The Siege of Rhodes of 1522 was the second and ultimately successful attempt by the
Ottoman Empire to expel the
Knights of Rhodes from their island stronghold and thereby secure Ottoman control of the
Eastern Mediterranean. The first siege, in 1480, had been unsuccessful.
The Knights of
St. John, or
Knights Hospitallers, had captured
Rhodes in the early
14th century after the loss of
Acre, the last
Crusader stronghold in
Palestine in 1291. From Rhodes, they became an active part of the trade in the
Aegean sea, and at times harassed
Turkish shipping in the Levant to secure control over the eastern
Mediterranean. A first effort by the
Ottomans to capture the island, in 1480, was repulsed by the
Order, but the continuing presence of the knights just off the southern coast of
Anatolia was a major obstacle to Ottoman expansion.
Since the previous siege the fortress had received many upgrades from the new school of trace italienne, which made it much more formidable in resisting artillery
. In the most exposed land-facing sectors, these included a thickening of the main wall, doubling of the width of the dry ditch, coupled with a transformation of the old counterscarp into massive outworks (tenailles), the construction of bulwarks around most towers, and caponiers enfilading the ditch.
Gates were reduced in number, and the old battlement parapets were replaced with slanting ones suitable for artillery fights.
A team of masons, labourers and slaves did the construction work, the
Muslim slaves were charged with the hardest labor.
In 1521,
Philippe Villiers de L'Isle-Adam was elected
Grand Master of the Order. Expecting a new Ottoman attack on Rhodes, he continued to strengthen the city's fortifications, work that had begun after the Ottoman invasion of 1480 and the earthquake of 1481, and called upon the Order's knights elsewhere in
Europe to come to the island's defence. The rest of Europe ignored his request for assistance, but some
Venetian troops from
Crete joined the knights. The city was protected by two and, in some places three, rings of stone walls and several large bastions. The defence of the walls and bastions was assigned in sections to the different Langues into which the knights had been organized since 1301. The harbour entrance was blocked by a heavy iron chain, behind which the Order's fleet was anchored.
When the
Turkish invasion force of 400 ships arrived on Rhodes on 26 June 1522, they were commanded by
Mustafa Pasha.[2]
Sultan Suleiman himself arrived with the army of
100,
000 men on 28 July to take personal charge.
The
Turks blockaded the harbour and bombarded the town with field artillery from the land side, followed by almost daily infantry attacks. They also sought to undermine the fortifications through tunnels and mines. The artillery fire was slow in inflicting serious damage to the massive walls, but after five weeks, on
4 September, two large gunpowder mines exploded under the bastion of
England, causing a 12 yards (11 m) portion of the wall to fall and to fill the moat. The attackers immediately assaulted this breach and soon gained control of it, but a counterattack by the
English brothers under Fra'
Nicholas Hussey and Grand Master
Villiers de L'Isle-Adam succeeded in driving them back again.
Twice more the Turks assaulted the breach that day, but each time the English brothers, aided by
German brothers, held the gap.
On
24 September, Mustafa Pasha ordered a new massive assault, aimed mainly at the bastions of
Spain, England,
Provence and
Italy. After a day of furious fighting, during which the bastion of Spain changed hands twice, Suleiman eventually called off the attack. He sentenced Mustafa Pasha, his brother-in-law, to death for his failure to take the city, but eventually spared his life after other senior officials had pleaded with him for mercy.
Mustafa's replacement,
Ahmed Pasha, was an experienced siege engineer, and the Turks now focused their efforts on undermining the ramparts and blowing them up with mines while maintaining their continuous artillery barrages. The regularity of the locations where the mines were detonated under the walls (which generally rest on rock) has led to the suggestion that the Turkish miners may have taken advantage of culverts under the
Hellenistic city which lies beneath the medieval city of Rhodes.
- published: 21 Dec 2013
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