The Siege of Vienna
By John Stoye
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About this ebook
The consequences of defeat were momentous: the Ottomans lost half their European territories and began the long decline which led to the final collapse of the Empire, and the Hapsburgs turned their attention from France and the Rhine frontier to the rich pickings of the Balkans. The hot September day that witnesses the last great trial of strength between Cross and Crescent opened an epoch in European history that lasted until the cataclysm of the First World War in 1914.
John Stoye
John Stoye is a Fellow in Modern History at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he lives. He has written several books including Europe Unfolding: 1648-1666, Marsigli's Europe: 1680-1730, and English Travellers Abroad: 1604-1667.
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The Siege of Vienna - John Stoye
The Siege of Vienna
To Catherine
for withstanding the siege
This eBook edition published in 2012 by
Birlinn Limited
West Newington House
Newington Road
Edinburgh
EH9 1QS
www.birlinn.co.uk
First published in 1964 by Collins, London
Second edition first published in 2000 by Birlinn
Copyright © John Stoye, 1964, 2000
The moral right of John Stoye to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form without the express written permission of the publisher.
ISBN: 978-1-84341-037-9
eBook ISBN: 978-0-85790-510-9
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Contents
Illustrations
Maps and Places
Some of the Principal Personages
Preface to the Birlinn Edition
Preface to the Original Edition
1 THE ORIGINS OF THE OTTOMAN ATTACK
I The Ottoman army enters Hungary
II The Ottoman constitution
III The defences of the Ottoman Empire
IV Ottoman policy in eastern Europe 1656–82
V Kara Mustafa’s objectives 1682–3
2 LEOPOLD I AND THE CITY OF VIENNA
I The Emperor and his court
II The Hofburg and the Herrengasse
III The fortifications of Vienna
IV The municipality of Vienna
V Burghers and noblemen
3 THE DEFENCE OF HABSBURG INTERESTS IN EUROPE
I The condition of the Empire
II Money and men
III Treaties with Bavaria and Hanover
IV Thököly, and the treaty with Poland
4 THE THREAT TO VIENNA
I The campaign in Hungary
II Crisis in Austria
III The flight from Vienna
5 THE SIEGE
I The first week
II Counterscarp and ravelin
6 OUTSIDE THE CITY
I The Tartars
II North of the Danube
III The messengers to and from Vienna
IV The government at Passau
7 WARSAW, DRESDEN, BERLIN AND REGENSBURG
I Sobieski’s journey to the Danube
II John George’s journey to the Danube
III Frederick William’s refusal
IV Leopold defies Louis XIV
8 THE RELIEF OF VIENNA
I Leopold’s journey down the Danube
II The Turks close in on the city
III The crossing of the Danube and the Wiener Wald
IV 12 September, 1683
9 THE CONSEQUENCES OF VICTORY
I Rejoicing and disenchantment
II The death of the Grand Vezir
III Thököly and Sobieski
IV The Holy Alliance of 1684
V The fall of Luxembourg
VI Vienna after the siege
Notes and References
Index
Illustrations
I The Ottoman Frontier: Esztergom and Neuhäusel
From pen-and-ink sketches by Dr Edward Browne in Additional MS. 5233 of the British Library
II The Habsburg Frontier: Komárom and Petronell
Engravings by G. Bodenehr and C. Beutler
III Emperor Leopold I
By Michel Noël, drawn in Frankfurt in 1658, and by Elias Heiss
IV Charles V, Duke of Lorraine
Engraved by J. C. Sartorius in 1677
V The Burgplatz in Vienna
From the painting by Samuel Hoogstraten, dated 1652
VI The Hofburg and the Turkish Siege-Works
Drawn by Daniel Suttinger in 1683, and here reproduced from Vienna Gloriosa, id est peraccurata & ordinata Descriptio (Vienna, 1703)
VII Vienna in the Seventeenth Century
From engravings in E. Francisci, Vor-Blitz des fortstralenden Adler-Blitzes . . . und zu Beleuchtung des jetzo wütenden türckischen-und frantzösischen Waffen dienlichster Vorbericht (Frankfurt, 1691)
VIII Tartars Crossing a River
From L. F. Marsigli, L’état militaire de l’empire ottoman, ses progrès et sa décadence (The Hague, 1732)
IX The Siege of Vienna
Drawn by Daniel Suttinger in 1687 and engraved by M. Bodenehr in 1688
X Koltschitzki in Disguise
Frontispiece to Das heldenmüthige wiewol gefährliche Unterfangen Herrn Georg Frantzen Koltschitzky (Nuremberg, 1683)
XI The Danube and the Wiener Wald
Engravings by M. Merian, in his Topographia Provinciarum Austriacarum (Frankfurt, 1649), and by an unnamed artist
XII Passau
An engraving dated 1576, by L. Abent
XIII Ernest Rüdiger Von Starhemberg
Engraved by L. Gomier, and published in Rome
XIV John Sobieski, King of Poland
Published by C. Allardt in Amsterdam
XV An English Broadsheet, 1684
The original is printed in red ink
The following authorities have kindly given permission for the reproduction of these plates: The Trustees of the British Library for nos. I–IV, VI, VII, IX–XI and XIV–XV, the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, for no. V, the Curators of the Bodleian Library for no. VIII and the Ashmolean Museum for nos. XII–XIII
Maps and Plans
Map of Eastern Europe in 1683
Map of the Danube in 1683
Germany in 1679
The Fortification of the City
Tartar Raids in Austria, 1683
The Routes to Vienna, July–August 1683
The Wiener Wald, September 1683
Some of the Principal Personages
Mehmed IV, Sultan
Kara Mustafa, Grand Vezir
Michael Apafi, Prince of Transylvania
Serban Cantacuzene, Prince of Wallachia
George III Duka, Prince of Moldavia
Murad Ghiraj, Khan of the Crimea
Imre Thököly, ‘King’ of Hungary
Louis XIV, King of France
John III Sobieski, King of Poland
Charles XI, King of Sweden
Leopold I, Emperor
Eleanor of Pfalz-Neuburg, Empress, Leopold’s third wife
Eleanor of Mantua, Dowager Empress, Leopold’s step-mother
Eleanor, Leopold’s half-sister, who married Charles, Duke of Lorraine
Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg
John George III, Elector of Saxony
Max Emmanuel, Elector of Bavaria
Charles V, Duke of Lorraine
Herman, Margrave of Baden, President of the War Council in Vienna
Lewis of Baden, his nephew
Philip William, Count Palatine of Pfalz-Neuburg
Ernest Augustus, Duke of Hanover-Calenberg
George Frederick, Count Waldeck
Abele, President of the Treasury in Vienna
Borgomanero, Spanish ambassador in Vienna
Buonvisi, Papal Nuncio in Vienna
Caplirs, Vice-President of the War Council
Caprara, Leopold’s envoy to the Sultan
Königsegg, Imperial Vice-Chancellor
Kuniz, Leopold’s envoy to the Sultan
Lamberg, John Maximilian, a senior court official in Vienna
Lamberg, John Philip, his son, Leopold’s envoy to Berlin and Dresden
Montecuccoli, President of the War Council until 1680
Nostitz-Reineck, Bohemian Chancellor
Pallavicini, Papal Nuncio in Warsaw
Rébenac, French ambassador in Berlin
Schwarzenberg, President of the Imperial Council
Sinelli, Bishop of Vienna
Sinzendorf, Hans, President of the Treasury until 1680
Starhemberg, Conrad, Statthalter of Lower Austria
Starhemberg, Ernest Rüdiger, his son, commander of the Vienna garrison
Stratmann, Austrian Court-Chancellor
Zierowski, Leopold’s ambassador in Poland
Zinzendorf, Albert, a senior court official in Vienna
Preface to the Birlinn Edition
I am delighted that there should still be a call for the story I tried to tell almost forty years ago. I remember vividly walking round and round the famous city where I was very much a stranger, trying to understand the complexities of an event and the stream of uncertain, often contradictory evidence about it, which had earlier caught my imagination in Oxford libraries. In this edition I have left the historical narrative intact, though removing certain errors and improving some of the detail. I am deeply grateful to Hugh Andrew and his skilful colleagues at Birlinn.
Magdalen College,
Oxford
J. W. S.
25 March 2000
Preface
The English-speaking world, to judge from its general works on the seventeenth century, is well aware that the siege of Vienna by the Turks in 1683 was a crisis of the greatest importance. We fix the date to the place, we surmise that it affected profoundly the history of modern Europe, but no complete account has ever been published in English. I have tried here to fill this gap. The total literature on the subject, of many periods and in many languages, is overwhelming in extent; I can only say that I have eagerly laid hands on what I could find, and on what I could read.
It is a pleasure to express thanks, for help of various kinds, to Mrs. I. M. Brown, Mr Richard Ollard and Mr Nicholas Henderson; to Dr Anna Coreth and Dr J. C. Allmeyer-Beck of the Austrian State Archives in Vienna; to Mr Albert Hourani of St Antony’s College, Mr Giles Barber of the Bodleian Library and Mr Austin Gill of Magdalen College, in Oxford; to Professor John Bromley of Southampton University, Dr Margaret Aston of Newnham College, Cambridge, and Mr Eric Falk of the Inner Temple, London.
Magdalen College,
Oxford
J. W. S.
25 November, 1963
I
The Origins of the Ottoman Attack
I
On 6 August 1682, an important meeting took place in Sultan Mehmed IV’s great palace in Istanbul. The highest officers of his government were present, and those among them who opposed the Grand Vezir Kara Mustafa for personal reasons, or deplored his aggressive statesmanship, had been silenced. They now agreed to disregard the existing treaty of peace with the Emperor Leopold I, which was not due to expire until 1684, and they recommended a military campaign for the year 1683, to be mounted in Hungary with the maximum armament of the Sultan’s empire.
In fact, these dignitaries were formally accepting the Grand Vezir’s decision to intensify a policy already in operation; but they could hardly fail to realise how much depended on the bigger scale, and therefore on the scope, of his new proposal. In 1681, a number of the Sultan’s troops stationed north of the Danube had been sent to help Imre Thököly, the Magyar leader in rebellion against Habsburg authority in Christian Hungary, that part of the country which the Turks themselves did not occupy. Early in 1682, more troops were drawn from an even wider area, including Bosnia and Serbia, for the same purpose. Their commander, old Ibrahim, the governor of Buda, gave Thököly powerful assistance and some useful Habsburg strongholds in Slovakia were captured. Up to, but not beyond this point, the policy was flexible. It could be modified or even reversed. But now the Sultan, inspired by the Grand Vezir, went decidedly further. He recognised Thököly as ‘King’ of Hungary under Ottoman protection. He instructed his own court, and in addition the full complement of his household troops, to winter in Adrianople. He began to summon other contingents from his more distant provinces. It was soon understood that they were all to move northwards during the early months of the following year to Belgrade, the general rendezvous for an immense concentration of forces.
Five days later, on 11th August 1682, at Laxenburg near Vienna, Leopold I received the opinion of his counsellors on the question of peace or war with the Turks.¹ They unanimously advised him to try to renew his treaty of peace. These statesmen paid far too little attention to the gloomy dispatches from the Habsburg envoys in Istanbul, George Kuniz and Albert Caprara, or to the threatening situation in Hungary. They were almost all preoccupied by the recent aggressions of Louis XIV in Flanders and Germany and Italy, and by Leopold’s and Louis’ rival claims to succeed Carlos II of Spain if he died childless. They considered that the ambitious foreign policy of the French court had gained rather than lost momentum since the treaties signed at NymegenF1 in Holland, in 1678 and 1679, put an end to seven years of public warfare in western Europe. They believed that Louis XIV was more to be feared than Mehmed IV. They argued that further concessions to France would prove fatal to Habsburg power and reputation, while possible concessions to the Sultan might be retrieved in due course. They appeared to have in mind, not an immediate order to Caprara to make a positive offer to the Turks (this they had always refused to contemplate), but a further dragging out of discussion between their envoys and the Grand Vezir; if necessary, somewhat later, they would consider the surrender of a few fortified points in the area between Habsburg Pressburg and Turkish Buda. The Sultan, after all, had not stirred in the critical 1670s when Christian Hungary was in a state of mutiny against Leopold. They tried hard to convince themselves that he would not stir far in the 1680s.
The Austrian counsellors were mistaken, but the westward orientation of Viennese policy was an obstinate tradition of long standing. The dominant idea, at least since the early part of the century when the Ottoman power was relatively quiescent, had been to deal gently with the Moslems in order to spare the maximum force required to oppose Christian enemies in western Europe. This was the tactic in 1664, after the great victory of St Gotthard on the banks of the River Rába, when the Habsburgs made concessions (unnecessarily, it seemed to some critics) in order to secure the twenty years’ truce due to expire in 1684. ‘The Crescent Moon (of Islam) climbs up the night sky and the Gallic cock sleeps not!’ was a popular German saying of the time. Leopold I in the Hofburg heard clearly the crowing of the French court and, with the majority of his statesmen, disliked Louis XIV intensely; but for him, the moon rose in comparative silence and the Sultan represented the principle of evil in a somewhat remote sphere, at least in the years before 1682 and 1683. A strong clerical interest at his court, which argued the merits of defending or expanding Christendom, battled in vain against the traditional emphasis in the complex system of Viennese diplomacy.
In August 1682, therefore, the Turks decided on an ambitious military attack against the Habsburg at an early date; and the Habsburg decided to try to avoid war. It is a coincidence which helps to explain why twelve months later the armies of the Sultan were camped round the walls of Vienna itself. In fact, the Habsburg government was not caught completely off its guard, as other evidence will show. But a fundamental underestimate of Turkish striking power continued to bedevil its general policy.
An official ceremony in Istanbul, the mounting of the Sultan’s insignia – the Tugh, or horsetails – outside the Grand Seraglio, publicly proclaimed his intention of leaving the city in the near future. As so often in past years, no doubt, it seemed that he would hunt during the autumn and then go on to Adrianople. Indeed, he left on 8 October,² after the fast of Ramadan and the feast of Bairam were over, hunted at leisure through various tracts of countryside, and reached Adrianople early in December. His harem and household followed him. But observant men were on the watch for a great deal besides the usual paraphernalia of a despot’s private pleasures. They saw the different sections of the Sultan’s permanent army, usually stationed in and near Istanbul, now assembling outside the walls of the city around his gorgeous ceremonial tent, the movable headquarters and symbol of his government: the Janissaries and auxiliary infantry units, the Spahis and other household cavalry, and a host of technicians and tradesmen required for the service of the troops. Although a marvellous cavalcade had ushered the Sultan out of the city with traditional Moslem emphasis on the importance of such an occasion, the majority of the soldiers left a week later, moved forward without stopping long anywhere, and reached Adrianople before him. Here they remained for four months, the core of an army which expanded rapidly as additional detachments kept coming in; for messengers had gone out to the farthest edges of the empire in Asia and Europe, and also to Egypt. The beylerbeyis, or governors-in-chief, were instructed to bring with them the contingents for which their revenues made them liable, and to see that the lesser provincial officials, the sandjakbeyis, and the landowners large and small, who held land on military tenures, did likewise. Gradually, these forces began to make their way to Adrianople, Belgrade or to points on the road between them.
Meanwhile Kuniz and Caprara had both been brought from Istanbul, and the representatives of other rulers arrived at the temporary centre of government where the Sultan and Grand Vezir resided. One came from Moscow, and the treaty made in 1681 with the Czar of Muscovy was ratified, which ensured peace in a vast area north of the Black Sea. The envoys of the Prince of Transylvania were for once well and lavishly entertained: the Ottoman government hoped to make certain that Prince Michael Apafi sent his forces to join the army, and paid his tribute punctually in the coming year, at the same time acting as a counterweight to Thököly, the new ‘King’ in Hungary. A conference with Caprara took place, in which arguments aired at earlier meetings between the Austrian and the Turkish statesmen were repeated. It was a farcical occasion, because Leopold had made no fresh offers, and because Kara Mustafa was determined not to commit himself until the weight of the army to be assembled in Hungary had given him an overpowering advantage. Caprara learnt now that the price of peace was the surrender of Györ, a fortress of the greatest importance to the Habsburg defences, situated on the Danube, fifty miles south-east of Pressburg. The Turks realised that he had no authority to agree to this; he was already that familiar phenomenon in the history of Ottoman relations with the Christian states, a captive diplomat, detained for possible use by the Turks at their discretion. As a matter of much greater immediate importance, at Adrianople the Sultan willingly agreed with his counsellors that he should lead the army to Belgrade, while thereafter the Grand Vezir exercised supreme military command as his deputy.
For some time attention had been given to the condition of the route through the Balkans. The repair of bridges across the Maritza and the Morava was taken in hand. Unfortunately, exceptional rains increased abnormally the weight of water flowing off the Rhodope and Balkan mountains. The passage of the foremost troops inevitably churned up the road, to the disadvantage of men, carts, and beasts coming up behind them. On 30 March the vanguard of Janissaries set out, to be followed soon afterwards by the Sultan and his household with the main body of troops, the ambassadors of Austria and Poland, and all the rag-tag and bobtail that accompanied a court or an army on the move at this period. Perhaps 100,000 persons were trekking forward.
Caprara’s secretary has left an account of what took place on the road to Belgrade in April, 1683.³ Some parts of the army marched or rode by day, but when the secretary tried to sleep at night he woke to hear other troops, advancing through the darkness by the flare of countless torches. Carts and wagons of every description went along with, or followed, the different detachments; often they got lost, or lagged behind. Great flocks of sheep and herds of cattle formed the basis of the victualling system, and Caprara guessed that 32,000 lbs. of meat and 60,000 loaves were consumed daily.⁴ Prices fluctuated as rival commissariats bid against one another to supply their men. Privileged persons went by coach, and coaches stuck in the mud. The rains were shocking. If most men slept in tents, the more exalted (among whom the Austrian diplomats were still lucky to count themselves) sometimes found accommodation in the hospices which generations of wealthy and pious Moslems had built at intervals along the road. Sometimes there were halts of a day, or two days, when cities like Philippopolis and Sofia were reached; the army camped outside, and only civilians and grandees were allowed to pass the walls. Otherwise, there was nothing to be done except to go patiently forward after the vanguard – the indispensable vanguard of Janissaries which led the way, marked out the distances, and prepared the ovens every evening for those who followed them. Behind the Balkan troops, the men of Anatolia and Asia were now coming up. At Niš the other great route was joined, from Salonika, down which were moving the men from the Aegean and the men of Africa. The main body finally reached the outskirts of Belgrade on 3 May. A little earlier, officers had been sent ahead to close all the wineshops. A little later, the Sultan’s entry into the city was of great ceremonial magnificence. The season of war and serious business approached with the spring, though spring itself, and the indispensable growth of fresh pasture for the innumerable livestock of this army, came late.
At Belgrade the Danube meets one of its largest right-bank tributaries, the Sava. Across the Sava stands Zemun, where the enormous camp was set on 4 May. More troops came in daily from different directions. The artillery was reviewed, though a Turkish account suggests that it did not include more than sixty guns and mortars. Munitions and provisions were loaded on 150 ships, for dispatch up the Danube. Every day the Sultan rode out from Belgrade on tours of inspection, and on 13 May he solemnly entrusted the sacred standard of Islam, ‘the Flag of the Prophet’, to the Grand Vezir, appointing him generalissimo for the campaign. Between 18 and 20 May the governor of Mesopotamia arrived with his men. The Janissaries marched out of camp, and a few days later the Grand Vezir followed with most of the remaining troops. The Sultan and his court stayed on at Belgrade with a small but adequate guard.
The pace of the Turks’ advance was still slow, and they did not reach Osijek until 2 June. Two things held them back, rain, and the knowledge that their great bridge over the River Drava, another major tributary of the Danube, was not yet in a proper state of repair. For at Osijek, the route into Hungary crossed the Drava by a long pontoon bridge and then, a little way upstream, another bridge – constructed of massive timbers, with spectacular wooden towers placed at short interval – traversed the marshes for a distance usually estimated at five miles or 6,000 paces. Throughout a chequered history of decay and renovation since Suleiman the Lawgiver’s reign, this formidable engineering work was the main gateway into Hungary from the south. Croats and Magyars had tried more than once to destroy it, and Caprara’s secretary in 1683 noticed the scars surviving from a brave effort to burn down the bridge in 1664.⁵ According to their own accounts, the Turks had been engaged on repairs during the previous six months; even so, they were too slow not to delay Kara Mustafa’s army. While the work was hurriedly completed, Osijek itself hummed with business. Troops arrived from Albania, Epirus, Thessaly and even Egypt. The pasha of Veszprém had come southwards and reported for duty with his men. Above all Thököly himself appeared, to be greeted royally.
On 14 June the army began to leave Osijek. Most of the European, Asiatic and African contingents had now arrived, and once past the bridge a stricter order of march was enforced. The vanguard, led by Kara Mehmed of Diyarbakir, with 3,000 Janissaries, 500 Cebecis (also footsoldiers) and the cavalry of Diyarbakir, Aleppo, Sivas and Egypt, was 20,000 strong, and subsequently increased by some 8,000 Tartars who were then riding across Hungary to the Danube. Next came the main body of troops, followed by a powerful rearguard; but for neither of these are firm figures available. On they tramped, or rode. Instead of the rains, they complained of lack of water, and retailed the usual story that enemy agents were poisoning the wells. Prince Serban Cantacuzene, the tributary ruler of Wallachia, now appeared with his due contingent of men and wagons, to be employed by the Turks to strengthen their inadequate commissariat. Ten days later, Székesfehérvár was reached. A final decision on the future line of march had to be taken at this point, where the itineraries diverged towards alternative objectives on the long frontier between the Christian and the Moslem worlds.
On Saturday 26 June the Grand Vezir held a council.⁶ Its discussions have been unreliably reported but there is no doubt about the immediate result. On 29 June the Turks entered enemy territory to the north-west, and moved towards the Habsburg citadel of Györ. Prisoners disclosed the concentration of strong hostile forces, and once again the commanders checked the order of march. Tartars, and other irregulars, fanned out ahead. Then came the vanguard, then various troops normally stationed in Hungary. The main army itself was divided into three distinct columns: on the right the Anatolian cavalry, on the left the cavalry of Europe, with the mass of infantry and artillery in the centre. The baggage followed. The rearguard kept its distance well behind. On Thursday 1 July, the Turks reached the right bank of the River Rába, not far from the town and fortifications of Györ. Soon all Europe hummed with the news of their advance, and it was realised that the days of reckoning were at hand.
This short chronicle of events between August 1682 and July 1683 is based on good evidence. The history behind the chronicle at once appears much more obscure. It is one thing to describe the movement of these massive forces across the Balkan lands, quite another to show why they took this course, and at this date. Ottoman history in the seventeenth century, in spite of some heroic inquiries, has still to be written. There remains in Istanbul a forest of administrative records to be explored for this period, but in any case the Moslem cultural and political tradition never gave the Sultan’s greater office holders the impulse to compose state-papers and diplomatic instructions on the western model, or to write their memoirs in order to explain and justify their actions. Even Alexander Mavrocordato, the Greek dragoman who accompanied Kara Mustafa to the gates of Vienna, educated at Padua and a keen collector of western books, preferred to commit to paper only the most meagre account of what occurred in 1683.⁷ Yet no man was better placed to observe and to judge the secret course of Turkish politics at Istanbul, Adrianople, and in the gorgeous tents which were the headquarters of the Grand Vezir.
II
One or two far-seeing Moslem writers of the seventeenth century contrasted unfavourably the working of contemporary Ottoman institutions with what they believed was the sounder practice of earlier periods. It is more important to take into account the conventional opinion of their day. For the plain man, accepting without debate the structure of human society as it existed, the frame of government provided by the great empire of the Ottoman Sultan seemed indestructibly part of the nature of things. Its splendour, and strength, far overshadowed the current tribulations of humanity within it. Anyone who cares to browse, for example, through the writings of the traveller Evliyá Chelibí,⁸ son of a prosperous Istanbul goldsmith who crossed and recrossed the Moslem world in a long sequence of journeys between 1640 and 1670, will be left with a vivid impression of his complete sense of confidence. No city, in Evliyá’s experience, could approach the magnificence of the Istanbul he so lovingly describes: its palaces and places of worship, its educational establishments and hospitals, its plethora of the guilds of skilled craftsmen. Nothing could detract from the glory of those marvellous conquests which the sultans of his own day, Murad IV and his two successors, had made in various parts of the world. They were worthy of Selim the Cruel and Suleiman the Lawgiver. Look up his account of the gun-foundry and its workmen in the capital, and of the topjís, or artillerymen: who could doubt that both were incomparable in their own line of business? Read his description of the siege by the Turks of Azov in 1640: the reader must believe that such a partnership of Moslem courage in battle with massive military organisation was, and would always be, superior to the efforts of any enemy. Besides, victories brought their due advantage to the brave adventurer. Evliyá tells of the booty distributed, of his own share of slaves and furs and other valuables; it was the traditional, practical motive for Ottoman militancy from the Sultan or Vezir down to the dingiest camp follower. In this valuable and conventionally-minded author there is not the slightest hint of a ‘failure of nerve’, no inkling of living mainly in the shadow of past Moslem achievements.
Against Evliyá it must be said that the armed forces, and the structure of government, were no longer based on the practice which made possible Ottoman expansion in earlier days. Apart from Murad IV, the sultans of the seventeenth century retreated to the hunting-lodge or the inner household of the palace. Their fear of rivals led them to refuse political and intellectual education, or any exercise of authority, or even personal freedom, to other members of their own family. This defect became the more glaring when a rule was established in 1617,⁹ in order to avoid the alternative dangers of a minority, that the vacant throne must always pass to the eldest surviving prince of the imperial house: a man, therefore, who had spent his earlier life ‘caged’ in the palace for the greater security of his predecessor. Power was still the Sultan’s, but responsibility increasingly rested with a sequence of Grand Vezirs whose tenure of office depended on the Sultan’s good will, susceptible in turn to secret intrigue within the palace or hunting-lodge. The men who made the crucial political decisions were vulnerable in a way that Selim and Suleiman had never been in the previous century.
Nor was the standing army any longer so compact, highly trained, or dependent on the Sultan and independent of everybody else. The Janissaries, who were the infantry, and some of the ojaks or regiments of Spahis who were the household cavalry, had been normally recruited in the past from Christian populations in the Balkans; so also were the more talented men who became high officers of state. Educated as Moslems, drafted into the army or the administration, they were the well-paid servants who upheld the supreme power in its miraculous, isolated splendour. They were themselves cut off from the social order which they helped to control. Already in the sixteenth century, the Moslem populations began to react against this dominance, of a permanent military force and a brilliantly organised government, both manned by converted Christian ‘slaves’. Many of the leading statesmen and commanders had left behind them children who were Moslem-born, and who naturally reinforced the pressure in defence of their own obvious interest. The Janissaries were recruited increasingly from the sons of former Janissaries and from the Moslem population, particularly in Istanbul itself and other large cities like Cairo. They broke the old rules which forbade them to marry before retirement, or to trade; while married tradesmen, and others, purchased, the privileges of ‘veteran’ Janissaries. These tendencies were noted by foreign observers before the close of the sixteenth century. Then, gradually, the élite of the recruits which was educated in the schools of the Seraglio, was also taken from influential Moslem families.¹⁰ It amounted to a fundamental alteration in the personnel of the governing class, and of this the famous Köprülü dynasty of Vezirs forms a conspicuous example. The chances that Mehmed Köprülü’s sons and nephews would enjoy either affluence or influence were not much less than those of Le Tellier’s or Colbert’s family in France.
One result of this change was the greater sensitivity of the régime to the religious problems of the Moslem world. The inevitable tensions between the sects and orders of dervishes, and the representatives of orthodoxy, involved the army because the Janissaries were deeply influenced by the great sect of the Bektashi. The link between them received official sanction in 1594. Fifty years later the Mevlevi, another sect, certainly had influence in high places. The views of the Bektashi and the Mevlevi, on a wide range of subjects, from the veneration of saints to the drinking of wine, and their intermittent sympathy with Christian ideas, tended to meet with the strong disapproval of the orthodox. At the same time the Janissaries of the capital interfered increasingly in politics, partly in order to insist on the payment of full wages while the value of the currency steadily depreciated. Strife broke out between them and rival contingents in the standing army. They learnt to ally with opposite parties at court, and there were occasional periods of complete anarchy in the headquarters of the empire. Then Mehmed Köprülü obtained full powers as the Grand Vezir in 1656. His rule could not restore the old structure of the state, but it did reinforce orthodoxy in religion. For the time being the more radical sectaries were suppressed, and the Janissaries and other paid troops were reduced to order. One of the most powerful allies of Fazil Ahmed, the second Köprülü, was Vani the stern preacher who denounced all dervishes and wine-drinkers.¹¹
A further consequence of this reviving orthodoxy may well have been increased hostility to the Christian churches. While the Orthodox Christian clergy tended to look to the Ottoman government for protection against the encroachments of Roman Catholic missions, and were much alarmed by the multiplication of Uniate churches in communion with Rome, some of them had responded to this Catholic threat by a vigorous movement of reform under Patriarch Cyril Lukaris (executed in 1638). They also began to look with growing attention and sympathy towards the Orthodox Czar and Church of Muscovy, then coming more closely into line with Greek religious practice thanks to Nikon, Patriarch of Moscow (until 1657) and other reformers. The Orthodox rulers of the Romanian principalities, Wallachia and Moldavia, over which the Sultan claimed sovereignty, also occasionally looked to Muscovy (and to Catholic Poland) for support. But these developments simply strengthened the Istanbul government’s determination to control its Orthodox subjects with the utmost rigour. Meanwhile,