The struggle between Oruç Reis and Hayreddin Barbarrosa with Ottoman support (1515–1529) The Barbarrosa brothers, who came under the protection of Sultan Selim in 1515, captured the city of Algiers in 1516 after a delegation from Algeria asked for their help against the
Spanish Army. After
Oruç Reis was declared the
Sultan of Algeria in
Cherchell, he captured Tenes and
Tlemcen and expanded his territory to Morocco, but he lost his life in the Spanish counter-attack of May 1518.
Tlemcen fell back into the hands of the
Zayenids under Spanish protection. On the other hand, the
Ottoman conquest of Egypt finished in 1517, consolidating the Ottoman Naval presence in the Mediterranean Sea beyond the Balkans and
Anatolia, while introducing them into the Red Sea, starting a new series of
Ottoman wars in Africa and
in Asia, which then would make them clash with the
Spanish expansionist campaigns in the Maghreb and the
Portuguese maritime exploration on the Indian Ocean. Another consequence was that the
Ottoman dynasty got the
Ottoman Caliphate, which made them
Sultan of Sultans among all the
Sunni Muslims (nominally from Morocco to Muslim India and Indonesia, although initially only Arab states who currently recognised
Abbasids or were menaced by
Portuguese India Armadas submitted to the Ottoman political bodies) and so were considered by the Muslim
Barbary corsairs as their Natural Protectors, and by the Catholic societies as the Political Heads of a unified Muslim world that at any moment could threaten Christianity due to the bellicose policy of the Ottoman Empire.
Hayreddin Barbarossa replaced Oruç Reis and in October 1519, this time he sent a delegation of Algerian dignitaries and
Muslim jurists to
Sultan Selim with a petition of the Algerian people asking for help and be annexed to the Ottoman Empire. This solicitation, that generated initial hesitations from the Turks, would be answered positively by
Suleiman the Magnificent, who then turned the
Regency of Algiers into an Ottoman
Eyalet in 1521. Meanwhile, the
Portuguese Empire, ally of Spain with the delegated task of fighting the Muslim states on the "
Mar de África" (African coast outside Mediterranean Sea) according to the spheres of influence in the
Treaty of Alcáçovas, started to develop
factories on the
Swahili coast and the
Gulf of Aden to fight against Ottoman Corsairs on the Indian Ocean and to expand their economical and militar presence in the region while menacing the security of
Egypt Eyalet and the
Holiest sites in Islam. However, the admiral
Selman Reis defeated them on
Kamaran Island and later led an expedition into the interior of Yemen to subdue the area, which benefited Ottomans in consolidating their naval presence on the Red Sea and their land one over
Southern Arabia, stopping the Portuguese raids since 1527 and increasing their international prestige among Asian states, like the
Vizier of
Hormuz or the
Zamorin of
Calicut. and self proclaimed
Kaiser-i-Rum,
Suleiman the Magnificent Spanish counter-offensive (1529–1541) 's reception of
Hayreddin Barbarossa Pasha (1533)|left|346x346px The
loss of the island of Algiers caused a major shock in Spain. In 1529, a Spanish fleet of 10 ships carrying reinforcements to the besieged island was destroyed by the skillful counter-attack of
Hayreddin Barbarossa Pasha, who had already passed the island. In July 1531, the 50-man Spanish-Genoese fleet under the command of Genoese Admiral
Andrea Doria suffered an even greater defeat in the Cherchell Campaign. Likewise, the Ottomans in 1534 were able to recapture the port of
Koroni (at the tip of the
Morea), which Andrea Doria had captured in 1532. It was in these years that another war front opened for the Spanish Monarchy in Central Europe during the
Little War in Hungary (1526–1568), in which after the
Battle of Mohács, Charles summoned the
Spanish Cortes in
Valladolid requesting that Spanish military assistance should be provided to the
Holy Roman Empire,
Austria and
Habsburg Hungary to prevent the Turks from advancing into Hungary, Germany and Italy (arguing that Spanish interests were menace there and also of the
Christendom as a whole). So, since 1529,
Charles V and
Mary of Hungary sent a Spanish Expeditionary force composed of the
Tercio of Flanders (which included also Italians and Portuguese) that fought along Germans, Flemish, Czechs, Slovaks, Croats, Hungarians and Romanians in major battles of the
1529–1533 campaign like the
1st Siege of Vienna or
2nd Siege of Buda, in addition to participating in the battles of the Hungarian castles, in defense of the fortress of
Visegrád,
Szeged,
Lippa and
Timisoara for
Ferdinand I of Hungary against the Ottoman puppet
John Zápolya of Hungary with his
Transylvanian,
Moldavian, Serbian and Turkish troops. Some subjects of
Habsburg Spain that resalted in the Austro-Hungarian
theater were
Luis de Ávalos,
Luis de la Cueva y Toledo,
Luis de Guevara, Juan de Salinas,
Jaime García de Guzmán, Jorge Manrique,
Cristóbal de Aranda,
John of God,
Bernaldo de Aldana,
Hurtado de Mendoza, Gianbattista Castaido and
Caste Lluvio. However, the year 1533 also witnessed important turning points in the Ottoman-Spanish War. Indeed, the Ottoman Empire signed a peace treaty for the first time with the
Holy Roman Empire, which also included the
Spanish Empire. With this treaty, the war between the Ottomans and the
Austrian Archduchy on the
Hungarian front ended, while the war with the other vassals of the Holy Roman Empire (the
Spanish Empire, the
Kingdom of Naples and the
Republic of Genoa) not covered by the treaty continued uninterruptedly in the Mediterranean. At the same year occurred the
Siege of Agadir (1533) between Moroccans (backed by Ottomans) and Portuguese (backed by Spaniards), winning the latter. '' (
Prado Museum,
Juan de la Corte) The second important development in 1533 was that the Ottoman fleet under the command of
Kemankeş Ahmed Paşa, who wanted to retake Koroni, was ineffective against the Genoese fleet, and the Ottoman capital turned to
Hayreddin Barbarossa and the Turkish leaders for a stronger fleet in the Mediterranean. Barbarossa, who was called to Istanbul in 1532, was appointed
Kapudan Pasha in 1533. Hayreddin Barbarossa Pasha, who set sail for the Mediterranean with the strong fleet he had prepared in the winter of 1533–1534, devastated the coasts of the Kingdom of Naples and then
conquered Tunis on August 16, 1534. This strategic move by the Ottomans caused the attention of the
Holy Roman Emperor Charles V to turn completely to the Mediterranean. In 1535, Charles V personally
led an expedition and took back Tunis in June with the help of a Christian coalition between Spain, HRE, Italian States and Portugal (which was already in its own
Ottoman Wars since 1517 on the Indian Ocean and
Horn of Africa). In response, Hayreddin Barbarossa Pasha, who managed to smuggle his fleet to Annabe, sailed to the Western Mediterranean and invaded
Minorca, one of the
Balearic Islands of the Spanish Empire. In September, the Spanish attack on
Tlemcen was also repelled by the Ottomans. ' raids during
Hayreddin Barbarossa rule over
Regency of Algiers. (1538)|left|261x261px In 1537, the
Ottoman navy under the command of Barbarossa, and the
Ottoman troops under the command of
Lutfi Pasha, invaded
Apulia, part of the
Kingdom of Naples. The
Ottoman-Venetian War with the
Republic of Venice began in the same year. Thereupon, with the encouragement of
Pope Paul III, the
Holy League was formed with the participation of Venice, the
Spanish Empire, the
Papal States, the
Republic of Genoa, and the
Knights of Malta. However, at the
Battle of Preveza on September 28, 1538, the Ottoman navy under the command of Barbarossa won a great victory over a Christian navy which also included 50 Spanish galleons and 61 Genoese-Papal warships.
Castelnouvo, which was captured by the Genoese Admiral
Andrea Doria (at the service of
Habsburg Spain) in the same year to be used as a base against the Ottomans in the future,
was recaptured by Barbarossa in 1539 in a siege in which the 6,000-man Spanish garrison was annihilated. During the Spanish occupation of Herceg Novi, they made incursions into
Dubrovnik to defend
Habsburg Croatia and
Republic of Ragusa interests. This was the last military operation of the Spanish Empire in the Eastern Mediterranean until the
Battle of Lepanto. In particular, the hesitation of the Genoese Admiral Doria to include Genoese ships in the battle of Preveza, even though he was allied with Venice, Genoese's historical rival, led to criticism of the said person. (Ultimately, the Holy Alliance soon fell apart.) In 1540, an Ottoman fleet from
Algeria invaded
Gibraltar, but the Spanish Navy balanced the situation with its success in the
Battle of Alborán, while the Spanish-Genoese fleet under the command of Giannettino Doria defeated another Ottoman fleet in the
Battle of Girolata on June 15, 1540, and managed to capture
Turgut Reis. Taking advantage of Turgut Reis' defeat, Andrea Doria set sail from Messina in the summer of 1540 with a fleet of over 80 ships (51 galleys and over 30 galleys and fustas) and 14 Spanish infantry divisions led by
Garcia de Toledo, the Governor General of Sicily of the Kingdom of Spain, and landed in Tunis, capturing the fortresses of
Monastir,
Sousse,
Hammamet and
Kelibia held by the
Hafsids, thus expanding Spanish rule in Tunis.The year 1541 marked the peak of Spain's attacks, which had been ongoing since 1529. After Barbarossa rejected the offer to take command of the
Holy Roman Empire's navy,
Charles V gathered a large navy (580 ships and 36,000 sailors and soldiers), and was devastated by a storm during the
Algiers Naval Expedition of 1541, and suffered a great defeat in front of Algiers, which was defended by
Hasan Ağa. Although 2 years later would be launched the
Spanish expedition to Tlemcen (1543), in which Spanish force defeated Zayyanids from the
Kingdom of Tlemcen (supported by
Ottoman Algeria and
Wattasid Morocco) and ended in a total success as Abu Abdallah VI was restored to the throne as a Spanish vassal. On the
Portuguese theater, the Ottomans became allies of
Bahadur Shah's
Gujarat Sultanate and
Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi's
Adal Sultanate with the main goal to continue the
Mamluk Egypt–Portuguese conflicts and develop its naval and economic power on the recently conquered
Suez Port. So, in 1538 an Ottoman-Egypt expeditionary force led by
Hadım Suleiman Pasha was
sent to Diu to help Guajarats and stablish Ottoman influence on Indian Ocean, but they were defeated by
Portuguese India militia (although they conquered
Ottoman Yemen at the return of the expedition). Then the Portuguese sent
Estêvão da Gama to lead a
military expedition to Suez in 1541 with the main goal to crush the Red Sea's Ottoman fleet (the main Turkish navy that served to intervene on Indian Ocean), although initially victory at the
Battle of Suakin, however it ended that campaign in a militar Stalemate that was politically favorable for Ottomans (the Portuguese withdrew from Egypt after
Attack on Jeddah and
Battle of Suez due to stagnation) but economically favorable for Portuguese as the Muslim trade in Red Sea was blocked from
Gulf of Aden (and the Portuguese were capable to raid there like in the
Battle of El Tor, even launched an intervention in the
Ethiopian–Adal War, although being crushed initially on the
Battle of Massawa). Despite the recent failures, the corsair
Piri Reis, famous for developing a very accurate
Nautical Map of the World, was turned into
Hind Kapudan-ı Derya (grand admiral of the Ottoman Fleet in the Indian Ocean) to lead campaigns in the Red Sea and Persian Gulf (taking advantage of the recent
Ottoman conquest of Basra).
The Ottomans took the war to the Western Mediterranean (1542–1559) and
Philip II of Spain, the main Spanish rulers who defy the
Ottoman Caliphate.|left and
Suleiman the Magnificent, the most important rivals of
Charles V, stablished a
Franco-Ottoman alliance on 1535 directed against
Habsburg Spain.|278x278px The Holy Roman Empire's great defeat in Algeria temporarily ended the Spanish attacks on Ottoman lands, and the Ottomans carried the struggle to the
Western Mediterranean, where the
Spanish Empire was the dominant element. With the Ottoman Empire's involvement in the
Italian Wars within the framework of its alliance with
France, the Ottoman fleet under the command of Barbarossa invaded the ports held by the
Kingdom of Naples, the
Papal States, the
Republic of Genoa and the
Duchy of Savoy in 1543 and
wintered in Toulon in the winter of 1543–1544, continuing its operations on these coasts in 1544. Also on 1543 was launched the
Expedition to Mostaganem by
Count Alcaudete, although they were defeated by the Ottoman-Algerian forces. In 1546, the great Turkish sailor
Hayreddin Barbarossa Pasha died. in
Matrakçı Nasuh's miniature (1543)|262x262px|left Meanwhile, due to the throne dispute in the
Kingdom of Hungary, which was subject to the Ottomans, the Ottoman Empire and the Holy Roman Empire began a
new war in 1540. In this context, the two empires continued their fierce struggle in the Mediterranean and Hungary. After the Ottomans emerged victorious from the war, the parties signed a ceasefire in 1545 and a peace
treaty in 1547, and entered a period of relative calm in the Mediterranean. Despite it, another Spanish expeditionary force in Hungary was sent on 1548, composed this time by the
Tercio Viejo de Nápoles (which had Italians and Germans) under the leadership of
Bernardo de Aldana and
Giovanni Battista Castaldo, fighting on
Transdanubia until 1554 against the oligarchs of
Northern Hungary and Slovakia, as well as the
Transylvanians, Romanians, French and Turks who supported them. Those Spaniards defended
Habsburg Hungary on
Csábrág,
Léva,
Murány,
Szolnok and
Temesvár (although there they surrendered the fort of
Lippa without resistance due to economical problems, which caused Aldana's enemies to imprison him in
Trencsén until 1556). Their greatest successes were suppressing the robber knights on
Hungarian Highlands, the rebuild of
Szolnok and the occupation of
Ottoman Transylvania that briefly deposed
John Sigismund Zápolya from 1551 to 1556. Also on the Portuguese front of war succeeded military engagements on the Indian subcontinent at the
Siege of Diu (1546), which resulted in Portuguese victory against the Ottoman-
Guajarati coalition, and on the Arabian Peninsula at the
Capture of Aden (1548), which resulted in Ottoman victory against a Portuguese-Yemeni insurgents coalition (being a decisive expel of Portuguese Empire from
Yemen). at its peak on XVI Century.
Habsburg Spain participated in all the theaters of war in Europe. in front of Genoa. Despite the other fronts, there was a brief peace from Ottoman military incursions in the Spanish Domains since 1545. However, the calm between the parties was short-lived, and the Spanish Empire sent a fleet in June 1550 to capture the Ottoman fortress of
Mahdia in
Tunisia, and
Emperor Ferdinand's efforts to recapture
Hungary and
Transylvania through
George Martinuzzi led to the start of a
new war that would last until 1562. In this war,
Turgut Reis, who took over the leadership of the
Ottoman fleet, and
Piyale Pasha, who was appointed
Kapudan Pasha in 1553, brought the Ottoman military presence in the Western Mediterranean to its peak, in defiance of the Spanish Empire. The Mediterranean was the scene of larger-scale operations and important victories for the Ottomans. The operations of the Ottoman Navy in the Mediterranean, in alliance with the Kingdom of France against the Holy Roman Empire, led to the start of an
Italian War that lasted from 1551 until 1559. • In
1551, the Ottoman navy invaded the island of
Gozo, which belonged to the
Knights of Malta, one of Spain's allies, in July and conquered Tripoli with the land support of the Libyan Arabs as a result of
the siege from 14 to 15 of August. On the other hand, the Ottomans from Algeria launched the
Campaign of Tlemcen (1551) against Spanish,
Zayyaanids and Saadi Moroccan forces, changing the borders in favour of Algerian Regency. Simultaneously, at July also succeeded the
Siege of Qatif (1551) against
Portuguese empire at the
Kingdom of Hormuz, in which the Ottomans from the
Basra Eyalet were defeated by Portuguese (with the help of
Safavid Persia, who were
in their own conflict with the Turks).. • In
1552, the
Ottoman navy also sailed to the Western Mediterranean, invaded
Calabria, which was part of the
Kingdom of Naples, and (with the help of the
French Navy) defeated the
Genoese navy (backed by the
Spanish Navy) under the command of
Andrea Doria in the
Battle of Ponza on August. On the same year was dispatched from
Egypt Eyalet the
Ottoman expedition against Hormuz (led by Admiral
Piri Reis and
Seydi Ali Reis) against the Portuguese-Iranian alliance in the
Persian Gulf, with the main goal to secure the
Hijaz from Portuguese raids, reestablish Turkish-Sunni control of the
Indian Ocean trade, and conquer
Bahrain region to secure
Ottoman Iraq from Persians. Before arriving to
Hormuz Island, they sacked
Portuguese Oman in August at the
Capture of Muscat (1552), crushing the
Al-Mirani Fort and occupying southern Arabian coast from
Aden to
Basra while blocking Red Sea to Portugal. However, at the
Siege of Hormuz in September they were defeated by the Portuguese and so on the
Strait of Hormuz wasn't blocked (which let communications with
Portuguese India solicitating reinforcements for the revenge the next year). • In
1553, the struggle in the Mediterranean continued to be active. The Ottoman fleet under the command of
Sinan Pasha and
Turgut Reis, combined with the
French fleet under the command of
Antoine Escalin des Aimars, struck the coasts of Naples, Sicily and
Corsica, and in August and September
captured Corsica, which was under the control of the
Genoese, an ally of the
Kingdom of Spain. On the other hand, the Kingdom of Spain realized that it could no longer hold
Mahdia, which it had occupied in 1550. Emperor
Charles V offered to hand the castle over to the Knights of Malta, but when his offer was rejected, he evacuated the castle. Thereupon, the Ottomans recaptured the castle. In the same year, at July, succeeded the
Battle of the Bay of Velez between Portuguese-Moroccan and Ottoman-Algerian forces at the
Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera, which ended in Portuguese defeat. Despite Moroccan alliance with Portugal and Spain (in response to the
Ottoman expeditions to Morocco), the Ottomans tried to offer the booty to the
Saadi ruler as a token of friendship (wanting to avoid possible Moroccan raids on
Oran, and to reconciliate Saadians and
Wattasids to help against
Iberian enclaves in North Africa and support
Mudéjar and
Morisco renegades attempts to restore
Al-Andalus) but the
Moroccan-Algerian border issues were not solved and in so was launched later the
Battle of Taza. In the same year on the
Portuguese empire in Asia succeeded the
Battle of the Strait of Hormuz (1553), in which the Ottoman Indian Ocean fleet, led by
Murat Reis the Elder, attempted to transfer 15 galleys from
Basra to the Red Sea (needing to cross the
Persian Gulf dominated by the
Portuguese India Armadas from
Ormus) to finish the Portuguese raids in the
Gulf of Aden to
Suez, but the Ottomans lost that military engagement and were forced to return to
Ottoman Iraq. map of
Corsica, which helped to realize the Ottoman-French invasion of the island on 1553.|left|275x275px • In
1554, the Ottoman fleet plundered the coast of
Pula, which was part of the Kingdom of Naples, Spain, and invaded Viesta, then bombarded the coast of
Tuscany, which was part of the
Republic of Florence, and invaded
Orbetello. However, the Ottoman fleet was unable to meet the French fleet and abandoned the planned joint operation on Corsica, returning due to the advance of the season. At the Portuguese front of war, succeeded the
Battle of the Gulf of Oman, in which the Ottomans failed to expel Portuguese from the
Arabian Gulf or to conquer the
Imamate of Oman, but succeeded in finally crossing the
Strait of Hormuz and reaching
Gujarat to help them against
Portuguese India. • On the other hand, Morocco was in a period of national fragmentation due to the conflicts between
Wattasids and
Saadis. This led to a Spanish-Ottoman proxy war there. So, the Wattasids led by
Ali Abu Hassun, after being rejected by the
Portuguese Empire, seek help to the Ottomans since 1545 (being too far for a
Vassalage pact in which Morocco was annexed to the Ottoman Empire), while the Saadis led by
Mohammed al-Shaykh, after being offended by the arrogant tone of the Sublime Porte (who addressed
Moroccan Sultans as a mere "
Sheikh of the Arabs", which disturbed the former good Saadian-Ottoman relations) seek defensive aid to the Spaniards in response of Turkish interventionism (being too far to invade
Ottoman Algeria). So, on 1554 the Ottomans launched the
Capture of Fez with the goal to conquer Morocco, which briefly they do. Another goal of the Ottomans was to have access to the Atlantic Ocean through occupying the Moroccan port of
Tangier, so avoiding the Iberian blockade of Turkish ships on the
Strait of Gibraltar, which was a first step of bigger plans to develop Turkish incursions to
Spanish America and stablish a Turkish colony with the projected name of "
Vilayet Antilia" on the
Spanish Main (based in
Piri Reis map). However, the Moroccan resistance impided them to execute it. • In
1555, the activities of the Ottoman navy under the command of
Piyale Pasha and
Turgut Reis in the Western Mediterranean continued without slowing down. While the navy devastated the coasts of
Calabria,
Tuscany,
Corsica and
Liguria, the Turkish-French raid on
Piombino was fruitless. The
Governor of Algiers,
Salih Reis, managed to
capture Béjaïa, one of the few bases left by the Spanish in North Africa, on September 28. This loss caused anger in Spain and the commander who surrendered the castle to the Ottomans,
Alonso Peralta, was executed in
Valladolid., Algeria.|left|186x186px • On the other hand, the Holy Roman Empire was also going through a historical turning point after the
1st and
2nd Schmalkaldic War. The
Imperial Diet convened in
Augsburg to broker peace between the Catholics and Lutheran princes (
Schmalkaldic League). With the
Peace of Augsburg signed on September 25, 1555, the formula
cuius regio, eius religio (the religion of the ruler is the religion of his country) was adopted, granting each ruler the authority to determine the religion of his own lands. However,
Charles V, who had suffered continuous military defeats against the Ottoman Empire, had failed to bring France to heel, had lost
Metz in 1554, and had also failed to establish
religious unity within his country, was psychologically collapsed and prepared to abdicate, dividing the Empire between the
Spanish and
German/Austrian branches. These shocking developments in the Holy Roman Empire continued on January 16, 1556, when Charles V formally abdicated and retired to a monastery in Spain. Charles V's brother and
Archduchy of Austria,
Ferdinand, ascended the throne of the empire, while Charles V's son,
Felipe II (1556–1598), became
King of Spain. In a global perspective, the
Ottoman–Habsburg wars influenced a lot in the consolidation of
Protestant reformation despite opposition from the
Holy Roman Emperor, as the
Empire of Charles V was not free to focus in the German-Nordic religious conflict due to the
Franco-Ottoman alliance threatening imperial interests on the
Italian Wars,
Hungarian–Ottoman Wars and the Spanish–Ottoman War.
"the consolidation, expansion and legitimization of Lutheranism in Germany by 1555 should be attributed to Ottoman imperialism more than to any other single factor". • In
1557, the Ottoman fleet of 60 ships under the command of Turgut Reis and Piyale Pasha hit the coast of
Apulia, then landed troops on the coast of
Calabria and invaded
Cariati. Then, they headed towards Tunisia and managed to conquer
Bizerte, which had been under the occupation of the
Spanish Empire since 1534. • .In
1558, the Ottoman fleet under the command of Turgut Reis and Piyale Pasha carried out a larger-scale operation in the Western Mediterranean, invading
Reggio in Calabria, plundering the
Lipari Islands, and capturing
Massa Lubrense, Cantone and
Sorrento on the
Amalfi coast of the Kingdom of Naples. The fleet then bombarded
Piombino on the
Tuscan coast, headed south and defeated a fleet of the Knights of Malta off the coast of
Malta, then
headed for the Balearic Islands and captured
Ciutadella, the capital of the
island of Minorca, after an eight-day siege (July 17). The Spanish response (allied with Moroccan troops in
their own conflict with Ottoman Algeria) was the
Expedition to Mostaganem (1558) in an attempt to conquer Algiers, but ended in a disastrous failure. • In
1559, the
Peace of Cateau-Cambresis ended the
Italian Wars, consolidating Spanish hegemony in Europe and also temporary dismantling the
Franco-Ottoman alliance due to the withdrawal of France from
Mediterranean Sea and the beginning of
French Wars of Religion.
Unsuccessful peace efforts (1558–1559) While this struggle was ongoing in the Mediterranean, as a result of diplomatic negotiations between the Ottoman Empire and the Holy Roman Empire that had been ongoing since 1557, a permanent armistice was signed between the Ottomans and the Germans on January 31, 1559. On April 29, 1558, Emperor
Ferdinand sent four drafts of the
Ahidname to the Ottoman side. Although the German ambassador
Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq appeared before
Suleiman the Magnificent on June 8, he did not receive a positive response to the drafts of the Ahidname. However, it was agreed that the negotiations would continue. Because, in the Ottoman Empire, which
had eliminated the
Safavid Persian threat in the east with the
Treaty of Amasya in 1555, the ongoing civil war based on succession among the princes (since the assassination of
Prince Mustafa in 1553) had turned Suleiman's attention to the struggles between his sons. The period between
Prince Bayezid's defeat by Selim in
Konya in 1559, his subsequent refuge with the Safavids, and his strangulation by Ottoman executioners in
Kazvin as a result of the Ottoman-Safavid reconciliation in 1561, occupied the Ottoman state mechanism considerably. During the same period, the
Spanish branch of the
Habsburg Dynasty also sought peace with the Ottomans. So, in March 1558, both the King
Philip II of Spain and
Pope Pius IV decided to send an emissary to talk with Persian ambassadors via
Michel Cernovic, the chief
dragoman of the Venetians and agent of
Ferdinand I of the HRE, as well as of
Habsburg Spain, in Constantinople. However, he was more concerned with negotiating (together with the
Flemish ambassador for the
Kingdom of Germany,
Ogier Ghislain de Busbecq) the Ottoman border treaties in
Transylvania and Hungary with the Vienna-based Habsburgs, than with finalizing anything with
Safavid Persia, which also which also made him neglect the negotiations concerning the Spanish–Ottoman conflict.
Total War (1560–1574): Djerba, Malta, Lepanto and Tunis (1560) The Ottoman Empire's transfer of the war to the Western Mediterranean from 1542 onwards and the devastating attacks of the Ottoman navy on the lands of Spain and its dependencies every year caused the
Spanish Empire to turn its attention entirely to the struggle there and appeal to
Pope Paul IV. Upon the Pope's call, the Holy Alliance armada of approximately 200 ships, consisting of warships from the
Papacy,
Genoa,
Malta,
Naples-
Sicily and
Savoy, in addition to Spain, targeted
Tripoli, the base of
Turgut Reis, who had caused the greatest destruction to Spanish lands between 1551 and 1559 (February 20, 1560). In response, the armada, which headed for the island of
Djerba for logistical reasons, captured it and built a fortress, but was forced into battle with the Ottoman fleet under the joint command of
Piyale Pasha and Turgut Reis, which reached the island on May 11. While the Ottoman navy won a great victory in the
Battle of Djerba, the Crusader armada lost half of its ships and suffered between 9 and 18,000 deaths and 5,000 prisoners. Spanish Admiral D.
Alvaro de Sande, who took over command of the Holy Alliance armada after Genoese Admiral
Giovanni Andrea Doria withdrew from the battlefield, was among the prisoners. (1563) While the victory at Djerba was in a sense the peak of the
Ottoman navy, for the next 10 years there was no power left to oppose it in the Mediterranean. Indeed; it took a certain amount of time for Spain, which had lost 600 skilled sailors and 2,400 harquebusiers, to recover. However; the Ottomans were not able to reinforce this superiority with additional gains. Because; although during this period, Turgut Reis destroyed the Naples-Sicily fleet in the
Battle of Lipari in 1561 and captured the remaining ships of the Kingdom in the , the Ottoman navy under the joint command of Piyale Pasha and Turgut Reis
could not take Oran, which it besieged (for the second time) in 1563. In the same year, the Spanish fleet and troops under the command of suffered a
heavy defeat in front of the Ottoman base of
Peñon de Velez on the northern coast of Morocco, which they besieged, but the following year the Spanish fleet (helped by a Catholic coalition with Portuguese and Italian forces), commanded by
García Álvarez de Toledo y Osorio, managed to
recapture the base that the Ottomans had evacuated (the mentioned lands are still part of Spain). Also in this period succeeded the
Great Siege of Mazagan (1562) between Portuguese and Moroccan forces led by their prince
Abdallah Mohammed, ending in a Portuguese crucial victory. The year 1565 saw one of the largest operations of the Ottoman navy. The navy, carrying a force of approximately 25,000 men, reached
Malta on May 18, 1565, and laid
siege to the castles on the island defended by the
Knights Hospitaller. The Ottoman forces, who had difficulty capturing the St. Elmo Castle, launched a heavy bombardment on August 7 of the island's main fortified positions, St. Michel and St. Angelo, but were unable to capture them with general attacks. The losses suffered and the necessity of the Ottoman navy returning to Istanbul for the winter (due to the change of season to autumn) led Serdar
Lala Mustafa Pasha to decide to evacuate the island. When a rescue party of 8,000 men under the command of Don Garcia, sent by the Kingdom of Spain, landed in Malta on September 7, the Ottomans evacuated the island on September 8. In this way, the Knights Hospitaller, an important ally of Spain, and the island of Malta, which protected the Kingdom's lands in southern Italy, were saved. Although the Ottoman forces suffered losses in Malta, the
Ottoman navy continued to maintain its power. Indeed, while the
Ottoman army was marching to Hungary in 1566 for the
Siege of Szigetvar, the last
campaign of Suleiman the Magnificent, the Ottoman navy under the command of Piyale Pasha conquered
Chios, which was ruled by the Genoese, an ally of Spain, in the same year. Then, sailing to the
Mediterranean, they struck the
Pula coast of the Kingdom of Naples, also an ally of Spain. Later, in 1566, Philip II ordered his ambassador to Portugal,
Alonso de Tovar, to prepare an embassy to Persia and to inform him if the Persians were going to break the
Peace of Amasya with the Ottomans after the death of Suleiman the Magnificent (however, the mission never reached Iran). Despite it, the Ottoman-Acehnese alliance still instigated further sieges to Malacca (like in 1570), and would support the offers from the
Muslim Indian Deccan sultanates (specially an embassy from
Adil Shahi/Bijapur in the name of the Muslim alliance from the
Battle of Talikota against the pro-Portuguese
Vijayanagara Empire) to develop an Anti-Portuguese
League of the Indies (along
Kingdom of Sitawaka,
Gujarat Sultanate,
Johor Sultanate) to expel
Catholic Church in India and instigate a war front in the Indian Ocean with the main goal to crush the
Portuguese India Armadas from
Goa to
Malacca (distracting them to support Spaniards in the Mediterranean-Atlantic Ocean wars of the period).''' and requested that the Ottoman navy organize an expedition to aid them in a letter they sent to the Beylerbeyi of Algeria,
Kılıç Ali Pasha, on 20 April 1568. Ottoman
Sultan Selim II, to whom the
Moriscos conveyed their requests for aid, stated in a response letter he sent on 16 April 1569 that he was following the uprising closely and was doing his best to provide the necessary aid in a timely manner, but that it was not possible to send the Ottoman navy to the region immediately, as the navy was preparing for the
Cyprus expedition. However, Selim II ordered Kılıç Ali Pasha to support the rebels. Although Kılıç Ali Pasha's attempt to send a fleet to
Almería in 1569 to bring soldiers, provisions and weapons failed due to a storm, he managed to send 400-500 soldiers and provisions and weapons in the attempt in 1570. King Felipe II took action in the winter of 1570–71 against the danger of increasing this aid and the spread of the uprising and suppressed the uprising violently. In response, taking advantage of Spain's preoccupation with the uprising, Kılıç Ali Pasha
captured Tunis, which was under the control of the
Hafsids under Spanish protection, in his expedition at the end of 1569. in the
Kingdom of Granada (Crown of Castile). in front of
Messina on 1572-73 (paint of
Giorgio Vasari and assistants)|left After suppressing the Granada Revolt, the Kingdom of Spain refocused on its direct struggle with the Ottoman Empire. During the Ottoman attacks on Cyprus in the early years of the
1570–1573 Ottoman-Venetian War, the
Holy Alliance established between the
Kingdom of Spain and
its dependencies and
Venice on 25 May 1571 could not prevent the Ottomans from
capturing Famagusta and completing the conquest of Cyprus, but it did manage to inflict a major defeat on the Ottoman navy at the
Battle of Lepanto on 7 October 1571 (Spain contributed 49 galleys to the Allied navy in the battle). Then the Spanish-Venetian coallition develop contacts with Greek dissidence, planning a possible liberation of the
Peloponnese. The Ottomans, who had completely rebuilt their navy, set out for the Mediterranean under the command of Kılıç Ali Pasha in the summer of 1572, but did not engage in a major battle with the Allied navy, to which the Spanish also contributed 55 galleys. During these years, another attempt at rapprochement with the Persians was done, as the Holy League prepared an embassy in 1572 to inform
Shah Tahmasp I about the defeat of the Ottoman army at the Battle of Lepanto and propose renewing the
Habsburg-Persian alliance to fight against the Turks. Also,
Íñigo López de Mendoza, viceroy of the
Kingdom of Naples (through an Armenian messenger named John the Baptist) sent gifts to the Persian monarch on behalf of the King of Spain, with an offer of friendship. The Shah responded positively and sent John the Baptist himself and a Persian emissary with his reply, full of gifts for Philip II. However, after Tahmasp I fell seriously ill in 1574 and died two years later, such plans could not be realized when a civil war broke out in Persia (which
the Turks took advantage of by invading Iran in 1578). at the end of Spanish-Ottoman total warfare. Also another goal of the Ottoman campaigns of 1574 was to help the
Dutch Revolters in the
Spanish Netherlands and consolidate a
Turco-Calvinist aliance by reducing Spanish-Catholic pressure over the
Dutch Reformed through making another war front for
Habsburg Spain, which finally led to the 1575 Spanish-Dutch (developed partially by Philip II desires to focus in the Ottoman War instead of struggling also with the Dutch one) and the establishment of an Ottoman Consulate in Antwerp (
De Griekse Natie) shortly after to improve
Netherlands–Turkey relations in the context of
Ottoman–Habsburg wars. , the last
Proxy war of the Spanish-Ottoman total warfare in the Mediterranean. Despite Philip II of Spain, in the name of prudence due to economical problems, quit from the development of further big military operations against the Ottomans, he still supported the military operations from other allied rulers to have indirect conflicts against the Turks, like the project of
Sebastian I of Portugal to help
Abu Abdallah Mohammed II Saadi (who first wanted help from Spain, but not getting it due to the less bellicose Spanish foreign policy at the time) in reconquer
Saadi Morocco against the
Ottoman-Algerian capture of Fez (1576). This led in 1578 to the
Battle of Alcácer Quibir, in which
Habsburg Spain financed and give permission to Portuguese and Moroccans to recruit auxiliary forces in his territory (and convinced the
HRE to do so) fearing the menaces of an Ottoman
Suzerainty so close to Iberian peninsula (as it risked the security of not only the
Metropoli of the Empire, but also was a potential threat for the Iberian routes to the Atlantic Ocean and Americas). However, it ended in a
Pyrrhic victory for the Ottoman-Algerian-Moroccan coalition (supported by
Morisco contingents and
Sephardic capital who feared
Spanish Inquisition) against the European coalition. == Changing priorities and the search for peace ==