted nearly four months, from 18 May to 8 September 1565.

Great Siege of Malta
Part of theOttoman–Habsburg wars

Dimostrazione di tutte le batterie,fresco byMatteo Pérez d'Aleccioat theGrandmaster's PalaceinValletta
Date18 May – 8 September 1565
(3 months and 3 weeks)
Location35°53′31″N14°31′06″E/ 35.89194°N 14.51833°E/35.89194; 14.51833
Result Maltese–Spanish victory
Belligerents

Ottoman Empire
Ottoman Vassals:

Commanders and leaders
Strength
35,000–40,000

2,500 (6,100, including militia, servants, and galley slaves)

  • 900 soldiers from the Spanish Empire
  • 800 soldiers from Italian states outside of the empire
  • 600 Knights Hospitaller
  • 200 unaffiliated soldiers from Sicily and Greece
Casualties and losses
25,000[3]–35,000 killed in combat and from disease[4][5] At least 2,500

The Knights Hospitaller had beenheadquartered in Malta since 1530,after being driven out ofRhodes,also by the Ottomans, in 1522, following thesiege of Rhodes.The Ottomans first attempted to take Malta in 1551 but failed. In 1565,Suleiman the Magnificent,the Ottoman Sultan, made a second attempt to take Malta. The Knights, who numbered around 500 together with approximately 6,000 footsoldiers, withstood the siege and repelled the invaders.

This victory became one of the most celebrated events of sixteenth-century Europe, to the point thatVoltairesaid: "Nothing is better known than the siege of Malta." It undoubtedly contributed to the eventual erosion of the European perception of Ottoman invincibility, although the Mediterranean continued to be contested between Christian coalitions and the Muslim Turks for many years.[6]

Knights of Malta

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By the end of 1522,Suleiman the Magnificent,the Ottoman Sultan, had forcibly ejected the Knights from their base onRhodesafter the six-monthsiege of Rhodes.From 1523 to 1530 the Order lacked a permanent home. They became known as the Knights of Malta when, on 26 October 1530,Philippe Villiers de L'Isle-Adam,Grand Masterof the Knights, sailed into Malta's Grand Harbour with a number of his followers to lay claim to Malta andGozo,which had been granted to them by Holy Roman EmperorCharles V[7]in return for one falconsent annually to the Viceroy of Sicily and a solemn Mass to be celebrated on All Saints Day. Charles also required the Knights to garrisonTripolion the North African coast, which was in territory that theBarbary corsairs,allies of the Ottomans, controlled. The Knights accepted the offer reluctantly. Malta was a small, desolate island, and for some time, many of the Knights clung to the dream of recapturing Rhodes.

Nevertheless, the Order soon turned Malta into a naval base. The island's position in the centre of the Mediterranean made it a strategically crucial gateway between East and West, especially as the Barbary corsairs increased their forays into the western Mediterranean throughout the 1540s and 1550s.

Jean Parisot de Valette

In particular, the corsairDragutwas proving to be a major threat to the Christian nations of the central Mediterranean. Dragut and the Knights were continually at loggerheads. In 1551, Dragut and the Ottoman admiralSinandecided to take Malta and invaded the island with a force of about 10,000 men. After only a few days, however, Dragut broke off the siege and moved to the neighbouringisland of Gozo,where he bombarded theCittadellafor several days. The Knights' governor on Gozo,Gelatian de Sessa,having decided that resistance was futile, threw open the doors to the Cittadella. The corsairs sacked the town and took virtually the entire population of Gozo (approximately 5,000 people) into captivity. Dragut and Sinan then sailed south to Tripoli, where they soonseized the Knights' garrison there.They initially installed a local leader,Aga Morat,as governor, but subsequently Dragut himself took control of the area.

Expecting another Ottoman invasion within a year, Grand Master of the KnightsJuan de Homedesordered the strengthening ofFort Saint Angeloat the tip ofBirgu(now Vittoriosa), as well as the construction of two new forts,Fort Saint Michaelon theSengleapromontory andFort Saint Elmoat the seaward end of Mount Sciberras (nowValletta). The two new forts were built in the remarkably short period of six months in 1552. All three forts proved crucial during the Great Siege.

The next several years were relatively calm, although theguerre de course,orrunning battle,between Muslims and Christians continued unabated. In 1557 the Knights electedJean Parisot de ValetteGrand Master of the Order. He continued his raids on non-Christian shipping, and his private vessels are known to have taken some 3,000 Muslim and Jewish slaves during his tenure as Grand Master.[8]

By 1559 Dragut was causing the Christian powers such distress, even raiding the coasts of Spain, thatPhilip IIorganized the largest naval expedition in fifty years to evict the corsair from Tripoli. The Knights joined the expedition, which consisted of about 54 galleys and 14,000 men. This ill-fated campaign climaxed in theBattle of Djerbain May 1560, when Ottoman admiralPiyale Pashasurprised the Christian fleet off the Tunisian island ofDjerba,capturing or sinking about half the Christian ships. The battle was a disaster for the Christians and it marked the high point of Ottoman domination of the Mediterranean.

Towards the siege

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Fort St. Angelo
Suleiman I

After Djerba there could be little doubt that the Turks would eventually attack Malta again. Malta was of immense strategic importance to the Ottoman long-term plan to conquer more of Europe, since Malta was a stepping stone toSicily,and Sicily in turn could be a base for an invasion of theKingdom of Naples.[9]In August 1560, Jean de Valette sent a despatch to all the Order's priories ordering that their knights prepare to return to Malta as soon as acitazione(summons) was issued.[10]After Djerba, the Turks made a strategic error in not attacking Malta at once, while the Spanish fleet lay in ruins, as the five-year delay allowed Spain to rebuild its forces.[11]

Meanwhile, the Knights continued to prey on Turkish shipping. In mid-1564,R Omega s,the Order's most notorious seafarer, captured several large merchantmen, including one that belonged to theChief Eunuchof theseraglio,and took numerous high-ranking prisoners, including the governor of Cairo, the governor of Alexandria, and the former nurse of Sultan Suleiman's daughter. R Omega s' exploits gave the Turks acasus belli,and by the end of 1564, Suleiman had resolved to wipe the Knights of Malta off the face of the earth.

By early 1565, Grand Master de Valette's network of spies inConstantinoplehad informed him that the invasion was imminent. De Valette set about raising troops in Italy, laying in stores and finishing work onFort Saint Angelo,Fort Saint Michael,andFort Saint Elmo.[12]

Tactics and weaponry

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All known techniques ofsiege warfarewere employed during the siege of Malta. Turkish forces had a hugesiege towerwith adrawbridgefrom whichsharpshootersfired over the walls ofFort St. Angelo.The tower was constructed to be resistant to fire with leather sheets kept moist from water tanks contained inside the tower. Despite this, Maltese masons had hiddenartillerywithin the walls, leaving the outer masonry in place to conceal it from view. Concealed from sight, the defenders were able to move the cannon into position, loaded withchain shot,without revealing its location to the Turks, who had already taken positions in the tower when it was destroyed.[13]

Armies

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The Turkish armada, which set sail from Istanbul on 22 March, was by all accounts one of the largest assembled since antiquity. According to one of the earliest and most complete histories of the siege, that of the Order's official historianGiacomo Bosio,the fleet consisted of 193 vessels, which included 131galleys,sevengalliots(small galleys), and fourgalleasses(large galleys), the remainder being transport vessels.[5]Contemporary letters fromDon Garcia, the Viceroy of Sicily,give similar numbers. "[14]

The Italian mercenaryFrancisco Balbi di Correggio(serving as anarquebusierin the Spanish corps), gave the forces as:[4]

The Knights Hospitaller The Ottomans
500 Knights Hospitaller 6,000Sipahis(cavalry)
400 Spanish soldiers 500 Sipahis fromKaramania
800 Italian soldiers 6,000Janissaries
500 soldiers from the galleys (Spanish Empire) 400 adventurers fromMytiline
200 Greek and Sicilian soldiers 2,500 Sipahis fromRumelia
100 soldiers of the garrison of Fort St. Elmo 3,500 adventurers from Rumelia
100 servants of the knights 4,000 "religious servants"
500 galley slaves 6,000 other volunteers
3,000 soldiers drawn from the Maltese population Various corsairs from Tripoli and Algiers
Total: 6,100 Total: 28,500 from the East, 40,000 in all
First edition of Balbi's account of the siege of Malta, printed inAlcalá de Henaresin 1567.

The Knight Hipolito Sans, in a lesser-known account, also lists about 48,000 invaders, although it is not clear how independent his work is from Balbi's.[3]Other contemporary authors give much lower figures. In a letter written to Philip II only four days after the siege began, de Valette himself says that "the number of soldiers that will make land is between 15,000 and 16,000, including seven thousandarquebusiersor more, that is four thousandjanissariesand three thousandsipahis."[15]On the other hand, in a letter to the Prior of Germany a month after the siege, de Valette writes, "This fleet consisted of two hundred and fifty ships, triremes, biremes and other vessels; the nearest estimate we could make of the enemy's force was 40,000 fighting men."[16]

Indeed, a letter written during the siege by the liaison with Sicily, CaptainVincenzo Anastagi,states the enemy force was only 22,000 and several other letters of the time give similar numbers.[17][18]However, Bosio arrives at a total of about 30,000, which is consistent with Balbi's "named troops."[19]Richard Knolles' history gives essentially the same figure.[20]

Siege

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Arrival of the Ottomans

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Before the Turks arrived, de Valette ordered the harvesting of all the crops, including unripened grain, to deprive the enemy of any local food supplies. Furthermore, the Knightspoisonedall wells with bitter herbs and dead animals.

The Turkish armada arrived at dawn on Friday, 18 May, but did not at once make land.[21]The first fighting broke out on 19 May.[22]A day later, the Ottoman fleet sailed up the southern coast of the island, turned around and finally anchored atMarsaxlokk(Marsa Sirocco) Bay, nearly 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) from the Grand Harbour region. According to most accounts, in particular Balbi's, a dispute arose between the leader of the land forces, the 4thVizierserdarKızılahmedli Mustafa Pasha,[23]and the supreme naval commander,Piyale Pasha,about where to anchor the fleet. Piyale wished to shelter it atMarsamxett Harbour,just north of the Grand Harbour, in order to avoid thesiroccoand be nearer the action, but Mustafa disagreed, because to anchor the fleet there would require first reducing Fort St. Elmo, which guarded the entrance to the harbour. Mustafa intended, according to these accounts, to attack the poorly defended former capitalMdina,which stood in the centre of the island, then attack Forts St. Angelo and Michael by land. If so, an attack on Fort St. Elmo would have been entirely unnecessary. Nevertheless, Mustafa relented, apparently believing only a few days would be necessary to destroy St. Elmo. After the Turks were able to emplace their guns, at the end of May they commenced a bombardment.

Siege of St. Elmo on 27 May 1565

It certainly seems true that Suleiman had seriously blundered in splitting the command three ways. He not only split command between Piyale and Mustafa, but he ordered both of them to defer to Dragut when he arrived from Tripoli. Contemporary letters from spies in Constantinople, however, suggest that the plan had always been to take Fort St. Elmo first.[24]In any case, for the Turks to concentrate their efforts on it proved a critical mistake.

While the Ottomans were landing, the knights and Maltese made some last-minute improvements to the defences of Birgu and Senglea. The Ottomans set up their main camp inMarsa,which was close to the Knights' fortifications.[25]In the following days, the Ottomans set up camps and batteries onSanta Margherita Hill[26]and theSciberras Peninsula.[27]The attacks on Birgu began on 21 May, while Senglea was first attacked a day later.[28]

Map of Malta at the time of the Great Siege.Captions in French

Capture of Fort St. Elmo

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The darkness of the night then became as bright as day, due to the vast quantity of artificial fires. So bright was it indeed that we could seeSt Elmoquite clearly. The gunners of St Angelo... were able to lay and train their pieces upon the advancing Turks, who were picked out in the light of the fires.

— Francisco Balbi, Spanish soldier[29]

In the initial weeks of the siege, prior to the arrival of the small relief sent byGarcia de Toledo,two companies of veteran soldiers from theTercio of Sicilyfaced the Ottoman forces, led by three Spanish captains. These companies were dispatched from Sicily to Malta in the spring, anticipating the imminent Ottoman attack reported by spies. The companies included those of Captains Andrés Miranda and Juan de la Cerda. However, Captain Miranda was not present at the siege's outset, as he remained in Sicily, serving as a courier and military adviser for García de Toledo. His company was temporarily commanded by hissecond lieutenant,Gonzalo de Medrano.[30][31]

Both companies played a crucial role in the early skirmishes against the Turks at the gates ofBirgu.During one such engagement, Ensign Gonzalo de Medrano notably distinguished himself in front of his arquebusiers, gaining the attention of Grand Master La Valette. When the Ottomans targeted Fort San Telmo to secure their fleet inMarsamxett harbour,the Grand Master’s first action was to send the two Spanish companies to San Telmo. Utilizing his authority as Captain General of the Island of Malta, granted by the King of Spain, he promoted Gonzalo de Medrano tocaptainand assigned him to lead Captain Miranda'scompany.[30]

At San Telmo, approximately 500 Spanish soldiers from the two companies of the Tercio Viejo de Sicilia were besieged, alongside their captains Juan de la Cerda and Gonzalo de Medrano, as well as around 100 knights and staff members, including Andrés de Miranda.[30]

Having correctly calculated that the Turks would seek to secure a disembarkation point for their fleet and would thus begin the campaign by attempting to capture Fort St Elmo, de Valette sent reinforcements and concentrated half of his heavy artillery within the fort.[32][33]His intent was for them to hold out for a relief promised by Garcia de Toledo, Viceroy of Sicily. The unremitting bombardment of the fort from three dozen guns on the higher ground of Mt. Sciberras began on 27 May,[34]and reduced the fort to rubble within a week, but de Valette evacuated the wounded nightly and resupplied the fort from across the harbour. After arriving in May, Dragut set up new batteries to imperil the ferry lifeline. On 3 June, a party of TurkJanissariesmanaged to seize the fort'sravelinand ditch.[32][35]Still, by 8 June, the Knights sent Captain Gonzalo de Medrano with a message to the Grand Master that the Fort could no longer be held but were rebuffed with messages that St Elmo must hold until the reinforcements arrived.[32][31]

The Turks attacked the damaged walls on June 10 and 15, and made an all-out assault on June 16, during which even the slave and hired galley oarsmen housed in St Elmo, as well as the native Maltese soldiers, reportedly fought and died "almost as bravely as the Knights themselves." Two days later, Dragut was seen in a trench cannon emplacement arguing with the Turkish gunners about their level of fire. At Dragut's insistence a cannon's aim was lowered, but the aim was too low, and when fired its ball detached part of the trench, which hit Dragut in the head, killing him,[36](although according to Bosio, it was a lucky shot from Fort St. Angelo that mortally wounded him).[32]During the siege, a Turk planted his standard (flag) on therampart.However, it was taken away by Captain Gonzalo de Medrano, who cut down the Turk and at the same moment, received a mortal wound from an arquebuse to the head.[31][37]

Finally, on 23 June, the Turks seized what was left of Fort St. Elmo.[32]They killed all the defenders, totaling over 1,500 men, but spared nine Knights whom the Corsairs had captured. A small number of Maltese managed to escape by swimming across the harbour.[38]

Although the Turks did succeed in capturing St. Elmo, allowing Piyale to anchor his fleet in Marsamxett, the siege of Fort St. Elmo had cost the Turks at least 6,000 men, including half of their Janissaries.[32]

Mustafa had the bodies of the knights decapitated and their bodies floated across the bay on mock crucifixes. In response, de Valette beheaded all his Turkish prisoners, loaded their heads into his cannons, and fired them into the Turkish camp.[39]

Panic

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By this time, word of the siege was spreading. As soldiers and adventurers gathered in Sicily for Don Garcia's relief, panic spread as well. There can be little doubt that the stakes were high, perhaps higher than at any other time in the contest between theOttoman Empireand Europe.Queen Elizabeth Iof England wrote:[40]

If the Turks should prevail against the Isle of Malta, it is uncertain what further peril might follow to the rest of Christendom.

All contemporary sources indicate the Turks intended to proceed to the Tunisian fortress ofLa Golettaand wrest it from the Spaniards, and Suleiman had also spoken of invading Europe through Italy.[citation needed]

However, modern scholars tend to disagree with this interpretation of the siege's importance. H.J.A. Sire, a historian who has written a history of the Order, is of the opinion that the siege represented an overextension of Ottoman forces, and argues that if the island had fallen, it would have quickly been retaken by a massive Spanish counterattack.[32]

AlthoughDon Garciadid not at once send the promised relief (troops were still being levied), he persuadedPhilip IIto allow him to release an advance force of some 600 men under the command of Don Melchor de Robles, a Spanish knight. After several attempts, thispiccolo soccorso(Italian:small relief) managed to land on Malta in early July and sneak into Birgu, raising the spirits of the besieged garrison immensely. However this relief force was too small to make any significant impact.

Don Garcia pleaded with Philip II to authorize a much larger relief force to be deployed, but the Spanish king was indecisive and fearful of risking his newly assembled fleet.[41]Although the Spanish council was gathered, some members still deemed a relief of Malta too dangerous, and proposed attackingTunisin an attempt to force the Turks to divide their forces. However, their captain-general DonÁlvaro de Bazánalso called for relieving the siege, and eventually this was the decision adopted.[42]

The Senglea Peninsula

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The siege of St Michael, showing the Christian Knights cut off from the sea and surrounded in their remaining fortresses of Birgu, St Angelo and St Michael.

On 15 July, Mustafa ordered a double attack against theSengleapeninsula. He had transported 100 small vessels across Mt. Sciberras to the Grand Harbour, thus avoiding the strong cannons of Fort St. Angelo, in order to launch a sea attack against the promontory using about 1,000 Janissaries, while the Corsairs attacked Fort St. Michael on the landward end. Luckily for the Maltese, a defector warned de Valette about the impending strategy and the Grand Master had time to construct apalisadealong the Senglea promontory, which successfully helped to deflect the attack. Nevertheless, the assault probably would have succeeded had the Turkish boats not come into point-blank range (less than 200 yards) of a sea-levelbatteryof five cannons that had been constructed by Commander Chevalier de Guiral at the base of Fort St. Angelo with the sole purpose of stopping such an amphibious attack. Just two salvos sank all but one of the vessels, killing or drowning over 800 of the attackers. The land attack failed simultaneously when relief forces were able to cross to Ft. St. Michael across a floating bridge, with the result that Malta was saved for the day.

The Turks by now had ringed Birgu and Senglea with some 65 siege guns and subjected the town to what was probably the most sustained bombardment in history up to that time. (Balbi claims that 130,000 cannonballs were fired during the course of the siege.) Having largely destroyed one of the town's crucialbastions,Mustafa ordered another massive double assault on 7 August, this time against Fort St. Michael and Birgu itself. On this occasion, the Turks breached the town walls and it seemed that the siege was over, but unexpectedly the invaders retreated. As it happened, the cavalry commander Captain Vincenzo Anastagi, on his daily sortie from Mdina, had attacked the unprotected Turkish field hospital, killing everyone and beheading more than sixty Turks.[43]The Turks, thinking the Christian relief had arrived from Sicily, broke off their assault.

St. Michael and Birgu

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After the attack of 7 August, the Turks resumed their bombardment ofSt. MichaelandBirgu,mounting at least one other major assault against the town on 19–21 August. What actually happened during those days of intense fighting is not entirely clear.

Attack on the post of theCastilian knightson 21 August 1565

Bradford's account of the climax of the siege has a mine exploding with a huge blast, breaching the town walls and causing stone and dust to fall into the ditch, with the Turks charging even as the debris was still falling. He also has the 70-year-old de Valette saving the day by leading towards the Turks some hundred troops that had been waiting in the Piazza of Birgu. Balbi, in his diary entry for 20 August, says only that de Valette was told the Turks were within the walls; the Grand Master ran to "the threatened post where his presence worked wonders. Sword in hand, he remained at the most dangerous place until the Turks retired."[43]Bosio also has no mention of the successful detonation of a mine. Rather, in his report a panic ensued when the townspeople spied the Turkish standards outside the walls. The Grand Master ran there, but found no Turks. In the meantime, a cannonade atop Ft. St. Angelo, stricken by the same panic, killed a number of townsfolk withfriendly fire.[44]

Fort St. Michael and Mdina

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The situation was sufficiently dire that, at some point in August, the Council of Elders decided to abandon the town and retreat to Fort St. Angelo. De Valette, however, vetoed this proposal. If he guessed that the Turks were losing their will, he was correct. Although the bombardment and minor assaults continued, the invaders were stricken by an increasing desperation. Towards the end of August, the Turks attempted to take Fort St. Michael, first with the help of amanta(similar to aTestudo formation), a small siege engine covered with shields, then by use of a full-blownsiege tower.In both cases, Maltese engineers tunneled out through the rubble and destroyed the constructions with point-blank salvos ofchain shot.

At the beginning of September, the weather was turning and Mustafa ordered a march onMdina,intending to winter there. However the attack failed to occur. The poorly defended and supplied city deliberately started firing its cannon at the approaching Turks at pointlessly long range; this bluff scared them away by fooling the already demoralised Turks into thinking the city had ammunition to spare.[45]By 8 September, the Turks had embarked their artillery and were preparing to leave the island, having lost perhaps a third of their men to fighting and disease.

Gran Soccorso

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On 7 September,Don Garciahad, at last, landed about 8,000 men at St. Paul's Bay on the north end of the island. The so-calledGrande Soccorso( "great relief" ) positioned themselves on the ridge of San Pawl tat-Tarġa on the 13th of September, waiting for the Ottoman assault. It is said that, when some hot-headed knights of the relief force saw the Ottoman retreat and the burning villages, in its wake, they charged without waiting for orders fromAscanio della Corgna.Della Corgna, seeing the troops in such spirits, had no choice but to order a general charge which resulted in the massacre of the retreating Ottoman force, who retreated from the islands on 13 September.

Malta had survived the Ottoman assault, and throughout Europe people celebrated what would turn out to be the last epic battle involving Crusader Knights.

The relief force consisted of mainly Spanish and Italian soldiers, sent by theSpanish Empireas well as theGrand Duchy of Tuscany,theRepublic of Genoa,thePapal States,and theDuchy of Savoy.[2]

Aftermath

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Lifting of the Siege of MaltabyCharles-Philippe Larivière(1798–1876).Hall of the Crusades,Palace of Versailles.
Great Siege MonumentbyAntonio SciortinoinValletta

The number of casualties is in as much dispute as the number of invaders. Balbi gives 35,000 Turkish deaths,[4]Bosio 30,000 casualties (including sailors).[5]Several other sources give about 25,000.[46]Theknightslost a third of their number, and Malta lost a third of its inhabitants. Birgu and Senglea were essentially leveled. Still, 6,000 defenders had managed to withstand a siege of more than four months in the hot summer, despite enduring a bombardment of some 130,000 cannonballs.

Jean de Valette, Grand Master of the Knights of Malta, had a key influence in the victory against the Ottomans with his example and his ability to encourage and hold people together. This example had a major impact, bringing together the kings of Europe in an alliance against the previously seemingly invincible Ottomans; the result was the vast union of forces against the Ottomans at theBattle of Lepantosix years later. Such was the gratitude of Europe for the knights' heroic defence that money soon began pouring into the island, allowing de Valette to construct a fortified city,Valletta,on Mt. Sciberras. His intent was to deny the position to any future enemies. De Valette himself died inBuskettat a hunting accident next to theVerdala Palacesin 1568.

In literature and historical fiction

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^At least two companies of SpanishTerciostook part in the defence of Fort St Elmo.Cañete, Hugo A. (3 July 2020)."La leyenda negra del fuerte de San Telmo y los tres capitanes españoles del Tercio Viejo de Sicilia que lo defendieron (Malta 1565) | Grupo de Estudios de Historia Militar".Grupo de Estudios de Historia Militar(in Spanish).Retrieved4 July2020.
  2. ^abPaoletti, Ciro (2008).A Military History of Italy.Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 16–17.ISBN9780275985059.
  3. ^abArnold Cassola,The 1565 Great Siege of Malta and Hipolito Sans'sLa Maltea (Publishers Enterprise Group: Malta, 1999).
  4. ^abcFrancesco Balbi di Correggio / translated by: Ernle Bradford (1965).The Siege of Malta, 1565.London.{{cite book}}:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^abcGiacomo Bosio,Histoire des Chevaliers de l'ordre de S. Iean de Hierusalem,edited by J. Baudoin (Paris, 1643).
  6. ^Fernand Braudel,The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II,vol. II (University of California Press: Berkeley, 1995).
  7. ^Abbe de Vertot,The History of the Knights of Maltavol. II, 1728 (facsimile reprint Midsea Books, Malta, 1989).
  8. ^Godfrey Wettinger,Slavery in the Islands of Malta and Gozo,(Publishers Enterprise Group: Malta, 2002), p. 34
  9. ^Setton, Kenneth Meyer (1984).The Papacy and the Levant, 1204–1571.Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society. p. 854.ISBN0-87169-162-0.
  10. ^Carmel Testa,R Omega s(Midsea Book: Malta, 2002), p. 61.
  11. ^Braudel, op cit.
  12. ^"Malta prepares for an imminent Ottoman invasion".Heritage Malta.17 May 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 1 February 2016.
  13. ^Hindley, G. (2009).Medieval Sieges & Siegecraft.United States: Skyhorse Publishing, p. 88
  14. ^Coleccion de Documentos Ineditos Para La Historia de Espana,vol. 29 (Madrid, 1856).
  15. ^Coleccion,op. cit., p. 367
  16. ^Celio Secondo Curione,A New History of the War in Malta,translated from the Latin by Emanuele F. Mizzi (Tipografia Leonina: Rome, 1928).
  17. ^Giovanni Bonello, Histories of Malta, Volume III,Versions and Perversions(Patrimonju Publishing Ltd: Malta, 2002)
  18. ^Coleccion,op. cit.
  19. ^Giacomo Bosio, op. cit.
  20. ^Richard Knolles, TheGenerall Historie of the Turke(London, 1603).
  21. ^"Hostile Ottoman fleet anchored in Malta today".Heritage Malta.18 May 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 1 February 2016.
  22. ^"Rash decision ruins the day".Heritage Malta.19 May 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 4 February 2016.
  23. ^Aurel DeceiIstoria Imperiului Otoman,Ed. Ştiinţifică şi enciclopedică, București 1978, p. 185
  24. ^Coleccion,op. cit., pp. 6–7
  25. ^"Ottoman troops land in Malta".Heritage Malta.20 May 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 6 February 2016.
  26. ^"Birgu attacked: Greek betrays Order of St John".Heritage Malta.21 May 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 5 February 2016.
  27. ^"Liberated prisoners enrolled as soldiers".Heritage Malta.24 May 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 5 February 2016.
  28. ^"Turks planning to sabotage Fort St Elmo".Heritage Malta.22 May 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 5 February 2016.
  29. ^Grant, R.G. (2005).Battle a Visual Journey Through 5000 Years of Combat.London: Dorling Kindersley. p. 133.
  30. ^abc"La leyenda negra del fuerte de San Telmo y los tres capitanes españoles del Tercio Viejo de Sicilia que lo defendieron (Malta 1565) | Grupo de Estudios de Historia Militar"(in Spanish). 2020-07-03.Retrieved2024-10-05.
  31. ^abcAllen, Bruce Ware (2015-10-22).The Great Siege of Malta: The Epic Battle between the Ottoman Empire and the Knights of St. John.University Press of New England.ISBN978-1-61168-843-6.
  32. ^abcdefgSire, H. J. A. (1993)."5".The Knights of Malta.New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp.68–70.ISBN0-300-05502-1.
  33. ^"Refugees ordered to leave Fort St Elmo".Heritage Malta.25 May 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 6 February 2016.
  34. ^"Fort St Elmo under fire: Renegade reveals Ottoman plan".Heritage Malta.27 May 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 5 March 2016.
  35. ^"Ravelin of Fort St Elmo taken over by Ottomans".Heritage Malta.3 June 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 5 February 2016.
  36. ^Setton, Kenneth Meyer (1984).The papacy and the Levant.Vol. 4. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society. p. 860.ISBN9780871691620.
  37. ^Balbi, Verdadera Relacion, fol.51
  38. ^Bruce Ware Allen (2015).The Great Siege of Malta: The Epic Battle between the Ottoman Empire and the Knights of St. John.University Press of New England. p. 160.ISBN978-1-61168-843-6.
  39. ^Bradford, Ernle Dusgate Selby (1988).The great siege: Malta 1565: with four illustrations.Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.ISBN978-0-14-002106-6.
  40. ^Felix Pryor,Elizabeth I: Her Life in Letters,(University of California Press, 2003), p. 39.
  41. ^Crowley, Roger (2008).Empires of the Sea: The Final Battle for the Mediterranean, 1521–1580.Faber & Faber.ISBN978-0-571-23230-7.
  42. ^Hernández-Palacios, Martín (2023).Álvaro de Bazán: el mejor marino de Felipe II(in Spanish). Rialp.ISBN978-8-432-16519-1.
  43. ^abFrancisco Balbi,The Siege of Malta 1565,translated by H.A. Balbi (Copenhagen, 1961).
  44. ^Bosio, op. cit., p. 552.
  45. ^Grima, Noel (15 June 2015)."The Mdina siege of 1429 was 'greater than the Great Siege' of 1565".The Malta Independent.Archived fromthe originalon 15 August 2015.
  46. ^Arnold Cassola,The 1565 Ottoman Malta Campaign Register,(Publishers Enterprise Group: Malta, 1998), p. 111.

References

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  • Allen, Bruce Ware,The Great Siege of Malta: The Epic Battle between the Ottoman Empire and the Knights of St. John,Hanover N.H., ForeEdge 2017ISBN1512601160.
  • Bradford, Ernle(1961).The Great Siege: Malta 1565.Wordsworth edition 1999.ISBN1-84022-206-9.
  • Bradford, Ernle,The Sultan's Admiral: The Life of Barbarossa,London, 1968.
  • Correggio, Francesco Balbi di (1961).The Siege Of Malta 1565.Copenhagen.
  • Francesco Balbi di Correggio (translated Ernle Bradford in 1965) (1568). "chapter II".The Siege Of Malta 1565.Penguin 2003.ISBN0-14-101202-1.{{cite book}}:CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Currey, E. Hamilton,Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean,London, 1910
  • Pickles, Tim.Malta 1565: Last Battle of the Crusades;Osprey Campaign Series #50,Osprey Publishing,1998.
  • Rothman, Tony, "The Great Siege of Malta", inHistory Today,January 2007.
  • Spiteri, Stephen C.The Great Siege: Knights vs. Turks, 1565.Malta, The Author, 2005.
  • The Great Siege – 1565. Visit Malta. (n.d.).https:// visitmalta /en/a/great-siege-1565/
  • Wolf, John B.,The Barbary Coast: Algeria under the Turks.New York, 1979;ISBN0-393-01205-0
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