Authors: David Brewer
Tags: #History / Ancient
Notes
Prologue: The Greek View of Turkish Rule (pp. 1–8)
Chapter 1: Greece Before the Turks (pp. 9–19)
For the Fourth Crusade see Jonathan Phillips’ and Michael Angold’s books of that title, which supplement the material in Steven Runciman’s
A History of the Crusades.
For an account of the following centuries see Peter Lock,
The Franks in the Aegean
. Harold Lurier,
Crusaders as Conquerors, The Chronicle of Morea
is the most accessible translation of the chronicle, and Lurier’s introduction and notes are indispensable. Denis Zakythinos,
Le Despotat grec de Morée
deals mainly with the later part of the period. For the operation of the feudal system in Greece see Peter Topping,
Feudal Institutions as Revealed in the Assizes of Romania.
1
Phillips, p. 52
Phillips, p. 623
Robert de Clari, quoted in Kelly,
Istanbul
, p. 1234
Runciman,
Crusades
, vol. III, p. 1305
Lurier in
Chronicle
, p. 56
Chronicle
, pp. 115–177
Chronicle
, pp. 67, 1068
Chronicle
, p. 1569
Chronicle,
p. 15810
Zakythinos, p. 3711
Quoted in Topping, p. 812
Chronicle
, p. 15813
Chronicle
, p. 19014
Chronicle
, p. 19415
Chronicle
, pp. 177–816
Chronicle
, p. 17817
Lock, p. 11118
Zakythinos, p. 7119
Lock, p. 11320
Lock, pp. 5–6
Chapter 2: 1453 – The Fall of Constantinople (pp. 20–33)
The main eyewitness and contemporary accounts are in J.R.M. Jones’ translations in
The Siege of Constantinople, 1453: Seven Contemporary Accounts
; and Nicolo
Barbaro,
Diary of the Siege of Constantinople
(same translator); and in Sphrantzís,
A Contemporary Greek Source for the Siege of Constantinople 1453: The Sphrantzes Chronicle
(translated, with a valuable commentary, by Margaret Carroll). Of the many books describing the siege Steven Runciman,
The Fall of Constantinople
is probably still the best factual account, but see also Roger Crowley,
Constantinople: The Last Great Siege
. For the Byzantine background see Donald M. Nicol,
The Immortal Emperor
; Judith Herrin,
Byzantium
; and A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine Empire.
1
Dolfin in
Seven Accounts
, p. 1262
Vasiliev, pp. 678–93
Leonard of Chíos in
Seven Accounts
, p. 294
Ducas in
Seven Accounts
, p. 775
Barbaro, p. 116
Barbaro, p. 257
Tedaldi in
Seven Accounts
, p. 38
Leonard of Chíos in
Seven Accounts
, p. 159
Leonard of Chíos in
Seven Accounts
, p. 2610
Ducas in
Seven Accounts
, p. 8711
Barbaro, p. 3312
Sphrantzís, p. 5613
Barbaro, p. 4514
Vasiliev, p. 65015
Ducas in
Seven Accounts
, p. 9116
Leonard of Chíos in
Seven Accounts
, p. 3317
Edward Pears (1903) quoted in Vasiliev, p. 65218
Ducas in
Seven Accounts
, p. 11119
Ducas in
Seven Accounts
, pp. 98–920
Ducas in
Seven Accounts
, p. 10321
Barbaro, p. 6122
Leonard of Chíos in
Seven Accounts
, p. 2523
Leonard of Chíos in
Seven Accounts
, p. 40
Chapter 3: Sultans and Patriarchs (pp. 34–43)
Martin Crusius’ history, his
Turcograecia
, was first published in Basel in 1584, and a facsimile of this original was produced in Modena in 1972. In this edition the original Greek and Crusius’ Latin translation are printed in parallel, and Crusius’ copious and valuable Annotations are included. However it is not easy to read as the Greek is somewhat crabbed and the Latin is full of abbreviations. A clean parallel Greek and Latin text, edited by Niebuhr, was published in Bonn in 1849, but without the Annotations. References are to Crusius,
Turcograecia
and to Crusius, ed. Niebuhr respectively.
The complete works of Yennádhios, in eight volumes, were first published in Paris in 1935, with an invaluable commentary in French. See also the relevant
chapters of Papadopoullos,
The Greek Church and People
; Vacalopoulos,
The Greek Nation
; and Runciman,
The Great Church in Captivity.
For dates of patriarchates see endnotes to Chapter 10.
1
Sathas,
Tourkokratouméne Ellás
(Greece Under Turkish Rule), Athens, 1896, p. 12
Koran, ch. II, section 59, in e.g.
The Koran
, ed. Palmer, Oxford, 19003
Arnakis essay,
The Greek Church of Constantinople and the Ottoman Empire,
p. 2404
Finkel,
Osman’s Dream
, p. 115
Yennádhios, vol. VIII, App. V, pp. 27–86
Yennádhios, vol. IV, p. 4077
Runciman,
Great Church
, p. 1698
Yennádhios, vol. IV, p. 2659
Yennádhios, vol. IV, p. 23210
Yennádhios, vol. VIII, App. V, p. 31, n. 311
Yennádhios, vol. VIII, App. V p. 3312
Yennádhios, vol. IV, pp. 381–2. The acrostic reads ‘Scholaríou péphike pan chirón pónos’.13
Yennádhios, vol. III, p. 2314
Yennádhios, vol. IV, p. 41515
Karoúzos,
Martínos Kroúsios
, p. 3516
Crusius, ed. Niebuhr, p. 11517
Papadopoullos, p. 13318
Runciman,
Great Church
, p. 18719
Crusius, ed. Niebuhr, pp. 158–6920
Vacalopoulos,
The Greek Nation
, p. 330, n. 3621
Crusius,
Turcograecia
, p.487
Chapter 4: The Greek Peasants (pp. 44–52)
Detailed descriptions of the Turkish systems of landholding and taxation are in Inalcik and Quataert,
An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire
, vol. I; and in Gibb and Bowen,
Islamic Society and the West
. There is a useful summary in McGrew,
Land and Revolution in Modern Greece
, chapter 2, which also describes the Greek peasant’s way of life under Turkish rule. For the devshirme see Vasdravellis,
Klephts, Armatoles and Pirates in Macedonia.
1
Spencer,
Fair Greece Sad Relic
, pp. 70, 562
Spencer,
Fair Greece Sad Relic
, p. 63. Lithgow was using ‘fastidious’ in its original sense of something evoking disgust rather than of a person who easily feels it.3
Mahaffy,
Rambles and Studies in Greece
, quoted in Anderson,
The Smile of Apollo
, London, 1964, p. 1884
McGrew, p. 55
Vasdravellis, p. 176
Finlay,
History of the Greek Revolution
, vol. I, p. 3407
Gibb and Bowen, vol. II, p. 2108
Crusius,
Turcograecia
, pp. 193–49
Vasdravellis, p. 11410
Crusius,
Turcograecia
, p. 194
Chapter 5: The Italians in the Aegean (pp. 53–65)
The main sources are, for Chíos, Philip Argenti,
The Occupation of Chios by the Genoese
and
Chius Vincta
; and for the Cyclades, B.J. Slot,
Archipelagus Turbatus
. See also Peter Lock,
The Franks in the Aegean, 1204–1500
; and Apostolos Vacalopoulos,
The Greek Nation, 1453–1669.
1
Argenti,
Occupation,
pp. 99–1002
Thomas Gordon,
History of the Greek Revolution
, vol. I, p. 3513
Argenti,
Chius Vincta
, p. xliv, n. 34
Argenti,
Chius Vincta
, p. ci5
‘In a word, the views of the Greek leaders overrode the wishes of the Turkish authorities on every issue’, Argenti,
Chius Vincta
, p. cxciii6
Randolph,
The Present State of the Islands
, p. 467
Randolph,
The Present State of the Islands
, p. 148
Slot, p. 22 (joke); Vacalopoulos, p. 90 (coercion); Carola Matthews,
At the Top of the Muletrack
, London, 1971, pp. 105–6 (pride)9
Finkel,
Osman’s Dream
, p. 166, who points out that Nur Banu may in fact have been a Greek girl from Corfu – which would disappoint the genealogists.10
Slot, p. 7811
Slot, p. 77
Chapter 6: Pirates and Slaves (pp. 66–76)
For piracy in general see Fernand Braudel,
The Mediterranean
, especially vol. II, chapter 7; and Nicholas Rodger,
The Safeguard of the Sea
. Both praise Godfrey Fisher’s
The Barbary Legend
– ‘excellent book’ (Braudel), ‘an exuberant defence of the Barbary corsairs’ (Rodger) – so Fisher was no mere revisionist maverick. For Spain see J.H. Elliott,
Imperial Spain
, for Venice Alberto Tenenti,
Piracy and the Decline of Venice
, and for Greek piracy Vasdravellis,
Klephts, Armatoles and Pirates.
For slaves see Braudel and Fisher as above, plus Inalcik,
The Ottoman Empire: The Classical Age
; Inalcik and Quataert,
An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire
; Faroqhi,
Subjects of the Sultan
; Vacalopoulos,
The Greek Nation
; and Finlay,
Greece Under Othoman and Venetian Occupation
.
1
Elliott, p. 532
Fisher, p. 333
Fisher, p. 554
Fisher, p. 95
Fisher, p. 106
Fisher, p. 627
Fisher, p. 1498
Tenenti, p. 1089
Braudel, p. 87110
Vasdravellis, p. 17811
Vasdravellis, p. 15612
Inalcik,
The Ottoman Empire: The Classical Age
, p. 8413
Grosrichard,
The Sultan’s Court
, p. 6414
Vacalopoulos,
The Greek Nation
, pp. 94–615
Slot,
Archipelagus Turbatus
, p. 4516
Busbecq,
Turkish Letters
, pp. 44–517
Busbecq,
Turkish Letters,
p. 7018
Vacalopoulos,
The Greek Nation
, p. 94, quoting Bartholomeus Georgieviz19
Argenti,
The Occupation of Chios
, p. 62220
Finlay,
Greece Under Othoman and Venetian Occupation
, pp. 61, 68, 6921
Finlay,
Greece Under Othoman and Venetian Occupation
, pp. 64, 75