In the spring of 1461, Mehmed fitted out a fleet comprising 200 galleys and ten warships. At the same time, Mehmed crossed the Dardanelles to
Prusa with the Army of Europe and assembled the Army of Asia; one authority estimates
the combined force consisted of 80,000 infantry and 60,000 cavalry. According to
Doukas, as word of the Sultan's preparations circulated the inhabitants of places as far apart as Lykostomion (or
Chilia Veche) at the mouth of the Danube,
Caffa in the Crimea, Trebizond and Sinope, and the islands of the Aegean Sea as far south as
Chios,
Lesbos, and
Rhodes, whether or not they had acknowledged his hegemony, all worried they would be his target. This appears to have been Mehmed's intent, for when later asked by a confidante where this force was destined, the Sultan scowled and said, "Be certain if I knew one hair of my beard knew my secret, I would pull it out and consign it to the flames."
Sinope surrenders Commanding the army, Mehmed led his land troops towards
Ancyra, stopping to visit the tombs of his father and ancestors. He had written the ruler of Sinope,
Kemâleddin Ismâil Bey, to send his son Hasan to Ancyra, and the young man was already there when Mehmed reached the city and received his overlord graciously. Mehmed made his interests quickly known: according to Doukas, he informed Hasan, "Tell your father that I want Sinope, and if he surrenders the city freely, I will gladly reward him with the province of
Philippopolis. But if he refuses, then I will come quickly." Despite the extensive fortifications of the city and its 400 cannon crewed by 2,000 artillerymen, Ismail Bey caved into Mehmed's demands and accepted the lands Mehmed gave him in Thrace. There, he wrote a work on ritual prescriptions of Islam called
Huulviyat-i Sultan and died in 1479. Mehmed had many reasons for seizing Sinope. It was well-situated and had good harbors. It also lay between Mehmed's territories and his ultimate objective, the city of Trebizond. Kritoboulos states that one major reason Mehmed took it for his own was that Uzun Hasan might seize it himself, and Mehmed knew "from many indications that he was plotting [to do that] in every way, and determined to seize it."
Marching into Anatolia Leaving Sinope to his admiral
Kasim Pasha to arrange its government, Mehmed led his armies inland. The march was arduous for the men.
Konstantin Mihailović, who served in the Ottoman army in this campaign, writing his memoirs decades later, recalled no landmarks between Sinope and Trebizond, yet the travails of the journey were still vivid in his memory: The path the Ottoman army took is not known. Kritoboulos states that Mehmed crossed the
Taurus Mountains, becoming one of only four generals to have crossed them (the others being
Alexander the Great,
Pompey, and
Timur). However, as his translator Charles Riggs points out, to Kritoboulos all of the mountain systems of Asia Minor were part of the Taurus. Doukas states that Mehmed led his soldiers across Armenia and the
Phasis River, then ascended the
Caucasus Mountains before reaching Trebizond. This makes no sense when one examines a map, for both the Phasis River and the Caucasus are far to the east of their destination. However, Mihailović wrote in his memoirs that the army marched into Georgia, Kritoboulos states that no one had an explanation for this attempted murder, and before the assassin could be questioned he was "mercilessly cut to pieces by the army." Mihailović, on the other hand, states that the assassin was acting under the orders of Uzun Hassan and describes how the man was tortured for a week before he was executed. His body was left "beside the road for the dogs or wolves to eat." Both accounts agree that the Grand Vizier's wounds were minor, although Kritoboulos adds that Sultan Mehmed sent his personal physician, Yakub, to tend to Mahmud Pasha's wounds. Once the Sultan had passed
Sivas and entered the lands of the Aq Qoyunlu, he sent
Sarabdar Hasan Bey, the governor of the region of
Amastris and Sebastea, forward to conquer a border fortress and lay waste to the lands around it. After continuing his march, the Sultan encountered
Sara Khatun, the mother of Uzun Hasan; she had come to negotiate a peace treaty between the Sultan and her son. While Mehmed agreed to a peace treaty with Uzun Hasan, he refused to include Trebizond as a party.
Kasim Pasha invests Trebizond Meanwhile, Admiral Kasim Pasha had completed his work in Sinope and, assisted by a veteran seaman named Yakub, sailed to Trebizond. According to Chalkokondyles, upon reaching their destination the sailors disembarked, set fire to the suburbs, and began the investiture of the city. However, Doukas states that despite daily assaults "no headway was made" to breaching the walls. The men of Kasim Pasha's fleet had besieged the walls of Trebizond for 32 days when the first units of the Sultan's army under his Grand Vizier Mahmud Pasha Angelovic crossed over the
Zigana Pass and took up positions at Skylolimne. == Negotiations ==