Following the
Venetian victory over the
Ottoman Empire in the
Seventh Ottoman–Venetian War (1714–1718), the Peloponnese once again returned to Ottoman hands. However, the autonomous
Mani, who had refused to accept Ottoman sovereignty in the first imperial occupation of the Peloponnese, once again rejected Ottoman rule. The
Maniots through an agent they had in
Russia began conspiring with
Catherine the Great and Count
Alexei Grigoryevich Orlov. In 1770, terms were agreed and a Russian
fleet sailed into the
Aegean Sea and landing in Mani en route destroying an Ottoman fleet at the
Battle of Chesma. After initial success, the
Orlov Revolt ended in failure. Arguments between Orlov, the Russian leader, and , the Maniot leader led to the separation of the armies. Mavromichalis's army suffered a devastating defeat at Rizomilo in
Messenia against the Ottoman army with only Mavromichalis surviving. Meanwhile, the Russian army having made no long term gains retreated. The Ottomans had, meanwhile, unleashed mercenaries of Muslim Albanians (also known as
Turkoalbanians) on
Greece. They pillaged their way through the
Peloponnese where they massacred Greek civilians in revenge for massacres and destruction of properties that Christian forces committed against Muslim civilians. They launched several incursions into Mani but they were all beaten back with heavy casualties. This string of defeat aggravated the Ottoman
Pasha in the Peloponnese, Hatzi Osman and he mustered an army of 16,000 men and invaded Mani. ==Battle==