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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Wars And Battles > Lepanto, battle of
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Lepanto, battle of, Wars And Battles

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Lepanto, battle of[lipan´tO] Pronunciation Key, Oct. 7, 1571, naval battle between the Christians and Ottomans fought at the mouth of the Gulf of Patras, off Lepanto, Greece. The fleet of the Holy League commanded by John of Austria (d. 1578) opposed the Ottoman fleet under UluC Ali Pasha. The allied fleet (about 200 galleys, not counting smaller ships) consisted mainly of Spanish, Venetian, and papal ships and of vessels sent by a number of Italian states. It carried approximately 30,000 fighting men and was about evenly matched with the Ottoman fleet. The battle ended with the virtual destruction of the Ottoman navy (except 40 galleys, with which UluC Ali escaped). Approximately 15,000 Turks were slain or captured, some 10,000 Christian galley slaves were liberated, and much booty was taken. The victors, however, lost over 7,000 men. Among the allied wounded was Cervantes, who lost the use of his left arm. Lepanto was the first major Ottoman defeat by the Christian powers, and it ended the myth of Ottoman naval invincibility. It did not, however, affect Ottoman supremacy on the land, and a new Turkish fleet was speedily built by Sokollu, grand vizier of Selim II. Nevertheless, the battle was decisive in the sense that an Ottoman victory probably would have made the Ottoman Empire supreme in the Mediterranean.



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Topics that might be of interest to you:

John of Austria, 1545–78, Spanish admiral and general
John of Austria, 1545¢#150;78, Spanish admiral and general
NAvpaktos
Ottoman Empire
Philip II, king of Spain, Naples, and Sicily
Saint Pius V
rosary
Selim II
Spain
Venice

Related Categories:

History > Modern Europe


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