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Ottoman raids in Friuli

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On four occasions in the 15th century, the Ottoman Empire raided the Patria del Friuli, then part of the Republic of Venice. The first three raids (1472, 1477, 1478) took place during the First Ottoman–Venetian War. The final raid (1499) during the Second Ottoman–Venetian War. These were overland raids launched as part of the Ottoman wars in Europe.

Threats

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The Ottoman threat to Friuli goes back to 1415, when they raided raided the neighbouring lands of Carniola, Styria and Lower Austria. At that time, Friuli still belonged to the Patriarchate of Aquileia. It was conquered by Venice only in 1420.[1]

In June 1469, Ottoman forces reached Gorizia but did not cross the Venetian frontier. In response, Venice hired the condottiere Deifobo dell'Anguillara, Galeotto Manfredi, Ercole Malvezzi and Fontaguzzio da Bologna. They also hired some lance spezzate and dispatched the cernide (peasant levies) of Bergamo, Crema, Brescia, Verona, Vicenza, Padua and Treviso. Similar tactics were repeated in defence of Friuli down to 1477.[2]

1470s raids

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Domenico Malipiero records that the Ottomans crossed the frontier in November 1471, but no other source mentions it. They certainly entered Friuli in the fall of 1472 under the leadership of a certain Hasan Bey, perhaps a descendant of Evrenos. The raiders were primarily akinji, light cavalry. In November 1477, Turahanoğlu Ömer Bey led a raid into Friuli.[2] At the first encounter along the Isonzo, the Venetian commanders Girolamo Novello and Giacomo Badoer were lured out of their fortress, fooled by a feigned retreat and killed in the fighting.[3] After that, Giacomo Martinengo and Francesco Michiel retreated, while Zaccaria Barbaro refused to leave the fortress at Gradisca. The republic hired Cola di Monforte [it], but he arrived too late.[2] The raiders reached as far as the Tagliamento,[3] and threatened Pordenone.[4] The entire raid lasted only thirteen days.[2]

By April 1478, Carlo da Montone [it] was in charge of Venetian defences in Friuli, with Giacomo da Porcia and Antonio di Pers under his command. In July 1478, Turahanoğlu Ömer Bey launched a new raid into Friuli, joined by Mihaloğlu Ali Bey, Malkoçoğlu Bali Bey and Skender Pasha. This second raid lasted a mere four days. As part of a new strategy,Carlo da Montone remained in Gradisca, sending small detachments to harass the raiders but refusing to give battle.[2] The populace fled to the fortresses.[3] The Ottomans hit Tolmino, Caporetto and Plezzo before crossing the Alps at the Predil Pass and hitting Fusine, Coccau [it] and Villach.[2]

The destruction of villages and churches during these raids is reported by Paolo Santonino [de] in his itinerary for the years 1485–1487.[4] The incursions are not mentioned in Suzi Çelebi's Gazavatnama Mihaloğlu.[2]

1499 raid

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Following the raids of 1477–1478, the Venetians improved the fortifications of Gradisca and brought in light cavalry, the stratioti, and archers recruited from Durazzo, Morea and Zante. In 1480, Sultan Mehmed II sought Venetian assistance in his planned attack on Otranto. To prevent the Venetians from informing the Neapolitans, he stationed forces at Val Canale [it] threatening to invade Friuli.[2]

Skender Pasha returned to raid Friuli between 28 September and 5 October 1499 with 7,000 troops. He burned 132 villages and killed between 10,000 and 15,000 people.[3] Andrea Zancani was in charge of the defences, but refused to leave Gradisca. Spilimbergo, Mortegliano and Udine successfully defended themselves. At Aviano, two thousand were taken as slaves. One of them, Giacomo da Sacile, later regained his freedom and served in the Venetian army.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Kenneth Meyer Setton, The Papacy and the Levant, 1204–1571, Volume 2: The Fifteenth Century (American Philosophical Society, 1978), pp. 7, 50.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Maria Pia Pedani, "Turkish Raids in Friuli at the End of the Fifteenth Century", in Markus Köhbach, Gisela Prochaska-Eisl and Claudia Römer (eds.), Acta Viennensia Ottomanica (Instituts für Orientalistik, 1999), pp. 287–291.
  3. ^ a b c d Oliver Jens Schmitt and Mariya Kiprovska (2022), "Ottoman Raiders (Akıncıs) as a Driving Force of Early Ottoman Conquest of the Balkans and the Slavery-Based Economy", Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 65(4): 497–582.
  4. ^ a b Kenneth Meyer Setton, The Papacy and the Levant, 1204–1571, Volume 2: The Fifteenth Century (American Philosophical Society, 1978), p. 327.