to
Suleiman the Magnificent and ambassador
Jean Cavenac de la Vigne, dated 22 February 1557. The Ottomans had already attacked the Balearic Islands many times previously, as in the 1501
Ottoman raid on the Balearic islands. Then followed the sacks of
Pollença (in 1531 and 1550), the
Sack of Mahon in 1535,
Alcúdia (1551),
Valldemossa (1552),
Andratx (1553), and
Sóller (1561). Ottoman attacks only decreased after the
Battle of Lepanto in 1571, although they continued until the 17th century. On 30 December 1557,
Henry II of France, who was in conflict with the Habsburgs in the
Italian War of 1551–1559, wrote a letter to Suleiman, asking him for money,
saltpeter, and 150 galleys to be stationed in the West. Through the services of his ambassador
Jean Cavenac de la Vigne, Henry II obtained the dispatch of an Ottoman fleet in 1558.
Suleyman the Magnificent sent his fleet as a diversion to help his
French allies against the Habsburgs. The Ottoman armada left Constantinople in April 1558. On 13 June 1558 the Ottoman fleet ravaged
Italy, with little effect however apart from the sack of
Sorrento, then part of the possessions of
Spain in southern Italy, where they took 3,000 captives. ==Raid==