By Jeremias Wells
When Saint Pius V ascended the throne of Saint Peter early in 1566,
Christendom faced extreme peril. The Huguenots had been waging a
particularly violent war in France since 1562; the Spanish Netherlands
exploded in revolt later in the year; England, having gone from schism
to heresy, was openly assisting all the anti-Catholic forces; but the
greatest danger came from the constricting tentacles of Muslim
aggression throughout Europe and the Mediterranean.
The
defense of Malta understandably raised Christian spirits, but it was
only a defensive action. The powerful Ottoman fleet, still intact,
continued to raid Christian lands. The year after that strategic
triumph, Ali Pasha, who commanded the naval forces in Malta, captured
Chios, the last Genoese position in the Eastern Mediterranean and
through treachery murdered the ruling Giustiniani family. Then for three
days the Mohammedans roved over the island, massacred all the
inhabitants and destroyed everything Catholic. Two boys in the
Giustiniani family, aged ten and twelve, were martyred. The younger boy,
almost cut to pieces, was told to hold up one finger if he wished to
apostatize and live. He clenched his fists so tight that they could not
be opened even after death.
Some months later, Suleiman led another of those huge armies—always
at his disposal—of 200,000 men and 300 cannons up the Danube River
Valley toward Vienna. But instead of focusing on his main objective, he
allowed himself to be distracted by a minor irritant in southwestern
Hungary. The small, walled town of Szigetvar and its Croatian overlord,
Count Zriny, who was cut from the same cloth as Skanderbeg, continued to
resist occupation. Like most tyrants, Suleiman would not accept what he
saw as insulting behavior and so deviated from his original plan. After
losing several weeks just transporting his cumbersome equipment over
difficult terrain, he was tied down another five weeks by the heroic
resistance of the Hungarians. Zriny died leading a final charge with a
sword in his hand and praise of Jesus on his lips. However, Suleiman
could not enjoy any satisfaction from his misdirected effort, for he had
died the night before. Vienna would have to wait for another day. Selim
II, known as the Sot because of his drinking habits, took over the
throne in Constantinople, having already eliminated all rivals in his
family, and plotted the next attack on Christianity.
The Pope of the Rosary
From
the moment of his elevation, Saint Pius V, through his experience and
extraordinary vision, not only recognized the grave peril to Christendom
but also saw the solution; the Ottoman power could be broken solely by
means of a crusade; and crusades are won not only on the battlefield but
also in the spiritual life, that is, on the supernatural level. Spain
and Venice, as we shall see, viewed the Turks as a threat to their
material welfare—as indeed they were—but the holy Pope also saw them as a
threat to the order that God Himself placed in the world and for that
reason employed the weapons of spiritual warfare.
Saint Pius V increasingly asked for more prayers from pious
Catholics, especially from the monks and nuns in their cloisters. If he
asked for more sacrifices from others, he certainly intended to carry
his portion of the burden by doubling his accustomed exercises of piety
and mortification. A devotion to which he gave special attention was the
Rosary, so much so that he was called the “Pope of the Rosary.”
1 In fact, the great saint secured the uniformity of recitation of the Hail Mary through a Papal Bull published in 1568.
The Holy League
While Saint
Pius V was trying to organize an effective alliance against the
increasing danger, another Muslim provocation illustrated the precarious
situation. During the Christmas season of 1568, the pent-up hatred of
the “converted” Moors, known as Moriscos, burst forth in all its massive
cruelty. Savage tortures were employed against their victims before
they were violently dispatched, especially against humble village
priests and their altar boys. If they called on Jesus or His Blessed
Mother for strength, their tongues were cut out or their mouths were
loaded with gunpowder and ignited. These descendants of the invaders who
had nearly destroyed Christian Spain during an occupation lasting eight
centuries again drenched the country in blood.
Ferdinand Braudel in his acclaimed work on the Mediterranean
2
remarked that there was no doubt about the links between the Spanish
rebels and the corsairs of Algeria, the latter being staunch allies of
the Turks. The Barbary pirates brought men, ammunition, and weapons to
the southern Spanish coast and took Christian prisoners as payment, thus
introducing another thread in the noose strangling Catholic Europe.
Initial attempts to subdue the well-organized revolution met with
failure until Don Juan of Austria was placed in overall command. A
soldier who possessed all the extraordinary abilities of leadership,
including judgment and courage, he vigorously and relentlessly pursued a
campaign that destroyed the enemy strongholds and brought the survivors
to their knees. Meanwhile, all the courts of Europe were informed that
extensive preparations for greater aggression were visibly under way at
Constantinople.
Only a saint who lived daily in God’s presence and His benevolent
power could have assessed the seemingly insurmountable difficulties of
forming an anti-Turkish league and then going forward with such energy
and tenacity.
3
Saint Pius V repeatedly sent out requests to the counts of Europe to
join the crusade; yet, one treacherous or indifferent monarch after
another excused himself. Spain, which could be motivated by Catholic
considerations, and the Republic of Venice, whose territories were most
vulnerable, did not refuse; nevertheless, they sent evasive replies.
Spain, alone among the Europeans, was willing to contribute its
resources in men and material, although it had difficulty in seeing
beyond its narrow interests. On the other hand, Venice, basically
unreliable in any idealistic cause, was willing to fight only when its
commercial interests were threatened. Yet Saint Pius V was finally able
to bring the greatest power in Europe and the possessor of the largest
fleet in the Mediterranean to the bargaining table.
Once there, the skillful and occasionally duplicitous negotiators,
mutually distrustful and desirous of financial advantage, began to
haggle over every possible issue. Throughout the long, agonizing months,
the Pope’s overpowering personality swept aside all obstacles to force a
decision. Although sick and in constant pain, the indomitable Pontiff
finally concluded an agreement with the two shortsighted governments in
March 1571.
According to the treaty, the choice of its supreme commander was
reserved for the Pope. Behind his sumptuous chapel adorned with gold
cloth and silver vessels was a bare, miserable oratory where the
Dominican monk would go in the early morning hours to pray unobserved.
Prostrated on the cold stones before a crucifix and with deep groans,
the holy monk appealed to God for guidance. The Pope then went into the
rich chapel to celebrate the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. When he reached
the Gospel of Saint John, he began to read, “Fuit homo missus a Deo,
cui nomem erat Joannes!” (“There was a man from God whose name was
John!”).
4
Turning his face toward the Virgin, he paused and realized that the
commander of the crusade was to be Don Juan of Austria. The choice of
this truly great crusader was of inestimable value, for the lack of
competent leadership caused several scandalous failures during previous
decades.
The Battle
In
the middle of September, the largest Christian fleet ever assembled
sailed out from Messina in Sicily to seek out and destroy the Muslim
fleet commanded by the Sultan’s brother-in-law, Ali Pasha. Saint Pius V
granted all members of the expedition the indulgences of crusaders. Not
one of the 81,000 soldiers and sailors had failed to confess and receive
Holy Communion.
The immense fleet moved eastward across the Ionian Sea in a file
stretching out for nearly ten miles. Ten days later it arrived at Corfu
off the northwestern coast of Greece. The Turks had ravaged the place
the month before and left their usual calling cards: burned-out
churches, broken crucifixes, and mangled bodies of priests, women, and
children.
Here the animosity between the Italians and Spanish that festered
just below the surface almost erupted when the Venetian commander, the
crusty, battle-scarred old Sebastian Veniero, hung four argumentative
Spaniards from his yardarm. Fortunately, cooler heads prevailed. Don
Juan wondered if the Christians would annihilate one another before the
enemy was even sighted.
Then word arrived: “Ali Pasha is in Lepanto!” A long thin body of
water, known as the Gulf of Corinth, separates central Greece from the
Peloponnesus, the southern peninsula. About a quarter of the way into
the inlet from the west sits Lepanto, the fortified headquarters of the
Turkish fleet.
From Corfu the fleet worked its way down the northwest coast of
Greece. On October 5 came the infuriating news that Christendom had
suffered another cruel indignity from the Ottomans. Cyprus, the jewel of
Venice’s far-flung island possessions, had been attacked the year
before. The besieged capital, Nicosia, had fallen quickly, and its
twenty thousand survivors had been massacred. The fortified city of
Famagusta held out for another year due to the courageous leadership of
Marc Antonio Bragadino, its governor. With no hope of relief in sight
and starvation and disease reducing the population, Bragadino agreed to
what appeared to be honorable terms and surrendered. In an act of
unbelievable treachery, the Turkish general, three days later, hacked
the Venetian officers to death. For the next week, Bragadino was
horribly mutilated and then flayed alive.
At sunrise on Sunday morning, October 7, the chaplains on each ship
were celebrating Mass as the vanguard of the fleet cruised south along
the coast, turned the corner at the headlands, and entered the Gulf of
Corinth. Since dawn the Turks had been moving in their direction from
the east, with the advantage of having the wind at their back. While the
ships of the League maneuvered from file to line abreast, Don Juan,
with crucifix in hand, passed by each galley shouting encouragement and
was met, as he made his way through the line, with tremendous applause
and enthusiasm. By using tact and understanding, and forcefulness when
necessary, he had welded many disparate elements into a united fleet.
The young crusader divided his force into four squadrons. On the
left, he placed the soft-spoken but fierce-fighting Venetian Agostino
Barbarigo. Don Juan led the central squadron, ably supported by Veniero
and the papal commander, Marc Antonio Colonna. The cautious Gian Andrea
Doria controlled the fate of the right wing. Only the Christians
displayed their forces in such a way as to create a reserve squadron,
and they had the good fortune of having this under the command of the
Marquis de Santa Cruz, the Holy League’s most respected admiral.
Although the Christian galleys were outnumbered, 274 to 208, they had
superior firepower in cannon and harquebuses, while the Turks relied
mostly on bows and arrows. By nine o’clock the two lines were fifteen
miles apart and closing fast. Just before contact was made, the wind
that had been favoring the Turks shifted around from the east to the
opposite direction. The Christians drew first blood when their huge,
though unwieldy, galleys fired many rounds of cannon shot with
devastating effect. But because of their lack of maneuverability, the
floating batteries quickly passed out of action.
Barbarigo’s
counterpart, Mohammed Sirocco, made a quick dash between the Venetian
commander’s left wing and the shore line, hoping to swing around and
trap Don Juan’s squadron from behind. Barbarigo quickly slid over and
intercepted the Turks, but several galleys had slipped by and attacked
him from the rear. When his squadron closed in to help, Barbarigo,
standing in the midst of fierce struggle, lifted the visor of his helmet
to coordinate their attack. An arrow pierced his eye; mortally wounded,
he was carried below. However, his quick, self-sacrificing action had
prevented Sirocco’s flanking movement. The Christian left then trapped
the Muslim wing of fifty-six galleys against the shore and methodically
destroyed it.
The center of both lines bore down heavily on each other without any
thought of subterfuge or trickery. The Muslims were yelling, screaming,
and banging anything that would make noise. The Christians were in an
ominous silence, weapons in one hand, rosaries in the other. Usually,
the flagships stand off from the heat of battle, but not this time; both
supreme commanders set a hard course for each other. Ali Pasha’s
Sultana gained the initial advantage by ramming into the Reale up to the
fourth rower’s bench. Don Juan grappled the two ships together and
boarded. Instantly, a dozen Turkish ships closed in behind Ali Pasha,
supplying him with thousands of janissaries. Veniero and Colonna hugged
the Reale from either side. Reinforcements arrived from other galleys.
Some two dozen ships became interlocked, thus forming a floating
battlefield. The battle raged back and forth over the blood-soaked,
carnage-strewn decks.
Many in the Christian fleet performed magnificent acts of valor. The
ferocious old Veniero stood at his prow in full view, firing shot after
shot while his young servant reloaded. A Sicilian sergeant, rather than
die of disease, jumped out of his sickbed, went on deck, and killed four
Turks before dying from nine arrow wounds. The duke of Parma, companion
to Don Juan and future military genius, jumped aboard a Muslim galley
and cut down the first twelve men he faced.
Finally, Don Juan, huge broadsword in one hand and an axe in the
other, led an attack across the Sultana that ended in the death of Ali
Pasha. From that point on the spirit and fighting capacity of the Turks
declined.
One last hope for the Ottomans remained. Aluch Ali, the clever
Barbary corsair, out-foxed Doria by dragging him too far to the
Christian right. He then cut back and slipped through the opened hole.
Cardona, with a handful of galleys, attempted to block him but was wiped
out. Santa Cruz, who was giving valuable support to the center
squadron, broke away to intercept Aluch Ali. The latter, seeing his
opportunity for an unhindered attack on the Christian rear disappear,
fled to the open sea with just a few of his ships. Most of his squadron
was destroyed when Doria wheeled about and assisted Santa Cruz in
finishing the weakened Ottoman fleet.
The Holy League had achieved an overwhelming victory in the largest
sea battle fought up to that time. The Ottoman Empire lost about 240
galleys and saw 30,000 killed. The League suffered a trifling 12 galleys
sunk; 7,600 men were killed.
At the time the battle was won, Saint Pius V was studying financial
sheets with the papal treasurer. He rose, went to the window and looked
toward the east. When he turned around his face was radiant with
supernatural joy, and he exclaimed, “The Christian fleet is victorious!”
5
After human agencies verified the news two weeks later, Saint Pius V
added the Feast of the Holy Rosary to the Church calendar and the
invocation Auxilium Christianorum to the litany of Our Lady, since the
victory was due to her intercession.
Notes:1. C. M. Antony, Saint Pius V: Pope of the Rosary (New York: 1911), 77.2. Ferdinand Braudel, The Mediterranean (New York: 1973), 1061.3.
For a complete and accurate account of the difficulties, see Ludwig von
Pastor, History of the Popes (St. Louis, Mo.: 1929), vol. XVIII.4. Father Luis Coloma, Story of Don John of Austria (London: 1913), 215.5.
Robin Anderson, Saint Pius V (Rockford, Ill.: 1978), 78. Several
biographers use a longer quotation. See Antony, op. cit., 91.