During the 1200's, the five hundred year Jihad ran into bad times. The           'Abbasid empire had been riding high for centuries and their capital,           Baghdad, was truly a sight to behold. But they had attracted the           attention of the Golden Horde and in 1258 the grandson of Genghis           Khan, Hulagu, dropped by for a visit. He didn't much care for all of           the finery and hoopla, but thought the town would be nice for his           troops if the locals weren't in the way.           So he hauled al-Mustassim, the last real 'Abbasid caliph, outside the           city to a large plain.
There he brought together as many of the population as he didn't need           to fetch and carry for his troops and massacred them in front of the           Caliph. When that was over, he killed his family, servants, assorted           animals and finally the Caliph himself. Just another family fun night           for the Khans. From Spain to Iraq, the star-and-crescent flags came           down. At about the same time, the young son of a Turkish tribal leader           called Ertogrul was growing up in Sugut, near the Sea of Marmara. The           Turks at the time were pagans, animists, but would shortly become           Muslims and step into the void left by the 'Abbasids. Young Othman           didn't know it at the time, but Hulagu had done him a big favour. More           about him in a day or so. Excerpts from: 
          http://www.islamic.org
In the thirteenth century still another threat to the Muslim world           appeared in the land beyond the Oxus: the Mongols. Led by Genghis           Khan, a confederation of nomadic tribes which had already conquered           China now attacked the Muslims. In 1220 they took Samarqand and           Bukhara. By mid-century they had taken Russia, Central Europe,           northern Iran, and the Caucuses, and in 1258, under Hulagu Khan, they           invaded Baghdad and put an end to the remnants of the once-glorious           'Abbasid Empire. 
The ancient systems of irrigation were destroyed and the devastation           was so extensive that agricultural recovery, even in the twentieth           century, is still incomplete. Because a minor scion of the dynasty           took refuge with the Mamluks in Egypt, the 'Abbasid caliphate           continued in name into the sixteenth century. In effect, however, it           expired with the Mongols and the capture of Baghdad. snip Politically           and economically, the Mongol invasions were disastrous. Some regions           never fully recovered and the Muslim empire, already weakened by           internal pressures, never fully regained its previous power. The           Mongol invasions, in fact, were a major cause of the subsequent           decline that set in throughout the heartland of the Arab East.           
In their sweep through the Islamic world the Mongols killed or           deported numerous scholars and scientists and destroyed libraries with           their irreplaceable works. The result was to wipe out much of the           priceless cultural, scientific, and technological legacy that Muslim           scholars had been preserving and enlarging for some five hundred           years. 
As you can see, this was a major setback to the reservoir of science           and culture that the Arab world held. But during this period, the           empire had managed to spread via trading posts to such places as           India, the Philippines, Malaya, the East Indies, and China.
It would be left up to Othman and the Mongol leader Ghazan Khan Mahmud           to bring the message of Allah to Europe by separate routes and           different ways. A long siege on the town of Bursa, just south of the           Sea of Marmara, gave Othman I the power base he needed. Begun in 1317           and ended nine years later, Bursa became the first capital of the           Ottoman Empire. His son, Orkhan I took charge of the baby empire and           began to build his army into a force to be feared. Byzantine Emperor           John VI (John Cantacuzene asked Orkhan for his help in holding off the           aspirations of John V to the throne. The Jihad crossed the Dardanelles           into Europe, 1345. After collecting a wife to add to his harem (the 16           year old daughter of John VI), the sixty year old Orkhan headed back           to Bursa. But only four years later, they were asked back...this time           to stay. They are still there. 
In 1353, they established their first permanent settlement in Europe           on the Gallipoli peninsula and called it Galipolu. In 1915, the           Aussies and New Zealanders called it hell on earth. The second reason           for our attention to Orkhan I was his idea to take young men captive           at the rate of one thousand per year, send them to Constantinople to           be heavily indoctrinated in Islam, cut off from friends and family,           taught to be loyal to the Sultan to the death, and finally trained to           be the finest fighting force of the age. He called them Yani Sharis or           recruits. We call them Janissaries. They were the best identifiable           unit of fighting men for almost three centuries. So as the flag of           Islam fluttered to the ground in Spain, it was being raised in the           east. Adding the Greek area of Thrace, between Constantinople and           Salonika, to his young empire, Orkhan I turned control over to his           son, Murad I in 1359.
           
Murad took a long look at the rest of Europe and liked what he saw.           The Jihad was on the move again. Ah, the heady days of the Crusade. In           1366, a group of some twenty thousand Serbians and Hungarians set           forth to stem the tide of Turkish Islam from the east. They had a           variety of adventures, but it wasn't until 1371 that they met the main           body of the Ottoman army. Led by Amadeus of Savoy and Louis of           Hungary, the Crusaders were headed for Adrianople and paused to camp           at Cenomen, on the Marizza River. A mixed group of Catholics and           Orthodox, they nevertheless enjoyed a drink or ten. That night, they           were well into their cups and having a fine time when the Turks fell           upon them with a vengeance. 
Murad I personally led the Islamic army. They were dressed in           billowing clothes, wore huge turbans, wielded long, heavy curved           scimitars and used lances with great skill. On this night of September           26, the Janissaries made their entrance into military history that           would span five centuries. Sweeping through the camp at a full gallop,           the Turks completely demoralized the Crusaders. Vukasin, the king of           the southern Serbian lands, and his brother John Ugljesa, the despot           of Serres (modern Sérrai, Greece) were killed during the battle along           with thousands of Christian troops. Before the night was over, Murad I           destroyed the camp and scattered the survivors to make their way home           as best they could. For about eighteen years afterward, the Balkans           were unwilling vassals of the Ottoman Empire. Murad I turned his eyes           and his army to Greece. After the conquest of Sofia in 1385, Greece           fell under Turkish rule and remained that way for some 500 years           afterward. Only a few years later, Serbs, Bosnians, and Bulgarians           combined to hand Murad I a rare defeat at Plocnik. Little has been           recorded of this battle, but it encouraged the King of Serbia, Lazar I           to form a second coalition of Serbs, Bulgars, Bosnians, Wallachians,           and Albanians to confront Murad I at The Field Of The Blackbirds,           which we know today as Kosovo...June 15, 1389. 
It was to be a major turning point in history, some 50,000+ fighting           men arrayed in formation as the sun rose weren't thinking of history,           but of survival. Many would die on this day, as would two Kings. June           15, 1389. Some 50,000 men face each other across the small river of           Schinitza below the Kosovo mountains, between Bosnia and Serbia. The           majority are a mixture of Slovs: Serbians, Bosians, Albanians and           others; brought together to stop the spread of Islam into eastern           Europe. They are under the command of the King of Serbia, Lazar I.           Facing the Christians are the forces of Allah under the hand of Murad           I. The Christians outnumber the Islamic army 3 to 2. 
The King of Serbia held the middle of his line with the King of Bosnia           on one wing and Lazar's nephew, Yuk Bankowich leading the other wing.           Across the stream, the middle (and the Janissaries) is led by Murad,           with his sons Yakub and Bajazet to each wing. The battle begins with           first light. By early morning, the Christians are beating back the           Anatolians under Prince Bajazet. The whole line begins to waver, fall           back. Bajazet charges into the weak spot with his personal guard and           rallies his men, who soon begin to push the Christians back. Seeing           this, King Lazar's son in law, Milosch Kabilovitch, spurred his horse           across the battlefield shouting 'I'm a friend'. The Turkish ranks           opened to allow the knight passage and he was brought before Murad.           Kneeling before him in homage, Kabilovitch drew a dagger and stabbed           Murad in the stomach. The Janissary guard cut him to pieces. But the           damage was done, Murad lay dying. Murad summoned his strength and saw           that his commanders were shocked into silence.
           
Gazing toward the battlefield, Murad waved his hand and ordered them           to send in the reserves. With the Janissaries at the fore, the reserve           forces mounted on horses and camels and charged the Christians. Some           reports say one area ran first, other reports lay the blame elsewhere,           but soon the army of Lazar was in full rout. Lazar was captured and           brought to the dying sultan's tent where Murad had him decapitated.           Murad died shortly afterward. Standing beside his body, his eldest           son, Bajzet, commanded that his brother, Yakub, be seized and           strangled to death. (can't have rivals, especially heroes, just           standing around, you know) This was an amazing precedent. For hundreds           of years after this event, many of the sultans would ascend the throne           and order the deaths of all possible rivals at the same time.           Surveying the battlefield, the new sultan was stunned by the number of           soldiers of Islam that lay dead. Screaming for vengeance, he ordered           the execution of *all* of the Christian captives. 
Using professionals attached to the royal household, the slaughter           began with prisoners being tied together so to save the number of           strokes to decapitate all of them. When they still faltered under the           task, they began to slit throats or cut off a group of hands bound           together to allow the prisoners to simply bleed to death. Thousands           died that day, their heads piled in huge pyramids. Thus the Field of           Blackbirds as ravens covered the battlefield, pecking at torn flesh in           the waning daylight. Today, the anniversary of the Battle of Kosovo is           a day of mourning in Serbia. At the time, it was the beginning of           hundreds of years of the Serbs and others being vassals of the lowest           caste to the Turks. The new King of Serbia, Stephen Lazarevitch, gave           his sister, Despoina, to Sultan Bajazet and she became his favourite           wife. But this was merely the end of the beginning of the Ottoman           Empire. The Sultan looked west, to Hungary, and he wanted it as well.           
I don't have the words to describe how bitter the Christians of the           area are against the Islamic Turks. Suffice to say that the wound has           been bleeding from the day of this dramatic battle. It has not healed           yet. We see the depth of the feeling of fifty years of bitterness in           the Palestinians. Yet we had no concept of their history when 'we'           went into Kosovo to stop the killing there. "Geez, folks, get over           it!" didn't work there and it will not work in Jerusalem.           
King Sigismund of Hungary was a nervous man in the spring of 1395.           After the loss of the Serbs to the Turks at Kosovo, He could feel the           lustful gaze of Sultan Bajazet upon his kingdom. Feeling the need for           reinforcements, he dispatched a bishop and a few knights to France for           help. France was in a lull of fighting the English and might feel the           need for an adventure or two. Thus the little group set off for the           dukedom of Burgundy to plead his cause. Sure enough, the Duke thought           it was a fine idea and assembled an army under the command of his son,           Jean de Nevers. The Pope got word of the expedition and sent his           blessings and called it a Crusade. Later, it would take the name of           the Crusade of Nicopolis. Still, it was something to do for the           knights. 
Several worthies such as Jean de Vienna, Admiral of France and Lord           Enguennard de Coucy joined up, adding the wealth of their battle           experience. Perhaps the noblest of the noble knights of the age,           Marshal Jean Boucicaut came along for the fun and glory. All in all,           some 10,000 armoured knight, pike men, archers and infantry set off           from Dijon on April 30, 1396 to save Catholic Hungary and Europe from           the turbaned followers of Allah. The French army crossed the Rhine and           spent five months having a great time of pillage and rape across           Bavaria before meeting King Sigismund at Buda, his capital (later           Budapest). They were in fine mettle, loaded with loot and girls...but           no heavy siege weapons. No problem, they claimed, they would defeat           that silly sultan and his light cavalry in the field. The king was not           impressed. Leaving Buda, the French knights and the Hungarian army had           a brief tussle or two with small groups of Turks and overran the town           of Rachowa. Not wanting to leave any knights behind, the French           murdered all of their prisoners. It seemed like the thing to do at the           time. Marching on, they came to Nicopolis on September 12th.
Nicopolis (Nikopol) was a small trading town on the Danube in northern           Bulgaria. It was built on sheer cliffs with steep, easily defended           roads. With no heavy weapons, the French and Hungarians settled back           to enjoy the fishing and some of their live loot. Meanwhile Bajazet           was approaching with less than 30,000 troops to go against 40,000           Hungarians and 10,000 French soldiers. The French met a Turkish           scouting force outside the city. A thousand French lancers simply           slaughtered them. Aroused by this easy victory over a much weaker           force, the French decided to defeat the Turks in one fell swoop. Ah,           those French... September 25, 1396...the Turks had established a           formation on some gentle hills outside of Nicopolis. Some six thousand           French knights and lancers on armoured horses charged them. These were           the original 'shock troops' of later fame. 
The French broke through the elite Janissaries, then the light cavalry           of the Turks, Spahis, were brushed aside. Thousands of Turks lay dead           and dying in their wake. Far behind, way too far behind, Sigismund's           Hungarian army struggled to catch up. The French drove on but Bajazet           had set a trap. Tens of thousands of pointed stakes had been driven           across their path. Unable to advance, they dismounted to stand and           fight until Sigismund could relieve them...they were doomed. A knight           on foot is a formidable foe for infantry, Bajazet set twenty thousand           Cavalry against them. Sigismund saw that the French were surrounded           and lost. He took his army and went home. The French fought bravely,           but after some three thousand were killed, including the Admiral, Jean           de Vienna, De Nevers surrendered. Bajazet I was not an overly even           tempered man.
           
Surveying the thousands of soldiers of Islam that littered the           field--many, many more than the French losses, and mindful of the           massacre at Rachowa, he had all of the remaining royal knights (about           two dozen) brought before him. He and they arrayed themselves slightly           away from the main battlefield on the morning of September 26th.           Bajazet had some three thousand of the cream of French knighthood           beheaded as they watched. It took all day. The heads were piled in           hills of gore, the bodies lay as they fell. The royals were ransomed           off to France, leaving Bajazet with loot, booty, fame...and Bulgaria.           So it would remain until 1878. But the good times were over for           Bajazet I. As Europe lay awaiting before him, another potentate           threatened. The world of Islam was not big enough for both of them.           
France, troubled by the Islamic Arabs for centuries, now felt the           threat of the Islamic Turks. Thousands of Catholics were dead; Not the           Orthodox Serbs they cared nothing about, but French Catholics. Even as           they turned their attention back to the English, the spectre of Islam           weighted heavily upon them. Richard II of England and Charles VI           signed the Truce of Paris in 1396. It was designed to give both           countries a breather in the hostilities for 30 years. Oh, well. It           sounded nice. Richard II didn't understand that he was in power at the           sufferance of the nobility. He had already gotten a severe spanking by           the nobles at the battle of Radcot Bridge in 1387, but some people           just can't seem to learn from experience. In 1397, he seized absolute           power for a while, but finally Henry of Bolingbroke took over the           throne in 1399 as Henry IV. This didn't exactly suit the French. They           were kindly pleased to see the English squabbling among themselves           while Richard was around. Seeking to get something stirred back up,           the Orleanists (primarily) sent a few boat loads of troops over to           Scotland in 1402. 
The Scots and the French invaded England under the Earl of Douglas and           got their butts kicked by Lord Henry (Harry 'Hotspur') Percy at the           Battle of Homildon Hill on September 14th. When that didn't work, the           French raided various ports along the Channel during 1403 and 1404,           while waiting for something new to develop. Finally, they decided to           help out one Owen Glendower in his revolt. Glendower was fighting           Henry in the Welsh hills where his tactics of ambush and surprise gave           the English fits. He even managed to beat a force under Sir Edmund           Mortimer in an semi-open battle at Pilleth in 1402. The following           year, Percy decided to join him and headed south with 4,000 seasoned           troops. 
Henry IV got between him and Glendower with 5,000 troops and soundly           defeated him at the Battle of Shrewsbury on July 21, 1403. Hotspur was           killed and his father took the bended knee, but revolted again and had           to be defeated and killed at the Battle of Brahmam Moor in 1408.           Thinking Glendower had the hot hand, the French forces landed in Wales           in 1405, but basically got bored and went home soon after. So that           didn't work either. Well, what is one to do when going on adventures           can't keep the troops busy? The Orleans and Burgundians got together           and began operations against the English in Vienne and Calais. This           was fun for a while, but on November 24, 1407, the Burgundians just           couldn't stand it and assassinated Duke Louis of Orleans.           
The plot doesn't thicken, but it starts to get confusing as to who is           who. The Orleans faction, often called the Royalists and sometimes the           Valois, got the Count Benard of Armagnac involved, so they were also           called Armagnac. At any rate, both sides asked Henry IV to give them a           hand in 1411. Nothing was done at the time and his son, Henry V took           over in 1413. This Henry had the right stuff. Brilliant, brave, and           politically wise, he threw in his lot with the Duke of Burgundy, John           the Fearless. John had his hands full with Charles IV, but the worse           part was the streets of the city of Paris. Simon Caboch and others had           roused the population and started the Cabochian Revolt (1413-14) which           had the royals and the court just terrorized. 
John basically told Henry to come on in and he would do nothing about           it. Henry V invaded France at Normandy on August 10, 1415 with some           12,000 men, mostly armed with the famed English longbow. Henry V moved           from the coast inland, fighting and winning along the way until he           finally reached Harfleur on August 13. He remained there until the           city fell on September 22. Then he did something very mysterious. He           decided to march from Harfleur to Calais. The result, as 'they' often           say, was history. Getting bored with laying around the palace in           Edirne, Murad II decided to ride over to Hungary and see if anyone           wanted to convert to Islam, die, or pay some gold to live in servile           squallor. Things went fairly well for a while, but the King of           Hungary, Ladislaus called upon his friend, the governor of           Transylvania, Janos Hunyadi to take an army and put an end to Murad's           summer vacation. Hunyadi met a small group of Turks at Semendria in           1441 and easily defeated them. All along the way, Hunyadi heard of           grevious things being done by Murad's followers so he was not in a           good mood when he relieved the city of Hermansdat from the siege by           general Mezid Bey (1442). 
Some 20,000 men came face to face with Allah that day, but not all in           battle. Hunyadi caputured Bey and his sons, had them cut into small           pieces and fed to the pigs by his highly amused officer corp. Later on           at the victory dinner, things were getting a bit slow. Mr. All Work           and No Play hadn't brought any entertainers along with his army, so to           liven things up, he had prisoners executed one by one to bolster the           diner's spirits and appetite. Hunyadi was declared the White Knight of           Hungary for all of this and the king decided to get in on the act.           Ladislaus gathered a very small army of Hungarians, Poles, Serbs,           Wallachians, Bosnians, Germans and even a few French and an Italian           papal legate, one Cardinal Julian Caesarini. This was no longer a war,           it was now a Crusade! Murad's brother-in-law, general Mahmoud Tchelebi           marched to meet the Christians with a slightly larger army. No matter.           Ladislaus and Hunyadi soundly trounched them at Nissa, close to the           Morava river. Thousands of Turks were killed and the rest routed.           Ladislaus then proceeded to cross the Balkan mountains with his army           and smashed the Islamic army at Sanim (Kustinitza) in 1443. The           Ottoman Empire was prostrate before him. No credible force lay between           the Christians and Edirne. So Ladislaus offered Murad II a peace           tready, which he was more than happy to sign.
Now history doesn't detail why the Hugarian King thought that was a           good idea, but subsequent events prove it to be just plain stupid.           [Gulf War, anyone?] The Cardinal was in a constant state of lividity.           The thought of all of those UnBelievers ready to meet Allah was more           than he could stand. Finally, he was able to convience Ladislaus to           lead another army against Murad, but then ran into another problem.           Breaking the tready before the ink was dry offended the honor of           Hunyadi, he just wouldn't do it. After some time of appealing to his           Christian nature, Ladislaus came up with the promise to make him King           of Bulgaria if he would come along. Well, honor is one thing, but a           crown is another. Ladislaus, Hunyadi and a resupplied, refreshed army           crossed into Bulgaria in July of 1444. 
They arranged for the Venetians to send a fleet to Varna on the Black           Sea at the mouth of the Danube with more supplies and reinforcements.           On the first of September, Murad II headed back across the straits to           Europe with a massive army perhaps four times the size of the King's.           Meanwhile, Ladislaus crossed the Danube and captured Varna. Then he           sat back to wait for the Venetian fleet. It never came. 'So what!'           Hunyadi said, 'Let's attack'. Geez. The Battle of Varna began on           November 10, 1444. Hunyadi led the Hungarian knights and French           crusaders under the Cardinal in an charge against the Muslim left           flank of Tartars and Mongols. The Asians broke and ran. The           Wallachians on their right flank were making mincemeat of the Turkish           troops. King Ladislaus and his Hungarian army advanced in the center           to meet Murad and his Janissary calvary. There, things went badly from           the start. The King had his horse killed out from under him an a           Janissary severed his head from his body on the spot. Carrying it on           the end of a pike, they demoralized the Christians. Cardinal Caesarini           fell dead from a scimitar stroke and his troops broke. 
The Battle of Varna was over with thousands dead and dying on the           field, Christians fleeing in all directions, hotly pursued by the           Janissaries. The Turkish Gaza had soundly defeated the Christian           Crusade. It would be the last true Crusade...but Hunyadi lived on and           would come back to haunt Murad II.   On October 10, 1415, Henry V left           Harfleur and headed for Calais with no heavy baggage, no artillery,           few support troops, only 900 knights and 8,000 archers. His purpose of           doing this with an army depleted by disease and casualties is a           historical mystery. France was a sodden mess. He and his men kept a           hard pace, moving 14 miles a day in torrential rains and heavy mud           over poor roads. Meeting resistance at Blanchetaque, Henry moved           eastward, up the Somme River looking for an uncontested crossing. But           bridges were down or defended, fords were flooded and impassable.           Finally on October 19th, he found a suitable crossing at Athies, less           than a dozen miles from Peronne. 
The French had been following his progress with interest and more           importantly, a sizable army. Charles d'Albret, the Constable of           France, took up postition blocking the main road to Calais near the           ancient castle of Agincourt with 30,000 men. Henry met them there in           the afternoon of October 24 with a tired, weak, and hungry army one           third their size. The French nobles wanted to attack at once, but           Charles waited. The next day, Henry drew up his small force in three           groups. In the center were his best archers, backed by the knights on           foot. To each side were lines of archers. Row upon row of thick stakes           were driven into the ground amongst the archers as traps for mounted           knights. He waited. Charles waited. Finally, Henry moved his center           forward perhaps 2,000 yards, reformed the troops and reset the stakes.           
The wings edged into a wooded area for greater protection from archers           and horsemen. They waited. Charles had dismounted knights in the           center, backed by the mass of infantry. Mounted knights were far to           the rear and he also had bowmen on each flank. Charles gave the order           to advance and the entire body began to move. The armored men at the           fore were literally wading through viscous mud of a freshly plowed           field. The infantry was doing no better following them. But, ah, those           French. In a familiar maneuver, the mounted knights drove headlong           through both groups, throwing them into disarray, and poderously           labored towards the English bowmen. Naturally, the English enjoyed the           target practice and cut them to ribbons. What few survived the first           volley of arrows retreated back through the weary knights slogging           across the field of goo. Charles himself led the men on foot. They           could not turn back. By sheer will, they advanced through the hail of           arrows and engaged Henry's front line. Henry called for his flanks to           close and they fell upon the French from the sides and rear. It was a           bloodbath. The remaining forces finally made the scene and joined by           the regrouped knights made a fight of it. But then Henry called in his           shock troops and 900 fresh, mounted knights went through the French           like a scythe. It was over. Charles D'Albert was killed. 
The Duke of Orleans and famous Marshal Jean Bouciquaut were captured.           Most of the cream of the Orleans-Armagnac faction were wiped out in           the first reckless charge. Henry had swept the field of opposition to           the Burgundians, leaving them with easy pickings. The battle cost           France some 5,000 to 6,000 men of noble birth, some ten per cent were           of high nobility. It was a severe blow. Henry claimed to have only           lost a few hundred men, but that is dubious. At any rate it was a           lopsided victory for the English that is much studied to this day as           an example of strategy overcoming superior force. Henry thought he had           had a pretty good day, so he took his army and went home. But not for           long. Henry V spent 1416 attending to matters in England. In addition           to preparing to reinvade France, Henry built up the fleet and drove           the Genoese, a key ally of France, from the channel. Many point to           this as the establishment of the Royal Navy.
He also gained the promise from Emperor Sigismund of the Holy Roman           Empire, another ally of France, that he would remain neutral. This           allowed Henry to feel secure to his rear and flank. Indeed, when Henry           came back to France in 1417, he was able to consolidate Normandy in           three campains over the next two years without outside interference.           During this period, Jean Sans Peur, the Duke of Burgundy...also known           as John the Fearless...was busy. The remnants of the Orleanist faction           was still strong enough to finally drive him out of Paris. Perhaps           they should have left well enough alone. On May 29, 1418, the Duke           returned to Paris and massacred as many of the Oleanist and Armagnac           leadership as he could lay his hands on. He did a fair job, but           allowed the Dauphin, the future Charles VII to escape. 
Geez, Christians never learn that you have to kill them *all*.           However, John the Fearless was scared to death of Henry, so he decided           to strike a truce with Charles so they could present a united front to           the English. The two met on a bridge at Montereau September 10, 1419           with each bringing along ten trusted aides. John would have been           better off with some bodyguards because Charles had him killed on the           spot. As the Turks learned early, two princes are one too many. But           this backfired on the Dauphin. Philip the Good and Queen Isabella           still had control of Paris and the loony Charles VI. After he got           through with the fairly light opposition in Normandy, Henry marched           into Paris, to get the Tready of Troyes in his pocket along with the           right to be the heir of Charles VI. For all practical purposes, Henry           become the ruler of France. 
He could have spent a year or two seeing the sights and checking out           the royal wine cellars, but Henry seemed to actually enjoy leading           troops, so off he went to hunt down every follower of the Dauphin in           Northern France before taking him on directly to the south. Sure           enough, he spent the winter of 1421 and the spring of 1422 at a siege           of Meaux and got sick. So sick, he died on August 31, 1422. His nine           month old son, Henry VI became King of England and heir to France. Not           to be outdone, Charles VI up and died two months later on October 21.           Thus Henry VI also became King of France and John, Duke of Bedford was           his regent. The other contender for the role, Thomas, the Duke of           Clarence had foolishly gotten himself killed by a French raiding party           on March 21, 1421 at Bauge in southern Normandy. The Dauphin didn't           like all of this, and felt a bit left out, so ten days later, he           proclaimed himself Charles VII. No one knows why he chose October 31st           to do that, but he did. During 1422 - 1428, the Duke of Bedford           completed the consolidation of northern France, largely by winning           battles against French forces that out numbered him at the Battle of           Cravant in 1423 and the Battle of Verneuil in 1424. If the average           reader suspects that undisciplined charges of French knights against           disciplined English bowmen had something to do with those           victories...well, it *is* hard to restrain the vaunting French spirit,           you know. In September of 1428, the Duke sent the Earl of Salisbury           off to the south, to Orleans, a quiet little town on the Loire that           had some decent wine and was the key to Charles's strength.
Salisbury only took some 5,000 men even though Jean, Count of Dumois           (called the 'Bastard of Orleans') held the town with a much larger           force. The Earl started off by taking a fortified French bridgehead on           the Loire, but was killed by a cannon shot from across the river. Some           folks have no luck at all. Perhaps even less lucky, the Earl of           Suffolk took over and settled down to a long seige of Orleans. Little           did he know what lay in store for him, but who would have guessed that           one of the boats slipping past his guards on the Loire was carrying           Holy Cargo to Orleans. The Earl of Suffolk took over the siege of           Orleans on October 24, 1428 with a very small fighting force of some           5,000 men. The Count of Dunois held the town with a numerically           superior army, but was content to sit and wait out the siege. The Earl           could not deploy enough men to seal the Loire river and the           countryside, so supplies continued to make their way into Orleans. By           and large the French were simply afraid of the English, but they still           made some forays. On one of few such raids, the Count of Clermont           attacked an English supply convoy carrying salted herrings to the           Earl. The convoy was commanded by Sir John Fastolf ( the model for           Falstaff) and they easily beat off the attack which became known as           the Battle of the Herrings, February 12, 1429. But this would change.           On April 27, 1429, a deeply religious peasant girl of a mere 17 years           of age lead an army of more than 3,000 men from Blois accompanied by           the Duke of Alencon. They slipped through the river guards and           relieved the garrison at Orleans.

Much has been written about Joan of Arc, so I will skip the details of           her achievements. What was really important about her was how she was           responsible for a dramatic change in the perception of the war by the           French and English men at arms. At this point in time, the French had           little stomach for fighting the English. They had lost a number of           battles to be sure, but the way they lost was the key. The French           still 'raised' armies when they were needed. Training was concentrated           upon individual skills of the armored men, afoot and mounted. Little           was done to instill a will to fight in the common soldier. It was           considered enough to be, well...French. Many of the 'officers' had           never been in large scale combat or had any idea of strategy in the           placement of their forces or in choosing their terrain. None of this           was helpful when facing ranks of well trained archers. Time and again,           all through northern France, small forces of the English defeated           larger French forces. Perhaps the most stunning was at the Battle of           Verneuil, on August 17, 1424 when the French tried to out flank the           English, only to be beaten off by the archers of the *baggage* guard.           The second factor was the loss of so many nobles in each battle. At           Verneuil, the Earl Archibald of Douglas was killed and the Duke of           Alencon was captured, for example. Many of the common people were           primarily fighting for their lord of the manor. When they were killed           or captured, not only did the fighting men lose heart, but the all           important non-fighting people of their area did as well. These two           things resulted in the French cowering at Orleans while a pitifully           small group of English relaxed in the surrounding countryside. Joan of           Arc would change all of that. During the period of 1429 to her death           in 1431, Joan gave France a higher ideal to fight for than some noble           they mostly knew by name. And fight they did, both the common foot           soldier and those in their command. The people of the towns and           villages waged a partisan war that was probably more harmful to the           English than the pitched battles. 
They didn't care that Burgundian and Armagnac leadership was corrupt           and inept. They were fighting for France, for God, for Joan. Indeed,           for all practical purposes, after the death of Joan of Arc, neither           leadership had much to do with the continuing war. In 1436, the people           of France drove the English out of Paris and in 1444, the English           signed the Truce of Tours. Nationalism had won the day. Over the next           five years, the French established a standing army of 15 compagnies           d'ordonnance, comprised of 600 men each. They later expanded this to           20. Jean and Gaspard Bureau established a permanent artillery           organization which became far superior to any at that time. This group           of professionals re-established order in the country and within a few           short years had swept the English from France. This was the end of the           Middle Ages and the start of modern warfare. And it all began with a           young girl who *believed* and those who *believed* in her. Martin           Luther is given credit for getting the Reformation started. Historians           fairly well agree on that. Just about everything else about him is           clouded over by religious bias of one sort or another. 
False documents, outright lies, and distortions of events are mixed in           what is actually 'known' about what he did, what he said, and why he           did the things he wanted to do. Not much different from the histories           of other controversial people of the day. Here are two versions of his           early years and his home environment. The first is from 1549 and is           quite uplifting.
          http://www.iclnet.org/pub/resources/text/wittenberg/melan/lifea-01.txt
"The name of Luther is widely spread throughout the ramifications of           an ancient family within the Lordship of the illustrious Counts of           Mansfield, but the parents of Martin Luther originally resided in the           town of Eisleben, where he was born, subsequently they removed to           Mansfield, where his father, John Luther, filled the office of           magistrate, and for his integrity of character, was valued and beloved           by all good men. In his mother, Margaret Luther, was found a fair           assemblage of domestic virtues; and a peculiar delicacy of mind was           conspicuous in her character, accompanied by the fear of God and the           spirit of prayer, so that many excellent women found in her a bright           example of Christian virtues. 
Her reply to questions which I have occasionally put to her,           respecting the time of her son's birth, was, that she clearly           remembered the day and the hour, but that she was doubtful as to the           year; she said, however, that he was born on the 10th of November,           after eleven o'clock at night; and that the name of Martin was given           to the infant, because the following day on which, by baptism, he was           initiated into the church of God, was dedicated to Saint Martin. But           his brother James, a man of uprightness and integrity, was accustomed           to say, that the opinion of the family, respecting Luther's age was,           that he was born in the year of our Lord 1483. When be had attained an           age at which be was capable of receiving instruction, his parents           diligently accustomed their son Martin to the service and fear of God,           in connection with the performance of' social and family duties; and,           as is usual with good persons, they took care that he should receive           literary instruction, so that whilst yet quite young his education was           entrusted to the care of the father of George Emilius, who, as he is           still living, can bear witness to the truth of this relation. At that           time the grammar-schools of Saxony were not in a flourishing           condition, and on this account, when Martin had entered his fourteenth           year, he was sent to Magdeburg, accompanied by John Reineeke, whose           character was afterwards of a shining order, and the influence which           he obtained in that neighbourhood consequently great. The affection           which subsisted between Luther and Reinecke, whether arising from a           natural accordance of mind, or from their companionship in youthful           studies, was both ardent and lasting. Luther, however, did not remain           at Magdeburg longer than twelve months. 
During four succeeding years, passed in the school of Eisenach, he had           an opportunity of hearing a preceptor who illustrated grammatical           studies with greater accuracy and ability than he could have met with           elsewhere; for I remember to have heard his talents commended by           Luther, who was sent to this town from the circumstance of his           mother's descent from an ancient and honorable family in those parts..           Here he completed his grammatical studies. The powers of his intellect           being of a gigantic order and peculiarly adapted to the science of           eloquence, he speedily surpassed his contemporaries, both in the           copiousness of his language as a public speaker, and in prose           composition; whilst in poetry, be with ease excelled his competitors           in the course of learning." Isn't that nice. Sounds like the ideal           All-Germany childhood. Here is another view, equally biased the other           way. 
          http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09438b.htm 
His father, Hans, was a miner, a rugged, stern, irascible character.           In the opinion of many of his biographers, it was an expression of           uncontrolled rage, an evident congenital inheritance transmitted to           his oldest son, that compelled him to flee from Mohra, the family           seat, to escape the penalty or odium of homicide. This, though first           charged by Wicelius, a convert from Lutheranism, has found admission           into Protestant history and tradition. His mother, Margaret Ziegler,           is spoken of by Melancthon as conspicuous for "modesty, the fear of           God, and prayerfulness" ("Corpus Reformatorum", Halle, 1834). Extreme           simplicity and inflexible severity characterized their home life, so           that the joys of childhood were virtually unknown to him. His father           once beat him so mercilessly that he ran away from home and was so           "embittered against him that he had to win me to himself again." His           mother, "on account of an insignificant nut, beat me till the blood           flowed, and it was this harshness and severity of the life I led with           them that forced me subsequently to run away to a monastery and become           a monk." 
The same cruelty was the experience of his earliest school-days, when           in one morning he was punished no less than fifteen times. The meager           data of his life at this period make it a work of difficulty to           reconstruct his childhood. His schooling at Mansfeld, whither his           parents had returned, was uneventful. He attended a Latin school, in           which the Ten Commandments, "Child's Belief", the Lord's Prayer, the           Latin grammar of Donatus were taught, and which he learned quickly. In           his fourteenth year (1497) he entered a school at Magdeburg, where, in           the words of his first biographer, like many children "of honorable           and well-to-do parents, he sang and begged for bread - panem propter           Deum" (Mathesius, op.cit.). " Chuckle. History is usually written by           the winners, but in this case, both sides survived so things do get           muddled. 
All sides agree on a few things about Luther. He was extremely           dogmatic, which is not a bad thing when going against an established           religion. He was intelligent and well educated, a hard worker who           often did marathons of writing, reading, and translating. He had           little respect for those in authority and a keen eye for where they           were weak in their positions, primarily morally. He was a good to           excellent speaker and had a killer instinct for which way the mood was           swinging among the common people of the day. Most importantly, he was           the right person at the right time in the right place to start a           revolution. I use that word dilibertly because that is what he did.           Germany at the time was going though a long period of recovery from           war, plague, food shortages, terrible weather and just general bad           times. For the man on the street life was hard and looked to be going           downhill. About all he had to rely upon was his religion and *that*           was suspect. Witches were being hunted, Jews being persecuted, and           heretics were under too many beds. To top it all off, the Church and           State had decided that a 'good' way to raise needed funds was to           charge people to forgive their sins. 
The theory was that a person could commit some 'sin', go down to the           street corner, drop a coin into the pot, and get a piece of paper           called an indulgence which would yank his soul from hell back on the           road to heaven while the coin was rolling around. This did raise           money, but was on the way to dramatically changing how doing something           bad was thought of. Now think about it. For centuries a core method of           keeping the faithful in line was the threat of going to hell for evil           deeds. That was still there, but now you could get out of it pretty           easily. It was the classic loophole.
I suggest that any parent think about laying down the law to a           teenager, then saying if they don't do what they are told, it will           cost them a small, but not trivial, amount of money. Pretty soon they           are coming home at dawn and leaving some loose change on the kitchen           table to make up for it. Well. The very fabric of authority was being           torn. Then comes the story of The Indulgence. The selling of           indulgences has been going on for centuries, but it just got out of           hand in Germany. (other accounts are less kind) From the Catholic           Encyclopedia: 
"Albert of Brandenburg was heavily involved in debt, not, as           Protestant and Catholic historians relate, on account of his pallium,           but to pay a bribe to an unknown agent in Rome, to buy off a rival, in           order that the archbishop might enjoy a plurality of ecclesiastical           offices. For this payment, which smacked of simony, the pope would           allow an indemnity, which in this case took the form of an indulgence.           By this ignoble business arrangement with Rome, a financial           transaction unworthy of both pope and archbishop, the revenue should           be partitioned in equal halves to each, besides a bonus of 10,000 gold           ducats, which should fall to the share of Rome. John Tetzel, a           Dominican monk with an impressive personality, a gift of popular           oratory, and the repute of a successful indulgence preacher, was           chosen by the archbishop as general-subcommissary.
History presents few characters more unfortunate and pathetic than           Tetzel. Among his contemporaries the victim of the most corrosive           ridicule, every foul charge laid at his door, every blasphemous           utterance placed in his mouth, a veritable fiction and fable built           about his personality, in modern history held up as the proverbial           mountebank and oily harlequin, denied even the support and sympathy of           his own allies -- Tetzel had to wait the light of modern critical           scrutiny, not only for a moral rehabilitation, but also for           vindication as a soundly trained theologian and a monk of           irreproachable deportment. It was his preaching at Juterbog and Zerbst,           towns adjoining Wittenberg, that drew hearers from there, who in turn           presented themselves to Luther for confession, that made him take the           step he had in contemplation for more than a year. It is not denied           that a doctrine like that of the indulgences, which in some aspects           was still a disputable subject in the schools, was open to           misunderstanding by the laity; that the preachers in the heat of           rhetorical enthusiasm fell into exaggerated statements, or that the           financial considerations attached, though not of an obligatory           character, led to abuse and scandal. The opposition to indulgences,           not to the doctrine -- which remains the same to this day -- but to           the mercantile methods pursued in preaching them, was not new or           silent. Duke George of Saxony prohibited them in his territory, and           Cardinal Ximenes, as early as 1513, forbade them in Spain."
           
Ha! Was Luther just pissed at his flock thinning out and those that           came had little to confess? No, he seems to be the real article. What           the Church was doing was wrong and he wanted it fixed. Luther's case           was taken up by the press at the time and he got the necessary support           from the gentry. Soon enough, the Church was being openly questioned           and that was not good for those in power. Before long protesters and           reformers had names in capital letters and the stage was set for           Calvin, et al to guide Europe on still another path. 
The Castle Church in Wittenberg still stands and the famous door is           now made of bronze with the questions engraved in it. His Most           Christian Majesty King Francois I of France thought it would be a good           idea to see his enemy Charles V get preoccupied with the Turkish           threat from the east. He sent Suleiman a nice note to that effect and           got the response: "that he has laid his petition before the throne           which is the refuge of the world, he no longer need fear the enemy who           has threatened and ravaged his dominions and made him captive." So           much for good ole Catholic unity against the evils of Islam. Suleiman           prompty headed for Catholic Hungary with some 300,000 men to see what           he could do about helping those devout Christians to meet their maker.           He frankly didn't care what Francois thought or wanted, what *he*           wanted was all that mattered. And He wanted blood. King Louis II of           Hungary was a staunch ally of Charles V, but Charles didn't feel the           urge to send any help. 
Thus Louis set off to stop the Turks with his personal army of 4,000.           Uh, that *is* the correct number... The real bigshot in Hungary was           John Zapolya and he rounded up about 40,000 men to watch over *his*           best interests. Louis was able to gather 22,000 additional men during           his march and on August 29, 1526 he met the forces of Islam on the           field of Mohacs, near the Danube. Louis had about 12,000 cavalry and           about 14,000 infantry. He was a bit dubious about fighting an army           that was a tad bigger than his, but the Archbishop Tomori, a great           warrior in his own right, assured him that the correct God would take           the day. Oh, well. Meanwhile Zapolya took notice of the numbers in the           two armies and decided to sit this one out. The field was a great           place for a cavalry battle. Louis drew his men into three groups of           infantry with the cavalry between the groups and in reserve.           
The infantry had a number of arquebusiers, but only 20 cannon. As we           have seen before, Suleiman had cannon by the hundreds. The battle           began late in the day with the Hungarians seeming to be making camp to           fight the next day. On Suleiman's left, his commander, Ibrahim, who           was also responsible for the baggage train, took note and decided to           have his men do the same. Seeing this, Louis's right flank commander,           Batthyani, ordered his knights to charge. We have seen this before.           They did indeed break the Turkish line and Louis belatedly ordered the           center and left flank to advance. The right flank had been quick, but           the left flank was slow.
Louis was in big trouble in the middle and called for relief from           Batthyani. But he was in worse trouble...his men had dismounted and           were looting the baggage train. Bad timing. By the time he could get           them back into the fight, Suleiman had unleashed his cannon, taking a           terrible toll. About two hours into the hand to hand fighting,           Suleiman sent in the Janissaries by the thousands. It was all over.           Accounts have Louis fleeing the scene when he and his horse fell into           a stream where he was drowned. Seven Bishops and Archbishops,           including Perenyi died in battle. Most of the nobility Louis had           brought were also among the dead. 10,000 infantry and 5,000 of his           cavalry were killed over a span of some three hours. Two thousand were           beheaded during the night and their heads displayed on pikes amongst           the Turkish tents. Turkish losses were probably higher, but not           reported. It took Suleiman three full days to round up his men and           restore some sort of order. Before the battle, Bishop Perenyi is           recorded as saying: " Today is the feast of St. John the Martyr. Let           us rename the this day the Feast of twenty thousand Magyar martyrs."           He was prophetic or knew how to count beyond his fingers and toes.           This battle marked the end of Hungary as a major player for centuries.           Under Turkish rule, the population would fall by half from about four           million to about two million. The country was broken three ways, one           for the Turks, one for Charles's brother, Ferdinand of Hapsburg, and           one for that hero of self interest, John Zapolya. Suleiman took           100,000 assorted slaves, a massive load of booty, and headed back           home.
His men were free to loot, rape, kill and so on en route. Many stayed           and became rich and powerful. Others went home wealthy and full of           stories about the glories of Gaza. It was a high water mark for Islam.           Unsated, Suleiman looked to Vienna. He swore to make the Danube as           Islamic as the Nile, the Tigris, the Indus, and the Euphrates. It           would run red with the blood of Christians. Vienna. The center of           trade and commerce for middle Europe for centuries, was also a           political center of Charles V's Holy Roman Empire. He had taken a           loose confederation of Germanic states and turned it into a major           power, ruling territories as far reaching as those of Charlemagne.
This was the First Reich (962-1806) that Hitler was so fond of and the           historical basis for much of his claims to Austria, et al. Suleiman I           didn't know, understand or care about any of this. Charles was           standing in his way and calling himself an emperor to boot. Well,           there is only room in Suleiman's world for one emperor...Charles had           to go. On May 10, 1529, Suleiman took off for Vienna with a hundred           thousand or so of his closest friends, some three hundred heavy siege           cannon, perhaps a quarter of a million draft animals, horses, camels,           goats, sheep and so on, but no pigs. Along the way, he and his men           laid waste to the various cities and towns, raping, looting, burning;           all the things they had come to expect on these vacations.           
At Buda, for example, he spent a day during the first week of           September having his men comb the town to make sure ever person in the           small garrison had been massacred. This trip was true scorched earth           going and coming. Not only did they take a terrible human toll, but           the herds did so much damage that the food supply for the area took           decades to recover. But Vienna was the goal. Guarded by Charles's           brother, Ferdinand of Hapsburg, and less than 17,000 soldiers, Vienna           shouldn't be much of a problem for the conqueror of Rhodes. When           Suleiman reached Vienna on September 23, word came that King Ferdinand           had decided he had pressing business elsewhere and was gone. His           German general in command was Nicholas, Count of Salm, along with           Philip, Count Patatine of Austria and Marshal William von Roggendorf.           Able men all, but no one that Suleiman had ever heard of. Still, they           had done what could be done to defend the city. Trenches had been dug,           food and water stored, flamable roofs removed, and the outer area           cleared. Their few cannon were positioned and as many of the           population as possible was armed...they knew the fate of losers to the           soldiers of the Ottoman Empire.
The weather was worse than vile. Rain and mud were as much a problem           as the defenders. Suleiman literally was unable to effectively deploy           his cannon. What he could get into position, pounded the city day           after day. He sent his army and cavalry against the city several           times, but the efforts were tentative. Bolstered by this, Nicholas           sent out sorties in the driving rain on September 29, October 2 and 6           and managed to demoralize the artillery positions. And by this time,           it was getting plum cold. Between the cold feet of his men, the rain,           the mud, and the hot blood of the defenders, Suleiman declared victory           and cut for home in the third week of October...in a snowstorm. He did           take the time to kill every male prisoner he had though... accounts           vary, but there were at least 2,000 and possibly ten times that many.           The roads were impassable to the wagons and carts. 
Thousands littered the area where they were abandoned. The cannon were           loaded on a flotilla that had accompanied them on the Danube and the           army slogged toward home on foot, camel, and horse with what they and           their slaves could carry. It was not fun. All along the way, they were           harassed by the Austrians and the flotilla suffered severe damage as           it passed by the fortifications at Pressburg, where Kings had been           crowned, and would be famous for the Tready of Pressburg, on December           26, 1805 when another Emperor would be recognized. But this emperor           was beaten. The toll at Rhodes had simply been too much. Suleiman           would make another haphazard run north from Belgrade in 1532, but it           was over. He would sign a peace tready with the hated Ferdinand in           1533. The expansion into Europe was at an end. Suleiman turned his           attention to the south and to the Mediterranean. And they would not           like it at all. Milan...Milan...Milan. Those French kings. When they           get the wind up about something, they don't let go. Just as soon as           Francis I took over the throne, he spent some time making alliances           with Henry VIII and Venice and declared war on everyone else. As quick           as he could, he gathered 30,000 men of various military ability and           headed for Milan. He took the hard, high road through the Argentiere           Pass, just up the mountain from Chamonix-Mont-Blac. That, at least,           was unexpected, but he had the aid of the turncoat Spanish engineer           Pedro Navarro whom we mentioned before. Francis wasn't a complete           fool. He sent an emissary ahead with a few trunks of gold and got           10,000 of the Swiss mercenaries in Lombardy to head for home. That           left some 15,000 Swiss waiting for him. On September 14, 1515, Francis           was taking a break at Marignano, about ten miles from Milan.           
The Swiss made a forced march for his camp and without breaking           stride, attacked. The French were taken by surprise and completely           demoralized. (geez, how many times does this same battle happen)           Unable to get his artillery in position, Francis ordered a cavalry           attack, but the Swiss swept through it into the camp. Francis mounted           and with Chevalier Pierre Terrail de Bayard at his side, personally           lead a counterattack. Four to five hours of hand to hand combat           carried into the night. Both sides quit when they no longer could tell           friend from foe in the dark. At dawn, the Swiss attacked again, but           Francis had spent the night positioning his artillery.
It took a heavy toll on the Swiss, but they pressed forward and again           it was hand to hand. Towards mid-day, a Venetian relief column           approached the Swiss rear position and they broke off fighting and           withdrew in good order. A remarkable feat given the conditions. When           the column arrived, Francis had 5,000 troops dead on the field; the           Swiss had left 6,000. No matter, Milan belonged to France...again. The           Swiss immediately sued for peace, a situation that would hold until           the French Revolution. The Pope did too, but we know how long those           things last. On August 13, 1516, Charles of Spain swapped claims to           Milan for possession of Naples, then on December 4, Emperor Maximilian           made peace as well. Lots of peace for only 11,000 brave men dead.           Things were quiet around Milan for a while until General Prosper           Colonna snuck up on Marshal Odet de Lautrec with a Spanish-           German-Papal army and scared him out of town. The Marshal regrouped           with some Swiss mercenaries and Venetians and came back with 35,000           men. But he was slow to pay the Swiss and they threatened to boycott           the battle. 
He told them the gold was in the post, so they decided on one more           fight. Not wanting to wait for the mail, Lautrec attacked. Meanwhile           Colonna had dug in until only his plume showed. The men in the           trenches had the new arquebusier hand cannon and knew how to use them.           While Lautrec moved his artillery to an fro to get the best shot, the           Swiss got impatient and charged the trenches. Bad move. Of 8,000 crack           Swiss pikemen, 3,000 were killed in half an hour. The Swiss learned           their lesson. The premiere pikemen of the age *never* attacked against           hand cannon again. Lautrec saw the handwriting on the trench and           decided to go back to France. Milan was gone. Again. Man, Francis was           pissed. Francis wanted to go back to Milan, but he had to stay around           the palace and deal with the traitor Prince Charles of Bourbon           (another story), so he sent the worthy Admiral of France William de           Bonnivet down there with a nice sized army. But things went wrong from           the start. Colonna out maneuvered him and Bonnivet got trapped in           Novara. Winter set in and the French army settled down. In March, the           Viceroy of Naples, Charles de Lannoy came in a routed the encamped           French. He caught up with them at Sesia on April 30, 1524 and wounded           Bonnivet in the fighting. The army made its way back to France in poor           order. Worst of all, perhaps one of the ten finest French Warriors of           the age, Bayard died leading a counterattack. The chevalier sans peur           et sans reproche had led a legendary life, so much so that fact and           fiction are hard to tell apart. His reputation was so high that           *twice* he was captured and released without ransom, purely out of           respect. It was a fitting way to end his career. Well, this just would           not do. 
Francis rounded up 40,000 troops and headed for Milan. Little did he           know the most dangerous enemy of them all awaited him there...plague.           Francis I really lusted after Milan. Weary of the city being won and           lost, he headed there with 40,000 troops and again entered Italy via           the Argentiere Pass in early October, 1524. When he got to Milan, he           found the city undefended. Charles de Lannoy, Viceroy of Naples, had           taken his troops south when plague broke out in the city. Francis was           furious. Leaving a small garrison outside of the city, he headed after           Lannoy to work off a little anger. Stopping at Pavia, Francis divided           his force and sent 15,000 men led by John Stuart, Duke of Albany, to           conquer Naples. Now most military people just naturally keep their           forces united and on guard against attack from unknown forces when in           a strange country. Not Francis. He didn't even do the patrol           thing...again. Lannoy had joined up with a group led by the Marquis of           Pescara, gotten reorganized and resupplied and headed for Pavia with           20,000 men. Francis was dug in and when he arrived Lannoy did as well.           Both armies sat in their trenches, cold, wet and generally miserable           in the Italian winter. The Swiss got bored (again) and 6,000 took off           for home with the stated intention of opening up a supply line.
This left Francis with slightly less of a force than Lannoy. During           the night of February 23, 1525, Lannoy moved his main force to the           French left during a driving rainstorm. Well! When the French woke up           the next day, Lannoy was drawn up in battle order 90 degrees away from           all that fine artillery. Francis knew he was doomed if he didn't do           something to buy time for the artillery to be swung around. Leading           knights and light cavalry with many of the infantry straggling along           behind, Francis led the charge. Several times, he was beaten back,           regrouped his heavy cavalry and charged again. Meanwhile, the infantry           was slogging sloooowly up to reinforce him. Not waiting, Lannoy           counterattacked, driving the cavalry back into the oncoming foot           soldiers. Some two hours of hand to hand combat took place, but the           French didn't really have a chance. The Spanish arquebusiers dominated           the field. Francis had few guns of any kind and only a small group of           men armed with crossbows. The day might have been different, but a           third of Francis's army under Duke Charles of Alencon decided that           they had had all the fun they could stand and headed back for France.           Mmmm. 
Prince Louis de La Tremoille was killed and Francis was wounded and           captured when his horse was slain. 8,000 Frenchmen lay dead among only           1,000 of the army of Lannoy. It was over. Held prisoner in Madrid,           Francis signed a tready giving up all claims to Italy and turning over           Burgundy, Artois and Flanders to Charles V. This tready lasted all the           way back home. Francis spent the next four years getting his army           kicked around, more nobility killed and lost more territory. He allied           with the Pope, but didn't bother to do much when Spanish and German           mercenaries decided to visit Rome on May 6, 1527. (It was not fun for           the men of the cloth.) The next year, his best army in the field was           decisively defeated at Londriano and a revolt in Genoa, led by Andrea           Doria, cost him his best base in Italy. It was grim. In 1531, Francis           finally...finally...decided to reorganize his army more along the           lines of his fine artillery organization. He set up infantry legions           as standing units. 
Pikemen and arquebusiers were trained and supplied. In a few more           years, he had a core of four legions with 6,000 men each ready to           fight the 'new' warfare. So naturally, he headed for Milan. A number           of important works on the changes in warfare were written during this           time. Niccolo Machiavelli (1469 - 1527) wrote The Prince and The Art           of War which many of us have read. But Albrecht Durer (1471 - 1528)           wrote extensively on the theory of fortifications and Niccoleo           Tartaglia (1500 - 1557) wrote on the science of gunnery. All three           were heavily read by the nobility of Europe. Later on would come           Political and Military Discourses by Francois de la Noue (1531 -           1591), a brilliant series of thoughtful observations on strategy. The           nobility was taking a terrible loss of life and many began to try to           fight smarter. Not a bad thing at all. This was the beginning of           officers who led by birth, natural skill, ability to raise armies,           *and* educated in the history of battles similar to ones they would           actually fight in. It made a difference. At the same time Milan was           suffering from the plague, Nostradamus was still on his wandering tour           in the general area. 
In 1529, he dropped by Montepellier ( later to become a Huguenot           stronghold), less than a hundred miles from Marseilles. War and rumors           of war, plague, deaths of noblemen and commoners were the topics of           the day. Perhaps the movement of armies to the east convienced him to           go west to Agen, on the Garonne River. We may never know. But it is           interesting to note that Agen later became a key member of the           Catholic League *against* the Huguenots, was the location of an           inquisition tribunal at one time and the widely known home of prunes           for all time. Suleiman I had pretty much gotten weary of seeing his           dead soldiers stacked in piles next to Christians. In a way, he may           have been glad to hear that the Shah of Persia, Tahmasp, had been           inciting the Shi'ites to revolt and had taken an army and gone about           the general area pushing out Suleimans light garrisons. Now this was           something to get the Sultan's blood up. Killing Shi'ites was one of           his favorite things... He sent Ibrahim Pasha down with a small army of           mostly light cavalry and Pasha took Tabriz on July 13, 1534 without           much trouble. Suleiman joined him in December with the main army and           they moved into Mesopotamia and retook Baghdad with almost no           opposition. 
However, Kurd and Persian guerrillas harassed him all the way,           inflicting major losses to men, equipment and morale. While Suleiman           was sight seeing around Baghdad, Tahmasp moved into Tabriz. Geez. In           April, the Sultan left Baghdad and went to Tabriz, but Tahmasp went           out the back way as he came in the front. Suleiman marched his army           after him, but the Shah had no intention of having a head to head           battle. Finally, the Turks marched back to Tabriz and leveled the           place. Well, he *had* to do *something*. Amongst the rape and           ravaging, he did leave untouched the Blue Mosque and an even older           citadel. He wasn't all bad after all. Disgusted, Suleiman packed up a           few rugs and slaves and went home. On March 30, 1536, Suleiman had           Ibrahim Pasha assassinated. Many say one of his wives, Roxelana,           talked him into doing it for reasons of her own, but others think it           was just his way of venting about the wasted excursions into Persia.           Who knows. At any rate, he didn't go back for another decade...and it           was inconclusive. So he waited another decade. This time, he just           concerned himself with scorching the earth, killing a few thousand           civilians here and there, raping, looting and just not being very nice           to the Shi'ites. He finally gave up on the whole thing in 1555.
While all of this was going on, Suleiman was keeping up a running sea           battle from one end of the Mediterranean to another. After the fall of           Rhodes, he felt he should rule the sea and was not pleased at all that           he didn't. A brief note about the naval tactics of the day. Frankly,           they hadn't changed a bit since the Punic Wars. The ships certainly           hadn't. They were a basically a sail and oar powered barge for           carrying troops. Many had a small cannon or two in the bow, but they           all had a large reinforced ram, sometimes with a metal beak. Their           main purpose was to get close to a ship, ram them, board them and           fight the messy hand to hand stuff with 300 to 400 men on each ship.           Think about it. War at sea was war at land on a small scale. Suleiman           was lucky in a way. He had picked Khair ed-Din to be his Admiral and           it turned out that he was one of the top two galley commanders of all           time. Suleiman was unlucky though that the other top commander was in           the employ of the Holy Roman Empire. Admiral Andrea Doria had already           cost France its best base in Italy and he was the dagger at the throat           of Islam in the Roman Lake. It was the end of the era of the galley as           the new galleon of Spain and England would take over the seas. But           these two would slug it out for years in the old standby galley.           Andrea Doria, the Genoese Admiral for Holy Roman Emperor Charles V and           Khair ed-Din, the Dey of Algiers and Kapitan Pasha for Suleiman I of           the Ottoman Empire would write an end to the reign of the galley in a           long series of bloody, brilliant, and historic battles.
           
It all began in Morea, the old Peloponnese, when Doria took Patras in           NW Greece and Khair took it right back again in 1533. Patras was           completely destroyed by the Turks during the Greek War of Independence           three hundred years later, but it got off light this time. Not so for           other coastal fortified ports. The War At Sea was on. When Suleiman I           decided to take over the Mediterranean, he looked around for an           Admiral. He had plenty of Generals, but the men running his fleet left           a lot to be desired. He finally settled on one Khair ed-Din, a           masterful pirate who had a personal navy of 35 galleots (single masted           galleys) engaged in raiding from his base in Algiers. It was a stroke           of luck or genius, as Khair--better known as Barbarossa--turned out to           be one of the all time best Admiral of galleys in history. Not only           that, he had been doing the stuff of legends since he took over the           small fleet in 1518. Records are sparce, but he was certainly the           leading supplier of white slaves for the North African coast and the           way he got them made Suleiman's eyes water. Barbarossa dearly loved to           go into coastal towns and spend days raping, plundering and casually           killing Christians. The lightly armed trading vessels he ran across           were brought to port awash in blood. The Sultan thought he was a fine           fellow. Barbarossa was called to Turkey by the Sultan to refit,           reorganize and take charge of his navy in 1533, which he did. After           some time doing that *and* god only knows what in the palace with           literally thousands of women at his disposal, he took the main fleet           out on a shake down cruise.
The first place of substance he shook down was Tunis. In 1534, he           kicked out the local ruler, one Mulai-Hassan, and settled back to           enjoy the local entertainment. Hassan hied himself off to Europe and           got the ear of Charles V. Charles took a liking to him as it seems           that when Hassan took over Tunis, he had 44 of his 45 brothers and           half brothers strangled. (they never located the other one.) He also           kept two harems, one of some 400 young boys and another of about an           equal amount of women. Charles was so fond of him that he personally           lead 30,000 troops and a fleet of perhaps 400 ships against Barbarossa           at Tunis in the summer of 1535. Andrea Doria, the other truly great           galley admiral, held off the Muslim fleet while Charles took the city,           reinstated Hassan, and made Tunis a Spanish protectorate (1535-1574).           
Charles V was by all accounts a vile man, but in Tunis he turned the           troops loose to massacre, rape and plunder on a scale rarely seen in           Christian Europe. It made the sacking of Rome in 1527 look like a Boy           Scout Jamboree. Suleiman no doubt nodded his head in respect when he           heard the account. Oh, well, fun is where you find it. In early spring           of 1536, His Most Catholic Majesty Francis I allied with Suleiman to           the extreme outrage and horror of Christian Europe. This didn't mean           much to Suleiman, but it was a big deal to Barbarossa as we shall see.           After getting his fleet back in shape in Algiers, he headed for the           Spanish Balearic Islands and literally devastated Minorca, the central           island and then headed back to Istanbul for new orders. By this time,           Suleiman was mad at Venice so he had Barbarossa make the rounds of           Venician islands and ports to see what havoc he could wrought. It was           quite a bit. While he was doing that, Suleiman sent an army to the           Albanian coast opposite Corfu, a prime island fortress near the heel           of Italy while his fleet blockaded its supply from the sea. But Doria           came to its rescue with a larger fleet and the Turks withdrew in           September, 1537. Left to his own devices, Barbarossa raided his way           around the coast of Italy in the company of a few French ships and           officers. He finally stopped at Toulon with their blessing and spent           the winter on the French Riviera. 
Now *that* is what allies are for. As might be imagined, the Riviera           was a bit worse for wear when the fleet left. Barbarossa spent 1538           simply ravaging Venician ports, sending thousands of slaves back to           Turkey and more thousands of Christians to meet their god. He did a           good job of it. Venice finally sued for peace and gave up to the           Ottoman Empire all of the places it had occupied and was left with           Corfu, Zante, Crete, and Cyprus. From 1539 to 1544, the Mediterranean           was largely a Muslim sea. Christians seemed safe only when under the           direct protection of Andrea Doria. Now this did not set well with           Charles V. On October 20,1541, Charles landed east of Algiers with           21,000 men and the cover of Doria at sea....just in time for one hell           of a storm to hit the area. The fleet was a mass of wreckage. The           Islamic forces attacked his landing site while the storm still raged.           Charles managed to cripple back to europe with only 14,000 men and a           ruined fleet on the 27th. Doria took the fleet back to Geona and           Charles turned his attention to matters closer to the throne. With the           coast clear, so to speak, Barbarossa took a French fleet along with           him and raided Catalonia and sacked Nice. 
Then took another winter vacation on the coast of Provence. But           Francis pulled the rug out from under him when he unexpectedly signed           a peace tready. Barbarossa went back to Istanbul and later died in           1546...it had been a good life for the old Muslim Admiral. None have           been his match to this day. Doria and the Turks sparred back and forth           for several more years. The new admiral, Torghoud, gained ground in           North Africa and Doria made them pay dearly elsewhere. It seemed the           largely inconclusive battles had to be leading up to something. They           were. Malta. 1565. 
The second *rock* of the Mediterranean. During this period of the           1540's, Nostradamus left Agen and wound up in Marseille in 1544. More           or less the same time Barbarossa was also in the area. Nosty was no           doubt concerned with the plague, but he had to be aware of the Islamic           admiral just a few miles away. We can only speculate on the tales he           heard, but the Moslem pirate from Algiers had to be a topic of           conversation. Barbarossa was a large man for the day with an           impressive 'Red Beard' as he was called by the Italians, and his           exploits would have been blown up even larger. The sudden peace signed           by Francis left the area more peaceful than before and Doria was           standing to in Genoa. It is probably just an accident of time and           place, but after returning to Salon and getting married, Nosty           traveled down to Venice and Genoa in 1548 and seems to have gone to           Milan and possibly Florence. I am not at all sure that he would have           done this two year walk-about if the fleet of Barbarossa would have           still been active. It is even more curious that the trip seemed to be           tour of war centers as well as centers of art and literature. I know           that many believe that he was well versed in the classics, and I feel           that he was indeed familar with them; but it is just human nature that           the tales he heard with his own ears and the sights he saw with his           own eyes weighed more heavily when he chose the words to describe what           he saw of the future. Francis I ran right back to northern Italy as           soon as he got his standing army organized. He was dead set on getting           Milan. What a guy. 
But the forces of Charles V bogged down his foray. Charles attacked           him twice, once via Provence and again via Picardy. The whole affair           was just a mess and both sides finally decided to take some time off           and signed the Peace of Nice. Francis had wasted a lot of men,           material, and money and only had a foothold in Italy. There was some           flurries back and forth, but not much changed on the ground during           1536-1543. Francis never set foot in Milan again. On April 14, 1544,           imperial forces under the Spanish Marques del Vasto met the French           army south of Turin. Francis of Bourbon (Prince of Enghien) had about           4,000 Swiss pikemen/infantry, 7,000 French infantry with some hand           cannons, 2,000 Italian infantry of dubious skill and the usual 1,500           French (and some Italian) heavy and light cavalry. Vasto had 7,000           German pikemen, 6,000 Italian infantry of more or less the same skill           level as those of those of the Prince, 5,000 Spanish infantry skilled           with the use and tactics of hand cannons, and about 1,000 mixed           cavalry. Neither side had much artillery at all, perhaps 3-4 dozen           guns all told. 
One thing I haven't mentioned...these different groups of mercenaries           stayed together as units. Thus when the battle began, Vasto's German           pikemen fought the Swiss pikemen supported by the French cavalry and           the French infantry fought the balance of the Spanish forces while the           Italians on both sides more or less mixed it up. For several hours,           they fought hand to hand with the arquebus troops standing back and           picking off pikemen and horsemen in the melee. Finally, in a brilliant           move, the Prince pulled his cavalry out of the main battle, swung           around to the flank of Vasto and carried the day with his knights           leading the light cavalry through the rear of the infantry. Vasto left           the field leaving some 6,000 dead and over 3,000 prisoners. The French           lost about 2,000. Once again, it was proven that cavalry could no           longer best infantry supported by adequate hand cannon in a straight           battle. Only by his flanking attack was the Prince able to disorganize           and demoralize the men on foot. Back in Paris, Francis was pleased for           a week or two but then Charles invaded eastern France in May.           
Charles got delayed a bit at St.Dizier by a stout defense and Francis           was able to call back some men from Italy to Harry Charles while the           regular army set up to defend Paris. Henry VIII had allied himself           with Charles V and decided to invade France as well. In July he           entered France via Calais with an army of 40,000 English bowmen mixed           with a variety of mercenaries, mostly German. Henry really wasn't all           that eager for a fight, though, so he laid siege to Boulogne and they           finally let him in on September 15, 1544. This seemed like a pretty           good spot to stay, so he did. This did *not* sit well with Charles. He           thought Henry was going to help him take Paris, not just lounge around           seeing the sights of Boulogne and Calais. Disgusted, Charles signed           the Peace of Crepy with Francis and went home. This suprised Henry no           end, so he went home as well. Geez, what a boring war. Henry wasn't           stupid, though. He left a hefty fighting force in Boulogne and Calais,           so when Francis sent some men up there in October, they were driven           out of the area by the English. For two more years, they fought along           both coasts and in the Calais area, but to no avail. Finally Francis           signed a tready with Henry giving him the area he was holding. Henry           VIII died on January 28, 1547. 
Francis I died on March 31 of the same year. Both were unpleasant men           even by the standards of their day and they each caused a tremendous           amount of grief and loss of life during their rule. But it wasn't           over...the last Valois-Hapsburg War was about to begin. During this           time, several things were going on that would have a lasting effect.           One worthy of note was the events caused by Pope Paul III. (Cardinal           Alessandro Farnese) The following is an excerpt from the Catholic           Encyclopedia: "When the Treaty of Crespi (18 Sept., 1544) ended the           disastrous wars between Charles and Francis, Paul energetically took           up the project of convening a general council. Meanwhile it developed           that the emperor had formed a programme of his own, quite at variance           in some important points with the pope's. Since the Protestants           repudiated a council presided over by the Roman pontiff, Charles was           resolved to reduce the princes to obedience by force of arms. To this           Paul did not object, and promised to aid him with three hundred           thousand ducats and twenty thousand infantry; but he wisely added the           proviso, that Charles should enter into no separate treaties with the           heretics and make no agreement prejudicial to the Faith or to the           rights of the Holy See. Charles now contended that the council should           be prorogued, until victory had decided in favour of the Catholics.           Furthermore, foreseeing that the struggle with the preachers of heresy           would be more stubborn than the conflict with the princes, he urged           the pontiff to avoid making dogmas of faith for the present and           confine the labours of the council to the enforcement of discipline.           To neither of these proposals could the pope agree. Finally, after           endless difficulties (13 Dec., 1545) the Council of Trent held its           first session.
           
In seven sessions, the last 3 March, 1547, the Fathers intrepidly           faced the most important questions of faith and discipline. Without           listening to the threats and expostulations of the imperial party,           they formulated for all time the Catholic doctrine on the Scriptures,           original sin, justification, and the Sacraments. The work of the           council was half ended, when the outbreak of the plague in Trent           caused an adjournment to Bologna. Pope Paul was not the instigator of           the removal of the council; he simply acquiesced in the decision of           the Fathers. Fifteen prelates, devoted to the emperor, refused to           leave Trent. Charles demanded the return of the council to German           territory, but the deliberations of the council continued in Bologna,           until finally, 21 April, the pope, in order to avert a schism,           prorogued the council indefinitely. 
The wisdom of the council's energetic action, in establishing thus           early the fundamental truths of the Catholic creed, became soon           evident, when the emperor and his semi-Protestant advisers inflicted           upon Germany their Interim religion, which was despised by both           parties. Pope Paul, who had given the emperor essential aid in the           Smalcaldic war, resented his dabbling in theology, and their           estrangement continued until the death of the pontiff. Paul's end came           rather suddenly. After the assassination of Pier Luigi, he had           struggled to retain Piacenza and Parma for the Church and had deprived           Ottavio, Pier Luigi's son and Charles's son-in-law, of these duchies.           Ottavio, relying on the emperor's benevolence, refused obedience; it           broke the old man's heart, when he learned that his favourite           grandson, Cardinal Farnese, was a party to the transaction. He fell           into a violent fever and died at the Quirinal, at the age of           eighty-two. He lies buried in St. Peter's in the tomb designed by           Michelangelo and erected by Guglielmo della Porta. Not all the popes           repose in monuments corresponding to their importance in the history           of the Church; but few will be disposed to contest the right of           Farnese to rest directly under Peter's chair. He had his faults; but           they injured no one but himself. 
The fifteen years of his pontificate saw the complete restoration of           Catholic faith and piety. He was succeeded by many saintly pontiffs,           but not one of them possessed all his commanding virtues. In Rome his           name is written all over the city he renovated. The Pauline chapel,           Michelangelo's work in the Sistine, the streets of Rome, which he           straightened and broadened, the numerous objects of art associated           with the name of Farnese, all speak eloquently of the remarkable           personality of the pontiff who turned the tide in favour of religion.           If to this we add the favour accorded by Paul to the new religious           orders then appearing, the Capuchins, Barnabites, Theatines, Jesuits,           Ursulines, and many others, we are forced to confess that his reign           was one of the most fruitful in the annals of the Church." More on the           Council of Trent at: 
http://newadvent.org/cathen/15030c.htm
Suleiman I had removed the thorn in the side of Islam when he took           Rhodes as a young man. Now almost 70, he turned his thoughts to the           knife at the throat of Islam: Malta. Those pesky Knights were using           the second rock of the Mediterranean Sea to pillage and harass Islamic           shipping with more vigor than they had from Rhodes. But they had           finally gone too far. The Provencal Mathurin d'Aux de Lescaut Romegas,           a French Knight of Malta, had inadvertently captured a Turkish ship in           the Ionian islands, near Corfu and took it back to Malta. Oops. It           belonged to the harem's chief eunuch, one Kustir-Aga and was financed           by the Sultan's daughter, Mihrmah, and just a whole gaggle of           concubines. Not good news for Suleiman. His financial advisors and           military leaders had been after him for decades to take care of Malta,           but it was the wrath of the women that made up his mind. (those           married men reading this can nod their heads) Suleiman watched the           fleet leave in April of 1565. The main body was thirty galliots with           another 150 galleys.
They carried 40,000 fighting men and a large number of support people.           Included were 6,000 Janissaries and 4,000 Layers, an elite corp of           Janissaries known for their religious zeal. Mustapha Pasha was in           charge of the troops and Piale was in command of the fleet. Another           20,000 troops were to be sent later as reinforcements along with the           ships from Alexandria and Algiers. This was to take a fortress           defended by some 700 knights, of which a quarter were old, veterans of           Rhodes, four decades previously... The Knights of Malta had about           13,000 other troops and perhaps ten thousand supporters within the           various fortifications, all under the command of Jean Parisot de la           Valette, now over seventy years old. 
When the Islamic fleet was sighted on May 18, Valette decided to allow           the fleet to land troops unopposed and make his stand within the many           forts around the port. Seeing the fleet hove to off the southeastern           coast at Marasirocco, he sent a small force of knights to the fort of           St. Elmo, between the landing beachhead and the main harbor. The fort           of St. Elmo was commanded by the Italian knight, Luigi Broglia, with           the Spanish knight Don Juan de Guaras his second. The French knight           Pierre de Massuez Vercoyran joined them, along with 64 knights from           St. Angelo who had volunteered for the post. Pasha landed thousands of           troops and began the battle with an artillery assault. Their main guns           were one that fired a 160lb ball, ten that fired 80 pounders, and two           60 pounders. They had three dozen more of lesser size. They began           firing on May 24. One of the knights who died in the barrage noted in           his diary that between six and seven thousand rounds were fired at the           fort each day. Dubious numbers, but no doubt there were a lot of           cannon balls in the air every day. On June 3, the Turks attacked in           force. (wonder if they knew when the feast day for St. Elmo was?)
           
The knights fought back with Greek Fire (appropiate) and other           weapons, but the Janassaries managed to get a foothold in the           outworks. As the days dragged on, the Turks were unable to advance any           closer. Thousands of followers of Islam lay dead about the fort.           Strangely enough, at night, a few boats brought more knights, food and           weapons to the fort without challenge. On June 16, the Layers, high on           hashish, with their mullahs and imams swarmed across the narrow moat           and up the walls. The knights met them with boiling oil and arquebus,           stones and spears. It was a slaughter. The dead formed a long slope           down from the walls when the day was done. On June 19, the Spanish           knight Captain de Miranda sent a message to Valletta: "Every new           reinforcement sent into the fort is lost; it is cruelty to send any           more men to die here." The fort of St. Elmo fell on June 23. There           were no survivors. 
The Turks impaled the heads of Miranda, the French Massuez and Spanish           de Guaras on pikes and placed them where they could be seen across the           bay. Their bodies were nailed to crosses and floated to the main fort.           Valletta went mad. All Turkish prisoners were killed and their heads           fired from cannon at Pasha's army. Pasha ordered all of the hearts           torn from the bodies of the knights and had them thrown into the sea.           Folks, these Knights and Turks fought some interesting wars, unlike           the French, English, et al. Piale brought his fleet into the bay of           Marsamuscetto now that the fort was in Islamic hands. In safe harbor,           with control of a beachhead, the Turks planned their next move. But           they had lost their wisest warror in the battle, the 80 year old           Dragut, the Greek pirate, and their plans suffered. Still, the forts           of St Angelo and St. Michael were next on their list and attack they           did.
"Valletta was the brainchild of Grand Master Jean de la Valette. When           the knights agreed, although reluctantly, to make Malta their           headquarters, de la Valette quickly realized that they needed a           defensible city to protect the island against the Turkish hordes that           had driven them out of Rhodes and had followed them all the way to           Malta. At the Grand Master's request, the Pope sent his own architect           and Michelangelo's assistant, Francesco Laparelli, to Malta to help           with the building of Valletta. Arriving in Malta on December 28th,           1565, he had the plans for the city drawn within three days. On March           28th, the new city was officially born. The inauguration ceremony was           held on the site of the Porta Reale (the site of the entrance gates to           Valletta) and the city was christened Valletta after the Grand Master.           The bastions surrounding the city are impressive indeed but were never           tested. Perhaps the Turkish generals realized that they were no match           against the fortified city. The Grand Harbour is virtually lined with           a string of bastions. Fort Sant' Elmo and Fort Ricasoli (the largest           fort in the Commonwealth) protect the entrance to the harbour.
           
Fort St. Angelo and the walls of Birgu and Senglea across the harbour           shield its flank. The Grand Master died before the city was finished.           Towards the end of 1568, the Maltese architect and engineer, Gerolamo           Cassar, took charge of the building of the city when Laparelli left           for active service in Crete, where he died. Cassar and Laparelli laid           out the street plan for the city. The first building that went up in           the city is the Church of Our Lady of Victory, which commemorates the           lifting of the Great Siege. Cassar designed all the auberges, the           Magisterial Palace, the Conventual Church of St. John, the parish           church of St. Paul, the churches of St. Mary of Porto Salvo, Carmine,           St. Augustine and St. Mary of Jesus, and numerous other buildings and           houses for the members of the order. Cassar died in 1586." On July 15,           1565, the Islamic forces of Suleiman I under the command of Pasha           attacked the fort of St. Michael on the second rock of the           Mediterranean Sea, Malta. 
The Dey of Algeria, Hassem, the son-in-law of Dragut, led the Algerian           warriors. Three boatloads of chanting imams were in the first wave. At           the same time, ten boatloads full of Janissaries headed for Fort St.           Angelo. The Knights of Malta opened fire on the boats as soon as they           came into range. Those headed for St. Michael only lost a few boats           and immediately attacked. They were met with boiling oil, stones,           spears and hand cannon fire. Unable to breach or scale the walls, the           Algerians withdrew. Close by, the cannons of St. Angelo sank nine of           the ten boatloads of Janissaries. The last boat returned to their base           at Fort St. Elmo. Some three thousand met Allah on that day including           hundreds of Christian galley slaves who went down with their ships,           chained to the oarlocks. Mustapha Pasha was furious. He decided to           take personal charge of the St. Michael battle and put Piale in           command of the St. Angelo forces. Candelissa, the deputy of Hassem,           took over naval operations. All of the cannon were brought to bear on           the two forts and they averaged a thousand rounds a day for nine           weeks. Inbetween barrages, the Turks attacked again and again.           
On the 18th of August, they breached a wall in a separate           fortification held by the Spanish Knights Of Malta, and raised the           banner of the Sultan. Towards the end of six hours of hand to hand           fighting, the Grand Master himself joined the beleaguered knights. In           full armor, weilding a pike, he led a counterattack. The Islamic           troops were demoralized by the vigor of the rallied knights and fell           back. Though injured in one leg, he would not leave the battle "so           long as those banners still wave in the wind", pointing to the star           and crescent flags. But the battle was over. Meanwhile, the Viceroy of           Sicily, Don Garcia had dispached a fleet containing some eight           thousand fighting men and perhaps half that in support troops to           relieve the Knights of Malta. On September 6, they began an unopposed           landing on the north of the island.
It was the end of hope for Pasha. He decided to have one last try for           appearances sake. On the next day, he attacked a small group at St.           Paul's Bay, where the apostle, shipwrecked, had actually strode upon           the sand they fought on. And fought they did. This was a battle           against sacrilege. The locals, the Knights and soldiers converged upon           the spot. Hours passed of hand to hand battle of scimitar vs sword.           Finally the Turks retreated. By the end of September 8, 1565, Piale           had all of Pasha's remaining troops aboard and they headed back to the           unpleasant job of telling Suleiman that they had failed. And failed           they did. Between 24,000 and 30,000 Soldiers of Islam were left dead           and dying. All of the artillery was left. Much of their camp supplies           were left. Their pride was left. Five thousand soldiers were killed,           five thousand islanders were killed. Three thousand injured men, women           and children clogged the buildings when Garcia's men reached the           fortifications. 
Half of the Knights of Malta were dead or gravely wounded...but Malta           had held. The tide had turned. The city of Valetta was built on the           ruins of the Fort of Saint Elmo. Some 1,000 of Suleiman's men died for           each Knight killed.
Some scholars think Malta has been inhabited for at least 7,000 years,           others think it may be as much as 8,000. Hard to tell. It is a puzzle           as to how the people got there, how they built the stone structures           and so on. The cart ruts are very intreguing and a discussion of them           is at: 
          http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Agora/5685/two.html
Suleiman I died on September 7, 1566.
In 1560, the Guises were the self-proclaimed leaders of the Catholic           militants and the two princes of the house of Bourbon the leaders of           the militant Protestants, more or less by default. King Francis II was           the foil of the Guises while the queen-mother seemed to actually enjoy           playing one against the other, while leaning on the side of the           Guises. That year, the meeting of the states-general had been           transferred from Meaux to Orleans for a variety of reasons, but the           Guises saw it as their best chance to trap the King of Navarre and the           Prince of Conde. On August 30 of that year, Francis wrote to the           brothers and said that they should attend the meeting and ..."being           able to assure you that whereinsoever he refuses to obey me I shall           know perfectly well how to make it felt that I am king." Well! This           direct order left the King of Navarre and the Prince of Conde with           only the choices of going into obvious danger or starting a war. There           was little choice.
           
They were simply too poor to raise, arm and support a major war. In           fact the mother-in-law of the Prince had just morgaged her castle in           Germany to the constable De Montmorency for a thousand gold crowns,           something that would have an unexpected benefit later on. The decision           was made: the rams would enter the lions den. On October 30, the pair           and their entourage reached Orleans. The duke of Aumale, Francis de           Lorraine, recorded the event in great detail: "Not one of the crown's           officers came to receive the princes; no honor was paid them; the           streets were deserted, silent, and occupied by a military guard." "The           King awaited the princes in his chamber; behind him were ranged the           Guises and the principal lords; not a word, not a salutation on their           part. After this freezing reception, Francis II conducted the two           brothers to his mother, who received them, ... 'with crocodile's           tears.'" When the Prince of Conte referred to the King's word of honor           "the king, interrupting him, made a sign; and the two captains of the           guard, Breze, and Chavigny [familar name?] entered and took the           prince's sword." 
Lewis de Conte was imprisoned in a house nearby and his brother was           led off to an apartment and placed under constant supervision. Events           moved rapidly from there. A quick trial, and the Prince of Conte was           sentenced to death on the 26th of November, 1560, with the deed to be           done on the 10th of December. The Duke of Guise's mother-in-law had           arrived and had a prophecy for him: "You have just opened a wound           which will bleed a long while; they who have dared to attack persons           of the blood royal have always found it a bad job." How true. But the           Guises paid no heed. In fact they cooked up a scheme to have Francis           (?) kill one himself. The plot was for the king to send for Anthony de           Bourbon, the King of Navarre, meet him, and stab him in the heart with           a dagger. Catherine de Medici didn't like the smell of it and sent the           duchess of Montpensier, Jacqueline de Longwy, to warn Navarre. All of           this is very plainly recorded, but what happened next is not. Either           the two kings met and nothing happened or Navarre declined the invite.           
Another event muddied the accounts somewhat. On November 17, 1560,           Francis was mounting a horse to go for a hunt and fell off in a faint.           He fainted again on the 29th and later died on the 5th of December,           probably from an ear abscess. He died in the arms of his wife, Mary           Stuart and attended by Admiral de Coligny. Things quickly changed.           Charles IX became King Of France at the tender age of ten. Catherine           was still the queen-mother and made a pact with Anthony. Shortly           afterward, the states-general recognized her as guardian, without the           title of regent and named Anthony Lieutenant-General of France to           assist her. She also had a slush fund of 300,000 francs a year...           Meanwhile, the Guises were out in the cold trying to figure out how to           get hot again. Catherine sent word to the Conde that he was free, and           after some wool- gathering, he took her up on it. 
Over the next few months, everything went his way and finally on the           24th of August, 1561 at Saint Germain he met with the King, Catherine,           assorted royality, the kings court *and* the Duke of Guise. The Duke           reportedly said "that he had not, and would never have desired to, put           forward anything against the prince's honor, and that he had been           neither the author nor the instigator of his imprisonment." Then they           hugged and did that French kissy-face thing. Good thing too. Outside,           the son of the Constable de Montmorency had just arrived with a           *large* group of armed men. It seems the Constable had arranged all of           this and his son, Marshal Francis de Montmorency, was going to make           damned sure it happened. However, before the night was over, the           Constable joined ranks with the Duke of Guise and Marshal de Saint           Andre. Marshal Francis got together with the Bourbons. Catherine was           faced with the two groups that would cause her and France pain and           anguish for years to come. 
Nostradamus died on July 2, 1566. He probably never heard of the           defense of Malta. I do think he heard of Rhodes and of the movement of           the Knights to Malta where they continued to harass Suleiman's           pirates. It would have been as much a topic of conversation for the           tradesmen and travelers as the activities of the pirates.