and the
Latin states of Greece. Map from William R. Shepherd's
Historical Atlas (1911) After the conquest of Constantinople by the forces of the
Fourth Crusade (1204), two groups of "
Franks" (a term used by the Byzantines to refer to Catholic Western Europeans) undertook the occupation of the Morea. They created the
Principality of Achaea, a largely Greek-inhabited statelet ruled by a Latin (Western) autocrat. In referring to the Peloponnese, they followed local practice and used the name "Morea". The most important prince in the Morea was
Guillaume II de Villehardouin (1246–1278), who fortified
Mistra (Mystras) near the site of
Sparta in 1249. After losing the
Battle of Pelagonia (1259) against the
Byzantine emperor Michael VIII Palaeologus, Guillaume was forced to ransom himself by giving up most of the eastern part of Morea and his newly built strongholds. An initial Byzantine drive to reconquer the entire peninsula failed in the battles of
Prinitza and
Makryplagi, and the Byzantines and Latins settled to an uneasy coexistence. In the mid-14th century, the later Byzantine emperor
John VI Kantakouzenos reorganized Morea into the
Despotate of the Morea. Sons of the emperor with the rank of
despotes were usually sent to rule the province as an
appanage. By 1430, the Byzantines eventually recovered the remainder of the Latin part of the Morea, but in 1460 the peninsula was almost completely overrun and conquered by the
Ottoman Empire. In these conquests, the coastal and port cities remained in the hands of the Venetians such as
Monemvasia,
Lepanto,
Modon,
Koron, but these places were captured during the reigns of
Bayezid II and
Suleiman the Magnificent. In July 1461, the last holdout,
Salmeniko Castle, was taken. The peninsula was captured for the
Republic of Venice by
Francesco Morosini during the
Morean War of 1684–99. Venetian rule proved unpopular, and the Ottomans recaptured the Morea in a lightning campaign in 1714. Under renewed Ottoman rule, centered at
Tripolitsa, the region enjoyed relative prosperity. The latter 18th century was marked by renewed dissatisfaction. Armed bands of the
klephts emerged, undeterred by the brutal repression of the
Orlov revolt. They waged
guerrilla war against the Turks, aided both by the decay of Ottoman power and the emergence of Greek national consciousness. Ultimately, the Morea and its inhabitants provided the cradle and backbone of the
Greek Revolution. ==Chronicle of the Morea==