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MEDIEVAL HISTORY LIBRARY
CHAPTER
XIII
THE TURKISH CONQUEST (1441-1460)
The Frankish principality of Achaia being now extinct, it
might have been expected that common-sense and the common danger from the Turks
would have convinced the Greeks that union and disinterested endeavours were
needed to consolidate and defend against the Turks what had been so slowly and
laboriously won back from the Latins. But that nota inter fratres inimicitia, which Tacitus had remarked as a
characteristic of human nature in his time, was intensified in the case of the
four surviving brothers of the Emperor John VI : Theodore, Constantine, Thomas
and Demetrios. The Peloponnese, as we saw, was now divided amongst the three
former, while the fourth had not yet obtained an appanage in the peninsula.
Unhappily, the prospect of the imperial succession was an apple of discord
among them, and the Byzantine court became a hot-bed of fraternal intrigues,
which were naturally continued in the residences of the three Despots in the
Morea. The emperor, who wished Constantine to succeed him, was desirous of
keeping the trio in Greece; while Constantine and Thomas wanted to have the
peninsula to themselves, and the former did not hesitate to seek the consent of
the sultan to this scheme through the mediation of the ever-useful Phrantzes,
his unfailing emissary in all dubious, or diplomatic, transactions. Civil war accordingly
broke out between Theodore and his two brothers, which it required all the
efforts of two imperial embassies to assuage. It was agreed that Constantine
should go to live in Constantinople, leaving the Morea to Theodore and Thomas,
and there he remained as regent for the emperor, while the latter, accompanied
by Demetrios and the oecumenical patriarch, set out to achieve the union of the
Eastern and Western churches at the councils of Ferrara and Florence. On his
journey to Italy, the emperor landed at Kenchreai, traversed Greece on
horseback, preached the blessings of brotherly love to the two Despots, and
ordered the philosopher Gemistos to accompany him to the council. Then he took
ship at the Venetian harbour of Navarino. The insecurity of the Greek seas at
that period may be judged from the fact that the emperor and his shipload of
learned theologians ran imminent risk of being captured by a Catalan corsair
who was lurking behind the island of Gaidaronisi, near Sunium.1 Their sufferings and labour were in vain; and on their return journey, wherever
they stopped in Greece, at Corfu, Modon, and Chalcis, the Greek clergy
indignantly remonstrated with them on the concessions which they had made. The
Greeks of Corfii, who had no bishop of their own, bitterly remarked that the
Latin archbishop would now press his claim to ordain their priests; those of
Chalcis, where the returning theologians took part in a service in a Catholic
church, declared that henceforth they could no longer exclude the Latin clergy
from performing mass in the Greek churches.
During the six years between 1437 and 1443, during
which Constantine was mainly absent at Constantinople, the Morea enjoyed the
blessing of having practically no history. We find Thomas administering justice
and confirming sales of property at Patras, and Theodore ratifying the ancient
privileges of the inhabitants of Monemvasia. All the Despot’s subjects, whether
freemen or serfs, were permitted to enter or leave that important city without
let or hindrance, except only the dangerous denizens of Tzakonia and Vatika,
whose character had not altered in two hundred years. The citizens, their
beasts, and their ships, were exempt from forced labour; and, at their special
request, the Despot confirmed the local custom, by which all the property of a
Monemvasiote who died without relatives was devoted to the repair of the
castle; while, if he had only distant relatives, one-third of his estate Was
reserved for that purpose. This system of death-duties was continued by Theodore’s successor,
Dem6trios, by whom Monemvasia was described as “one of the most useful cities
under my rule”. The prosperity of Patras, on the other hand, must have suffered
by the transference of the Venetian trade to Lepanto, previously only a
cattle-market, which, in consequence, began to pay its expenses. To the eye,
however, of a literary observer, the Humanist, Francescus Philelphus, there was
“nothing in the Peloponnese worthy of praise except George Gemistos”, or
Plethon, as he now’ called himself, who had returned from Florence, and was
holding a judicial post at Mistra. “The Palaiologoi princes themselves”, added
the critic, “are oppressed by poverty, and even their own subjects ridicule and
plunder them. The language is depraved, the customs are more barbarous than the
barbarians.” Yet it is to these barbarians that we owe those beautiful
Byzantine churches, the Pantanassa and the Peribleptos, at Mistra.
In 1443 a fresh distribution of the Moreot Governments
took place. In view of the succession to the throne of all the Caesars, both
Constantine and Theodore were anxious to obtain the city of Selymbria, on the
Sea of Marmara, which was close to the capital. Finally, an arrangement was
made by which Theodore received Selymbria, where he died of the plague five
years later, and ceded his province in the Morea to Constantine. An inscription in the chapel of Our Lady
of Brontochion, at Mistra, still commemorates Theodore’s temporary aspirations
for the peace of the cloister, and a feeble monody has been preserved in
remembrance of this feeble ruler.
Thus, Constantine now held the larger portion of the
peninsula, including Patras, Corinth, and Mistra, in each of which he was
represented by a governor, in the case of Mistrai the faithful Phrantzes, whose
jurisdiction included not only the capital, but the village of Jewish Trype, at
the mouth of the Langada Gorge, Sklavochorio (the ancient Amyklai), and several
other villages in the neighbourhood. Phrantzes received on his appointment
strict injunctions to abolish a number of offices and to establish one-man rule
at Mistral, while a single minister in attendance was attached to the person of
the sovereign wherever he went. Constantine’s first act after his arrival was
to rebuild the Isthmian wall, which Turakhan had destroyed a second time during
a raid into the Peloponnese in 1431 ; the next was to renew, this time by force
of arms, the attempt which he had made by diplomacy nine years before, to
recover the Athenian duchy for himself and the cause of Hellenism, which he
personified. The moment seemed singularly favourable, for a weak man held sway
at Athens, and the Turks, hard pressed by the Hungarians and Poles, whom Pope
Eugenius IV. had marshalled against them, defied by Skanderbeg in Albania,
defeated by John Hunyady at Nish, threatened by the appearance of a Venetian
fleet in the yEgean, were unable to protect their Athenian vassal. He,
therefore, cheerfully responded to the appeal of the papal envoys, marched into
Bceotia early in 1444, occupied Thebes, ravaged the country to the gates of
Livadia and as far north as Lamia and Agrapha, and compelled Nerio II to pledge
himself to pay tribute. The Wallachs of Pindos now descended upon the Turks of
the great Thessalian plain, and received from the victorious Constantine a
governor whose seat was at Phanari; one of the Albanian clans in Phthiotis, to
which the sultan had granted autonomy, joined his standard; 300 Burgundian
auxiliaries arrived to swell his forces, and he was so flushed with success
that he did not scruple to arouse the wrath of Venice by seizing the port of
Vitrinitza, on the Gulf of Corinth, which had been ceded by the Turks to the
governor of Lepanto. Thus, for a moment, almost all the Morea and the greater
part of continental Greece acknowledged the sway or the suzerainty of a Greek
prince. Never, since the time of the Frankish Conquest, had the Hellenic cause
been so successful. The news spread to Italy; Cardinal Bessarion hastened to
congratulate Constantine on the fortification of the isthmus, and urged him to
transfer his capital from MistrS to Corinth. At the same time, he bade him
become the Lycurgus of the new Sparta— lightening taxation, checking
extravagance in dress and servants by strict sumptuary laws, preventing the
export of corn, building a navy from the wood of the Peloponnesian forests, and
searching for iron in the folds of Taygetos. Above all, the cardinal advised
him to send a few young Spartans to learn letters and arts in Italy and so
qualify as literary and technical instructors of their fellow-countrymen. While
the patriot churchman dreamed of a revival of ancient Hellas by the genius of
Constantine, the court of Naples heard that he had actually occupied Athens;
and Alfonso V of Aragon, who had never forgotten that he was still titular duke
of Athens and Neopatras, wrote at once demanding the restitution of the two
duchies to himself, and sent the Marquis of Gerace to receive them from the
conqueror’s hands. But, before the letter was despatched, the fate of Greece
had been decided on the shores of the Black Sea. The perjury of the Christians,
who had broken their solemn oaths to keep peace with the sultan, had been
punished by their crushing defeat at Varna in November 1444. Venice made peace
to save her colonies; the rest of Greece lay at the mercy of the victor.
Nerio II was the first sufferer for his compulsory
alliance with the Greek Despot. Omar, the son of Turakhan, governor of
Thessaly, ravaged Boeotia and Attica, as a punishment for his weakness. Nerio
now saw that his only hope lay in obsequiousness to the Turks, whose star was
again in the ascendant, and sent an envoy to the sultan, expressing his
willingness to pay the same tribute as before. On these conditions he purchased
safety from the Turks, but at the same time called down upon himself the
vengeance of Constantine, who marched against Athens, and endeavoured to take
it Nerio now called upon the sultan to protect him ; his appeal was supported
by Turakhan, whose Thessalian province had suffered from Constantine’s recent
successes; and Murad, true to the traditional Turkish policy of supporting the
weaker of two rival Christian nationalities, accordingly sent an ultimatum to
Constantine, demanding the evacuation of the Turkish territory which he had
occupied. As Constantine refused, the sultan resolved to chastise the bold
Greek who dared to disobey him.
In 1446 all Murad’s preparations were made, and he set
out from Macedonia to invade Greece, with a commissariat so splendidly
organised as to call forth the enthusiastic praise of the Athenian historian.
North of the isthmus he met with no opposition, for Constantine, with his
brother Thomas and the whole force of the Peloponnese, amounting to 60,000 men,
had retired behind the newly restored walls of the Hexamilion. At Thebes an
Athenian contingent joined the sultan under Nerio, who had thus the petty
satisfaction of assisting his present against his late master. After encamping
for a few days at a place called Mingiai to prepare his cannon and fascines,
Murad drew up his forces in front of the Isthmian wall. A spy, who was
despatched from the Greek headquarters, came back with an alarming report of
the strength of the Turkish army, which stretched from sea to sea, and implored
the Despot to send an embassy to the sultan with all speed, and so avert, if
possible, the evils which his rashness had brought upon the Peloponnese.
Constantine ordered the spy to be thrown into prison for his frankness, and
rejected his advice. He had, indeed, sent Chalkokondiles, father of the
historian, as an envoy to the sultan, but his instructions were to claim the
isthmus and the Turkish possessions recently captured in continental Greece—a
claim which, as the historian admits, was excessive, and so irritated Murzad that
he threw the ambassador into prison. When, however, the sultan came to examine
the imposing walls of the Hexamilion, he remonstrated with old Turakhan for
having advised him to attack such apparently impregnable lines so late in the
season —for it was now 27th November. But the veteran, who knew his Greeks and
had already twice taken the Isthmian wall, maintained that its defenders would
not resist an attack, but would flee at the news of his arrival at the isthmus.
In this expectation the sultan waited several days before ordering the attack;
but, as Constantine showed no sign of surrender; he ordered his cannon to open
fire on the wall. On the evening of the fourth day, the fires in front of the
Turkish tents, and the strains of the martial hymns which rose from the Turkish
camp, warned the Greeks that, according to their custom, the besiegers would
begin the assault on the next day but one. On the following evening the sutlers
dragged the siege engines into position, and at dawn next day, ioth December,
the band sounded the signal for the attack. While some endeavoured to undermine
the wall, and others placed scaling ladders against it, the Turkish artillery
prevented the defenders from exposing themselves over the battlements. The
honours of the day rested with a young Servian janissary, who was the first to
scale the wall right in the centre under the eyes of the sultan—a sad but
characteristic example of the manner in which the Turks in all ages have used
the Slavs against the Greeks and the Greeks against the Slavs. Others followed
him, the Greeks were driven down from that point of the battlements, a panic
seized them, and they fled in disorder, followed by the troops near them. The
two Despots in vain endeavoured to rally their panic-stricken men; then,
finding their efforts useless, and suspecting the Albanians of treachery, they
fled also; while the Turkish soldiers poured over the fatal battlement, through
a breach in the wall, and finally through the gates. Some fell upon the ample
plunder which they found in the Greek camp, others slew or captured the fleeing
Greeks; the whole isthmus, laments a Greek poet, was strewn “with gold-winged
arrows, jewelled swords, and the heads and hands and bodies of men”. The sultan
stained his laurels by two hideous acts of cruelty. Three hundred Greeks, who
had fled to Mount Oneion, above Kenchreai, he induced to surrender, and then butchered
in cold blood; six hundred of his soldiers’ captives he purchased, in order to
sacrifice them as an acceptable offering to the Manes of his father.
The two Despots retreated into the far south of the
peninsula, for they knew that the citadel of Akrocorinth had neither provisions
nor munitions sufficient to resist a long siege; they had staked and lost their
all at the isthmus, and they had to face a revolt headed by a Greek archon, who
proclaimed Centurione’s bastard son, Giovanni Asan, as legitimate Prince of Achaia. If hard pressed by the Turks, they were resolved to quit the country.
Meanwhile, leaving old Turakhan, who knew the Peloponnese well, to pursue them, the sultan marched along the south shore of the
Corinthian Gulf with such rapidity that, on the same day on which he captured the isthmus, he surprised Basilicata, the ancient Sikyon, whose entire male population had gone to defend the Hexamilion, with the exception of a few who had taken refuge with the women and children in the
Akropolis. This small garrison soon surrendered; the sultan set fire to the
town, and then continued his march to the wealthy city of Vostitza, which met
with a like fate at his hands. When he reached Patras, he found that all the
inhabitants, except some 4000 who had occupied the castle and the palace, had
fled across the gulf to the Venetian colony of Lepanto,
which had secured immunity by continuing to pay him tribute. The occupants of
the palace surrendered, and were enslaved; but the people in the splendid old castle, even though
a breach was made in the walls, hurled blazing resin and
pitch on to the heads of the janissaries, and so maintained
their position. The sultan had to content himself with burning and destroying the town, whose wealth had made it the “purse” of Constantine,
and with ravaging the country as far as Glarentza. Meanwhile, Turakhan had returned from his raid; and, as the season was far advanced and the Despots were willing to make peace on his terms, and pay him a tribute, Murad withdrew to Thebes, leaving the
Hexamilion a heap of ruins, and taking more than 60,000 captives with him. On his approach,
the terrified Thebans abandoned their homes, only to fall into the clutches of the Turkish army at the isthmus. The news of the fall of the Hexamilion had been at once followed by the submission of all Constantine’s recent conquests in
continental Greece; and the Bey of Salona swore on the Koran that no harm should befall the revolted
people of Loidoriki and Galaxidi, if they would return to their allegiance.
On the death of his brother, the Emperor John, in 1448, Constantine succeeded, in spite of the intrigues of
his younger brother Demetrios, to the imperial title. It is a picturesque fact,
which the Greeks should not forget when they raise their contemplated monument
to him, that the last emperor of Constantinople was crowned at Mistra, where
his first wife, Theodora Tocco, like Cleopa Malatesta, the wife of his brother
Theodore, lay buried in the Zoodotou monastery. After the coronation on 6th
January 1449, the new emperor sailed on board a Catalan ship for the imperial
capital, where he met his two surviving brothers. Thomas he confirmed in the
dignity of a Despot, upon Dem£trios he bestowed his previous government, with
the exception of Tatras, which was added to that of Thomas. Before the two
Despots left for the Morea, they solemnly swore, in the presence of their aged mother,
their brother the emperor, and all the leading members of the Senate, to live
in unity and brotherly love.
Shortly after the accession of Constantine to the
imperial throne, his great adversary, Murad II, rounded off his Greek conquests
by annexing practically all that remained of the former Despotat of Epiros. For
many years Carlo II Tocco had remained at peace with his cousins and with the
Turks. When the antiquary, Cyriacus of Ancona, visited the “ King of the
Epirotes”, as he styles him, in 1435 and 1436, the latter gave him a letter of
introduction, which ensured him a warm welcome at a marriage festivity in the
family of the Despot’s cousin Turnus. In 1444, however, when the fortunes of
the sultan seemed to be waning, and his brother-in-law, the Despot Constantine,
made his brilliant but short-lived conquests in nothern Greece, Carlo also
threw off the Turkish suzerainty. In this bold step he was advised and assisted
by his father-in-law, Giovanni, the above-mentioned Marquis of Gerace, a member
of the great Sicilian family of Ventimiglia. Landing with a small body of
cavalry, the marquis routed with great loss a large army of Turks which was
besieging his son-in-law. On his return home, however, shortly afterwards,
Carlo was captured by treachery or a Turkish stratagem, and reduced to his
former state of
vassalage. Unfortunately, he
died on 30th September 1448, before his eldest son,
Leonardo III, had reached manhood, so that there was no one strong-enough to
protect his continental dominions. The four governors, whom the late Despot had
appointed guardians of his children, thought that the only way to save
their threatened heritage was to invoke the protection of Venice; Zante hoisted
the banner of St Mark; the captain of Sta. Mavra offered his island to the
republic; while others of the islanders sent to Alfonso V. of Naples, mindful of the connection between the ducal family and the
Neapolitan crown. But while Venice was negotiating, the sultan acted. On 24th
March 1449, the Turks took Arta, and annexed all the continental dominions of
the house of Tocco, except the three points of Vonitza, Varnazza, and
Angelokastro, which thenceforth, under the name of Karl-ili, or “Charles’s
country”, formed a part of the Turkish Empire, still preserving in its Turkish
name the memory of Carlo Tocco.
Venice was now more than ever anxious to prevent the loss of
the island county of Cephalonia or its occupation by another Christian power,
such as the King of Naples. She really wanted absolute possession of the central
Ionian group, such as she had long enjoyed in Corfu,
and she actually ordered Vettore Cappello, her admiral, afterwards famous as the captor of Athens, and whose effigy still adorns the
portal of Sant’ Aponal at Venice, to take steps for
the annexation of Zante. Pensions, it was
thought, would reconcile any of the chief
inhabitants who now enjoyed offices—and such were numerous under the Tocchi—to
the change of ruler. But it soon became
evident that neither the “Despot of Arta,” as Leonardo III. still styled
himself, nor his brothers wished to surrender their heritage. Another proposal,
that Venice should occupy the islands during his minority, was rejected, and
ultimately the negotiations terminated by the republic, with the advice of “the
Councils of Cephalonia and Zante,” taking him, his brothers, and successors
under her protection. Henceforth Leonardo III. was included in Venetian treaties, though the kings of
Naples continued to regard him as their vassal.
While the Italian rule in continental
Greece was thus drawing to a close, an antiquary, for
the first time since the Conquest, visited the country. This mediaeval
Pausanias, Cyriacus of Ancona, has left us, together with numerous ancient
inscriptions and not a few sketches of classical monuments, some brief notes
on the distinguished personages whom he met in the course of his extended
travels. A merchant by profession, like Schliemann, whom in some respects he
resembled, he taught himself Greek, and was consumed by a burning enthusiasm
for the memorials of classic Hellas. As his notes often contain no indication
of the year in which they were written, an exact chronology of his Greek journeyings
is extremely difficult; but he seems to have first visited the Levant in 1412,
and we find him reading daily the Greek, Latin, and mediaeval historians to
Mohammed II during, or immediately after, the siege of
Constantinople, that is to say, in 1452 or 1453. His preserved
fragments refer, however, mainly to three Greek journeys, the first of which
extended from the end of 1435 to about the middle of 1436, the second took
place in 1437, and the third and longest lasted from 1443 to 1449, when the
Genoese Government describes him, in a letter of recommendation, as “now returning
west,” after “having visited Epiros, Aetolia, Akarnania, the Morea, Achaia,
Athens, Phokis, Boeotia, Crete, and the Cyclades.”
The worthy antiquary, on the first of these journeys,
arrived in Greek waters towards the end of December 1435. The plague then
raging at Corfu prevented-him from touching at that island, where, during one
of his previous voyages, he had acquired some Greek manuscripts. He accordingly
spent Christmas at the Corfiote dependency of Butrinto, on the opposite coast,
and thence proceeded to Arta, where Carlo II Tocco received him most
hospitably. “The King of the Epirotes,” as Cyriacus calls him, gave the
traveller every facility for seeing the sights of his dominions. His majesty’s
secretary, Giorgio Ragnarolo of Pesaro, assisted his fellowcountryman; and,
thus supported, the antiquary was able to visit Rogus, where he found “the head
of the Virgin’s mother, the body of St Luke, and the foot of St John
Chrysostom”; the ruins of the old Roman colony of Nikopolis, founded to
commemorate the victory of Actium; and the remains of Dodona. He then travelled
southward through Acarnania and Aetolia, stopping at Vonitza, so important in
the medieval history of the country, gazing across at Ithaka from the coast of
the mainland, and finally arriving at the ancient Kalydon, whence he set out
for Patras. Before, however, he had left “the Royal city of Akarnania”, he had
prudently submitted, in a letter still preserved, the manuscript account of his
journey in Epiros to the “King of the Epirotes”, in case any of his
observations should fail to please the royal eye! From Patras he crossed over
to the Venetian colony of Lepanto, and ere long we find him at Kirrha, the
ancient port of Delphi, then called “Ancona” (from the “elbow” of land on which
it stood), or “the Five Saints” (from some church of that name). At Salona he
mentions the church of the Transfiguration, but he has little or no regard for
what is post-classical. He scornfully remarks, in the narrow spirit of the
archaeologist for whom contemporary Greece has no interest, that Delphi “is
called Castri by the foolish Greek populace, which is quite ignorant where it
was”; but he inspected with keen interest the ruined walls, the remains of the
round temple of Apollo, the amphitheatre, and the hippodrome, wandered among
the broken statues which covered the ground, and admired the large and richly
ornamented tombs. Thence he proceeded to Livadia by way of the noble Byzantine
monastery of Hdsios LoukSs, where the monks showed him a very ancient
collection of sacred books. At Livadia he noted a large temple of Hera in the
ruined city; and, after a digression to Orchomenos, arrived at Thebes, which,
though no longer the capital of the duchy, was still the occasional residence
of the Duke of Athens, for our traveller specially mentions the “royal court”
there. A brief visit to Chalkis and Eretria concluded this part of his tour,
and on 7th April 1436 he reached Athens, where he stayed for fifteen days, the
guest of a certain Antonelli Balduini. On this occasion he does not seem to have
been presented to Nerio II, nor does he tell us much about the contemporary
state of the city at the beginning of the new reign. His days are entirely
devoted to visiting the antiquities, to making sketches, and to copying the
inscriptions which he finds on the monuments. Many of them relate to the
Emperor Hadrian, the great philhellene, who, as the inscription on his arch
reminded the traveller, founded a new Athens, which began where that of Theseus
ended. He noted down the emperor’s celebrated edict at the gate of Athena
Archegetis regulating the oil-trade; he transcribed the inscription
commemorating the completion by Antoninus Pius of Hadrian’s aqueduct, which,
like the Capuan notary forty years earlier, he was informed by the local
ciceroni to have been “Aristotle’s Study ; he, too, alludes to the statue of
the Gorgon on the south of the Acropolis; he, too, describes the temple of
Olympian Zeus, of which he counted one more column than his predecessor had
done, as the “house”, or “palace of Hadrian.” Similarly, he mistook the
choragic monument of Lysikrates for the marble seats of a theatre. The perfect
“temple Of Mars”, as he calls the Theseion, “with its thirty columns”, and “the
fifty-eight columns and noble sculptures on the pediments, frieze, and metopes
of the Parthenon” naturally aroused his admiration. But, unlike the pious
notary, he tells us nothing of its condition as the cathedral of Athens, beyond
two casual allusions to the recent restoration of a pillar, and to an
inscribed ancient marble urn inside, which may perhaps have served either as a
font or for holy water. He alludes, however, to the church of St Dionysios
under the Areopagos. His general impression of Athens is striking. “Everywhere”,
he writes, “I saw vast walls decayed with age, and inside and outside the city
incredible marble buildings, houses, and temples, all kinds of sculptures
executed with marvellous skill, and huge columns—but all these things a mass of
great ruins.”
Down at the Piraeus the antiquary could trace the huge
foundations of the ancient walls, part of two round tuwers was still standing,
and the entrance of the harbour was guarded by the huge marble lion, now in
front of the arsenal at Venice. Phaleron, or Porto Vecchio, he ignores.
Of contemporary Athens he gives us the barest
glimpses. He tells us that it possessed a “north” and a “west gate”, as well as
“the gate of the new city”, and that of the castle— the same number which the
Jesuit Father Simon enumerates more than two centuries later; that it had “new
walls”, a statement, corroborated by that of another traveller thirty years
afterwards, which might indicate the so-called wall of Valerian as the work of
the Acciajuoli; and that the Theseion lay outside the town. Of the inhabitants
he says nothing; as living Greeks, they had for him no interest; was he not an
archaeologist?
After a day at Eleusis, where, like the Capuan, he
noted the ruins of an aqueduct, Cyriacus journeyed by way of Megara to the
isthmus, still strewn with the walls erected by Manuel II and destroyed by the
Turks five and thirteen years earlier. Rapidly visiting Corinth and the
amphitheatre and brick baths of Sikyon, he made an excursion up to Kalavryta,
where he met a kindred soul, one George Cantacuzene, a scholar learned in Greek
literature who possessed a large library, from which he lent the wandering
archaeologist an Herodotos and several other books—an interesting proof of the
existence of culture in the Morea at this period. On the way down the valley,
the traveller stopped to see the image of the Virgin, attributed to St Luke and
still preserved in the monastery of Megaspelaion, and thence returned by way of
Patras, at the beginning of May, to the dominions of his friend, the “ King of
the Epirotes”, who gave him the abovementioned letter of introduction to his
cousin Turnus. The Tocchi were interested in literary matters; Orlando, the
brother of Turnus, is known to have employed a Greek priest to copy manuscripts
of Origen and Chrysostom for him, and Turnus heartily welcomed Cyriacus at his
daughter’s wedding at Orionatium in the middle of May. Two days later his guest
crossed over to Corfii, saw part of the old walls and the remains of the
ancient city of Palaiopolis, and then returned with his sketches and a goodly collection of inscriptions to his native
land.
But the love of travel
did not allow him much repose. In July of the
following year he is sketching the walls of Kythera and admiring those of
Epidauros Limera, near Monemvasia. In
August he is at Zante, “the island of Epiros” as he calls it, in allusion
to its union with the continental dominions of the Tocchi, and it was probably there that he received a letter of introduction to Carlo II’s ambitious cousin,
the bastard Memnon, who seems at this time to
have been governor of Charpigny in the Morea, the old feudal castle of Hugues de Lille. He gives us a pretty picture of his meeting
with Memnon “at the clear springs of the Alpheios”,
where the bastard was surrounded by his huntsmen, some bearing a straight-horned stag, others a
huge she-bear, and others again a haul of fish fresh from the river. Memnon not only gave him a warm welcome, but presented him with the skin of the bear, and escorted him to Mistra, where he
arrived a week later. There he visited Theodore II, then the reigning Despot, examined the statues, the columns, and the marble stage of the gymnasia on the site of classic Sparta, and speculated on the origin of the
name of its mediaeval successor, which he believes to have been
due to the cheese-like shape of the hill of Mistra. Of
the beautiful Byzantine churches of the Moreot capital he is as silently disdainful as any
classical archaeologist of our own day. Yet this very period was the
golden age of architecture at Mistra. The Florentine arcades (due, no doubt, to the
influence of the Despots’ Italian wives) and the Peribleptos church belong to the first half of the fifteenth century; only a few years before Cyriacus’s visit, Joannes Frangopoulos, the marshal of the Morea, had presented the charming Pantanassa as “a small thank-offering” to the Virgin.
In 1443 Cyriacus returned once more to Greece with letters for the two Despots of the Morea, and,
apparently in February 1444, he revisited Athens. An
extremely interesting letter, which he wrote from Chios on 29th March of that
year, describes his second impressions of the place. After mentioning the
Tower of the Winds, the “Temple of Aiolus”, as he calls it, he goes on to say
how, accompanied by the duke’s cousin and namesake, he went to pay his respects
to “Nerio Acciajuoli of Florence, then Prince of Athens”, whom he “found on the
Acropolis, the lofty castle of the city.” Again, however, the archaeological
overpowered the human interest; of the living ruler he tells us nothing; his
attention, as he says, was rather attracted by the Propylaea, in which was the
ducal residence. He describes in enthusiastic language the splendours of the
architecture—the marvellous portico of four polished marble columns, with ten
marble slabs above, and the court itself, where two rows of six huge columns
three feet in diameter supported the marble ceiling, and where the walls on
either side, composed of polished pieces of marble all of equal size, were
approached by a single large and splendid entrance. After sketching the building,
he hastened on with even greater eagerness to reinspect the Parthenon; again he
enumerates its fifty-eight columns, twelve on each front and seventeen on each
side; he alludes to the battle of the Centaurs and the Lapithae sculptured on
the metopes, to the sculptures of the pediments, and to the frieze of the
cella, which he supposed to represent the victories of Athens in the time of
Perikles. During the next five years he continued his journey in the Levant; he
had an audience of Murad II at Adrianople before the disastrous battle of
Varna, and describes a hunting party near Constantinople, at which the Emperor
John VI and the exDespot Theodore II, who had then, left the Morea, were
present. At the Dardanelles he spoke with some of the Greek captives, whom Murad
II had carried off from the Peloponnese. In his repeated visits to the islands
of the Archipelago, he received assistance from the Latin rulers, themselves in
some cases men of culture, interested in the classic treasures of their
diminutive dominions. Thus, Crusino I Sommaripa of Paros took a pride in
showing him some marble statues, which he had had excavated, and allowed him to
send a marble head and leg to his friend, Andriolo Giustiniani-Banca of Chios,
a connoisseur of art and a writer of Italian verse, to whom many of his letters
are addressed. So deeply was Cyriacus moved by Crusino’s culture and kindness,
that he too burst out into an Italian poem, of which happily only one line has
been published. Dorino I Gattilusio of Lesbos aided him in his investigation of
that island, nor was Francesco Nani, the Venetian governor of Tenos and
Mykonos, any more backward in paying him attention, escorting him to Delos and
back in his state galley with fourteen rowers. In another Venetian island, that
of Crete, Cyriacus attended a shooting match, held at Canea, in which the
archers were dressed as heroes of different nations and the winner received a
eulogy from the pen of the archaeologist. Early in 1448, he revisited Mistra;
on the road, the site of Sparta with its ruins inspired him with an Italian
sonnet, in which he contrasted the classic city of heroes with the mediaeval
capital over which Constantine Palaiologos then ruled. At least, however, the
Spartans of the fifteenth century had not lost their physique, for a tall youth
of immense strength carried the worthy antiquary across a stream under his arm,
and then broke an iron rod to show his power. The poem, too, though not
flattering to Mistra, was translated into Greek, and this rendering, still
extant, has been attributed to Gemistos Plethon. There is nothing improbable in
this meeting of the archaeologist and the philosopher, who may have already
made one another’s acquaintance at Florence, for in 1450, just before his
death, the latter composed a complimentary letter to the Despot Demetrios on
his reconciliation with his brother, and wrote a funeral oration on the death
of their mother, the dowager empress. While at Mistra, Cyriacus seems to have
been the guest of Constantine, for we find him writing, on 4th February 1448, at the
latter’s court, an account of the Roman calendar in Greek, which he dedicated to the Despot. From
Mistra he made excursions to Coron, where the Venetian officials, aided by a
Cretan scholar, one of the Calergi, showed him the antiquities, and to Vitylo,
where Constantine’s governor, John Palaioldgos, entertained him and showed him
the ancient materials, of which the castle was constructed. The last stage of this long journey was
another visit to Epiros, in October 1448. Cyriacus found his old host, Carlo II,
just dead, and Leonardo III reigning in his
stead. Here the antiquary revisited his old haunts of Dodona and Rogus, and
composed three Italian sonnets for the repose of Carlo’s soul. The results of
his long archaeological investigations he embodied in three large volumes, of which only fragments have come down to us. His
original drawing of the west front of the Parthenon3 and those of
other Athenian monuments have been preserved in a manuscript formerly belonging to the Duke of Hamilton, but now in the Berlin Museum, and are the earliest
extant reproductions of those buildings. Sketches of the same front of the Parthenon, of the Tower of the Winds, of the Monument of Phildpappos, showing the king in a four-horse chariot, of “a round temple of Apollo at Athens” (perhaps that of
Augustus), and of the noble lion of “the port of Athens” facing the two round
towers, may be
seen in the Barberini
manuscript of 1465, now at the Vatican, which contains the diagrams of San Gallo. As that
eminent architect took the explanatory text
almost verbatim from Cyriacus, he has been assumed to have
copied the latter’s drawings, and this is all the more probable because the
sketch of “the temple of Apollo” was drawn and
given to its owner,
as is expressly stated, by “a Greek in Ancona,” the
residence of the antiquary. Copies of the
traveller’s sketches of the Cyclades exist in a manuscript at Munich, whereas we have not a trace of his contemporary, Francesco
Squarcione of Padua, who is said to have “ travelled all
over Greece.”
The fall of Greek rule in the Morea was now fast approaching,
hastened by the fraternal quarrels of the two Despots, Thomas and Demetrios.
Neither their solemn oaths at
Constantinople, nor the imminent Turkish peril
prevailed over their mutual selfishness and ambition. The only point on which they were unanimous was their desire to extend their dominions at the cost of the Venetian
colonies, especially Nauplia and Argos, which complained loudly to the
mother-country for protection, and demanded a copy of the privileges granted it
after its capture by the Turks in 1397. Thomas
managed to obtain a start of his brother, and, reaching the Morea first, seduced the subjects of Demetrios from their allegiance. The latter, destitute of national feeling, sent his brother-in-law, Matthew Asan, to call in the aid
of the Turks, and thus compelled Thomas to come to
terms and submit their dispute to the arbitration of their brother, the emperor. As the two Despots, however, still continued to
quarrel, Mohammed II ordered old Turakhan to assist
Demetrios, and at the
same time, in view of the future conquest of the peninsula, to destroy all that remained of the Hexamilion. Thomas
then made peace with his brother, surrendering to him Kalamata in exchange for the Arkadian district of Skorta, which he had taken. So great was the
joy of the old philosopher and patriot Plethon, that he took up his pen for the
last time to congratulate Demetrios on this reconciliation. Then he died, full
of years, fortunate in escaping the disgrace of
seeing the country a Turkish province. “Sparta,” cried his friend Hieronymos
Charitonymos in his funeral oration, “is no
longer famous ; we lovers of learning shall soon
be scattered to the ends of the world”—a prophecy only too true, and too soon fulfilled.
In October 1452, when Mohammed II was ready for the attack on Constantinople, he sent Turakhan back to
the Morea to keep the two Despots busy there with their
own defence, so that they might not send assistance to their imperial brother.
Accompanied by his two sons, Achmet and Omar (the future conqueror of Athens),
and at the head of the European army of the Turkish Empire, the old commander
again arrived at the isthmus. The walls had been repaired, and the resistance
offered by their defenders was such that
the capture of the rampart cost many lives. When the Greeks fled, Turakhan
marched through the centre of the
peninsula by way of Tegea and Mantineia as far as Ithome and the Messenian
Gulf, plundering and taking prisoners as he went. Neokastron, presumably the “Chastel-Neuf” mentioned in
the feudal list of 1364, fell before him; but Siderokastron in Arkadia justified its name
and defied all his efforts. Nor was that
the only Turkish reverse. As Achmet was retiring
through the Pass of Dervenaki, between Mycenae and Corinth, that death-trap of Turkish armies, where 370 years later another Ottoman force met a similar fate,
he was surprised by Matthew Asan, brother-in-law of Demetrios, defeated and
taken as a captive to Mistra. The victory was the last
ray of dawn before the darkness of centuries. King Alfonso of Naples, who had long been intriguing with Demetrios, sent his congratulations, and talked of invading
Turkey; but the Turks had achieved their object, and the besieged of Constantinople applied in vain to the
Despots for corn and soldiers.
The news that the city was taken, and the emperor slain, fell like a thunderbolt upon his wretched brothers, who
naturally expected that they would be the next victims. Their first impulse,
and that of their leading, archons, was to rush down to the nearest port and take ship for Italy— an act of cowardice which had the worst effect
upon their already discontented Albanian
subjects. But as, one after another, important
Greeks arrived from Constantinople— men like Cardinal Isidore, who had played a
prominent part at the Council of Florence and had been taken prisoner by the
Turks, and Phrantzes, whose loyalty to his master had exposed him to a similar
fate—the two Despots plucked up sufficient courage to remain, and sent envoys
to the sultan’s court at Adrianople, in the hope that the conqueror would leave
them the shadow of sovereignty so long as they paid the annual tribute of
10,000 or 12,000 ducats which he imposed upon them.1 Some of the
Greek nobles wished, indeed, to proclaim Demetrios emperor, but this was too
much for the fraternal jealousy of Thomas, and the idea was dropped. Meanwhile,
the smouldering discontent of the Albanians, ill-treated by the Greek officials
and fired by the great exploits of their countryman, Skanderbeg, in Albania,
had burst out into one of those rare efforts for independence which that
strange race has occasionally shown. Some 30,000 of these nomads rose against
the Despots, at the instigation of one of their native chieftains, Peter Boua,
nicknamed “the lame”, a member of the family which had once held Arta and
Lepanto. Various dissatisfied Greek archons joined the movement, for the greedy
Byzantine officials who held the chief posts at the petty courts of Patras and
Mistra were extremely unpopular with the natives of the peninsula. Among these
Greek rebels the most prominent was Manuel Cantacuzene, who was lord of all
Braccio di Maina, and could not forget that his ancestors were of imperial
lineage and had once ruled at Mistra. Thomas had in vain tried to arrest him,
as a dangerous pretender; he was now proclaimed Despot by the Albanians, whose
national vanity he flattered by taking the Albanian name of “Ghin,” and calling
his wife “Cuchia.”
In the pitiable condition of Greece at that time it
was obvious to both parties that they could only obtain, or retain, the
government of the Morea by foreign aid. Accordingly, they both applied to the
only two foreign Powers which were strong enough to assist them—Venice and the
sultan. The republic was at first not disinclined to listen to the proposals of the Albanians to submit to Venetian rule. Venice had been constantly harassed by the Despots, and on one occasion had plainly
told the Emperor Manuel II, that the members of his family were “worse neighbours than the Turks”; in this
very year of the rebellion, Demdtrios had been molesting the Venetian colonies.
The first impulse of the Venetian Government was, therefore, to instruct its
officials in the Morea to encourage the insurgents until it had had time to decide upon its policy. More cautious counsels,
however, prevailed—for Venice did not want to embroil herself with the sultan—and it was proposed that Vettore Cappello
should proceed to the Morea, to urge the desirability of
unity on the contending parties, and to negotiate for the peaceful acquisition of such maritime places as Glarentza, Patras, Corinth, and Vostitza, but only in the event of a
possible Genoese
or Catalan occupation of the
peninsula. He was to protest, and the protest was perfectly
genuine, that the republic did not seek these territorial acquisitions from
motives of ambition, but simply in order to save the
country. The news that a Genoese fleet
was hovering off the Morea and that the Albanians were negotiating
with that rival republic,
naturally alarmed the
statesmen of the lagoons.
The sultan acted, however,
while the Venetians debated. He saw that a strong Albanian principality in the Morea would be less to his interest than the maintenance of the two weak
Byzantine states of Patras and Mistra. He therefore resolved to aid the Despots in suppressing the revolt, without, however, utterly annihilating the revolted; he chose, in other words, that policy of making one
Christian race balance another, so skilfully
followed by his successor in Macedonia at the present day. Omar, son of old Turakhan, was despatched to
carry out these instructions ; he inflicted a slight defeat on the
Albanians, and obtained from the
grateful Demetrios the
release of his brother Achmet as his reward. Another pretender, however, now appeared on the scene, in the person of Centurione’s son, Giovanni Asan. The so-called “Prince of Achaia” had been imprisoned with his eldest son since his
ineffectual rising in 1446 in the
castle of Chloumoutsi, and it had been rumoured that Thomas had allowed these
dangerous representatives of the old dynasty to die of hunger. They were,
however, still alive, and had eagerly listened to the plans of a
fellow-prisoner, a Greek agitator of obscure origin, named Loukanes, who had
received preferment from Theodore II, but had strongly opposed the influence of
Byzantine officialdom in his own, and his countrymen’s interest. These
prisoners of state now persuaded their gaoler to release them, whereupon they
threw the weight, Centurione of his name, Loukanes of his ability, on the side
of the insurgents. There must still have been many Franks who regarded the only
son of the last Frankish ruler of Achaia as their legitimate sovereign, and
even Venice and Alfonso of Naples thought it desirable to congratulate “Prince
Centurione” on his release, and to give him and his wife their coveted title.
Phrantz£s, who knew Peloponnesian politics well, and who had just entered the
service of the Despot Thomas, considered his escape so serious that he
interrupted a mission to the Servian court as soon as he heard the news, and
Matthew Asan, the brother-in-law of Demetrios, was despatched to the sultan to
ask for further assistance. This time Mohammed II sent old Turakhan himself to
the aid of the Despots, whose two capitals of Mistra and Patras were besieged
by the insurgents. Turakhan, with his two sons and a large force, arrived in
October 1454, and told the two Despots, who had in the meanwhile compelled the
enemy to raise the siege of those towns, that the presence of one or other of
them with his troops was essential to the success of his plans. First,
accompanied by Demetrios, he attacked the Albanians at a place called Borbotia,
which they strongly fortified, but from which they fled by night, leaving about
10,000 men and women prisoners of the allies. Next it was the turn of Thomas,
who took part with the Turkish commander in the capture of Ithome and Aetos—a
place which had recently hoisted the flag of Centurione, and which added
another 1000 to the ranks of the captives. At this the rest of the Albanians
submitted, on condition that they should keep the lands which they had taken
and the cattle which they had plundered—an arrangement which well suited the
sultan’s policy of playing off the two races against one another. The
pseudo-despot, Cantacuzene, disappeared, till four years later he returned as
the decoy of the sultan, while Centurione found a refuge among the Venetians at
Modon, where he remained for some two years. It was then thought desirable to
confirm his devotion to Venice by the grant of a small pension, lest he should
lend his name to some Turkish or other enterprise for the conquest of the Morea
; especially as, early in 1456, we find him a pensioner of King Alfonso at
Naples; accordingly, in 1457, the republic granted him an annuity, on condition
that he continued to reside at Modon, or “wherever else he could be most useful”
to her. Seven years later he settled, like his enemy Thomas, in Rome, and
thenceforth drew a monthly pittance from Paul II till 1469, when he died, the
last of his famous race to claim the title of “Prince of Achaia”. As for the
Albanian chief, Peter Boua, he was confirmed by the Turks in his privileges, and,
nine years later, headed another rising of his countrymen. Having thus restored
the authority of the two Despots, old Turakhan gave them, before he departed,
the excellent advice to live as brothers, to reward their loyal subjects, and
to repress at once the germs of sedition. Needless to say, his advice was not
taken.
The sultan was now the real master of the Morea. The
two Despots were his tributaries, and the Greek archons, degenerate scions of
old Moreot families such as those of Sophianos and Sgouromallaios, hesitated as
little as Albanian chiefs like Peter Boua or Manuel Raoul to acknowledge him as
their sovereign on condition that he took none of their property and spared
their children from the blood-tax. Two of them even offered to hand over to
Venice Mouchli, between Argos and the modern Tripolitza, and the three castles
of DamaU, Ligourid, and Phanari in Argolis—an offer which the Venetian
Government found very tempting, as the three Argive castles were near the
sea-coast. Meanwhile both Thomas and Demdtrios went on intriguing as before.
Both had tried to negotiate a matrimonial alliance
between their children and the family of Alfonso V of Aragon and Naples, who
sent an envoy to examine the Isthmian wall, and report on the defences of the
country, while Thomas invoked the aid of Venice to prevent his brother from
thus re-introducing Spanish influence into the Morea to the detriment of both
the republic and himself. While Demetrios appointed the scholar Argyrdpoulos as
his envoy, and told him to seek the aid of the pope and of Charles VII of
France, Thomas sent the serviceable Phrantzes to smooth over his disputes with
the Venetians, and obtained a safe conduct for himself and his family for the
Venetian colonies and the loan of both a Venetian and a Neapolitan galley, on
which he could flee in case of need. Nevertheless, the two brothers might,
perhaps, have preserved the shadow of authority for the rest of their lives,
had they abstained from any act which could offend their all-powerful suzerain,
the sultan. But the old intriguer Loukdnes could not rest from attempting to
stir up Byzantine officials and native Peloponnesians alike to revolt; and, in
spite of the wise refusal of Matthew Asan, the governor of Corinth, who knew
his Turks only too well, to join in these schemes, the tribute to the sultan
was allowed to fall into arrears. So long as there was any danger from the
Albanians, the Despots had been willing enough to pay what their deliverer
asked as the price of his assistance. But after the revolt had been suppressed,
they omitted to remit their annual ransom. Their excuse was that neither their
Albanian nor Greek subjects would pay their respective quota unless the land of
the peninsula were divided in equal portions. The Turkish view, however, was
that the Despots received the amount regularly, but spent it on themselves.
The sultan sent frequent embassies to demand payment,
and at the same time to report on the state of the country He was afraid that
the constant quarrels of the Despots would end in a Venetian or Aragonese
occupation of the Morea, which he thought would make a good base for his
projected attack upon Italy and which he had no wish to see in the hands of a
strong Western power. When, therefore, some three years’ tribute was in
arrears,he despatched an ultimatum to the Despots, giving them the alternative
of peace with payment, or the loss of their dominions. Emboldened by the
appearance of the fleet sent out by Pope Calixtus III to the Aegean, Thomas,
the more energetic of the two brothers, refused to pay; this refusal led to his
own and his brother’s ruin.
In the spring of 1458, at the head of an army of
80,000 cavalry and a large body of infantry, Mohammed II arrived in Thessaly,
where he halted to rest his men and to give the Despots a last chance of
payment. It was currently reported at the time, that had they done so, the
sultan, who had other pressing business on hand, would have abandoned his
expedition at that eleventh hour. But when no envoy arrived from the Morea, he
ordered his army to advance through Thermopylae into Boeotia, and encamped on
the classic field of Plataea at the river Asopos, till his scouts had examined
the mountain passes leading to the isthmus. While he was there, messengers
arrived from Thomas, begging for peace and bringing a part of the tribute, 4500
gold pieces. But it was too late; the sultan took the money, and told the
trembling emissaries that he would make peace when he was in the Peloponnese.
Then, as his scouts reported the passes to be unoccupied, he proceeded to the
isthmus, where he arrived on 15th May. He met with no resistance at the
Hexamilion; but a short experience of the natural and artificial fortifications
of Akrocorinth convinced him that it could only be taken by surrender or
starvation. There is only one approach to the citadel, and the steepness of the
ground would not permit him to plant his batteries near enough to the walls to
have any effect upon them; while, even if he could have succeeded in battering
down the triple line of walls, an assault would have been most difficult.
Accordingly, he left half his forces under the command of Mahmoud Pasha, a
Greek renegade and the first Christian who ever occupied the post of Grand
Vizier, to invest the place, and proceeded to reduce the neighbouring
fortresses by force or threats. He then marched into the interior of the
peninsula, devastating and destroying as he went. At Nemea he turned westward, and besieged Tarsos, a place to the north of Lake Pheneos, which surrendered and furnished some 300 youths to the
janissaries. But Doxies, the Albanian chieftain of the district, occupied a
very strong position on a high hill with a band of Greeks and Albanians, and prepared to defy the
great sultan. Unfortunately the besiegers cut off the water supply, and thus
compelled the heroic defenders, who had been constrained to bake their bread
with the blood of their slaughtered cattle, to sue for peace. Mohammed treacherously
seized this unguarded moment to attack the place, which thus fell into his
hands. The ancient feudal castle of Akova was
taken by storm ; the fortress of Roupele, in which a number of Albanians and
Greeks had taken refuge with their families, after two days’ desperate
fighting, during which the Turkish losses were such that the sultan ordered a
retreat, surrendered just as he was departing. Mohammed sent the inhabitants to
colonise Constantinople, with the exception of some twenty Albanians who had
surrendered at Tarsos and had broken their parole not to fight against him
again. As an awful example he ordered their ankles and wrists to be broken —an
act of cruelty commemorated by the Turkish name for the place —“Tokmak Hissari”,
or “the castle of ankles”. Thence he marched into the territory of Mantineia,
accompanied by Ghin Cantacuzene, the leader of the Albanian insurrection of 1453, whom he had
summoned to join him, thinking that his influence with
the Albanians would be useful. The ex-Despot was sent to try his persuasive
powers on the people of Pazanike; but his mission only made them more
obstinate; his Turkish companions accused him of treachery, and he was driven
from the sultan’s camp. Alarmed for his safety, he fled to Hungary, where he
died.
Finding that the enemy had occupied a strongly
fortified position, Mohammed encamped near Tegea, and held a council of war.
The two Despots had meanwhile fled to the sea-coast—Thomas with his family to
the Lakonian Mantineia, Demetrios to Monemvasia. The sultan’s ardent desire was
to see and capture that famous fortress, “the strongest of all cities that we
know,” as Chalkokondiles justly called it. But his advisers represented to him
the difficult nature of the country
which he would have to traverse, so he prudently decided instead to attack
Demetrios Asan in Palaio-Mouchli, then one of the most important places in the
peninsula. Here again, the sultan cut off the water supply, and after three
days, Asan surrendered on favourable terms, receiving the town of Loidoriki as
a fief for his son. The sultan now marched across country by a difficult route
to Patras, the abandoned capital of Thomas, whose citizens he found fled to
Lepanto and other Venetian colonies, except the garrison of the castle. The
latter made no resistance, their lives were spared, and the conqueror was so struck
with the fertility and situation of the town at the mouth of the Corinthian
Gulf, that he offered freedom, immunity from taxation for several years, and
the restitution of their property to all the inhabitants who would come back.
After garrisoning the castle, he despatched a portion of his forces to overrun
Elis and Messenia, and then returned along the coast of the gulf to Corinth,
occupying Vostitza on the way.
Although it was now July, he found Akrocorinth still
untaken, for Matthew Asan, who had been absent at Nauplia, had succeeded in
entering the fortress by night with seventy men and partially revictualling it.
As Asan boldly refused to surrender, and there was no longer provender for the
beasts of burden in the Turkish camp, Mohammed resolved to bombard the entrance
with stone balls made from the ruins of the ancient city of Corinth. At last a
breach was made in the outermost of the three walls; but when, after a
hand-to-hand fight, the Turks assailed the second rampart, they were greeted
with such volleys of large stones that they had to retire with heavy loss. So
powerful, however, for that period was the Turkish artillery, that a stone ball
weighing nearly 900 lbs. and fired at a range of about a mile and a half
destroyed the bakery of the citadel and the arsenal. At this juncture, the
Turkish detachment which had been sent to plunder Elis and Messenia arrived at
Corinth with some 15,000 head of cattle, so that the besiegers had ample
supplies for a long blockade, while the small stock of provisions which Asan
had brought with him was now all but exhausted. The Greeks complained to their
metropolitan, who treacherously informed Mohammed of the state of affairs. The
sultan then again called upon Asan to surrender, and the latter, seeing that
the majority was opposed to further resistance, went forth under a flag of
truce, together with Loukdnes, who had been in command during his absence, and
made terms with the sultan. On 6th August, Corinth, “the star castle,” as the
Turks called it, surrendered; the inhabitants were left unmolested, but ordered
to pay tribute; while the conqueror demanded from the Despots an annual tribute
of 3000 gold pieces and the cession of the city and district of Patras,
Vostitza, Kalavryta, and all the country which he had traversed with his
army—about one-third of the whole peninsula—and threatened a renewal of
hostilities in case of refusal. Asan proceeded to Trype at the mouth of the
Langada Gorge where the two Despots were waiting, and laid these hard terms
before them. But, hard as they were, there seemed to be no option but to accept
them. True, the patriotic Phrantzes sneered at the men who had surrendered the
key of the Morea and complained that Thomas had given away valuable cities “as
if they were of no more account than the vegetables in his garden”. Mohammed
left a garrison of 400 picked men of his own bodyguard in Corinth, thoroughly
provisioned all the fortresses which seemed to be in good condition, destroyed
the others and sent their inhabitants to Constantinople, where he settled the
skilled workmen in the city and the peasants in the surburban villages. Then,
appointing Omar, son of Turak- han, governor of the new Turkish province in the
Morea, he set out in the beginning of the autumn of 1458 for Athens, the city
which that warrior had captured.
The end of the Italian rule at Athens had been marked
by a domestic tragedy which might have attracted the dramatic genius of her
great classic writers. In 1451—the same year that had witnessed the death of
Murad II.—died Nerio II. We catch a last characteristic glimpse of him in the
middle of that year, when the Venetian envoy to the new sultan was directed to
ask that potentate to urge upon his vassal, “the lord of Sithines and Stives”,
the necessity of settling the pecuniary claims of two Venetians. After the
death of his first wife, Maria Melissene, Nerio, like his brother Antonio, had
married one of the daughters of Niccolo Zorzi or Giorgio of Karystos, titular
marquis of Boudonitza. The Duchess Chiara —such was the name of this passionate
Venetian beauty— bore him a son, Francesco, who was unfortunately still a minor
at the time of his father’s death. The child’s mother possessed herself of the
regency and persuaded the Porte, by the usual methods, to sanction her
usurpation. Soon afterwards, however, there visited Athens on some commercial
errand a young Venetian noble, Bartolomeo Contarini, whose father had been
governor of the Venetian colony of Nauplia. The duchess fell in love with her
charming visitor, and bade him aspire to her hand and land. Contarini replied
that, alas! he had left a wife behind him in his palace on the lagoons. To the
Lady of the Akropolis, a figure who might have stepped from a play of
Aischylus, the Venetian wife was no obstacle. It was the age of great crimes.
Contarini realised that Athens was worth a murder, poisoned his spouse, and
returned to enjoy the embraces and the authority of the duchess.
But the Athenians soon grew tired of this Venetian
domination. They complained to Mohammed II; the great sultan demanded
explanations; and Contarini was forced to appear with his stepson, whose
guardian he pretended to be, at the Turkish court. There he found a dangerous
rival in the person of Franco Acciajuoli, only son of the late Duke Antonio II
and cousin of Francesco, a special favourite of Mohammed and a willing
candidate for the Athenian throne, who had only been awaiting a favourable
moment to return. When the sultan heard the tragic story of Chiara’s passion,
he ordered the deposition of both herself and her husband, and bade the willing
Athenians accept Franco as their lord. Young Francesco was never heard of
again; but the tragedy was not yet over. Franco had no sooner assumed the
government of Athens, than he ordered the arrest of his aunt Chiara, threw her
into the dungeons of Megara, and there had her mysteriously murdered. A picturesque legend, current three centuries later at Athens, makes Franco throttle her with his own
hands, in a still more romantic spot—the monastery of Daphni, the mausoleum of
the French dukes—as she knelt invoking the aid of the Virgin, whereupon he cut
off her head with his sword. So deep was the impression which her fate made
upon the popular imagination.
The legend goes on to tell how her husband, “the Admiral”,
had come with many ships to the Piraeus to rescue her, but arrived too late.
Unable to save, he resolved to avenge her, and laid the grim facts before the
sultan. Mohammed II, indignant at the conduct of his protégé, but not sorry,
perhaps, of a pretext for destroying the remnants of Frankish rule at Athens,
ordered Omar, son of Turakhan, the governor of Thessaly, to march against the
city. The lower town offered no resistance, for its modern walls had but a
narrow circumference, and its population and resources were scanty. Nature
herself seemed to fight against the Athenians. On 29th May, the third
anniversary of the capture of Constantinople, a comet appeared in the sky; a
dire famine followed, so that the people were reduced to eat roots and grass.
On 4th June 1456, the town fell into the hands of the Turks. But the Acropolis,
which was reputed impregnable, long held out. In vain the constable of Athens
and some of the citizens offered the castle to Venice through one of the Zorzi
family; the republic ordered the bailie of Negroponte to keep the offer open,
but took no steps to save the most famous fortress of Christendom; in vain he
summoned one Latin prince after another to his aid. From the presence of an
Athenian ambassador at the Neapolitan court, we may infer that Alfonso V of
Aragon, the titular “Duke of Athens”, was among their number. Demetrios Asan,
lord of Palaio-Mouchli, who was Franco’s father-in-law, was also endeavouring
to dispose of his city to Venice at this time, so that he could not help his
kinsman; and the papal fleet, which was despatched to the Aegean, did not even
put into the Piraeus. Meanwhile, Omar, after a vain attempt to seduce the
garrison from its allegiance, reminded Franco that sooner or later he must
restore Athens to the sultan who gave it. “Now, therefore,” added the Turkish
commander, “if thou wilt surrender the Acropolis, His Majesty offers thee the
land of Boeotia, with the city of Thebes, and will allow thee to take away the
wealth of the Akropolis and thine own property”. Franco only waited till
Mohammed had confirmed the offer of his subordinate, and then quitted the
castle of Athens, with his wife and his three sons, for ever. At the same time,
his uncle, Nerozzo Pitti, was deprived by the Turks of his Athenian property,
his castle of Sykaminon, and his island of Panaia, or Canaia, the ancient
Pyrrha, opposite the mouth of the Maliac Gulf, and retired penniless to a
Theban castle, with his wife and eleven children. As compensation for these
losses, the Florentine Government allowed him to sell his house in Florence,
which was all that he had left; many others, like him, were ruined and exiled.
The last Latin Archbishop of Athens, Niccolb Protimo of Euboea, quitted the
Akropolis with the duke; he was assigned the possessions of the Latin Patriarchate
in his native island; in 1461 he was consoled for the loss of his see by the
archbishopric of Lepanto, which he held to his death in 1483, and even then the
popes continued to confer the phantom title of Archbishop of Athens on
absentees. It was not till 1875 that a Catholic archbishop again resided at
Athens.
Such was the state of affairs when Mohammed II, having
punished the Despots of the Morea, arrived at Athens in the early autumn of
1458. His biographer, the Greek Kritoboulos, who became governor of his native
island of Imbros under the Turkish dispensation, tells us that this cultured
sultan, who knew Greek, and whom he audaciously describes as “a philhellene”,
was filled with desire to behold “the mother of the philosophers”, as a Turkish
historian calls Athens. Mohammed had heard and read much about the wisdom and
marvellous works of the ancient Athenians; we may surmise that Cyriacus of
Ancona had told him of the Athenian monuments when he was employed as a reader
to His Majesty at the siege of Constantinople. He longed to visit the places
where the heroes and sages of classic Athens had walked and talked, and at the
same time to examine with a statesman’s eye the position of the city and the
Condition of its harbours. When he arrived at the gates, if we may believe a
much later tradition, the abbot of Kaisariano handed to him the keys of the
city, in return for which he ordered that the famous Byzantine monastery at the
foot of Hymettos, which had enjoyed complete fiscal exemption under the Latins,
should never pay more than one sequin to the Turkish governor. There is nothing
improbable in the tradition, for the abbot was probably the most important
Greek ecclesiastic left at Athens, the Metropolitan Isidore, a friend of
Phrantzes, having fled to the Venetian island of Tenos, where his tomb was
discovered near the foundations of the famous Evangelistria church some sixty
years ago. The sultan spent four days in admiring the monumentsand in visiting
the harbours of this new possession, “of all the cities in his Empire the
dearest to him”, as the Athenian Chalkokondiles proudly says. But of all that
he saw, he admired most the Akropolis, whose ancient and recent buildings he
examined “with the eyes of a scholar, a philhellene, and a great sovereign”.
Like Pedro IV of Aragon before him, he was proud to possess such a jewel, and
in his enthusiasm he exclaimed: “How much, indeed, do we not owe to Omar, the
son of Turakhan!”
The conquered Athenians once again were saved by their
ancestors. Like his Roman prototype, Mohammed II treated them humanely, though
he carried off many of their women and children to his seraglio, he granted all
their petitions, and gave them many and various privileges. The contemporary
historians do not tell us of what these privileges consisted; but there were Athenians in the seventeenth century who could show
patents of fiscal exemption, granted to their
ancestors by the conqueror. It is not improbable that the local Greek
authorities, the so-called “elders of the people”, of whom we found a trace
under the rule of the Acciajuoli, and who are often mentioned in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, were recognised by Mohammed. It is probable, too, that the same statesmanlike
sovereign, who converted the oecumenical patriarch into a useful instrument of
his far-sighted policy, favoured the re-establishment of the Orthodox Church in
the position of the leading Christian denomination at Athens. At any rate,
while the Uniate Archbishop shared the fate of his Catholic colleague, we find a metropolitan of Athens resident there a generation
after the Turkish Conquest, and another is mentioned as taking part in ecclesiastical
business at Constantinople in 1465. But, if the last Latin Archbishop of Athens was turned out of his noble cathedral as soon as the Turks
became masters of the Akropolis, the Parthenon was not for long restored to the
Greek Church. It has, indeed, been assumed from
the practice of the Turks at Constantinople and elsewhere, that the most
important church of Athens was immediately devoted to the worship of Allah. But
two writers subsequent to the capture of Athens, the anonymous author of 1458
and the anonymous author of 1466, both distinctly allude to the Parthenon as
still a church. Possibly it may have
been part of the wise policy of Mohammed to conciliate the Greeks and further
estrange them from the Latins by allowing them to resume, for a time at least, the use of their noble cathedral.
However that may be, ere long it was
converted into a mosque, called in the early part of the seventeenth century, the Ismazdi, or “house of prayer”,
and soon from the tapering minaret, which rose above it, the muezzin summoned the faithful to worship. A like fate
befell the church which had served as the
orthodox cathedral during the Frankish domination. This church, now the military bakery, received in honour of the sultan’s visit, the name of Fethijeh Jamisi, or “mosque of the conqueror”, and still preserves the
traces of the purpose to which it was put. In its place the orthodox adopted as
their “Katholikon”, or metropolitan church, that of St Panteleimon, which stood
in the square where the public auctions are now held. It was a tradition in the
seventeenth century that Mohammed II had also ordered, as a mark of his special
favour for Athens, that the city should not be made the capital of a sandjak, or province, so as to spare it the usual exactions of the
provincial governor’s retinue. But in 1462 there is mention of a subassi of
Athens, and it has therefore been assumed by modern Greek historians, that from
the time of the Conquest down to about 1610 or 1621, the city was governed by
that official, who, after the capture of Negroponte in 1470, was the
subordinate of the pasha of that province. His konak was at the Stoa of
Hadrian, while the disdar-aga, or commander of the garrison, occupied a part of
the palace of the Acciajuoli in the Propylaea, and the Erechtheion served as
his harem.
The anonymous treatise on “The Theatres and Schools of
Athens”, which was probably composed by some Greek at this moment, perhaps to
serve as a vade mecum for the sultan, whose eager enquiries about the meaning
and history of the monuments it may have endeavoured to satisfy, gives us an
interesting, if unscientific, idea of Athens as she was after two and a half
centuries of Frankish rule. The visitor could glean from this curious
guide-book, apparently the work of a local antiquary, the popular names
bestowed by the natives upon the classical monuments. Thus, the choragic
monument of Lysikrates was then, as in the time of Michael Akomindtos, “the
lantern of Demosthenes”, a name still
current in 1672; the Tower of the Winds was supposed to be “the school of Sokrates”, just as the caverns at the
foot of the hill of Philopappos are still known as the philosopher’s prison;
the gate of Athena Archegetis was transformed in common parlance into “the
palace of Themistokles”; the Odeion of Perikles, restored in Roman times, was
shown to visitors as “the school of Aristophanes”, and that of Herodes Atticus
as “the palaces of Kleonides and Miltiades”. Near “the lantern of Demosthenes”
the natives pointed out to the curious stranger the spots where once had stood
the houses of Thucydides, Solon, and Alkmaion. “ The school of Aristotle” was
placed among the ruins of the theatre of
Dionysios, and above it our author mentions the sun-dial and the two pillars of
the choragic monument of Thrasyllos, and repeats the story that a Gorgon’s head was formerly to be seen in an ironbound
niche between them—all of which statements are confirmed by the similar “Description
of Attica”, probably composed about the year 1628. Another “school”, that of
Sophocles, was supposed to have occupied a site to the west of the Akropolis,
while outside the city the anonymous author alludes to the Academy, which he
supposes to have been at Basilika, on the left as one goes down to Phaleron,
and not at Kathemia, near Kolokynthou; to the Eleatic
school at Ambelokepoi; to the Platonic at Patesia (or “Paradeisia”), and to
those of a certain Polyzelos and Diddoros, on Hymettos, whose name the Italians
had corrupted to “Monte Matto”, or “the Mad
Mountain”. Wild as these statements are, they yet contain important
topographical facts. They prove that the ancient deme of Alopeke had already
received its modern designation of Ambelokepoi; that Patesia, whose name has
been erroneously derived from the fact of the “Padishah” having pitched his
headquarters there, was still known by its picturesque name of “Paradeisia”;
and that the old tradition that two of the monasteries on Hymettos—probably
Kaisari- and and Astdri—had once been schools of philosophers, which seems to
have actually been the case at the close of the fourth century, was still
preserved. For the anonymous writer, as for Cyriacus, the Olympieion was the
ruins of a palace, and, like the traveller from Ancona, he mentions three gates
of the city. On the Akropolis he mistook the temple of Nike Apteros for “a
small school of musicians, founded by Pythagoras”; he mentions the Propylaea as
the ducal palace, with the former chancery adjoining it; and he elaborately
describes the “Church of the Mother of God”, the foundation of which he
attributes to Apollos and Eulogios, both patriarchs of Alexandria in the sixth
century. Allusion has already been made to his mention of the ducal villa of
the Acciajuoli at the spring of Kallirrhoe, and to the neighbouring chapel,
where they were wont to pray. This chapel had now been converted by “the pious”
Greeks into an orthodox church of St Mary’s on the Rock. Perhaps the most
curious tradition preserved in this pamphlet is the incident taken from the apocryphal
“Acts of St Philip”. The apostle — such was the legend — had spent two years at
Athens, whither the scribe of the Chief Priest of Jerusalem followed him to
controvert what he said. At last, the apostolic patience failed, and in the
midst of the Athenian Agora the saint caused the earth to open and swallow up
his irreverent adversary. A church of St Philip was founded to commemorate the
event, and this church, completely restored in our own generation, still
preserves, together with the quarter to which it has given its name, the quaint
mediaeval legend of the apostle and the scribe. Thus, at the close of the
Frankish domination, the ciceroni of Athens had identified their city with some
of the most famous names, alike of pagan and of Christian story.
On the fifth day after his arrival, the heir of these
great men left Athens for Boeotia, examining with his usual minute care all the
places of interest, and obtaining information about them. From Thebes—the abode
of his vassal Franco—he sent a message to the terrified bailie of Negroponte
that he proposed to visit that city on the following day. When he reached the
summit of the Pass of Anephorites, he paused for a quarter of an hour, as many
a traveller has done since, to admire the magnificent situation of the great
island. Spread out like a map at his feet —the narrow channel of the Euripos,
with its oft-changing tide, more like a river than an arm of the sea, the
picturesque fortress, which then stood in midstream, and the bridge which
connected the city of Negroponte with the continent. The islanders, alarmed at
the force of a thousand cavalry which accompanied him, thought that their last
hour had come; they picked up sufficient courage, however, to go out to meet
him with rich gifts in their hands; the sultan received them affably, rode
across the bridge, and spied out for himself the possibilities of capturing the
place. The information which he then gleaned was put to good use when, twelve
years later, he besieged the city. Then, the same day, 2nd September, he
returned to Thebes, whence he departed on the morrow for Macedonia. His
trembling vassal must have heaved a sigh of relief when this terrible visitor
was gone.
Scarcely, however, had he left Greece than
disturbances again broke out in the Morea. In October, the sultan had sent one
of his officials to complete the formalities of the recent peace, to receive
the oaths of the two Despots, and to demand from Demdtrios the hand of his only
child, Helene, and from Thomas the cession of the castles which he had not yet
transferred to the sultan’s commissioner. Thomas complied with this demand;
Demdtrios sent Matthew Asan to ask Mohammed for the islands of Lemnos and
Imbros in return for his daughter and his principality. According to another
account, Asan was instructed to ask the sultan for aid against Thomas, who
seemed to be constitutionally incapable of learning by experience, and who,
early in 1459, committed the double mistake of attacking his brother and
revolting against his suzerain.
The crafty and ambitious officials who infested the
two petty courts of the Morea, among them the veteran intriguer, Loukanes, “the
curse of the Peloponnesians”, as Phrantzes calls him, fanned the smouldering
embers of fraternal hatred; some of the Albanian chiefs, impatient of Turkish
rule and anxious to imitate the deeds of their great countryman, Skanderbeg,
joined with these Greek counsellors in inciting Thomas to “eat his oaths, as if
they were vegetables”. The connivance of Omar, the Turkish governor, was
suspected, and the sultan suspended him from both his Peloponnesian and
Thessalian commands, and despatched Hamsa Zenevisi, “the carrier of falcons”, a
renegade Albanian, to succeed him in the Morea. Hamsa’s first act was to arrest
Omar and the latter’s father-in-law Ahmed; his next to relieve the Turkish
garrison of Patras, which was besieged by Thomas’s men. The successes of the
latter at the expense of the Turks were confined to the capture of Kalavryta,
for Corinth and the other places which Loukanes had promised to win by
treachery remained true to the sultan. Demetrios, however, lost one strong
place after another: Karytaina and St George in Arkadia, Bordonia and Kastritza,
near Sparta, Kalamata, Zarnata, Leuktron, and most of Maina; but the commanders
of some of these castles, instead of taking the oath to his rival, simply
proclaimed their own independence, thus yet further weakening the unhappy
country, while the Albanians, bent on plunder, increased the confusion by
changing sides “thrice a week”, and deserting now Thomas, now Demetrios, as it
suited their purpose. Thomas, however, continued to hold his own; he
forestalled his less active brother in an attempt to capture the important town
of Leondari, and the latter withdrew to his capital of Mistra. But the Turkish
troops now arrived at Leondari from Patras, easily threw into confusion the
forces of Thomas, who was more skilled at palace intrigues than at strategy,
and blockaded the Despot in the town, where fever and famine soon made their
appearance. Hampered, however, by the number of his captives, the Turkish
commander raised the siege, and, leaving one of his lieutenants to support his
ally Demetrios at Mistra, repaired to the sultan to ask for reinforcements.
Thus, Thomas was free to resume the offensive against the Turkish garrisons. A
gleam of common sense or a pang of conscience prompted him to desist, at least
for a little, from attacking his brother; in the church at Kastritza he met
Demetrios; the Metropolitan of Lacedaemonia, clad in his episcopal cope, the
symbol of justice, celebrated the Holy Eucharist with all the impressive rites
of the Orthodox Church; and when, in the noble language of the liturgy of St
Chrysostom, he bade the
people “draw nigh in the fear
of God, and with
faith and love”, the two brothers approached together, and swore on the Holy
Sacrament to keep the peace.
But even the most solemn oaths had long ceased to bind the consciences of the two Palaiologoi. They
were soon engaged in a fresh fratricidal war,
the one relying on Turkish aid, the other on a body of 300 Italian foot soldiers sent by Bianca Visconti, Duchess
of Milan, and by Pius II, who wrote to the
rulers of Europe that “almost all the Morea had risen against the Turks”, and pointed out that the
peninsula was the bulwark of Christendom against the
infidels. The sultan ordered Zagan Pasha, a Christian renegade of marked
ability, whom he had promoted to be governor of the provinces of Thessaly and the Morea, to attack Thomas. Zagan
entered the peninsula in March 1460, raised the siege
of Achaia, near Patras, which the Despot was bombarding, and compelled him to retreat to the south of Messenia. Finding his military
operations unsuccessful and his Italian mercenaries dispersed, Thomas now
begged for peace, which Mohammed, anxious to chastise the Turkoman chief, Usun Has&n, in Asia,
was willing to grant, on condition that the Despot restored any Turkish forts
which he had taken, that he withdrew his troops from any which they were besieging, that he agreed to pay at once a tribute of 3000 gold pieces, and promised to appear in person before the Turkish envoy at Corinth within twenty days’ time. Thomas was prepared to accept these terms, but, as his subjects declined to contribute the money, he was unable to pay. This
final breach of his engagements so infuriated Mohammed, that he postponed his intended expedition into Asia, and set out in May
1460 to make short work with both Despots. He waited
three days at Corinth for the arrival of Demetrios; but the latter, who had been blockaded with his family by his brother in Monemvasia, sent his brother-in-law, Matthew Asan, in his stead with
valuable presents to pacify the sultan, to whom he had omitted to send his daughter Helene, as
stipulated. Mohammed,
however, was not to be
pacified; he ordered Asan under arrest, and, instead of entering the territory of Thomas, his open enemy, he despatched Mahmoud Pasha with all speed to Mistra, whither Demetrios had gone
in consequence of the hostilities which his brother was carrying on from
Kalamata. Demetrios, on finding his capital surrounded by the Turks, resolved
to shut himself up in the fine old castle; but when he learnt that his
brother-in-law was a prisoner, he agreed to obey the summons to surrender, if
he received a written guarantee by the hand of the latter. Mahmoud at once
released Asan and sent him, as desired, together with Hamsa Zenevisi, in whom
the Despot had confidence, to accept his surrender. One Greek historian
suggests that the whole affair was a comedy carefully arranged beforehand, and
that Demetrios was not sorry of an excuse for getting rid of his irksome
sovereignty in the Morea in return for compensation elsewhere. But, however
that may be, Mohammed, who arrived on the morrow, received him with the honour
due to a descendant of emperors, rose from his seat as the trembling Despot
entered his tent, offered him his right hand, gave him a place at his side, and
endeavoured to reassure his fears by splendid gifts and still more splendid
promises. But none the less he treated him as a prisoner, he gave him clearly
to understand that Greek rule at Mistra was now at an end, and appointed Hamsa
Zenevisi governor of that famous city, which had for all but two hundred years
been the capital of the Byzantine province. At the same time, the sultan
reiterated his claim to the hand of the Despot’s daughter, who, with her
mother, was still sheltering at Monemvasia. Isa, son of the Pasha of Uskub, and
Matthew Asan, were accordingly sent to demand the surrender of the city and of
the two princesses. The Monemvasiotes handed over the imperial ladies to the
envoys of the sultan and the Despot; but, relying on their immense natural
defences, animated by the sturdy spirit of independence which had so long
distinguished them, and inspired by the example of their governor, Manuel
Palaiologos, they bade them tell Mohammed not to lay sacrilegious hands on a city
which God had meant to be invincible. The sultan is reported to have admired
their courage and wisely refrained from attacking the impregnable fastness of
mediaeval Hellenism. On 30th May, he placed the daughter of Demdtrios in his
seraglio, and despatched her with her mother, under charge of an eunuch, to Boeotia,
whither Demetrios himself was shortly sent to join them. Meanwhile he
accompanied his captor. At this the governor of Monemvasia transferred his
allegiance to Thomas; but the latter, himself a fugitive and soon an exile, was
incapable of maintaining his sovereignty. A passing Catalan corsair, one Lope
de Baldaja, was then invited to occupy the place; but the liberty-loving
inhabitants soon drove out the petty tyrant whom they had summoned to their aid
; and, with the consent of Thomas, placed their city under the protection of
his patron, the pope. Pius II. gladly appointed both spiritual and temporal
governors of the rock which had so long been the stronghold of orthodoxy.
Having thus wiped the province of Demdtrios from the
map, the sultan turned his arms against Thomas. Bordonia was abandoned at his
approach by its cowardly archons; but the strong fortress of Kastritza, built
on a sheer rock, and approached by a single entrance, and that fortified by a
triple wall, for a time defied the assault of the janissaries. Urged on by
promises of plunder, they returned to the attack, drove the garrison back into
the Akropolis, and forced them from sheer exhaustion and lack of water to
surrender on terms. In flagrant violation of this solemn convention, Mohammed
beheaded or impaled all the male survivors, to the number of 300, ordered the
local chief, Proinokokkos, to be flayed alive, enslaved the women and children,
and levelled the castle with the ground. Leondari he found deserted by its
inhabitants, who had taken refuge in the almost impregnable stronghold of
Gardiki. After in vain offering them terms, he ordered his men to attack the
place, which resisted for no more than a single day, for the heat was intense
and the crowd of fugitives was so great that both water and provisions ran
short. Here, again, Mohammed violated his oath to spare the lives of those who
surrendered; he collected the men, women, and children together in a small
plain to the number of 6000, bound them hand and foot, and then ordered them to
be massacred in cold blood, The chief men of the place, who belonged to the
family of Bochales, escaped the general fate, thanks to the intercession of the
Beglerbeg Mahmoud, who was connected with them by marriage, and made their way
to Naples. The surrender of Gardiki was promptly followed by that of the castle
of St George, whose governor, Korkodeilos Klados, lived to head an insurrection
against the Turks some years later. One place after another now opened its
gates to the invaders— Kyparissia, till lately the residence of the Despot
Thomas; Karytaina; Androusa and Ithome; from the first of these cities and its
fertile neighbourhood, the garden of Greece, no less than 10,000 people were dragged
off to Constantinople. Meanwhile, Thomas had made no attempt to defend his
dominions. On the news of the sultan’s advent at Mistra, he had shut himself up
in the sea-coast town of Mantineia on the Messenian Gulf, whence he could
easily escape in case of need. Seeing that all was lost, and that Venetian
territory alone remained safe, he now set out for Navarino. But Mohammed began
to inspect the Messenian colonies of Venice, as he had inspected Negroponte ;
as he drew nearer, the Venetian authorities urged Thomas not to involve them in
diplomatic difficulties by remaining defiantly in their station of Navarino,
and offered him two ships on which to make his escape. The terrified Despot
thereupon fled to Marathos, and on the same day that the sultan came in sight
of Navarino, set sail with his wife and family and with some of his nobles from
the neighbouring harbour of Porto Longo for Corfu. There he arrived on 28th
July, where, five days later, the faithful PhrantzSs joined him. Neither ever
saw the Morea again.
The Venetians had good cause to fear that the anger of
the sultan would now fall upon their colony. They were, it is true, at peace
with Mohammed, but he had just shown his disregard of international law by
killing some of the people of Modon who had come out to him with a flag of
truce, and by annexing some Venetian villages on the ground that they had
belonged to the Greeks and were therefore his. The authorities of Navarino
accordingly hastened to renew the treaty with the conqueror and endeavoured to
mollify him by the offer of hospitality—an offer which did not restrain his
horsemen from making an incursion into the town and slaying a number of
Albanians from the surrounding districts. Then the sultan marched away to the
North, accompanied by Matthew Asan, while Demdtrios, for whom Mohammed had no
further use, was sent to join his family in Bceotia. Meanwhile, Zagan Pasha had
been busily occupied in the west of the peninsula. Chloumoutsi fell; and
Santameri, the famous castle of Nicholas III de St Omer, which was held by some
Albanians, and in which most of the neighbours had deposited all their
valuables, surrendered on terms. Next day, however, the Illyrian apostate broke
the convention, slew many of the inhabitants, and enslaved the rest—an act of
treachery which was also a political blunder, for it inspired the other
garrisons, which still held out, with the courage of despair. Zagan might plead
that he was only imitating his master, for Mohammed had ordered the flaying of
his old Albanian opponent Doxas, or Doxies, now captain of Kalavryta, who had
played fast and loose with both Greeks and Turks. But the sultan saw his
officer’s mistake, and at once tried to undo it by depriving Zagan of his
command, and by ordering the release of the captives of Santameri. This politic
act had the desired result; most of the forts round Patras hastened to
surrender; and when the sultan arrived there almost the only place which still
held out was Salmenikon, a very strong mountain fortress between Patras and Vostitza
defended by Graitzas Palaioldgos, who if not a genuine son of the imperial
race, proved himself far worthier of the name than the two miserable Despots.
This courageous soldier paid no heed to the sultan’s summons to capitulate; in
vain the Turkish gunners bombarded the place, in vain the janissaries marched
to the assault. After a seven days’ siege, the enemy, however, cut off the
water supply, and the lower town, crowded with Greek and Albanian fugitives,
then surrendered; some 6000 captives swelled the train of the conqueror, who
set aside the promising boys for his corps of janissaries, and distributed the
others among his captains. Still Palaiologos held the Akropolis of the town,
and declined to yield unless the sultan would move a stage away from it.
Mohammed agreed, and marched down to Vostitza, leaving Hamsa Zenevisi, whom he
had appointed in Zagan’s room, to take over the place. But, after the lesson of
Santameri, the Greek commander had little confidence in Turkish oaths; he
therefore resolved to make a preliminary trial of Hamsa’s sincerity, and sent
out a detachment of the garrison laden with baggage, to see whether the Turks
would allow them a free passage. The temptation to attack and plunder them
proved too strong for the Pasha; he broke his sovereign’s pledge, with the
result that Palaioldgos refused to surrender. The angry sultan now re-appointed
Zagan governor of Thessaly and the Morea, but Salmenikon still held out. At
last, in 1461, after a year’s siege, the gallant commander capitulated, and
made his way, with all the honours of war, into Venetian territory at Lepanto.
Such was the admiration which he inspired in his opponents, that the Grand
Vizier Mahmoud was heard to exclaim: “I found many slaves in the Morea, but
this was the only man.” The Venetian senate received with gladness so
courageous a soldier, and appointed him commander of all the light horse of the
republic. It is from him that the Athenian Palaiologoi, of whom we hear a
century later, were perhaps descended.
From Vostitza the sultan set out to Corinth, by way of
Lake Pheneos and Phlious. Treacherous to the last, he issued a proclamation
granting a full pardon to all who would lay down their arms and provide his
soldiers with provisions, and then seized those who trusted him. Phlious he
thought it necessary to overrun, because the Albanians had collected all their
belongings there, and had been followed by many kindred spirits, who were ready
to revolt at a signal from them. Then, leaving Zagan behind him to make a tour
of the conquered Morea and to re-organise a government, Mohammed recrossed the
isthmus in the late summer of 1460. His campaign had been a complete success.
He had finally destroyed the last vestiges of Greek rule in the peninsula, and
had annexed the whole of it to the Turkish Empire, save where the Venetian
banner still waved over the colonies of Nauplia, Argos, and Thermisi, Coron,
Modon, and Navarino, and where Monemvasia acknowledged the sway of the pope.
His Greek biographer tells us that nearly 250 forts had fallen before him, and
he had carried off. thousands of the inhabitants, including many of the men of
wealth, to Constantinople—the adults to repopulate his capital, the boys to serve in the corps of janissaries. The rest of the leading men fled to the Venetian colonies, and thus
the country, deprived of its natural leaders, lay at the feet of the conqueror.
The fate of the Palaiologoi deserves the notice which
mankind usually bestows upon sovereigns in exile. Demetrios received from
Mohammed the islands of Imbros and Lemnos, which his friend, the historian Kritoboulos,
had been the means of securing for the Turks, together with a portion of Thasos
and Samothrace, and the valuable mart and salt-mines of Aenos. These
possessions, which had belonged to the great Genoese family of Gattilusio,
brought in 600,000 aspers a year, in addition to which Demetrios received an
annuity of 300,000 more from the mint at Adrianople. He was thus able to spend
his time in riotous living and hunting till he was so unfortunate as to incur
the sultan’s anger. If we may believe the story of Phrantzes, a bitter enemy of Matthew Asan, that individual, who had
accompanied his brother-in-law to Aenos, was accused of embezzling money from
the salt-works by the sultan, who not only threatened him with impalement, but
suspected Demetrios of being his accomplice, and deprived him of all his
allowance, except just sufficient to keep body and soul together. A later
writer, however, considers Demetrios to have been the culprit, and says that he
was only saved from execution by the intervention of Mahmoud Pasha. One day,
however, when Mohammed was hunting, he met the poor exile on foot, and was so
deeply moved at the sight that he gave him a sum of 50,000 aspers from the
proceeds of the corn-tax, much less than what he had enjoyed, but still enough
to live on. In 1470 the Despot ended his pitiable career as a monk, David by
name, at Adrianople, and as his daughter never married Mohammed after all —for
the sultan feared that she might poison him— this branch of the family became
extinct.
The sultan was naturally anxious to get Thomas as well
as Demetrios into his clutches, in order to prevent him intriguing with the
Western Powers against the Turkish Empire. He therefore sent an agent to Corfu
with a request that the Despot would depute one of his archons to treat of
peace and to arrange for an appanage, on which Thomas could live. But when the
Despot’s emissary arrived at the sultan’s headquarters with a proposal to
exchange Monem- vasia for another sea-coast place, the latter flung him into
prison, and only released him in order that he might convey to his master
Mohammed’s command that either Thomas or one of his sons should appear in
person. Meanwhile, Thomas had despatched George Raoul to seek the aid of Pope
Pius II, and on 16th November, 1460, set out for Ancona, accompanied by most of
his magnates, and bearing the head of St Andrew, which had so long been
preserved at Patras. The relic was a valuable asset, for many princes offered
large sums for it, and its possessor had no difficulty in disposing of it to
the pope in return for an annuity. The precious relic was deposited for safety
in the castle of Narni, while Thomas proceeded to Rome, where Pius II bestowed
on him the Golden Rose, the symbol of virtue, a lodging in the Santo Spirito
Hospital, and an allowance of 300 gold pieces a month, to which the cardinals
added 200 more—a sum which his followers considered barely enough for his
maintenance, and certainly not enough for theirs. Venice, indeed, contributed a
sum of 500 ducats to his treasury, and concluded a treaty with him against the
Turks, but there were no practical results of this alliance. Meanwhile, on 12th
April, 1462, the day after Palm Sunday, Pius II. received the head of St Andrew
at the Ponte Milvio, on the spot where the little chapel of that Apostle with
its commemorative inscription now stands. Cardinal Bessarion handed the case
containing it to the pope, who bade the sacred skull welcome among its
relatives, the Romans, “the nephews of St Peter” —a ceremony depicted on the
tomb of the Pontiff in Sant’ Andrea della Valle. Shortly afterwards, the
Despot’s wife, who had remained with her family at Corfu, died and was buried
in the church of SS. Jason and Sosipater, whereupon Thomas summoned his two
sons and his
daughter Zoe to join him. But before they arrived, he died, on 12th May 1465, and was buried in the crypt of St Peter’s; but so completely has this scion of an
imperial race been forgotten that no one knows his
grave; yet every visitor to Rome unconsciously gazes
on his features, for on account of his tall and
handsome appearance he served as a model for the statue of St Paul, which still stands at the steps of St
Peter’s.
The family of Palaiologos was now represented by his two sons and his two daughters. The elder daughter, Helene, widow of the last Despot of Servia, resided at the court of her son-in-law, Leonardo III, at Sta. Mavra, and a local legend, devoid of historical accuracy, ascribes to her the erection
of the church
whence the town received its
name, in gratitude for
the deliverance of herself and her daughter from shipwreck on 3rd May, the day of Sta. Mavra. There she died as the nun Hypomone in 1474,
leaving two other daughters, one of whom died childless,
while the third married the son of the Albanian
hero, Skanderbeg, in whose descendants,
and in those of the Tocchi, there thus flowed the
blood of the Palaiologoi. Thomas’s younger daughter, Zoe, or Sophia, was married first to a Caracciolo, and then to the Grand
Duke Ivan III of Russia, to whom she brought a dowry of 6000 gold pieces, provided by Pope Sixtus IV, —an event commemorated by one of the
paintings in the Santo Spirito Hospital. With
her daughter, the wife of Alexander Jagellon of Poland, the female line
came to an end. The two sons do not seem to
have profited much by the strict injunctions which Bessarion had laid down for their education. The elder, Andrew, who bore the empty title of Despot, which we find on his seals,3 and continued to draw his father’s
allowance from the pope, fell into dissolute habits, and married a woman, named
Catherine, off the streets of Rome, by
whom he had no children. In such company, and with scarcely a rag to
clothe his limbs, he aroused the pity or contempt of
the Romans. His annuity was reduced; he had to take a back place at papal ceremonies. Once
he was seized with the idea of recovering the Morea with Neopolitan aid, and
induced Sixtus IV to give him 2000 gold pieces for the purpose; but in 1494 he ceded
all his rights to Charles VIII of France, and in his last will and testament in
1502, he left Ferdinand and Isabella of Castille his heirs. In that year he
died in Rome in such great misery that his widow had to beg his funeral
expenses from the pope. His younger brother, Manuel, a man of more spirit,
preferred the risk of death at the hands of the sultan to the prospect of starving
at the papal court. But to his surprise Mohammed gave him an establishment and
a daily sum for its maintenance. He remained a Christian, as did his elder son,
who died young; but his second son, Andrew, became a Mussulman and is last
heard of as Mohammed Pasha in the reign of Suleyman the Magnificent. Though the
family of the Despots of the Morea would thus appear to have been long extinct,
a Cornish antiquary announced in 1815 that the church of Landulph contained a
monument to one of Thomas’s descendants. But this claim is genealogically
unsound, for there is no historical proof of the existence of the supposed
third son of the Despot, mentioned in the brass plate at Landulph. But after
all, the world has not lost much by the extinction of the race, which, if it
vainly tried to save Constantinople by an act of heroism, foolishly lost the
Morea by its dissensions.
The faithful retainers of the Palaiologoi, disgusted
at the prospects offered them in Rome, scattered all over Europe. Many followed
the Grand Duchess Sophia to Russia, where they became absorbed in the Muscovite
nobility ; some went to France; others to Venice or Palermo; others again, like
Nicholas Melissends, the fiance of Phrantzes’s daughter, to Crete. The
historian had declined to accompany his master to Rome; he remained in Corfu,
moving from one village to another, till he finally settled down in the monastery
of SS. Jason and Sosipater. A visit to the Despot Andrew in Rome at the time of
his sister’s first engagement, and a summons from the widowed Princess of
Servia to the court of Leonardo Tocco at Sta. Mavra, broke the monotony of his
life. At last, the busy diplomatist, his career closed, became a monk, under
the name of Gregorios, and in his silent cell occupied himself with composing,
at the request of some noble Corfiotes, the story of his troublous times, till
at last he was laid to rest by the side of his master’s consort in the quiet
church at Kastrodes. Phrantzes did not write without anger or bias; but he has
given us a living picture of the leading actors in the tragic drama in which he
too had played a part. And to-day, beside the tomb of mediaeval Greece’s last
contemporary historian, the friend of the young Greek kingdom may meditate on
the causes which for nearly four centuries placed the Greeks beneath the sway
of the Turks.
The fall of the two Greek principalities in the Morea
was closely followed by the destruction of the fragments that remained of the
duchy of Athens. On his way back from the peninsula in 1460, Mohammed II
revisited Athens and reinspected the old city and the harbours. Unfortunately,
the janissaries stationed on the Acropolis told him that some Athenians had
conspired to restore Franco. The sultan not only arrested ten of the richest
citizens and took them away to Constantinople, but resolved to rid himself of
his former favourite. Franco, as the man of the Turk, was at the moment serving
with his Boeotian cavalry in Mohammed’s camp, and received orders from his
suzerain to join in the attack which was about to be made on Leonardo III Tocco
in western Greece. The “Lord of Thebes” so strongly objected to being compelled
to fight against his fellow-Christians, that, though he received as large
revenues from Thebes and Livadia as he had ever had from Athens, he had written
to Francesco Sforza of Milan offering his services as a condottiere for the sum
of 10,000 ducats a year. He was forced, however, to obey the sultan’s orders,
and, after defeating Tocco, repaired to the headquarters of Zagan, the governor
of the Morea. Zagan had meanwhile been told by Mohammed to kill him. The Pasha
invited him to his tent, and detained him in conversation till nightfall; then,
as the unsuspecting Franco was on his way back to his own tent, the Pasha’s
guards strangled him. Such was the sorry ending of the last “Lord of Thebes”.
Thereupon, Mohammed annexed Thebes and all Boeotia, and thus obliterated the
last trace of the Frankish duchy of Athens from the map. Franco’s three sons,
Matteo, Jacopo, and Gabriele, with their mother, were taken to Constantinople
and enrolled in the corps of janissaries, where one of them afterwards showed
military and administrative ability of so high an order as to win the favour of
his sovereign. Their mother, a daughter of Demetrios Asan of Mouchli, and famed
for her beauty, became the cause of a terrible tragedy, which convulsed alike
court and church. George Amoiroutses, the former minister and betrayer of the
last Emperor ofTrebizond, fell desperately in love with the fair widow, to whom
he addressed impassioned verses, and swore, though he had a wife still living,
to marry her or die. The oecumenical patriarch forbade the bans, and lost his
beard and his office rather than yield to the sultan. But swift retribution
fell upon the bigamist, for he dropped down dead, a dice-box in his hand.
Though the Acciajuoli dynasty had thus fallen for
ever, members of that great family still remained in Greece. An Acciajuoli was
made civil governor of the old Venetian colony of Coron, in Messenia, when the
Spaniards captured it from the Turks in 1532. When they abandoned it, he accompanied
them, but was captured by an Algerine pirate, who sold him as a slave to a
Greek. Eventually he was resold to a Spaniard, only to die in poverty at
Naples, where his race had first risen to eminence, and where it became
extinct. At the beginning of the last century the French traveller, Pouqueville,
was shown at Athens a donkey-driver named Neri, in whose veins flowed the blood
of the Florentine dukes; and the modern historian of Christian Athens,
Neroutsos, used to contend that his family was descended from Nerozzo Pitti,
lord of Sykaminon and uncle of the last duke of Athens. In Florence the family
became extinct only so recently as 1834; and the Certosa and the Lung’ Arno
Acciajuoli still preserve its memory there. In the Florence gallery, too, are
two coloured portraits of the dukes of Athens, which would seem to be those of
Nerio I. and the bastard Antonio I. In that case, the Florentine dukes of
Athens are the only Frankish rulers of Greece, except the palatine counts of
Cephalonia, whose likeness has been preserved to posterity.
Thus ended the strange connection between Florence and
Athens. A titular duke of Athens had become tyrant of the Florentines, a
Florentine merchant had become Duke of Athens ; but the age when French and
Italian adventurers could find an El Dorado on the poetic soil of Greece was
over.
The Turkish conquest of continental Greece was completed
by the campaign against Leonardo III Tocco, in which the unhappy Franco had
been forced to take part. For several years, in spite of an occasional dispute
with his Venetian protectors, the Duke of Leucadia had enjoyed peace in his
islands, while the three points which he still held on the mainland remained
unmolested by his Turkish neighbours. But he was so patriotic or so impolitic
as to second Skanderbeg in his rising against the Turks, and this brought down
upon him the vengeance of the sultan. According to one account, he was taken
prisoner at Corinth, whence he escaped by the aid of a corsair to Sta. Mavra;
but he lost the last of his continental possessions, except the strong fortress
of Vonitza on the Ainbrakian Gulf. When, three years later, he heard that
Venice was preparing to recover the Morea from the Turks, he begged the aid of
the republic, whose honorary citizen he was, in reconquering the old Despotat
of Arta, where he still possessed many adherents. This scheme, however, came to
nothing.
To complete the picture of continental Greece as she
was at the date of the Turkish Conquest, it remains to describe the condition
of the Venetian colonies. North of the isthmus, Lepanto, for which the republic
continued to pay an annual tribute of 100 gold ducats to the sultan, had
increased in population owing to the immigration of fugitives from the Despotat
of Arta and from the Morea. These immigrants, mostly Albanians, had their own
chief, and obtained exemption from obnoxious corvies on their boats and beasts
of burden. But an earthquake and the cost of repairing the fortifications
unfortunately made it necessary to reduce the garrison and thus diminished
Venetian influence in Epiros.1 Both Lepanto and Pteleon, the
Venetian station at the entrance of the Gulf of Volo, were now surrounded by
the Turkish empire, so that their position was naturally precarious. It had
been decided that the garrison of Pteleon should be Italian, and that a citizen
of Eubcea who knew Greek and was acquainted with Thessaly should be its rector,
and, as we saw, the post was held for seven years by Niccold Zorzi, son of the
last Marquis of Boudonitza; but after his time, the old system of appointing a governor
direct from Venice was adopted. The five-mile frontage on the mainland opposite
Euboea is mentioned as still belonging to Venice in 1439, but its cultivation
was of doubtful advantage to the islanders, because, though corn could now be
exported in large quantities, their peasants were constantly surprised while at
work by the Turks.
Of the great island itself the republic had been
practically absolute mistress ever since the disappearance of the Dalle Carceri
and Ghisi families towards the end of the last century. When the three great
baronies then became vacant, the Venetian bailie disposed of them as seemed
most to the interest of his Government, bestowing the third of the Ghisi upon a
number of small holders, and the two- thirds of the Dalle Carceri upon Januli
d’Anoe, whose family retained its share till the Turkish Conquest, and upon
Maria Sanudo, whose share descended to the Sommaripa of Paros. But all these
feudal lords, like the Zorzi of Karystos, were the creatures of the republic,
and the real governor of the island was the Venetian bailie. All the fortresses
in D’Anoe’s barony, for example, were garrisoned by Venetian troops; it was to
Venice that his vassals appealed for justice, and every four months the baron
himself was bound to present himself at Negroponte with two good horses and an
esquire. Next to the republic, the most important person in the
colony was the titular patriarch of Constantinople, a dignity still connected
with the see of Negroponte. In 1426, we are told that he owned a quarter of the
island and that he had many serfs, but that he shirked his share of the public
burdens. After the peace of 1430 between Venice and the sultan, the island
enjoyed a brief revival of prosperity, and the lamentations of the colonists
were less loud. A protective measure to encourage the local wine trade proved
most beneficial, and the famous plain of Lilanto, which a special official, the
potamarch, was bound to keep irrigated, was then called “the life of this
island, the eye and garden of Negroponte”, as it still is. Care, too, was taken
to humour the Jews, who were the chief merchants and who bore the chief burden
of taxation, and their ghetto at the capital was enlarged. Originally, they had
lived outside the city; but they had entered the walls for greater security; in
1358 the ghetto had been assigned to them, and finally, in 1440, their numbers
had so much increased that its boundaries were extended, with the proviso that
if they dwelt beyond a certain tower they would forfeit their houses and be
banished for ever. Orders, too, were given that the ghettos at Karystos and
Oreos were to be repaired, that the law should be equal for them and the
Christians, and that the public hangman should no longer be chosen from among
them. But there were signs that the island was declining. The harbours of
Negroponte and Karystos became choked with sand; the walls needed repair; the
plague made such havoc, that the vassals of Karystos were reduced to between
two and three thousand; Catalan corsairs still infested the coasts; the
Albanian immigrants were becoming restive; and the Turks, after a long
interval, resumed their operations, so that the captain of the bridge was
ordered to pass the night there. Then came the alarming news of the destruction
of Christian rule in Constantinople and on the mainland, and the scare of
Mohammed II’s visit. Taxes were hastily remitted to pacify the islanders, and
the Home Government became seriously alarmed about the island, “on the possession
of which depends the maintenance of our sea-power”, as they wrote to the
bailie.
It is to the closing years of Venetian rule in
Negroponte that we owe the copy of the Book
of the Customs of the Empire of Romania, to which allusion was made in the
third chapter. In 1421 a commission of twelve citizens was ordered to be
elected for the purpose of drawing up in a single volume the laws and customs
prevalent in the Latin Orient. The work was not finished till thirty years
later, when the last Latin Archbishop of Athens, Niccold Protimo, himself a
native of the island, was entrusted with the collation of the completed copy
sent from Negroponte with that preserved in the chancery at Venice. It was then
found that the Eubcean code contained 147 more articles than the Venetian, and
of these only 37 were approved. The code, as we have it, consists of 219
articles with 8 extra articles added by Nicholas de Joinville, bailie of Achaia
more than a century earlier, and is written in the Venetian dialect.
South of the isthmus, the two groups of Venetian
colonies in Argolis and in Messenia had suffered considerably, as we saw, from
the disturbed state of the peninsula, now from the Despots and now from the
Turks. The population of Nauplia had been increased by a settlement of
Albanians, and a band of gypsies had been encamped there as far back as the end
of the fourteenth century under a chief, or drungarius, to whom special
privileges were granted. But the local aristocracy claimed the exclusive right
to hold the various offices, as of yore, and complained of the condition of the
walls and the riotous behaviour of the light horsemen in the suite of the
governor.2 At Modon and Coron the treatment of the serfs was the
most important question at this period; they complained that they had to
provide straw and grass for the horses of the governor, and to lend their own
animals for his hunting-parties; and they were subject to a corvee, or
parapiasmo, as it was called, of two days a month; but they seem to have
prospered under Venetian rule, for there were rich peasants among them who were
willing to pay a large sum for enfranchisement. The Greek bishop was now
allowed to live in the town of Coron, instead of some miles outside, and twice
a year the Greek priests and monks paid a tax to the republic. Emigration,
however, was such an evil, that the taxes were lowered in order to encourage
people to live in the colony.
While, all around, principalities were falling, Venice
had, at this eleventh hour, added to her Greek colonies. In 1451, the classic
island of ^Egina, which she had long coveted, became hers. It had been
arranged, twenty-six years before, as we saw, that, when the Caopena family
became extinct, the republic should take their inheritance. In 1451, Antonello
Caopena, son-in-law of the Duke Antonio I of Athens, died without heirs, after
having bequeathed the island to Venice. The islanders welcomed Venetian rule;
the claims of Antonello’s uncle Arna, who had lands in Argolis, where a
mountain still bears his name, were satisfied by a pension, and a Venetian
governor, or rettore, was appointed, who was dependent on the authorities of
Nauplia. After Arne’s death, his son Alioto renewed his claim to the island,
but was told that the republic was firmly resolved to keep it. He and his
family were pensioned, and one of them loyally aided in the defence of TEgina
against the Turks in 1537, was captured with his family, and died in a Turkish
dungeon. Venice, however, ransomed his wife and children, who came and settled
as poor and simple citizens on the lagoons. There they remained till, in 1648,
the last of the race died, as priest of S. Giovanni in Bragora. Such was the
end of the Catalan lords of Aegina.
Two years after the annexation of Aegina, the Venetian
admiral occupied the Northern Sporades —Skyros, Skiathos, and Skopelos— the
original fief of the Ghisi, which had belonged to the Byzantine Empire for
nearly two centuries. Now that that empire had fallen, the islanders were absolutely
defenceless against the attacks of pirates. One party preferred the mild rule
of the Gattilusii of Lesbos, another that of the maona, or Genoese Company,
which ruled over Chios, but the majority favoured a Venetian protectorate, of
which their neighbours in Eubcea had had so long an experience. Accordingly,
they offered their island home to the Venetian admiral, on condition that he
would confirm their ancient privileges and preserve their episcopal see. At
first he hestitated, for three of the four castles of Skyros were now in ruins,
and such an acquisition seemed therefore to be more of an expense than a profit
to his Government. An embassy sent by the natives to the Genoese forced him,
however, to consent, for he knew that Venice would not tolerate her great rival
so near her most important colony. Two Venetian rectors, dependent on the
bailie of Negroponte, were sent to govern the islands, the republic granted
their privileges and heard their petitions, and they remained in her possession
till 1538.
Finally, as we saw, two of the Cyclades, Tenos and
Mykonos, had been under Venetian authority since the extinction of the Ghisi
family in 1390, and had been farmed out to a Venetian citizen, who was
dependent on Negroponte. But the islands were so poor and so thinly inhabited,
that the rent was reduced. Turkish depredations were frequent, and the
islanders complained to the Senate, to which they were faithful even when
misgoverned. In 1430 a governor was accordingly sent direct from Venice, the
two islands were declared independent of Euboea, and the privileges of the
people were confirmed. Still, the most ample franchises could not keep off
Catalan and Turkish corsairs. Thus, in 1460, the dull uniformity of Turkish
rule spread over the land, save where the dukes of the Archipelago and the
Venetian colonies still remained the sole guardians of Western culture, the
only rays of light in the once brilliant Latin Orient.
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