Authors: David Brewer
Tags: #History / Ancient
Chapter 7: The Fall of Cyprus (pp. 77–85)
The main source for Cyprus is George Hill,
A History of Cyprus
, vol. III. For the 1570 expedition of the combined fleet see also Hugh Bicheno,
Crescent and Cross
; and the lively (but unfortunately unreferenced) Jack Beeching,
The Galleys at Lepanto.
1
Hill, vol. III, p. 838 and n. 22
Hill, vol. III, p. 7973
Hill, vol. III, p. 878, n. 34
Braudel,
The Mediterranean
, vol. II, p. 10745
Hill, vol. III, p. 8846
Hill, vol. III, p. 8887
Hill, vol. III, p. 889, n. 1. Some historians have confused the two votes and say that the ultimatum was rejected only by the narrow margin of 202 to 199.8
Hill, vol. III, p. 897, n. 19
Bicheno, p. 19710
Quoted in Hill, vol. III, p. 91911
Hill, vol. III, p. 999, n. 112
Hill, vol. III, p. 100313
The story was included in Richard Knolles’ enormously influential
Generall Historie of the Turks
, London, 1603, and two centuries later part of Byron’s extensive reading about the Turks.
Chapter 8: 1571 – Lepanto (pp. 86–95)
As for Chapter 7, see Hill, Bicheno and Beeching. The tables and diagrams in Bicheno are particularly useful. The battle is also described in Andrew Wheatcroft,
Infidels
; and J.F.C. Fuller,
The Decisive Battles of the Western World
, London, 1954
.
Greek involvement is covered in I.K. Hasiótis,
I Éllines
, and
Metaxí Othomanikís Kiriarchías
(see Bibliography for details). The Turkish reaction to Lepanto is described in Halil Inalcik,
The Ottoman Empire: Conquest, Organisation and Economy
, section IX.
1
Bicheno, p. 2302
Bicheno, p. 2313
Bicheno, p. 2204
Bicheno, p. 2685
Bicheno, pp. 277–86
Bicheno, pp. 306–77
Bicheno, p. 2388
Cervantes,
Don Quixote
, part I, ch. 389
Finlay,
Greece Under Othoman and Venetian Occupation
, pp. 85–610
Hasiótis,
I Éllines
, p. 16211
Hasiótis,
Metaxí
, pp. 217–1812
Hasiótis,
I Éllines
, p. 1413
This reading of Chesterton is in Wheatcroft, p. 3314
Inalcik,
The Ottoman Empire: Conquest, Organisation and Economy
, section IX, p. 19015
Wheatcroft, p. 3416
Bicheno, p. 28517
Bicheno, p. 28818
Norwich,
A History of Venice
, p. 48919
Beeching, p. 246
Chapter 9: Mainland Greece and Town Life (pp. 96–106)
The Turkish system of administration is covered in Peter F. Sugar,
Southeastern Europe under Ottoman Rule
; Gibb and Bowen,
Islamic Society and the West
; Halil Inalcik,
The Ottoman Empire: Conquest, Organisation and Economy
; and Apostolos Vacalopoulos,
The Greek Nation
. For Thessalonika see Mark Mazower,
Salonica: City of Ghosts
, and for Athens Kevin Andrews,
Athens Alive
, though Andrews’ extracts from de la Guilletière should be read with caution – see text.
1
Sugar, p. xii2
Gibb and Bowen, vol. I, p. 2763
Iris Origo,
The Merchant of Prato
, London, 1957, pp. 62–54
Inalcik,
The Ottoman Empire: Conquest, Organisation and Economy
, section X, p. 2175
Vacalopoulos,
The Greek Nation
, p. 1936
Gordon,
History of the Greek Revolution
, vol. I, p. 3227
Mazower,
Salonica
, p. 288
Mazower,
Salonica
, pp. 48–519
Bernard Randolph in Molly Mackenzie,
Turkish Athens
, Reading, 1992, p. 37; de la Guilletière in Andrews, p. 8010
George Wheler, in Andrews, p. 10011
Andrews, p. 79 (de la Guilletière), p. 91 (Nointel), p. 101 (George Wheler)
Chapter 10: The Greek Church (pp. 107–18)
Of the mass of material on the Greek Orthodox Church, the main sources for this chapter are Steven Runciman,
The Great Church in Captivity
; Timothy Ware,
The Orthodox Church
; and T.H. Papadopoullos
, The Greek Church and People under Turkish Domination.
See also Apostolos Vacalopoulos,
The Greek Nation
, and
Istoría tou Ellinikoú Éthnous
(
IEE
) (History of the Greek Nation), vols X and XI.
Chronological lists of the patriarchs are in
IEE
, vol. X, p. 102 for 1453–1671 and vol. XI, p. 129 for 1671–1821.
1
Runciman,
The Great Church
, p. 1312
Runciman,
The Great Church
, p. 148Runciman,
The Great Church
, p. 604
Runciman,
The Great Church
, p. 595
Hasiótis,
Metaxí
, p. 876
Vacalopoulos,
The Greek Nation
, pp. 152, 113, 1117
Runciman,
The Great Church
, p. 2098
Vacalopoulos,
The Greek Nation
, pp. 181–29
Clogg,
The Movement for Greek Independence
, pp. 79–8010
Kapodhístrias,
Observations sur les Moyens d'Améliorer les Grecs
in G. Waddington,
A Visit to Greece in 1823 and 1824
, London, 1825, p. xxxix11
Papadopoullos, p. 12612
Hobsbawm,
Nations and Nationalism since 1780
, p. 5713
Runciman,
The Great Church
, p. 22314
N. Michael Vaporis, in ed. Costantelos,
Orthodox Theology and Diakonia
, Brookline, Massachusetts, 1981, p. 14915
John Chryssavgis in
Encyclopedia of Greece
, Chicago and London, 2000, p. 108516
Runciman,
The Great Church
, p. 34517
Vasiliev,
History of the Byzantine Empire
, vol. I, pp. 79–8018
Panayiotákis,
Kríti
, vol. II, p. 448
Chapter 11: Venetian Crete (pp. 119–27)
The main sources for this chapter are Molly Greene,
A Shared World
; Chrísas Maltézos,
I Kríti sti Dhiárkia tis Períodhou tis Venetokratías
(Crete During the Period
of Venetian Rule); Theocharis Detorakis,
History of Crete
; and N.M. Panayiotákis, ed.,
Kríti: Istoría kai Politismós
(Crete: History and Culture), vol. II, referred to as
Kríti
below. For El Greco see Xavier Bray,
El Greco
.
1
Maltézos, p. 462
The painting is in London’s National Gallery, no. 6260, and a larger version is in Madrid’s Escorial.3
Roger Fry, quoted in Bray, p. 74
Bray, p. 425
Bray, p. 426
Kríti
, vol. II, p. 1687
Kríti
, vol. II, p. 1698
Kríti
, vol. II, pp. 179–809
Detorakis, p. 19610
Greene, p. 11911
Greene, p. 6312
Quoted in Robert Pashley,
Travels in Crete
, London, 1837, vol. II, pp. 297–813
Greene, p. 58
Chapter 12: 1669 – The Turks Take Crete (pp. 128–35)
The sources for this chapter are as for Chapter 11, plus S.J. and E.K. Shaw,
History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey
; Daniel Goffman,
The Ottoman Empire and Early Modern Europe
; and John Stoye,
Europe Unfolding
. John Julius Norwich tells the story from the Venetian viewpoint in
A History of Venice
, chapters 42–4. The account of the surrender negotiations is in Harry Chionídhis,
Anglikón Ipómnima perí tis Poliorkías kai tis Ptóseos tou Chándakos
(English Account of the Siege and Fall of Iráklion).
Chapter 13: Turkish Rule in Cyprus and Crete (pp. 136–46)
For Cyprus see Halil Inalcik,
The Ottoman Empire: Conquest, Organisation and Economy
, section VIII; George Hill,
A History of Cyprus
, vol. IV; and Stavros Pantelis,
The History of Modern Cyprus.
For Crete the main sources are as for Chapter 11, and Joseph Pitton de Tournefort,
Voyage d’un Botaniste
.
1
Hill, vol. IV, pp. 1–22
Inalcik,
The Ottoman Empire: Conquest, Organisation and Economy
, section VIII, p. 73
Hill, vol. IV, p. 254
Hill, vol. IV, p. 345
Greene, p. 26, n. 486
Jane Hathaway, quoted in Greene, p. 20, n. 287
Detorakis, pp. 271–28
Richard Pococke, quoted in Greene, p. 919
Greene, p. 6110
Tournefort, vol. I, p. 5211
Tournefort, vol. I, p. 10712
Tournefort, vol. I, p. 10813
Tournefort, vol. I, p. 13014
Quoted in, for example, Anthony Flew,
An Introduction to Western Philosophy
, London, 1971, p. 219, where the flaws in Pascal’s argument are discussed.15
Panayiotákis, vol. II, p. 44016
Greene, p. 18617
Herzfeld,
A Place in History
, p. 6418
Clark,
Twice a Stranger
, pp. 185, 186
Chapter 14: The Changing Ottoman Empire (pp. 147–56)
All books on the Ottoman Empire, and many on the Mediterranean world in general, have something to say about perceived Ottoman decline. There are particularly illuminating insights in Daniel Goffman,
The Ottoman Empire and Early Modern Europe
; Suraiya Faroqhi,
The Ottoman Empire and The World Around It
; and Fernand Braudel,
The Mediterranean
. For the Ottoman economy see Inalcik and Quataert,
An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire.
1
Goffman, p. 1232
Braudel, vol. II, p. 11953
Imber,
The Ottoman Empire
, p. 1104
Goffman, p. 1175
Inalcik,
The Ottoman Empire: Conquest, Organisation and Economy
, section XIII, pp.344–66
Faroqhi, p.447
Grosrichard,
The Sultan’s Court
, Introduction, p. xxi8
Grosrichard,
The Sultan’s Court
, pp. 65–69
Grosrichard,
The Sultan’s Court
, pp. 137–810
Inalcik and Quataert,
Economic and Social History
, vol. II, pp. 541–211
Braudel, vol. II, p. 84012
McGowan,
Economic Life in Ottoman Europe
, p. 6513
Gibb and Bowen
, Islamic Society and the West
, vol. I, p. 258