READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM |
THE GREEK REVOLUTION.
CHAPTER III
Sultan Mahmud and Ali Pasha of
Joannina.
In the year 1820, the Othoman empire seemed to be on the eve of
dissolution. Ali Pasha was in open rebellion at the head of a warlike nation,
and with reasonable hope of establishing an independent throne in Albania. An
insurrection of the Greeks was also awaited with some anxiety by almost every
Christian in the Levant, excepting the English consuls.
Sultan Mahmud II then ruled Turkey. He ascended the throne in the year
1808, in his twenty-fifth year, after a series of revolutions at
Constantinople, caused by the attempts of his cousin, Sultan Selim III, to
reform the public administration, and introduce military discipline in the
corps of janissaries. Selim, who was dethroned in 1807, had neither energy nor
talent. His successor, Mustapha IV, lost his crown and life, after murdering
his cousin Selim in order to retain them, by a revolution that seated his
younger brother Mahmud on the throne.
Mahmud II had reigned twelve years; yet few of his subjects were
acquainted with his personal character. The fate of his cousin and brother
warned him that it would be dangerous to attempt reforming the abuses which, if
they remained unreformed, would inevitably cause the dissolution of the Othoman
empire at no very distant day. Mahmud revolved the condition of his empire, and
the difficulties of his own position, constantly in his mind, and he persuaded
himself that, in order to restore vigour to his empire, it was necessary to
begin by centralizing all power in his own hands. His own prudence, and the
seclusion of the serai, enabled him to conceal his ambitious projects, while
the iron firmness of his character enabled him to perfect the design which for
years he was compelled to keep in abeyance.
The personal appearance of Mahmud may be known to many from the numerous
portraits, which represent it with tolerable accuracy. His face was sallow, and
his beard, naturally dark, was artificially stained of a shining black. His
expression was that of sombre melancholy rather than of stern severity; it was
repellent, though not offensive. There was, however, something so artificial in
his whole appearance in public, that a physiognomist might have been baffled by
the unvarying mask with which Othoman etiquette clothes a sultan’s countenance.
He was of middle stature; but as, like most Turks, he had short legs, he
appeared tall when on horseback or when seated.
Sultan Mahmud was long deemed a cruel and bloodthirsty tyrant, and death
was for many years the lightest punishment he ever inflicted. It was said that
he ordered all the females of his brother’s harem to be thrown into the
Bosphorus, and few travellers entered the court of the serai without seeing a
head or a pile of ears and noses exposed in the niches at the gate. Dead bodies
hanging from shop-fronts, or stretched across the pathway of a narrow street,
were sights of daily occurrence, and proved that the sultan was indifferent to
human suffering and regardless of human life. Yet he was really neither cruel
nor bloodthirsty. The terrible punishments he inflicted were the result of
habit and policy, not of passion. When his absolute power was firmly
established, he ceased to inflict the cruel punishments which he had employed
as a means of intimidation. The administration of his latter years was
comparatively mild. Now, certainly, innate cruelty could not, after long
indulgence, have assumed the mask of humanity; but policy may render a prince
either cruel or merciful as he deems it expedient for his purpose. The fact is,
that Mahmud, though he possessed little sympathy with humanity, restrained and
ultimately subdued the Oriental ferocity which had from time immemorial formed
a characteristic of the government of the Sublime Porte. When we count the
number of lives sacrificed by public executions in the early years of his
reign, it must not be forgotten that the power of life and death was then
vested not only in the grandvizier and the provincial pashas, but was also
intrusted to the governors of petty fortresses, and to the captains of single
frigates. Sultan Mahmud was a thoughtful, stern, and obstinate man, whose
strongest characteristic was an inflexible will, not violent passions. The
restraint with which he long suppressed his feelings, and the patience with
which he waited for opportunities of carrying his plans into execution, misled
many acute observers into the belief that he was a weak prince. Ali Pasha of
Joannina was one of those who mistook the character of his master.
Few European statesmen in 1820 believed that it was possible to arrest
the decline of the Othoman empire; many expected its immediate dissolution. Yet
some competent authorities asserted that the reorganization of the sultan’s
administration was not an impracticable enterprise in the hands of an able and
energetic sultan, and that its success would restore strength to the Othoman
empire. Both foreign relations and internal affairs, however, presented great
difficulties to a reformer. Turkey was not comprehended in the general system
of territorial guarantees established by the treaty of Vienna. This
circumstance favoured the Russians in their schemes of aggrandizement, and the
Greeks in their projects of revolution.
The Mussulman population of European Turkey was visibly declining both
in wealth and number. This decline commenced when the Othomans ceased to
recruit their ranks with tribute-children, slaves captured in war, and
apostates. By some inexplicable social law, a dominant race almost invariably
consumes life and riches more rapidly than it supplies them. In the wide
extended empire of the sultan the whole military service was performed by the
Mussulmans, and in all foreign wars and domestic hostilities the loss always
fell heaviest on the Turkish race. The prejudices of a warlike people prevented
the Othomans from engaging in those occupations in which wealth is most
securely accumulated; and if they were not entirely an aristocratic class, they
were invariably a privileged caste of the population.
The long duration of the Othoman empire in Europe is a historical
marvel. No other government ever combined so much political wisdom with so
great a mass of social corruption. Taxation was always oppressive to the
agricultural population, justice was corrupt, so that in these two departments
the Mussulmans suffered as much from the vices of the administration as the
Christians. Yet, with all its defects, the sultan’s government retained hostile
races and rival religions in daily intercourse without dangerous collisions,
and ruled subject nations for generations without goading them to rebellion.
Its peculiar feature was, that it always remained disconnected from every
nation and race in its dominions. The sway of the sultan was not politically
more closely identified with the supremacy of the Turkish than of the Arabic
race. The theory of the government, even as late as the year 1820, was, that
Sultan Mahmud was the despotic master of the empire, and that viziers and
pashas exercised their authority in his name as his household slaves.
The empire seemed to be perishing from tyranny and weakness. Its tyranny
had produced universal discontent, and among the Christians an eager desire to
throw off its yoke. Its weakness invited ambitious pashas and lawless tribes to
live in open rebellion. In some provinces the sultan’s authority was lost.
Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli were virtually independent. Egypt had been so under
the Mamelukes; and under Mohammed Ali its allegiance was still doubtful. Syria,
Servia, Bosnia, and a part of Bulgaria, had been recently in a state of revolt.
The Kurds of Armenia and the Arabs of Mesopotamia paid the sultan only a
nominal allegiance. Ali Pasha of Joannina had long acted as an independent
vassal, and had been treated as a sovereign both by France and England. Many
Derebeys, whose castles commanded only a single valley, claimed a kind of
feudal independence, on the ground that they held their lands from the time of
the Seljouk empire, in Asia Minor, on the tenure of' military service alone. The
janissaries and the ulema, in Constantinople, were not more loyal than the
feudal chieftains in the distant provinces. Anarchy and rebellion
prognosticated to statesmen the inevitable and near fall of the empire. Omens
and prophecies were cited as evidence that the fall was near by the people. The
Greeks revived the prophecies which their ancestors had repeated when the
Belgian Baldwin became master of Constantinople and was proclaimed Emperor of
the East. Alexander I. of Russia was the flavus Rex, and the Turks
represented the corrupted Greeks of the Byzantine empire.
The voice of nations attributed to Ali Pasha of Joannina the energy and
talent which sultan Mahmud was supposed to want. His policy had increased the
power of the Albanian race, and to the careless observer it appeared to rest on
the firm adherence of a warlike nation. The Greeks were thriving in his
dominions, and appeared satisfied with his government. Political speculators
proclaimed that his independence would soon be established by a successful
rebellion.
Ali was a type of the Albanian character. With all his energy and
activity he was a mere savage. He was borne forward to power by circumstances
whose current he followed, but which he was unable to control or guide. As a
ruler he exhibited the qualities of an astute Albanian chieftain corrupted by
exercising the despotic authority of a Turkish pasha.
The ancestors of Ali were Christians, who embraced Mohammedanism in the
fifteenth century; though to Osmanlis and strangers he sometimes pretended that
he was descended from a Turk of Brusa who had received a ziamet from Sultan
Bayazid I. To his native clansmen he made no such boast. His family dwelt at
Tepelen, a small town composed of a cluster of fortified houses inhabited by
wealthy Mussulman landed proprietors. The agas of Tepelen enjoyed a degree of
local independence which was maintained by something like a regular municipal
organization. But the intense selfishness of the Albanian race broke out in
frequent quarrels, and kept the place always on the verge of anarchy.
The great-grandfather of Ali, Mutza Yussuf, raised himself to
considerable power by his personal valour. From him the phara of which he was
the chieftain assumed the name of Mutzochusats. It is worthy of remark that in
Albania, as in Greece in the time of Homer, no genealogy is carried by name
beyond the great-grandfather of the most distinguished man. Mukhtar Bey, the
son and successor of Mutza, was slain at the siege of Corfu, fighting against
Schulenburg. Veli, the third son of Mukhtar, was accused of poisoning his two
elder brothers to secure the chieftainship. Perhaps he poisoned himself, for,
like his brothers, he died young.
Ali, the infant son of Veli, was left to the care of his mother, whose
relationship to Kurd Pasha of Berat, a powerful Albanian chieftain, secured
protection to the infant. The young Ali grew up in lawless habits.
Sheep-stealing involved him in local feuds, and, falling into the hands of an
injured neighbour, he was only saved from death by the interference of Kurd
Pasha. He then entered the sultan’s service, and was employed by Kurd as a
guard of the dervens. He was brave and active, restless in mind and body, and
utterly destitute of all moral and religious feeling: but his good-humour made
him popular among his companions, and he displayed affection to the members of
his family and gratitude to his friends. As he grew older and rose in power, he
became, like most Albanians, habitually false; and, regarding cunning as a
proof of capacity, his conversation with strangers was usually intended to
mislead the listeners. During his long and brilliant career his personal
interests or passions were the sole guides of his conduct. Within the circle of
Albanian life his experience was complete, for he rose gradually from the
position of a petty chieftain to the rank of a powerful prince; yet his moral
and political vision seems never to have been enlarged, for at his greatest
elevation selfishness obscured his intellect, and avarice neutralized his
political sagacity. His ambition in some cases was the result of his physical
activity.
Ali, like every Albanian or Greek who has risen to great power by his
own exertions, ascribed his success solely to his own ability, and his
self-conceit persuaded him that his own talents were an infallible resource in
every emergency. He thought that he could deceive all men, and that nobody
could deceive him; and as usually happens with men of this frame of mind, he
overlooked those impediments which did not lie directly in his path. As an
Albanian, a pasha and a Mohammedan, he was often swayed by different interests:
hence his conduct was full of contradictions. At times he acted with excessive
audacity; at times with extreme timidity. By turns he was mild and cruel,
tolerant and tyrannical; but his avarice never slept, and to gratify it there
was no crime which he was not constantly ready to perpetrate.
The boasted ability of Ali was displayed in subduing the Albanians,
cheating the Othoman government, and ruling the Greeks. His skill as the head
of the police in his dominions gave strangers a favourable opinion of his
talents as a sovereign. He found knowledge useful in his servants, he therefore
favoured education. His household at Joannina had all the pomp and circumstance
of an Eastern court; but it had no feature more remarkable than a number of
young pages engaged in study. The children of Albanian Mussulmans might be seen
in one antechamber reading the Koran with a learned Osmanli, while in another
room an equal number of young Christians might be seen studying Hellenic
grammar with a Greek priest.
Under Ali’s government Joannina became the literary capital of the Greek
nation, for he protected laymen who rebelled against the patriarch and synod of
Constantinople, as well as priests who intrigued against the sultan. Colleges,
libraries, and schools flourished and enjoyed independent endowments. He
ostentatiously recommended all teachers to pay great attention to the morals of
their pupils, and in his conversation with Greek bishops he dwelt with a cynic
simplicity on the importance of religious principles, showing that he valued
them as a kind of insurance against dishonesty, and a means of diminishing
financial peculation. Greek, being the literary language of southern Albania,
was studied by Mussulmans as well as Christians. Poems and songs, as well I as
letters and accounts, were written by Mohammedans in Greek, and many were
circulated in manuscript. Unfortunately no collection of Mohammedan songs and
poems has been published.
The cruelty of Ali excited horror in civilized Europe, but it extorted
admiration from his barbarous subjects. The greatest compliment they could pay
him was to praise his cruelty to his face. Persons still living have seen him
listen with complacency to flattery embodied in an enumeration of his acts of
direst cruelty, and shuddered at his low demoniacal laugh when his Greek
secretaries reminded him how he had hung one man, impaled another, and tortured
a third. Lord Byron might well say, that
‘With a bloody hand
He ruled a nation turbulent and bold.'
One of his most wanton acts of cruelty has been much celebrated, and the
circumstances which attended it deserve to be recorded, as affording a
characteristic trait of Ali and of his government.
A Greek lady of Joannina excited the jealousy of Ali’s daughter-in-law,
the wife of his eldest son Mukhtar. Euphrosyne was the niece of Gabriel, the
archbishop of Joannina, but she had neglected to study the lives of the saints,
and turned her attention to naughty reading in the Greek classics. She
possessed great beauty and singularly attractive manners. In an evil hour her
classic tastes led her to revive the elegance and wickedness of the ancient hetairai,
and for a time her graceful manners concealed her graceless conduct. Her
husband visited Venice, fearing Ali’s designs on his purse, and disliking the
attentions of Mukhtar to his wife. During his prolonged absence the house of
the fair Euphrosyne became the resort of the educated and wealthy young men of
Joannina, and she received private visits and rich presents from Mukhtar Pasha
without much effort to conceal the disgraceful connection. This conduct caused
much scandal, and it was said that married ladies, whose husbands were not so
far distant as Euphrosyne’s, imitated her behaviour. A storm of indignation
arose among Christian husbands and Mussulman wives. The complaints of Mukhtaf’s
wife were at last made a pretext for punishment, but report said that Ali
sought revenge because he had been an unsuccessful lover. His vices were
notorious. Childe Harold remarked,—
‘Yon hoary
lengthening beard
Ill suits the passions that belong to youth’.
Men said that the hoary beard attempted to conceal its evil passions
under a veil of public duty. It was resolved to eradicate the great social evil
of Joannina by some effectual measure of reform. Ali decided on a general
massacre of the culprits, and never was cruelty perpetrated with more ruthless
deliberation or greater barbarity.
Ali was in the habit of dining with his subjects at their own houses
when he wished to confer on them an extraordinary mark of favour. He signified
to Nicholas Yanko, whose wife was one of the proscribed, his intention to
honour him with a visit. The men dine alone in Eastern lands. After dinner the
great pasha requested that the lady of the house might present his coffee, in
order to receive his thanks for the entertainment. When she approached, he
addressed her in his usual style of conversation with Greek females, mixing
kindness with playful sarcasm. Rising after his coffee, he ordered the
attendants in waiting to invite several ladies, whose conduct, if not virtuous,
had certainly not been scandalous, to visit Yanko’s wife at her house.
Ali proceeded to the house of Euphrosyne, attended by a few guards, and,
walking suddenly into her presence, made a motion with his hand, which served
as a signal for carrying off the victim, who was conveyed to Yanko’s house much
more astonished than alarmed. Ali rode on to his palace and engaged in his
usual employments. The ladies of the party assembled at Yanko’s were soon
discomposed by having an equal number of females of the very lowest order in
Joannina thrust into the room by policemen. In a few minutes the whole party
was hurried off to the church of St Nicholas, Yanko’s patron saint, at the
northern extremity of the lake. There the unfortunate culprits were informed
that they were condemned to death by the pasha. The wealthier were at first not
much frightened, for Ali’s avarice was so notorious that they believed their
relations would either voluntarily ransom their lives, or be compelled to do so
by the pasha. The worst punishment they feared was imprisonment in the convents
on the islands of the lake.
Morning dawned before the party reached the church of St. Nicholas, and
Mohammedan customs require that the execution of a sentence of death on females
by drowning must be carried into effect while the sun is below the horizon. For
twenty hours, ladies of rank and women of the lowest class remained huddled
together, trembling at times with the fear of death, and at others confident
with delusive hopes of life. At sunset a violent storm swept the surface of the
lake, and it was midnight before they were embarked in small boats and carried
to the middle of the lake. There they were thrown overboard, without being tied
up in sacks according to the Mussulman formality in executing a similar
sentence. Most of the victims submitted to their fate with calm resignation,
sinking without an audible word, or with a short prayer; but some resisted to
the utmost with piercing shrieks, and one whose hands got loose clung to the
side of the boat, and could only be plunged under water by horrid violence.
When all was finished, the police guards watched silently in the boats until
morning dawned; they then hastened to inform the pasha that his orders had been
faithfully executed. One of the policemen present, who had witnessed many a
horrid deed of torture, declared long after that the scene almost deprived him
of his senses at the time, and that for years the voices of the dying women
were constantly echoing in his ears, and their faces rising before his eyes at
midnight.
Several days elapsed before all the bodies were found and buried. In
this instance Ali’s cruelty excited extreme loathing among the Christian
population. Seventeen females perished, and public feeling was so strong that
their funerals were attended by crowds. Yet none of their relations had made an
effort to save them, and the husbands of more than one were accused of being
privy to the pasha’s design. Ali, when he saw the violence of public
indignation, thought it prudent to apologize for his severity by declaring that
he would have pardoned all those who could have found an intercessor, and that
he deemed his victims deserved death since no one spoke a word in their favour.
This was mere hypocrisy; he knew the selfishness of his subjects.
The beautiful Euphrosyne was twenty-eight years of age. Being the niece
of an archbishop, the orthodox cherished her memory with affection, as if she
had been a martyr, instead of viewing her conduct with reprobation and her fate
with pity. But public feeling expresses itself before public opinion is formed.
The cruel fate of the elegant Euphrosyne awakened sympathy, but her sixteen
fellow-sufferers died almost unpitied, though many of them were less blamable.
Several songs were composed on the subject of her death, which were repeated
over all Greece
Ali’s habitual exhibition of cunning and sagacity was considered as a
display of political wisdom. His artifice allured the intellects of the subtile
Greeks and the fancy of the enthusiastic Albanians. Colonel Leake, who was
several years the diplomatic agent of the British government at his court,
recounts an anecdote which proves that he was unable to lay aside his habits of
deceit even when his good-nature prompted him to do an act of kindness. “Not
long ago he almost frightened to death the Bishop of Grevena, a mild and timid
man, by a proceeding meant to increase the bishop’s authority. Being about to
visit Grevena, he ordered the bishop to prepare the episcopal palace for his
reception, but instead of proceeding there, went to another lodging, pretending
to believe that the bishop had so ordered it. Having sent for the unfortunate
holy man of Grevena, he assumed an air of extreme anger, ordered the bishop to
prison, and issued a proclamation that all persons having complaints against
him should make a statement of their grievances. Nobody having appeared, the
vizier sent for the bishop next day, and congratulated him on the proof that he
had no enemies, and that he governed his flock with kindness”.
Another anecdote deserves notice because it illustrates the manner in
which the Greek bishops in his dominions served as instruments of his avarice.
Having observed that the bishops possessed more authority than his
tax-gatherers, he resolved to employ them in collecting his revenues. He began
the experiment by obliging the celebrated Ignatius, metropolitan of Arta, who
afterwards escaped to Italy and resided
at Pisa, to become the tax-gatherer of his diocese. The orders given to the
bishop were severe, and he used little forbearance in his eagerness to win the
pasha’s favour. This severity caused many quarrels, without bringing an
increase of revenue. Disturbances occurred, and Ali was compelled to listen to
the complaints of the sufferers. As soon as the bishop had paid all the money
he had collected into the pasha’s treasury, Ali decided that a remission of
taxation ought to be made, to the amount of £2000 sterling. The claimants
compelled the bishop to refund the money, but Ali retained the fruits of his
extortion.
It has been already mentioned that Ali was elevated to the rank of
dervendji-pasha in the year 1787. The pashalik of Thessaly was united with that
office. His activity obtained for him the pashalik of Joannina, in addition to
his other commands, in the following year. His instructions required him to
destroy the authority still possessed by the Christian armatoli, whose
sympathies with Russia disquieted the Porte, and Ali carried out the views of
the Othoman government with zeal and vigour.
At this period, a strong feeling in favour of increasing the direct
authority of the sultan in the provinces far distant from the capital, had
arisen both among Mussulmans and Christians. It was thought that the central
government would restrain the exactions of the local pashas, and repress the
feudal anarchy of the hereditary beys. Ali took advantage of this feeling to
curtail the privileges of armatoli, ayans, and Mussulman and Christian
communities alike. His firmness of purpose soon consolidated his authority both
in Epirus and Thessaly; for at this early period of his career, justice and id
equity were words constantly on his lips, and they appeared to direct his
conduct. The armatoli had latterly become grievous oppressors of the peasantry.
The ayans had always been the tyrants of the Christian population. The
communities were powerless, except to increase the general anarchy. Ali
constituted himself the redresser of wrongs, and he succeeded in establishing a
degree of order which had not previously prevailed. Under the pretext of securing
equal justice to all, he compelled every district which enjoyed the right of
maintaining Greek armatoli to receive a garrison of Mussulman Albanians; while
in those districts where the Turkish landlords were all-powerful, he placed
detachments of armatoli to protect the cultivators of the soil. His energy
secured to the people a larger share of the fruits of their industry than they
had previously enjoyed, to that they willingly submitted to the contributions
he impelled them to pay for his protection. His exactions were chiefly directed
against the rich; and as he seldom allowed his agents to plunder with impunity,
he was spoken of as a hard man but a just pasha.
The sultan supported Ali’s plan of centralizing all power in his own
hands, as long as it was evident that he was only the sultan’s viceroy. The boldest
beys were drawn into hostilities, and then overwhelmed with forces prepared in
secret for their destruction. The wary were assassinated or poisoned. These
murders generally removed men as cruel and treacherous as Ali, who, as the
destroyer of a legion of tyrants, was considered a benefactor by a suffering people.
In the year 1796 he began to exhibit the ferocity of his character in
its darkest colours. Khormovo was a Christian township, situated high up in the
mountains, between the rivers Viosa and Dryno, and not far from their junction,
the inhabitants were dangerous brigands; and it was said hat for several
generations they waylaid travellers under the guidance of their priest. A
hollow tree, in the pass near the bridge of Tepelen, was long shown to
travellers as the place of concealment of this orthodox priphti (priest), from
whence he uttered his oracular decisions concerning the fate of those who were
plundered. If the unfortunate prisoner was a Turk he was hung on the tree; if a
Greek in the service of the pasha or the sultan, he was drowned in the river;
but if an Albanian, he was generally allowed to escape on payment of a ransom.
The Christians of Khormovo maintained their lawless independence by
means of a close alliance with the Mussulmans of Gardhiki, a powerful community
in the mountains to the south of the Dryno. Nearly thirty years had elapsed
since the mother and sister of Ali had been seized in a civil war between the
people of Khormovo and Gardhiki and the phara of the Mutzachusats. The ladies
were treated with the grossest indignity, and they instilled into the breast of
Ali their own rancorous longing for revenge. An occasion at last occurred of
punishing the children for their father’s crime. The territory of Khormovo was
laid waste, the inhabitants shot down, the son of the priest was roasted alive,
and a Greek poem, by a Mussulman, recounts with Oriental ferocity all the
details of the tortures inflicted by Ali’s soldiers on their unhappy prisoners.
The cruelty with which a Christian community was treated made very
little impression, and was soon forgotten.
After a further interval of sixteen years, a new catastrophe struck all
men with amazement and horror. The Mussulmans of Gardhiki were a powerful body,
and their alliance with the inhabitants of Arghyrokastro enabled them to escape
Ali’s vengeance for forty-five years. The cause of his anger was generally
forgotten and never mentioned.
Demir Dost, the principal aga of Gardhiki, was a brave and honourable
man, who had aided Ali in subduing Khormovo. Ali, having determined to deprive
the communities of Arghyrokastro and Gardhiki of the local privileges which
their alliance had hitherto enabled them to maintain, marched against them in
person. The peasantry declared in his favour, Demir Dost and sixty agas of
Gardhiki were admitted to conclude a capitulation which permitted them to
retain ther property and territorial rights, on condition that they should
reside at Joannina until the new civil and fiscal officers of the pasha were
established in the district.
After the departure of the agas, the pasha summoned the people of
Gardhiki to meet him at the Khan of Valiare, below Arghyrokastro, and on the
other side of the Dryno. The pasha’s agents declared that he wished to enrol a
strong body of Gardhikiots in his service, and no better lure could be held out
to attract the Albanian Mussulmans, who scorn to cultivate their lands if they
can gain their living by military service. Gardhiki also, like most Albanian
communities, had been long in the habit of sending mercenaries to every
pashalik in the Othoman empire. The hope of becoming the instruments of Ali’s
power rendered the common people careless of the loss of a troubled
independence, from which only the chieftains of the pharas derived any profit.
On the 27th of March 1812, about 670 Gardhikiots sat down to eat their
midday meal in the Khan of Valiare, and in the large quadrangular court
adjoining. Athanasios Vaïas, a Christian high in Ali’s favour, was ready with a
band of soldiers, who mounted on the walls of the enclosure, occupied the
towers at its angles, and closed the gates. They opened a sudden fire of
musketry on their unsuspecting victims, and it is said that two hundred fell at
the first volley. The soldiers then raised diabolical shouts, in order to
overpower the shrieks of the wounded and the dying, and kept up a continual
fire, without intermission, for an hour and a half, until not a limb moved in
the quadrangle, and the khan was enveloped in flames. The survivors, after the
first volley, had vainly attempted to climb the wall and force the gates. The
murderer had prepared the means of baffling every effort of despair.
Ali had not ventured to intrust many of his officers with the secret of
the premeditated massacre, and the firing created some confusion among his
troops; but he diverted the attention of the Mussulmans, who might have been
inclined to favour the escape of the Gardhikiots, by a proclamation that the
plunder of Gardhiki was granted to the soldiers. When plunder is to be gained,
neither Albanians nor armatoli feel any sentiments of patriotism or humanity.
All the troops whom Ali distrusted and wished to withdraw from the see of the
massacre were soon on their march up the mountain. The town of Gardhiki was
sacked; the houses were plunder in regular succession, in order to insure to
all a fair share of the booty; the women and children were carried off and
reduced to slavery, in direct violation of the Mohammed law; and all the
fortified houses of the agas were burn to the ground. Demir Dost and the sixty
agas who has retired to Joannina were murdered at the same time by Ali’s order.
As soon as he had perpetrated this act of treachery and blood, Ali
returned to Joannina, from whence he issued order for the murder of every
Gardhikiot who had escaped the massacre at the khan and the sack of the town.
But the cruelty exceeded the limits of human wickedness, and his orders were
disobeyed even by his own sons, who conceal many of his intended victims.
The deliberate extermination of a Mussulman community of eight hundred
families was an act of atrocity that roused the indignation of every
Mohammedan; and from that day Ali was accursed in the opinion of all true
believers. The deserted habitations, blackened with fire, the desecrated
mosques with their ruined minarets, the Mohammed women and children weeping in
slavery, cried loudly for vengeance. Yet Ali, in his intense selfishness,
thought much of the wrongs of his mother and his sister, and so little of the
sufferings of thousands of innocent individuals, that boasted of his
wickedness, and commemorated his infamy an inscription over the gateway of the
Khan of Valiare. The entrance was walled up. The bones were left unburied in the
court, and a marble tablet informed the passer-by, in both Turkish and Greek,
that Ali was proud of the vengeance which he had inflicted on the enemies of
his house. A curious poem in Greek, consisting of sixty-four verses, was
circulating in manuscript, which was said to be an exact copy of t inscription,
and to have been read over repeatedly to the pasha. It is a strange production,
in the form of a conversation between the khan and the dead bodies. The
building ask for information concerning the cause of their death. The dead
bodies reply, that fifty years ago they had burned Ali’s house and destroyed
his clan, and they add, “For this he slew us here, he razed our town, and
ordered it to remain for ever desolate, for he is a just man”. In conclusion,
Ali speaks a few warning words in his own person: “I do not wish to do another
similar act of severity, so let no man molest my house”.
Ali’s power at last alarmed Sultan Mahmud, who was labouring night and
day to circumscribe the authority of his pashas and great vassals. He had
hitherto made but slow progress in establishing his system of centralization,
but he had prepared the Porte for pursuing his policy with success. He availed
himself of the universal indignation manifested at the murder of the
Gardhikiots to diminish the power of Ali. The first step was to deprive Veli,
Ali’s second son, of the pashalik of the Morea, in August 1812, and send him to
rule the insignificant pashalik of Larissa. Public opinion, which had favoured
Ali in his plans of centralization at the expense of beys and communes, now
favoured the projects of Sultan Mahmud at the expense of Ali. The Porte could
alone afford protection against local tyranny: the sultan seemed to be the only
authority in the Othoman empire who had a direct interest in enforcing an
equitable administration of justice; every other authority seemed to derive a
profit from injustice. Ali remained insensible to the change which had taken
place in public opinion since he first attained the rank of pasha. This is not
wonderful, for the ambassadors of the European powers at Constantinople, and
their consuls in the provinces, were as blind to the increasing power of
centralization as the Albanian pasha. The prudence of Sultan Mahmud was
generally mistaken for weakness, and at the court of Joannina it was the
fashion to speak of the anarchy and corruption that prevailed in the empire
with great freedom, and of the dismemberment of Turkey as a probable event. The
adroit flattery of Greek sycophants, the impolitic intrigues of European
diplomatic agents, and the general improvement in the condition of the people
under his government, induced Ali to believe that the hour had arrived when he
might act as independent sovereign of Epirus with perfect security. Yet he had
reached the edge of a precipice, and the vicissitudes of a long and eventful
life, rich in social and political changes, had exhibited its lessons of
experience in vain. He fell pursuing the course of selfish criminal
gratification, which he had often combined with the measures which raised him
to power.
In the year 1819 Sultan Mahmud took advantage of the numerous complaints
against the lavish expenditure and illegal extortions of Veli, to remove him
from the government of Larissa to the still more insignificant pashalik of
Lepanto. Ali saw clearly that the object was to circumscribe his power; but he
attributed the measure to the influence of Ismael Pasho Bey, his active
personal enemy, and not to the deep policy of Sultan Mahmud. All his malicious
passions were roused, and he resolved to strike a blow that would destroy his
enemy and intimidate his sovereign.
Ismael Pasho Bey was an Albanian of family and wealth, allied to Ali’s
house by blood. He had served the pasha of Joannina in youth with much
devotion; but some cause of mutual distrust arose, and Ismael contrived to have
his services transferred to Veli, when Ali’s unworthy son was named pasha of
the Morea in 1807. The hatred of Ali increased; but Ismael, warned in time,
fled to save his life. For some years he escaped notice, but, finding that
Ali’s agents had discovered his place of residence, he removed to
Constantinople, where he believed no assassin would venture to attack him
openly. By attaching himself to the Ulema, frequenting the mosques with
assiduity, and transacting the business of every Albanian who had any affair
before the divan, he acquired some influence, and was named capidji-pasha.
In the month of February 1820 three Albanians made an attempt to
assassinate Ismael Pasho Bey at noon in the streets of Constantinople. They
were arrested; and, finding that their victim was only slightly wounded, they
expected to save their lives by confession. They declared that they had been sent
by Ali, pasha of Joannina, who had assured them that, in case of success,
several members of the divan were prepared to protect them from punishment.
This insinuation, that Ali possessed an overwhelming influence in the divan,
offended Sultan Mahmud deeply. The assassins were immediately executed, and Ali
was pronounced guilty of high treason. The traitor was summoned to present
himself as a suppliant before the Sublime Porte within forty days. The pashalik
of Joannina was conferred on Ismael Pasho. The period granted for repentance
elapsed, and the new pasha was ordered to march against the rebel.
While Ali was pursuing his course of wickedness, he was acting as an
instrument in the hands of Providence to advance the social progress of the
Greeks. Indeed, the career of this celebrated man, with all his power and
wickedness, would hardly have merited a place in history had circumstances not
rendered him the herald of the Greek Revolution. The scenes of his eventful
life produced very little direct change either in the political condition of
the Othoman empire or of the Albanian nation.
When Ali received the news of his condemnation he was fully prepared to
resist the sultan’s authority, and his military arrangements for the defence of
his pashalik were well planned. He had long revolved projects of rebellion in
his mind, and the time appeared favourable for asserting his independence. The
power of national feelings in upholding thrones and overthrowing dynasties was
the theme of general discussion. A national revolution had just broken out in
Spain, which was expected to produce great political changes in Europe. Ali was
told by his political advisers that an appeal to the nationality of the
Albanians and Greeks would induce them to unite in emancipating themselves from
the Othoman domination and expose their lives and fortunes for his cause. He
was liberal, therefore, of promises. He talked of constitutions and
representative assemblies with as much fluency and as little sincerity as the
kings of Spain, Naples, and Sardinia. He promised rewards to his troops, who
believed in nothing but payments in coined money, and he invited the Greeks to
co-operate with him in resisting the sultan, little foreseeing the consequences
of his encouragement.
The soldiers of Ali were habituated to mountain warfare, and were
intimately acquainted with every ravine and pass in the range of Mount Pindus.
Every path that afforded ingress into Southern Albania from Macedonia and
Thessaly was fortified sufficiently to resist Othoman infantry. A camp was
formed to support every point which could be assailed, and easy communications
were insured with the central magazines at Joannina by means of the lake. In
everything the army of Ali appeared far superior to any force the sultan could
bring against him.
The dispositions adopted for the defence of Southern Albania were the
result of a long-meditated plan of resistance. From the north, Ali’s dominions
were exposed to an attack by Mustaï, pasha of Skodra, at the head of the
Mussulman Gueghs and Catholic Mirdites, who were as good soldiers in mountain
warfare as the Tosks and the armatoli. But Mustaï was, like Ali, an Albanian,
and his career had been so similar, that he was not likely to view the ruin of
his fellow pasha with favour, particularly as they had never been involved in
any personal contests of importance. Ali had also secured several friends among
the chieftains in the north, and he apprehended little danger from that quarter.
The task of opposing the Skodra pasha was intrusted to Ali’s eldest son,
Mukhtar, pasha of Berat; but the right of Mukhtar’s line of defence was exposed
to be turned by a Turkish army assembled at Monastir, under the command of the
Romeli-Valessi, which could penetrate into Albania by the pass of Devol, and
thus unite with the Gueghs. Mustal was the first of Ali’s assailants who took
the field. He advanced as far as Durazzo without meeting any opposition; but,
after he had occupied Elbassan, he was recalled to the north by some movements
among his unquiet neighbours, the Montenegrins, or he made their movements a
pretext for retreating, in order to paralyze the advance of the Romeli-Valessi,
whom he had no desire to see established in the valley of the river of Berat.
The direct line of approach for an army advancing to attack Joannina
from the east is by the pass of Metzovo. Two great roads—one from Macedonia by
the valley of the Indji-karasou, and the other from Thessaly by the valley of
the Salamvria—converge at this pass, and two powerful armies may be
simultaneously prepared to force the passage, and maintained in its immediate
vicinity by supplies from the fertile districts of Anaselitza, Grevena, and
Trikkala.
To protect this pass, an army of 15,000 men was encamped on the eastern
slopes of Palaeovuni, between the sources of the Viosa and the river of Arta.
It was commanded by Omer Vrioni, an Albanian chieftain, who had acquired
considerable reputation as a soldier, and great wealth by his military service
in Egypt, during the troubled times which preceded the consolidation of
Mohammed Ali’s authority. The Albanian camp was established near the position
occupied by Philip V of Macedon after his defeat by Flamininus at the Fauces
Antigonenses, or Kleisura of the Viosa, and where he lingered a few days,
doubting whether he ought to march into Thessaly or fall back on Macedonia.
To the south of the pass of Metzovo there is another pass leading from
Thessaly into the valley of the Aspropotamos, called Portais, or the gates of
Trikkala; and there are several mountain paths farther south, by which light
troops may march from the upper valley of the Spercheus and the head waters of
the Megdova, by the valley of the Aspropotamos, into the valley of the river of
Arta, and thus gain an entrance into the plain of Joannina. But the country
through which these roads pass is intersected by successive ranges of high mountains
and deep valleys, besides being occupied by d Christian armatoli and by the
indigenous robbers of Mount Kotziaka.
Ali committed the defence of the passes to the south of Metzovo to many
local chieftains, Albanians and Greeks, Mussulmans and Christians.
The greatest danger to which he was exposed lay in the facility of
landing troops on the southern coast of Epirus. Prevesa was the key of his
maritime defences, and he intrusted its command to Veli, his second son, who
fled from Lepanto on the first approach of a Turkish force.
When the sultan proclaimed Ali a traitor, and named Ismael Pasho his
successor, the imperial authority was almost nominal in many provinces of the
Othoman empire, and Mahmud had no army ready to enforce his authority. The
janissaries at Constantinople were as little under his control as the
mercenaries of distant pashas. But no man then living had studied the condition
of the Othoman empire with so much attention, or knew so well the strength and
weakness of his own authority, as Sultan Mahmud. He alone understood how far he
could make use of the instrumentality of rival pashas to destroy the rebel
without allowing them to increase their own power. His systematic measures for
strengthening the authority of the central administration, for reforming the
Othoman government, and arresting the decline of the empire on the brink of
destruction, were then as little suspected as the firm and daring character of
the man who planned them.
The sultan intrusted the chief command of the army destined to attack
Ali from the east to Ismael, the new pasha of Joannina. No person appeared likely
to rally the discontented Albanians to his standard with so much certainty, and
no one could be selected with whom it was more difficult for Ali to treat.
Several pashas were ordered to assemble all their timariots and holders of
military fiefs, and take the field with Ismael. The Othoman army was slowly
collected, and it formed a motley assembly, without order and without
artillery. Each pasha moved forward as he mustered his followers, with a
separate commissariat and a separate military chest. The daily rations and
daily pay of the soldier differed in different divisions of the army. Ismael
was really only the nominal commander-in-chief. He was not a soldier, and had
he been an experienced officer, he could have done little to enforce order in
the forces he commanded.
Ali knew that his government was unpopular, but he acted under the usual
delusion of princes who consider that they are necessary to the order of
society. He considered himself the natural chief of the Tosks, and he believed
that he could easily become the political head of the Greeks. He had heard so
much lately of constitutions and political assemblies, that he expected to
create a strong national feeling in his favour by promising the Greeks a
constitution, and convoking the Albanian chieftains in a national assembly,
though he had formed no very clear idea of what was meant by a constitution, or
what a national assembly could really effect. His Greek secretaries, however,
assured him that it would be easy to raise the Greeks in arms against the
sultan, and his Mussulman councillors declared that every Albanian was ready to
support him as their sovereign. To make himself a national monarch, in
opposition to the Oriental despotism of the sultan, he convoked a divan to
consider the question of raising supplies, that being the only means of
assembling Albanian agas and Greek bishops in one assembly, without violating
Mussulman usages and offending Mohammedan pride.
The divan met, and Ali addressed the assembly in Greek. He condescended
to explain the motives which induced him to resist the sultan’s authority. He
pretended that he was persecuted by the viziers of the Porte, because he
supported the interests of the Albanians against the Osmanlis, and protected
the Christians against ruinous exactions. He invited all present to urge their
countrymen to support him and his officers in the approaching hostilities, and
assured them that their interests would suffer as much as his own if the
Othoman army penetrated beyond the passes.
The assembled Mussulmans were either his partizans or his creatures.
They testified their approbation of his discourse with the humility of Eastern
ceremony. Each bey repeated gravely in succession, with emphatic solemnity,
some trite compliment, or pronounced, with the air of having made a great
discovery, “Our lord, the vizier, speaks well; we are the slaves of his
highness”. Even Ali felt that the scene was ridiculous, for he knew that the
same words would be uttered, in the same tone, to his enemy Ismael, should he
ever succeed in entering Joannina.
The Greeks remained silent. They felt no inclination to support the
tyranny of Ali. It is certain that at this time the existence of an organized
plan for proclaiming the Greeks an independent nation was not known to the clergy
and primates of Northern Greece and Epirus. Though a secret society called the Philike
Hetairia had made great progress in enrolling proselytes in Constantinople,
the Morea, and the Ionian Islands, it had not succeeded in Joannina and among
the armatoli. Greek historians tell us that the terror inspired by Ali Pasha’s
government prevented the apostles of the Hetairia from visiting his
dominions. But that is certainly not the whole truth. Many agents of the Hetairia travelled through Epirus, but they were deterred from attempting to make
proselytes, from fear of treachery on the part of their countrymen. They found
that both the bishops and the primates were too closely identified with Ali’s
administration, and derived too great profits from acting as his political and
financial agents, to feel disposed to plot against his authority. The fear of
betraying the schemes of the Hetairia to false friends was stronger than
the fear of Ali’s cruelty. The Hetairists were partizans of Russia, and the
Romeliot Greeks did not generally connect their patriotic aspirations with
Russian projects. They, moreover, generally despised the class of men who
travelled as apostles of the Hetairia.
Suleiman Pasha, who succeeded Veli in the government of Larissa, was invested
by the sultan with the office of dervendji when Ali was proclaimed a rebel. On
assuming the official direction of the armatoli, and publishing the firman
proscribing Ali, he invited all the sultan’s faithful subjects to take up arms
against the traitor. A circular was addressed to all Mussulmans, to those
Christian communities which retained the privilege of keeping armed guards, and
particularly to the captains of armatoli, inviting them to expel the adherents
of Ali Pasha from their districts. The Greek text of this circular assumed the
form of a proclamation, calling on the Christians to take up arms for their own
protection. It is said to have differed materially from the Turkish copy, and
the pasha’s Greek secretary, Anagnostes, was supposed to have availed himself
of the opportunity, in order to assist the designs of the Hetairists.
Circumstances favoured the Greeks. The number of armed Christians in the
mountains of Thessaly and Epirus was great, and both the belligerents felt the
importance of gaining their assistance.
Several bands of Christian troops remained attached to Ali’s cause.
Odysseus, whom he particularly favoured, and who had been a page in his
household, was intrusted with the chief command at Livadea. Stournari was
stationed at Valtos, Varnakioti in Xeromero, Andreas Hyskos in Agrapha, and
Zongas was sent to harass the communications of the Othoman army. But, as early
as the month of June 1820, several bodies of armatoli joined the sultan’s
forces, while at the same time some captains took military possession of their
capitanliks, and expelled the Albanian Mussulmans io remained faithful to Ali.
For some time the Othoman authorities encouraged these enterprises. The armed
Christians, however, knowing that they had nothing to gain by a decided victory
either of the Turks or the Albanians, showed disposition to remain neutral as
soon as they had expelled the Mussulmans, and their attitude awakened the
suspicion of the Porte.
The sultan was alarmed, and fearing some collusion with the rebel, he
degraded Suleiman, and soon after put him to death. Mohammed Dramali was named
his successor, and ordered to occupy all the passes leading from Thessaly into Epirus.
In the meantime the main body of the Othoman army, under Ismael, advanced to
Kalabak. The left wing, under Pehlevan Baba of Rutshuk, who was named pasha of Lepanto
in place of Veli, descended into Greece. Pehlevan did distinguished himself as
a leader of light cavalry on the banks of the Danube in the last war with
Russia. He now marched at the head of the same active and disorderly troops trough
Thermopylae to Livadea, from which he drove Odysseus. Veli fled from Lepanto,
and Pehlevan occupied etolia and Acarnania without opposition, penetrated
trough the pass of Makronoro, which is a western Thermopylae, and fixed his
headquarters at Arta. Ali’s defences eere thus turned, and the road into the
plain of Joannina was open to the Othoman army.
The summer was far advanced before the grand army commenced its
operations, but its first movements were crowned with great success. Instead of
attempting to force the pass of Metzovo, which Omer Vrioni was prepared to
defend, Ismael sent a body of Albanians to seize the Portais or gates of
Trikkala. This corps occupied the bridge of Koraki, took possession of the pass
of Pentepegadhia, and opened communications with Pehlevan. Other detachments
occupied the upper valley of the Aspropotamos and the valley of the river of
Arta, where their arrival was welcomed by the native population, which consists
of Zinzar Vallachs.
This branch of the Vallachian race makes its appearance in the history
of the Byzantine empire, under its present name, in the eleventh century, and
in the twelfth it was so powerful as to be independent.
Omer Vrioni, finding that his position was turned, instead of falling
back on Joannina and concentrating Ali’s army in order to give battle to Ismael
in the plain, treated with the Othoman commander-in-chief to obtain advancement
for himself by deserting the rebel. He was promised the pashalik of Berat, then
held by Ali's eldest son, Mukhtar. The army under his orders, which was
encamped on Palaeovuni, dispersed. Many of the soldiers returned to their
native villages to watch the progress of hostilities before choosing their
side. Others immediately took service with Ismael.
Joannina was now besieged. Ali had barely time to burn the city in order
to prevent his enemy finding cover in the houses. The citadel, which is
separated from the city by a wet ditch, was well furnished with artillery,
military stores, and provisions. The garrison amounted to six thousand men. Ali
possessed an armed flotilla on the lake, which secured his communications with the
mountains to the north. He expected to be able to cut off the supplies of the
Othoman army, and compel Ismael to raise the siege before the arrival of his
heavy artillery. The cowardice and treachery of his sons frustrated his plans.
A division of the Othoman fleet arrived off the Albanian coast during
the summer, and as soon as Pehlevan occupied Arta, the capitan-bey besieged
Prevesa. Veli possessed ample means of defending the place, but he was a
coward. Ismael had been his friend in youth. Veli received promises of pardon,
and was ordered to treat with the capitan-bey. He opened negotiations by
pleading his filial obedience as an apology for his rebellion, and offered to
surrender Prevesa with all its stores on being allowed to carry off his own wealth,
and on receiving the promise of a pashalik, to which he might retire without
degradation. Ismael ratified these terms, and Veli removed with his harem on
board the Othoman fleet. The capitulation was respected, but both Ismael and
Veli were subsequently put to death by the sultan’s orders.
Mukhtar, who had abandoned Berat to fortify himself in Arghyrokastro,
soon followed his brother’s example. He was not destitute of courage, but he
was brutally selfish, and he was bribed to desert his father by a promise of
the pashalik of Kutaieh. In quitting Albania, he persuaded his youngest brother
Salik to accompany him.
The surrender of Prevesa, Berat, and Arghyrokastro enabled Ismael to
obtain supplies of every kind, but the communications between his camp and the
fleet were so difficult and so ill-managed, that heavy guns and ammunition were
brought up very slowly. His rear was often attacked by the partisans of Ali,
and, being compelled to look out for allies among the Albanians, he remembered
the glorious exploits of the Suliots, and their implacable hatred to Ali.
Sultan Mahmud authorized him to put them again in possession of Suli, and the
capitan-bey was instructed to treat with them. The Suliots had now lived as
exiles at Corfu for seventeen years, eating the bread of charity bestowed on
them in turns by the Russians, the French, and the English, as each became the
masters of the Ionian Islands. The proposals of the capitan-bey were soon
accepted; the Suliots crossed over into Albania, and received Ismael’s authority
to invest the fort of Kiapha, which Ali had constructed to command Suli. The
fort was garrisoned by Mussulman Albanians faithful to Ali. The numbers of the
Suliots were not sufficient to blockade it closely, and the Othoman
commander-in-chief neglected to furnish them with rations. In a short time they
were in a starving state, and, to obtain the means of subsistence, began to
levy contributions on the Christian peasantry in the pashalik of Joannina who
had submitted to the sultan. Ismael, forgetting his own neglect, was offended
at their depredations in his pashalik. Personally he was a bigot, and not
inclined to favour the establishment of an independent tribe of Christians in
the vicinity of his capital. The Mussulmans of Margariti and Paramythia, who
had submitted to his authority, warned him against the danger of allowing the
Suliots to gain possession of the strong fort of Kiapha. He felt the force of
their reasoning as much as he wished to secure the assistance of the Suliots;
and, hoping to gain time, he ordered them to join his army before Joannina,
promising them both pay and rations, with which he could not easily supply them
in Suli.
The starving Suliots were compelled to obey; but as their only object in
returning to Albania had been to regain possession of their native mountains,
they considered themselves cheated by the pasha, and henceforward they regarded
all Ismael’s conduct with distrust. They found that they were stationed in the
most exposed situation, and when Ali’s forces sallied out to attack them in
overwhelming numbers the Othoman troops in the nearest quarters came slowly to
their assistance. In this difficult position they owed their safety to their
own vigilance and valour. They adopted every precaution to guard against a surprise
either from friend or foe, and their military precautions justified the
reputation they had long enjoyed of being the best soldiers in Albania.
In the month of October 1820, Ismael opened his fire on the fortress of
Litharitza, which forms an acropolis to Joannina; but the heavy guns and
mortars which he had transported from Prevesa were so ill-managed that the
casemated batteries of the besieged suffered little; while the guns of the
fortress enfiladed the whole site of the ruined city, and impeded the
approaches of the Turks against the citadel of the lake, which was the centre
of Ali’s strength, and from which he frequently made desperate sallies on his
enemy.
The military incapacity of Ismael, and his unfitness for the office of
seraskier, became daily more apparent. He had dispersed the fine army of Omer
Vrioni, and gained possession of Prevesa without difficulty; he expected to
conquer Joannina as easily. Instead, therefore, of pushing the siege with
vigour, he devoted his whole attention to the measures which he considered most
likely to render his pashalik profitable to himself. His care was confined to
his own territory, and his general negligence enabled the partizans of Ali to
attack his convoys, and permitted the cavalry of Pehlevan, and the Gueghs of
Dramali, to plunder the country in every direction. The villages on the great
roads in Epirus, Thessaly, and Northern Greece were deserted by their
inhabitants. Ali, well informed of all that was passing, watched the progress
of the siege without alarm. He was still ignorant of the character of Sultan
Mahmud, and did not suspect that he was the real antagonist who was playing the
game against him.
The Suliots felt that they were treated with scorn. Their rations were
bad, and they received no pay. Ismael, and many Mussulmans in Albania and
Greece, entertained a suspicion that the Greeks were plotting an insurrection
in concert with Russia to assist Ali, and he was so imprudent as to display his
ill-will to all classes of Christians.
Ali took advantage of his rival’s imprudence with his usual sagacity.
Long conversations were carried on during the night between the Suliots and his
Albanians. The Suliots told their grievances, the Albanians expressed sympathy,
and boasted of their advantages. A formal negotiation was opened, and it
terminated in the Suliots forming an alliance with Ali, whom they had long
regarded as their bitterest enemy. The critical position in which both parties
were placed forced them to cast a veil over the past. The Suliots regained
possession of their native rocks. Ali resigned the proudest conquest of his
long career. He abandoned the policy of his government to save his life. He
promised to put the Suliots in possession of his fort at Kiapha; they engaged
to join his partizans, and fall on the rear of the sultan’s army. Hostages were
given, for both sides were suspicious, and looked with some anxiety to the
result of their strange alliance.
About midnight on the 12th of December 1820, the Suliots suddenly
quitted the seraskier’s camp before Joannina, and marched rapidly towards Suli
by the road to Variadhes. A week after, Murto Tshiali, Ali’s faithful adherent,
put them in possession of Kiapha, with all its military stores and provisions.
He also paid a sum of money to each of the chiefs of pharas, in order to enable
them to take the field. In January 1821 the Suliots formed a junction with a
corps of fifteen hundred Mussulman Albanians under the command of three
chieftains devoted to Ali, of high military reputation—Seliktar Poda (the
sword-bearer), Muhurdar Besiari (the seal-bearer), and Tahir Abbas, a bey of
great personal influence.
It was necessary for the Suliots to re-establish their authority over
the Christian villages which had formerly paid them tribute or black-mail; otherwise
they must have remained always dependent on Ali Pasha for their subsistence.
The Othoman authorities already occupied several posts in the Suliot territory.
The Suliot chiefs and their Mussulman allies resolved to make these positions
their first object of attack. Two months were consumed in this operation. After
some severe skirmishing, Devitzana and Variadhes, which command the two roads
leading from Suli to Joannina, and Lelova and Kanza, which open an issue into
the plains of Arta and Prevesa, were conquered. But in the meantime Ali’s
position had grown much worse. The severity of the winter had not, as he
expected, forced Ismael to raise the siege, and he had himself fallen into a
trap he had prepared for his enemy. Letters which he had written to the
Seliktar Poda and the Suliots, concerting measures for a combined attack on the
Othoman camp, fell into the hands of Omer Vrioni. They were answered as if they
had arrived safely at their destination, and the garrisons both of Litharitza
and the citadel were induced to make a sortie, which led them so far into the
Othoman camp that it was with great difficulty they effected their retreat,
leaving half their number dead on the field. This defeat took place on the 7th
of February 1821, and from that day Ali was compelled to act cautiously on the
defensive.
Sultan Mahmud saw that the conduct of the pashas before Joannina was
compromising the success of the campaign. He punished the incapacity of Ismael
and the insubordination of Pehlevan by removing them from their commands.
Pehlevan was immediately condemned to death; Ismael was sent to defend Arta in
a subordinate position, and Khurshid Pasha of the Morea, a sagacious veteran,
replaced him as seraskier before Joannina. Ismael’s misconduct, when Arta was
attacked by the Suliots, the Albanians, and the Greek armatoli, in the month of
November 1821, caused him to be exiled to Demotika, where he was decapitated.
Khurshid assumed the command of the Othoman army at the beginning of the month
of March 1821. The Greek Revolution broke out in the Morea shortly after, and
both the fate of Ali Pasha and the fortunes of the Suliots became subordinate
episodes in the military operations of Sultan Mahmud’s reign.
The Suliots henceforth derive their historical importance from their
connection with the great national struggle of the Greeks. Their
characteristics as an Albanian tribe were gradually lost after they were
finally expelled from Suli by Sultan Mahmud’s officers, and became dependent
for their existence on their pay, as Greek soldiers. But their condition when
they returned from Corfu to regain possession of their native mountains deserves
to be recorded, since it marks the great transition of society in Southern
Albania during the first quarter of the present century.
During sixteen years of exile the Suliots were thrown into close
connection with the modern Greeks. Their communal organization remained in
abeyance; but their absence changed the condition of the Christian peasantry
who had lived under their protection. Many of the cultivators of the soil found
themselves better off as the tenants of Ali Pasha than they had been as the
vassals of the Suliots; and when that tribe returned, they found the
inhabitants of the villages in their former territory unwilling to become again
the agricultural serfs of the Suliot confederacy. The Suliot warriors also were
so reduced in number that they were compelled to seek recruits from among the
Christian peasants, in order to counterbalance the strength of the Albanian Mussulmans
with whom they were forced to act. It was therefore absolutely necessary to
give the Suliot community a new constitution.
This was done. The subject villages sent deputies to a general council,
and every soldier enrolled under a Suliot chief was admitted to the privileges
of a native warrior. This circumstance was considered an event of great social
importance in Albanian society. It separated the Suliots from the great family
of the Tchamides, and overthrew the organization of the pharas. It is not easy
for strangers to understand the change which this revolution produced. They
cannot estimate the violence of the pride of class among the Albanians, nor the
strength of local patriotism or prejudice among the Suliots. In the month of
March 1821, when the Revolution broke out in the Morea, the Suliots knew
nothing of the Philike Hetairia, and cared nothing for the independence
of the Greeks, yet Greek ideas had already produced a change in the political
civilization of this rude tribe of Albanians. The principles of civil equality
and of the brotherhood of all the orthodox had been imprinted on their minds.
They were made to feel that they were citizens and Christians as well as
Suliots. They were, drawn into the vortex of the Greek Revolution without their
forming any preconceived design to aid the Greeks, just as they had been led by
circumstances to aid their enemy Ali Pasha. But, once engaged in the cause,
they embarked in it with their usual vehemence, and formed the van of its
warriors, sacrificing their beloved Suli, and abandoning all the traditions of
their race, to join the modern Greeks and assume the name of Hellenes.
The intellectual progress of the Suliots in civil affairs, under the
influence of Greek ideas, contrasts strangely with their obstinate rejection of
the military lessons taught them by the Russians, the French, and the English,
who placed the power of discipline and science in war constantly before their
eyes. The legions of Napoleon and the regiments of England showed them the
secret of rendering small bodies of well-trained soldiers a match for hosts of
undisciplined troops, but they refused to learn the lesson. They deliberately
rejected the advantages they might have derived from discipline and tactics,
because no Suliot would sacrifice the smallest portion of his self-importance.
The spirit of personal independence which made every individual Suliot pay only
a limited obedience to the chief of his phara, rendered the chiefs of the
pharas unwilling to obey a commander-in-chief, so that a Suliot army of 700
men was a kind of Polish diet. Unfortunately for the Greeks, the brilliant
courage of the Suliots induced the unwarlike leaders of the Revolution to
overrate the value of the Albanian system of warfare. The Greeks had taught the
Suliots some valuable social lessons; the Suliots in return taught the Greeks
to adopt the military barbarism of the Albanians, to despise the restraints of
discipline, and to depreciate the value of the tactics and science of civilized
nations. Their lessons entailed many calamities on Greece during the
revolutionary war.
The Suliots had some reasons for adopting their system in defending their
own mountains against the pashas of Joannina, which were inapplicable to the
defence of Greece against the Turks. The nature of the Suliot territory,
serrated with deep ravines converging at acute angles, forced the Suliots to
guard several passes. Their numbers were small, so that their enemies were
enabled to attack many points with overwhelming numbers. To meet this danger,
it was necessary to adopt some system of defensive warfare, by which a few men
could effectually check the advance of a large body. They obtained this result
by selecting positions commanding those passes which their assailants could not
avoid. In these passes a few men were posted in such a manner as to be
concealed from the approaching enemy, but so disposed that each Suliot occupied
a station overlooking the same portion of the road. A concentrated fire was
thus brought to bear on the gorge of the pass. Every shot was expected to prove
mortal.
The military science of the Suliot captains was displayed in the
selection of these positions, and in disposing the men who occupied them. The
great art was by a sudden fire to encumber the narrowest part of the pass with
the dead and wounded. It was also necessary for every man to have a second
rifle ready, in order to prevent the enemy from availing himself of numbers,
and rushing forward to storm the Suliot position. A perfect knowledge of the
ground, the eye of an eagle, the activity of a goat, and the heart of a hero,
were required to make a perfect Suliot warrior. It has often happened that a
band of twenty-five Suliots has arrested several hundred men, until their
countrymen could arrive in numbers sufficient to throw themselves in the rear
of the enemy and capture his baggage.
When circumstances rendered retreat unavoidable, it was an important
part of the tactics of the Suliots to abandon their position simultaneously,
and remove unperceived into some new position equally suited for defence. In
these operations each warrior watched the movements of his companions as
carefully as those of the enemy; for it was as great a fault to remain too long
in a position as to abandon it too soon. A wound received by unnecessary
exposure was, at Suli, as disgraceful as an act of military disobedience. No
soldier was entitled to compromise the public safety to win personal glory.
This species of defensive warfare required great powers of endurance, and a
facility of moving unperceived among stones and stunted brushwood, which could
only be acquired by long habit. An active youth becomes a good regular soldier
in six months, but as many years were spent in exercising a Suliot warrior,
before he was admitted to take his place in a chosen band appointed to defend
an important pass. Every man was there called upon to perform the part of a
cautious general as well as of a daring soldier.
The system of attack practised by the Mussulman Albanians bore great
similarity to these defensive tactics. The assailants dispersed in an extended
semicircle round the point of attack, and crept forward, covering themselves
with every irregularity in the ground. The first object was to ascertain the
exact position and the numbers of the enemy; the second to outflank him. The
first approach was usually made during the night; and before the grey mist of
the morning rendered objects visible to any eyes but those of Albanian
marksmen, a volley was often poured on the sentinels, who looked up cautiously
to examine the ground; or the two parties were already mingled together, and
forced to engage hand to hand.
It has been mentioned that when the Suliots were joined by the Mussulman
Albanians in Ali’s interest, they were compelled to attack the Othoman posts in
order to expel them from the Suliot territory. Many of their allies had fought
against them in 1803, but this circumstance only increased the mutual
emulation. Tahir Abbas and the Muhurdar were not men to yield the palm of
valour to Botzaris and Djavellas. Though the posts of Bogonitza, Lelova,
Variadhes, and Toskesi were defended by strong bodies of Gueghs, they were
stormed one after the other.
A curious story is told of the manner in which the Suliots gained
possession of Variadhes. That position was occupied by about a thousand Gueghs
and Sclavonian Mussulmans from Macedonia. The only well was without the Turkish
lines, though completely under cover of their fire. Five Suliots crept to this
well during a dark night, and let down into it a dead body and a pig cut up in
quarters. In spite of the silence they maintained, the Turks suspected that
somebody was attempting to draw water, and wounded two Suliots with their fire.
In the morning the Mussulmans discovered what their enemies had done. They
reproached the Christians with carrying on war dishonourably, and of using
unlawful weapons. The Suliots replied, “The well is in our country, and if you
don’t like the water, you can find many good springs in the territories of
Ismael the seraskier”. After some disputing, the Turks were compelled to accept
the terms offered by the Suliots, and retreat to the camp before Joannina.
Khurshid Pasha, who replaced Ismael as seraskier, assumed the government
of the Morea in the month of November 1820. The state of Greece already caused
some alarm at Constantinople, but the rebellion of Ali was considered the real
source of danger, and the conquest of Joannina was therefore the first object
of the sultan’s care. As soon as Khurshid reported that there was no immediate
cause of alarm in his pashalik, he was ordered to leave a kehaya at Tripolitza,
and take the command of the army before Joannina. On his arrival he found the
Othoman army thoroughly disorganized, and he set to work with energy to remedy
the evils created by his predecessor’s misconduct. Nothing astonished him so
much as the military position which the armatoli had assumed in the confusion.
He perceived, that though the armed Christians had generally ranged themselves
under the banner of the sultan’s seraskier, they were employed in strengthening
themselves, not in weakening Ali Pasha. His first business was to reorganize
his troops, increase their numbers, and collect supplies of ammunition and
provisions, preparatory to attacking Joannina with vigour. While thus engaged,
he was astounded by the news that all the Morea, the islands, and a great part
of continental Greece had suddenly taken up arms, and that his communications
with his pashalik were cut off both by land and sea. During the whole of the
summer of 1821, his operations were completely paralyzed; but he wisely
determined to keep Ali closely besieged, and to redouble his exertions to
destroy the great rebel. There can be no doubt that this was the most prudent
resolution he could adopt in the choice of difficulties which was offered him.
The conduct of Khurshid has been severely blamed by some military
critics. They consider his torpidity while the Greeks gained possession of Acarnania
and Aetolia, a proof of his incapacity. But it must be remembered, that when
the Greek Revolution broke out, his army did not exceed twenty thousand, and a
part of his force consisted of Christian armatoli, on whom he could no longer
depend. He was compelled to maintain the blockade of Joannina, to oppose the
progress of Ali’s partizans and of the Suliots in Epirus, to keep open his
communications with Arta and Prevesa, and to garrison the pass of Metzovo;
while he could not summon a single man to his assistance from Thessaly or
Macedon, lest he should be cut off from his magazines at Larissa and
Thessalonica, and from direct communication with Constantinople,
Those who depreciate Khurshid’s military talents observe that his camp
before Joannina was only eighteen hours’ march from the pass of Makronoros;
that Arta and Prevesa were occupied by Othoman garrisons; and that Bekir
Djokador (the gambler), who was governor of Prevesa, commanded the Gulf of
Arta, with the flotilla under his orders. It is argued that by landing a body
of troops at Karavaserai, the pass of Makronoros might be turned, and a body of
troops marched to Vrachori in nine hours. The fertile plains of Acarnania would
have enabled the Othoman cavalry to render good service by confining the Greek
armatoli to the hills, and thus communications might always have been kept open
with Lepanto and Patras.
The classic student is reminded of the rapid marches of Philip V of
Macedon, and his brilliant operation in destroying Thermus, the capital of the
Aetolians. The ruins of Thermus are still seen towering over the central plain
of Aetolia, on a rocky hill about six miles east of Vrachori. Like many other
classic spots, they have now a Sclavonian name. Both the ruins and the district
in which they lie are called Vlokho. The operations of Philip V afford a signal
proof of the wonders that may be effected by rapid movements, strict
discipline, and able tactics. The Macedonian troops were landed at Limnaea
(Karavaserai) in the afternoon. They marched all night, and reached the
Achelous (Aspropotamos) at daybreak. The distance is twenty-five miles.
Crossing the river, they pushed forward, and reached Thermus, situated about
fifteen miles from the river, late in the afternoon. The city was surprised and
systematically sacked. The public buildings were burned, and, as far as time
permitted, the statues were broken to pieces. Next day Philip commenced his
retreat The great fatigue which his troops had undergone during the two
preceding days and nights compelled him to move leisurely, and his men were
encumbered with booty. He spent three days in his retreat, before he crossed
the Achelous and regained Limnaea2
Khurshid had perhaps more than once an opportunity of imitating the
Macedonian king; but those who have written the history of the Greek Revolution
have estimated the obstacles to his making the attempt too lightly. It was even
difficult for him to calculate how far defection might spread among the Mussulman
Albanians, if he absented himself from the Othoman camp for a single day. The
Sclavonian beys and the Gueghs often behaved with great insubordination while
he was present. There could be no hope of success unless he headed the
expedition in person. His absence from the camp might enable Ali to raise the
siege of Joannina; the defeat of the expedition might afford him an opportunity
of rousing all Southern Albania against the sultan, and of forming an alliance
with the insurgent Greeks. It must not also be overlooked that, during the
month of May 1821, Khurshid detached nearly ten thousand men from his army,
partly to reinforce the garrisons of Patras and Tripolitza, and partly to watch
the vale of Tempe and the passes over the Cambunian mountains, and to keep in
check the armatoli of Olympus and Ossa. By his prudence, chiefly, the Greek
Revolution was prevented from spreading northward, after the execution of the
patriarch Gregorios on Easter Sunday (22nd April).
The personal position of Khurshid was one of great delicacy. The
interests of the Othoman empire, and his duty to the sultan, commanded him to
prosecute the siege of Joannina, and keep Ali at bay in his last stronghold.
But his own honour, and the safety of his family, called on him to march to
Tripolitza, protect his harem, and save the Mohammedan population of his
pashalik. The fate of the Othoman empire probably depended on his decision, and
he chose like a patriot. It is the duty of the historian to give the just meed
of praise to able and honourable conduct, whether the actor be an enemy or a
friend, a Mohammedan or a Christian, a Turk or a Greek.
The Suliots did everything in their power to profit by the weakness of
Khurshid’s army: they attacked Prevesa, and attempted to interrupt the seraskier’s
communications with Arta. Their endeavours to gain possession of Prevesa
depended for success on secret negotiations, not open assaults. They were
frustrated by the conduct of their Mussulman allies, who feared lest they might
become independent of Ali’s assistance, and abandon his cause to secure a
separate arrangement with the sultan. Their operations on the Arta road also
met with only temporary success.
On the 6th of August 1821, the united forces of the Mussulman Albanians
and the Suliots attacked a convoy of provisions and ammunition on its way from
Arta to the seraskier’s camp. The Suliots had not yet united their cause with
that of the Greeks, so that no common measures were concerted with the
Christians who had taken up arms in Acarnania and Aetolia. The Suliots still
confined their views to securing the independent possession of Suli. The allied
force, after plundering the Turkish convoy, attacked the troops of Khurshid
stationed to guard the pass of Pentepegadhia, and stormed their position in a
brilliant manner. In this exploit the Mussulman Albanians were more numerous
than the Suliots. The Muhurdar had 500 men under his command, while Drakos, who
led the Suliots, had only 200. Had they been able to retain possession of the
pass, which might probably have been done with the assistance of the Greek
armatoli, Khurshid would have been compelled to raise the siege of Joannina.
The seraskier saw the danger, and sent an overwhelming force to recover the
lost position and keep open his communications. This force compelled the allies
to retire, and from that time the Suliots began to lose ground. Ali could no
longer supply them with either rations or pay, and they began again to plunder
the Christian cultivators of the soil, who sought protection from Khurshid, and
with the assistance of these pillaged Christians the seraskier gradually
succeeded in extending the sultan’s authority over the whole of the Suliot
territory. The agas of Margariti and Paramythia also regarded the Suliots with
increased animosity since the outbreak of the Greek Revolution. The Suliots now
turned to the Greeks for assistance, who had already established themselves
firmly in Aetolia and Acarnania, and were preparing to attack Arfa.
Mavrocordatos then acted as dictator in Western Greece. The captains of
armatoli had already sent the Suliots several warnings of the danger of
delivering Ali. The power of Khurshid was not feared. Indeed, the authority of
Sultan Mahmud in Greece and Epirus was considered at an end. The agents of the
Greek government, the friends of Mavrocordatos, and the captains of armatoli,
all urged the Suliots to quit the cause of Ali and join that of Greece. They
justly observed, that the cause at issue was that of Greece and Turkey, and
that, whether Ali or Khurshid proved victorious, the victor would immediately
turn all his forces against the Christians, and in the first place against the
Suliots. The Suliots did not deny the truth of these observations, but they
resolved not to break their plighted faith with the Mussulman Albanians, who
had assisted them in their greatest difficulties. These Mussulman allies were
at last persuaded that Ali’s interest required the support of the Greeks.
In the month of October 1821, Khurshid gained possession of Litharitza,
and Ali found himself hard pressed in the fortress on the lake. The batteries
of the besiegers destroyed several magazines, and incessant showers of shells
rendered the place almost untenable. The Greeks began to be alarmed lest
Khurshid should immediately get possession of the immense treasures which they
believed were heaped up in Joannina, and became consequently of a sudden eager
to form an alliance with the Albanian Mussulmans who still adhered to Ali’s
cause. Several communications took place, and at last Tahir Abbas and Ago
Besiari resolved to visit Mesolonghi, in order to confer with Mavrocordatos in
person, and concert measures for assailing the rear of Khurshid’s army, and
opening an entrance into Ali’s fortress.
Tahir Abbas was a man of experience and sagacity, whose long intercourse
with the Greeks rendered him perfectly acquainted with their character, and
prevented his being deceived by their wiles. On the other hand, the Greeks laid
themselves open to his observation by underrating his talents. They considered
him ignorant and stupid, because he spoke Greek with the rude accent and simple
phraseology of the Epirot peasantry. Mavrocordatos and the Greek captains, with
that overweening confidence in their intellectual superiority which makes the
Greeks so often ‘the fools of their own thoughts’ trusted to their powers of
deception for using Ali’s partizans as blind instruments. By feigning to see
things as they wished him to see them, Tahir Abbas heard everything they ought
to have concealed. He saw that many Greeks considered the Revolution a movement
excited by Russia to destroy the Othoman empire, and that it would soon be
openly supported by the Emperor Alexander. He perceived that the Greeks were
fighting for their independence and for their religion; and, as a Mohammedan,
he would have considered the contest a war of extermination, even had he not
seen evidence of the fact at every step he took in his journey to Mesolonghi.
Though familiarly acquainted with the captains of armatoli, he was astonished
at the numbers of veteran soldiers he saw under their command. He was even more
astonished at the spirit of independence already displayed by the rayahs or
Christian peasantry. The Greeks committed a great error in allowing him to pass
through Vrachori, where the blackened walls of Turkish palaces, the desecrated
mosques and ruined minarets, could not escape his attention, and where their
pride induced them to point out also the unburied bones of murdered Mussulmans,
and the unveiled faces of women who had dwelt in the harems of beys, serving as
menials in Greek families. The scrutinizing mind of Tahir Abbas seized the fact
that a new phase had commenced in Turkish history; that henceforward the
Mussulmans in Europe would have to sustain a long war with all the Christians
who had been hitherto their obsequious serfs. When he reached Mesolonghi, he
observed to an Italian whom he had known at Joannina, that the Revolution was
the mortal combat of two religions. Of course he felt an internal satisfaction
at making this declaration. As a sincere Mohammedan, he felt assured that
though God might punish for a while the vices of the Othomans, eventually the
victory would rest with Islam.
It did not require the sagacity of Tahir Abbas to perceive that it was
impossible to conclude a treaty of any value either with Mavrocordatos or the
Greek government. The intrigues and tergiversations of those with whom he
negotiated revealed the anarchy that prevailed in the public administration,
and the dissensions that existed among the leading men. Finding that he could
obtain no money in Greece to enrol a body of Mussulman Albanians, and being
convinced that it would be an act of folly to co-operate with Greek troops
without a force sufficient to insure respect and good faith, he returned to his
countrymen, who were still acting with the Suliots, determined not to serve as
an instrument of Greek policy. He found that a part of the Suliots had already
joined the armatoli.
In the meantime the conquest of Litharitza had convinced the Albanians
that it was neither prudent nor possible any longer to resist the sultan’s
authority. Elmas Bey, who had commanded the Albanians, arrived from Tripolitza,
and gave a horrible picture of the cruelty of the Greeks. Khurshid availed himself
of this favourable opportunity to open negotiations with the partizans of Ali,
and Tahir Abbas having informed them that it was impossible to come to any
terms with the Greeks, the negotiations were soon terminated. The Albanians
separated from the Suliots, but informed them that they would not act against
them in the Suliot territory. The Suliots retired to their mountains, and the
Greeks were compelled to abandon their operations against Arta.
Ali was now living in a bomb-proof cellar, clothed in a bundle of dirty
embroidered garments, defending the castle of the lake with a diminished and
intimidated garrison. Khurshid was watching his prey with the vigilance of a
lynx. The Albanian beys, who had hitherto done everything in their power to
thwart the operations of the seraskier, were now so much alarmed at the
progress of the Greek Revolution, that they became eager for the triumph of the
sultan. At last, in the month of January 1822, partly by treachery and partly
by surprise, Khurshid’s troops gained an entrance into the citadel of the lake,
and Ali had barely time to shut himself up in the tower which contained his
treasures and his powder-magazine. From this spot he entered into negotiations with
Khurshid, who readily agreed to all his demands. Khurshid promised to spare
Ali’s life; and the aged tyrant, who had never respected a promise or spared an
enemy, flattered himself that he could escape the vengeance of Sultan Mahmud.
As he was destitute of any feeling of honour or of that pride which makes life
insupportable after defeat, and as he had no personal vengeance to gratify by
dying in defence of his treasury, he probably considered that at the worst it
was more dignified for a pasha, and an unwieldy old man of eighty-two, to die
by the bow-string than to be mangled in an explosion or slaughtered in an
assault Khurshid, on the other hand, had received the express orders of the
sultan to send Ali’s head to the Sublime Porte, and his difficulties rendered
it absolutely necessary for him to get possession of Ali’s treasury. Both he
and Ali knew that a pasha’s promise is valueless against a sultan’s order.
Khurshid gained possession of the tower, and removed Ali’s treasures, which he
found by no means equal to his expectations. Ali retired to a kiosk in one of
the islands of the lake.
On the 5th of February 1822 a meeting took place between Ali and
Mohammed Pasha, who was appointed Khurshid’s successor in the pashalik of the
Morea. When Mohammed rose to depart, the two viziers, being of equal rank,
moved together towards the door with all the ceremonious politeness of Othoman
etiquette. As they parted, Ali bowed low to his visitor, and Mohammed, seizing
the moment when the watchful eye of the old man was turned away, drew his
hanjar, and plunged it in Ali’s heart. He walked on calmly to the gallery, and
said to the attendants, “Ali of Tepelen is dead”. The capidji of the Porte
entered the hall of conference, severed the head from the body, and carried it
to the citadel, where it was exhibited to the troops before being sent off to
Constantinople. A tumult arose between the Albanians and the Turks, in which
several persons were killed; but order was quickly re-established by the
seliktar of Khurshid, who rode among the soldiers, announcing that the
seraskier had given orders for the immediate payment of all the arrears due to
the army, and that he would soon march into the warmer and more fertile region
of Thessaly, and prepare to invade Greece, where booty and slaves would be
obtained in abundance. Everywhere he was received with acclamation, and the
Albanians as well as the Turks shouted, “The dog Kara Ali is dead. Long life to
Sultan Mahmud and his valiant seraskier, Khurshid Pasha”.
The head of Ali was exposed at the gate of the serai. A few weeks after,
four heads of pashas occupied the same niche, placed side by side. They were
the heads of Ali’s sons, Mukhtar, Veli, and Salik, and of his grandson Mahmud,
the son of Veli. They had been allowed to live quietly in Asia Minor until the
old lion of Joannina was hunted down. The heads were buried at the cemetery
before the gate of Selivria, where five marble tombs, ranged in a line, still
arrest the attention of the traveller. The wicked father and his worthless sons
are united in death. Filial ingratitude and Othoman treachery are recorded in
pompous inscriptions teaching piety.
THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE REVOLUTION.
The Causes of the Greek Revolution.
|
Mahmud II was
born on 20 July 1785, in the month of Ramadan. He was the son of Abdul
Hamid I and his wife Nakşidil Sultan.
He was the youngest son of his father, and the second child of his mother, he
had a elder brother, Şehzade Seyfullah Murad, two years older than him, and a
younger sister, Saliha Sultan, one year younger than
him. According to tradition, he was confined in the Kafes after
the death of his father.
His mother
was Nakşidil Valide Sultan. In 1808, Mahmud II's predecessor, and half-brother, Mustafa
IV ordered his execution along with his cousin, the deposed
Sultan Selim III, in order to defuse the rebellion. Selim III was killed,
but Mahmud was safely kept hidden by his mother and was placed on the throne
after the rebels deposed Mustafa IV. The leader of this rebellion, Alemdar Mustafa Pasha, later became Mahmud
II's vizier. Western historians give Mahmud a poor reputation for simply
being the Sultan during a time of deterioration of the Ottoman Empire.
There are
many stories surrounding the circumstances of his attempted murder. A version
by the 19th-century Ottoman historian Ahmed Cevdet Pasha gives the following account: one of his slaves, a Georgian girl
named Cevri, gathered ashes when she heard the
commotion in the palace surrounding the murder of Selim III. When the assassins
approached the harem chambers where Mahmud was staying, she was able to keep
them away for a while by throwing ashes into their faces, temporarily blinding
them. This allowed Mahmud to escape through a window and climb onto the roof of
the harem. He apparently ran to the roof of the Third Court where other pages
saw him and helped him come down with pieces of clothes that were quickly tied
together as a ladder. By this time one of the leaders of the rebellion, Alemdar Mustafa Pasha arrived with his armed men, and
upon seeing the dead body of Selim III proclaimed Mahmud as padishah. The
slave girl Cevri Kalfa was
awarded for her bravery and loyalty and appointed haznedar usta, the chief treasurer of the Imperial Harem,
which was the second most important position in the hierarchy. A plain stone
staircase at the Altınyol (Golden Way)
of the Harem is called Staircase of Cevri (Jevri) Kalfa, since the events
apparently happened around there and are associated with her.
The vizier
took the initiative in resuming reforms that had been terminated by the
conservative coup of 1807 that had brought Mustafa IV to power.
However, he was killed during a rebellion in 1808 and Mahmud II temporarily
abandoned the reforms. Mahmud II's later reformation efforts would be much more
successful.
After Mahmud
II became sultan, Turkish border wars with the Russians continued. In 1810, the
Russians surrounded the Silistre fortress for the
second time. When Emperor Napoleon I of France declared war on Russia
in 1811, Russian repression on the Ottoman border diminished, a relief to
Mahmud. By this time, Napoleon was about to embark on his invasion of
Russia. He also invited the Ottomans to join his march on Russia. However,
Napoleon, who had invaded all of Europe except the United Kingdom and the
Ottoman Empire, could not be trusted and accepted as an ally; Mahmud rejected
the offer. The Bucharest Agreement was reached with the Russians on 28 May
1812. According to the Treaty of Bucharest (1812), the Ottoman Empire
ceded the eastern half of Moldavia to Russia (which renamed the territory
as Bessarabia), although it had committed to protecting that region.
Russia became a new power in the lower Danube area, and had an economically,
diplomatically, and militarily profitable frontier. In Transcaucasia,
Turkey regained nearly all it had lost in the east: Poti, Anapa and Akhalkalali. Russia retained Sukhum-Kale on
the Abkhazian coast. In return, the Sultan accepted the Russian annexation of
the Kingdom of Imereti, in 1810. The
treaty was approved by Emperor Alexander I of Russia on June 11, some
13 days before Napoleon's invasion began. The Russian commanders were able to
get many of their soldiers in the Balkans back to the western areas of the
empire before the expected attack of Napoleon.
During the
early years of Mahmud II's reign, his governor of Egypt Mehmet Ali Paşa successfully waged the Ottoman-Saudi
War and reconquered the holy cities of Medina (1812)
and Mecca (1813) from the First Saudi State.
Abdullah bin Saud and the First Saudi State had barred Muslims from the Ottoman Empire from entering the holy shrines of Mecca and Medina; his followers also desecrated the tombs of Ali ibn Abi Talib, Hassan ibn Ali and Husayn ibn Ali. Abdullah bin Saud and his two followers were publicly beheaded for their crimes against holy cities and mosques. His reign
also marked the first breakaway from the Ottoman Empire, with Greece gaining
its independence following a revolution that started in
1821. In the wake of continued unrest he had ecumenical patriarch Gregory
V executed on Easter Sunday 1821 for his inability to stem the
uprising. During the Battle of Erzurum (1821), part of the Ottoman-Persian
War (1821-1823), Mahmud II's superior force was routed by Abbas Mirza,
resulting in a Qajar Persian victory which got confirmed in the Treaties
of Erzurum. Several years later, in 1827, the combined British, French
and Russian navies defeated the Ottoman Navy at the Battle of Navarino; in
the aftermath, the Ottoman Empire was forced to recognize Greece with
the Treaty of Constantinople in July 1832. This event, together with
the French conquest of Algeria, an Ottoman province (see Ottoman
Algeria) in 1830, marked the beginning of the gradual break-up of the Ottoman
Empire. Non-Turkish ethnic groups living in the empire's territories,
especially in Europe, started their own independence movements.
One of Mahmud
II's most notable acts during his reign was the destruction of
the Janissary corps in June 1826. He accomplished this with careful
calculation using his recently reformed wing of the military intended to
replace the Janissaries. When the Janissaries mounted a demonstration against
Mahmud II's proposed military reforms, he had their barracks fired upon
effectively crushing the formerly elite Ottoman troops and burned the Belgrade
forest outside Istanbul to incinerate any remnants. This permitted the establishment of a European-style conscript
army, recruited mainly from Turkish speakers of Rumelia and Asia Minor. Mahmud
was also responsible for the subjugation of the Iraqi
Mamluks by Ali Ridha Pasha in 1831. He
ordered the execution of the renowned Ali Pasha of Tepelena.
He sent his Grand Vizier to execute the Bosniak hero Husein Gradaščević and
dissolve the Bosnia Eyalet.
Another Russo-Turkish
War (1828-29) broke out during Mahmud II's reign and was this time was
fought without janissaries. Marshal Diebitsch was
armed (in the words of Baron Moltke) "with the reputation of invincible
success". He was to earn the name Sabalskanski (the crosser of the Balkans). Bypassing the Shumla fortress, he forcibly marched his troops over the Balkans, appearing before
Adrianople. Sultan Mahmud II kept his head, unfurled the sacred banner of the
prophet and declared his intention of taking command personally. Preparing to
do so, he appeared, ill-advisedly, not on horseback but in a carriage. The
Divan, British and French ambassadors urged him to sue for peace.
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