Yet next day, May 24th,
1820, Ali addressed a circular letter to his brothers the Christians,
announcing that in future he would consider them as his most faithful subjects,
and that henceforth he remitted the taxes paid to his own family. He wound up
by asking for soldiers, but the Greeks having learnt the instability of his
promises, remained deaf to his invitations. At the same time he sent messengers
to the Montenegrins and the Servians, inciting them to revolt, and organised
insurrections in Wallachia and Moldavia to the very environs of Constantinople.
Whilst the Ottoman vassals
assembled only in small numbers and very slowly under their respective
standards, every day there collected round the castle of Janina whole companies
of Toxidae, of Tapazetae, and of Chamidae; so that Ali, knowing that Ismail
Pacho Bey had boasted that he could arrive in sight of Janina without firing a
gun, said in his turn that he would not treat with the Porte until he and his
troops should be within eight leagues of Constantinople.
He had fortified and
supplied with munitions of war Ochrida, Avlone, Cannia, Berat, Cleisoura,
Premiti, the port of Panormus, Santi-Quaranta, Buthrotum, Delvino,
Argyro-Castron, Tepelen, Parga, Prevesa, Sderli, Paramythia, Arta, the post of
the Five Wells, Janina and its castles. These places contained four hundred and
twenty cannons of all sizes, for the most part in bronze, mounted on
siege-carriages, and seventy mortars. Besides these, there were in the castle
by the lake, independently of the guns in position, forty field-pieces, sixty
mountain guns, a number of Congreve rockets, formerly given him by the English,
and an enormous quantity of munitions of war. Finally, he endeavoured to
establish a line of semaphores between Janina and Prevesa, in order to have
prompt news of the Turkish fleet, which was expected to appear on this coast.
Ali, whose strength seemed
to increase with age, saw to everything and appeared everywhere; sometimes in a
litter borne by his Albanians, sometimes in a carriage raised into a kind of
platform, but it was more frequently on horseback that he appeared among his
labourers. Often he sat on the bastions in the midst of the batteries, and
conversed familiarly with those who surrounded him. He narrated the successes formerly
obtained against the sultan by Kara Bazaklia, Vizier of Scodra, who, like
himself, had been attained with the sentence of deprivation and
excommunication; recounting how the rebel pacha, shut up in his citadel with
seventy-two warriors, had seen collapse at his feet the united forces of four
great provinces of the Ottoman Empire, commanded by twenty-two pachas, who were
almost entirely annihilated in one day by the Guegues. He reminded them also,
of the brilliant victory gained by Passevend Oglon, Pacha of Widdin, of quite
recent memory, which is celebrated in the warlike songs of the Klephts of
Roumelia.
Almost simultaneously,
Ali's sons, Mouktar and Veli, arrived at Janina. Veli had been obliged, or
thought himself obliged, to evacuate Lepanto by superior forces, and brought
only discouraging news, especially as to the wavering fidelity of the Turks. Mouktar,
on the contrary, who had just made a tour of inspection in the Musache, had
only noticed favourable dispositions, and deluded himself with the idea that
the Chaonians, who had taken up arms, had done so in order to aid his father. He
was curiously mistaken, for these tribes hated Ali with a hatred all the deeper
for being compelled to conceal it, and were only in arms in order to repel
aggression.
The advice given by the
sons to their father as to the manner of treating the Mohammedans differed
widely in accordance with their respective opinions. Consequently a violent
quarrel arose between them, ostensibly on account of this dispute, but in reality
on the subject of their father's inheritance, which both equally coveted. Ali
had brought all his treasure to Janina, and thenceforth neither son would leave
the neighbourhood of so excellent a father. They overwhelmed him with marks of
affection, and vowed that the one had left Lepanto, and the other Berat, only
in order to share his danger. Ali was by no means duped by these protestations,
of which he divined the motive only too well, and though he had never loved his
sons, he suffered cruelly in discovering that he was not beloved by them.
Soon he had other troubles
to endure. One of his gunners assassinated a servant of Vela's, and Ali ordered
the murderer to be punished, but when the sentence was to be carried out the
whole corps of artillery mutinied. In order to save appearances, the pacha was
compelled to allow them to ask for the pardon of the criminal whom he dared not
punish. This incident showed him that his authority was no longer paramount,
and he began to doubt the fidelity of his soldiers. The arrival of the Ottoman
fleet further enlightened him to his true position. Mussulman and Christian
alike, all the inhabitants of Northern Albania, who had hitherto concealed
their disaffection under an exaggerated semblance of devotion, now hastened to
make their submission to the sultan. The Turks, continuing their success, laid
siege to Parga, which was held by Mehemet, Veli's eldest son. He was prepared
to make a good defence, but was betrayed by his troops, who opened the gates of
the town, and he was compelled to surrender at discretion. He was handed over
to the commander of the naval forces, by whom he was well treated, being
assigned the best cabin in the admiral's ship and given a brilliant suite. He
was assured that the sultan, whose only quarrel was with his grandfather, would
show him favour, and would even deal mercifully with Ali, who, with his
treasures, would merely be sent to an important province in Asia Minor. He was
induced to write in this strain to his family and friends in order to induce
them to lay down their arms.
The fall of Parga made a
great impression on the Epirotes, who valued its possession far above its real
importance. Ali rent his garments and cursed the days of his former good
fortune, during which he had neither known how to moderate his resentment nor
to foresee the possibility of any change of fortune.
The fall of Parga was
succeeded by that of Arta of Mongliana, where was situated Ali's country house,
and of the post of the Five Wells. Then came a yet more overwhelming piece of
news Omar Brionis, whom Ali, having formerly despoiled of its wealth, had none
the less, recently appointed general-in-chief, had gone over to the enemy with
all his troops!
Ali then decided on
carrying out a project he had formed in case of necessity, namely, on
destroying the town of Janina, which would afford shelter to the enemy and a
point of attack against the fortresses in which he was entrenched. When this
resolution was known, the inhabitants thought only of saving themselves and
their property from the ruin from which nothing could save their country. But
most of them were only preparing to depart, when Ali gave leave to the Albanian
soldiers yet faithful to him to sack the town.
The place was immediately
invaded by an unbridled soldiery. The Metropolitan church, where Greeks and
Turks alike deposited their gold, jewels, and merchandise, even as did the
Greeks of old in the temples of the gods, became the first object of pillage. Nothing
was respected. The cupboards containing sacred vestments were broken open, so
were the tombs of the archbishops, in which were interred reliquaries adorned
with precious stones; and the altar itself was defiled with the blood of
ruffians who fought for chalices and silver crosses.
The town presented an
equally terrible spectacle; neither Christians nor Mussulmans were spared, and
the women's apartments, forcibly entered, were given up to violence. Some of
the more courageous citizens endeavoured to defend their houses arid families
against these bandits, and the clash of arms mingled with cries and groans. All
at on e the roar of a terrible explosion rose above the other sounds, and a
hail of bombs, shells, grenade's, and rockets carried devastation and fire into
the different quarters of the town, which soon presented the spectacle of an
immense conflagration. Ali, seated on the great platform of the castle by the
lake, which seemed to vomit fire like a volcano, directed the bombardment,
pointing out the places which must be burnt. Churches, mosques, libraries,
bazaars, houses, all were destroyed, and the only thing spared by the flames
was the gallows, which remained standing in the midst of the ruins.
Of the thirty thousand
persons who inhabited Janina a few hours previously, perhaps one half had
escaped. But these had not fled many leagues before they encountered the
outposts of the Otto man army, which, instead of helping or protecting them,
fell upon them, plundered them, and drove them towards the camp, where slavery
awaited them. The unhappy fugitives, taken thus between fire and. sword, death
behind and slavery before, uttered a terrible cry, and fled in all directions. Those
who escaped the Turks were stopped in the hill passes by the mountaineers
rushing down to the>> rey; only large numbers who held together could
force a passage.
In some cases terror
bestows extraordinary strength, there were mothers who, with infants at the
breast, covered on foot in one day the fourteen leagues which separate Janina
from Arta. But others, seized with the pangs of travail in the midst of their
flight, expired in the woods, after giving birth to babes, who, destitute of
succour, did not survive their mothers. And young girls, having disfigured
themselves by gashes, hid themselves in caves, where they died of terror and
hunger.
The Albanians, intoxicated
with plunder and debauchery, refused to return to the castle, and only thought
of regaining their country and enjoying the fruit of their rapine. But they
were assailed on the way by peasants covetous of their booty, and by those of
Janina who had sought refuge with them. The roads and passes were strewn with
corpses, and the trees by the roadside converted into gibbets. The murderers
did not long survive their victims.
The ruins of Janina were
still smoking when, on the 19th August, Pacho Bey made his entry. Having
pitched his tent out of range of Ali's cannon, he proclaimed aloud the firman
which inaugurated him as Pacha of Janina and Delvino, and then raised the
tails, emblem of his dignity. Ali heard on the summit of his keep the
acclamations of the Turks who saluted Pacho Bey, his former servant with the
titles of Vali of Epirus, and Ghazi, of Victorius. After this ceremony, the
cadi read the sentence, confirmed by the Mufti, which declared Tepelen
Veli-Zade to have forfeited his dignities and to be excommunicated, adding an
injunction to all the faithful that henceforth his name was not to be
pronounced except with the addition of "Kara," or "black,"
which is bestowed on those cut off from the congregation of Sunnites, or
Orthodox Mohammedans. A Marabout then cast a stone towards the castle, and the
anathema upon "Kara Ali" was repeated by the whole Turkish army,
ending with the cry of "Long live the sultan! So be it!"
But it was not by
ecclesiastical thunders that three fortresses could be reduced, which were
defended by artillerymen drawn from different European armies, who had
established an excellent school for gunners and bombardiers. The besieged,
having replied with hootings of contempt to the acclamations of the besiegers,
proceeded to enforce their scorn with well-aimed cannon shots, while the rebel
flotilla, dressed as if for a fete-day, passed slowly before the Turks,
saluting them with cannon-shot if they ventured near the edge of the lake.
This noisy rhodomontade did
not prevent Ali from being consumed with grief and anxiety. The sight of his own
troops, now in the camp of Pacho Bey, the fear of being for ever separated from
his sons, the thought of his grandson in the enemy's hands, all threw him into
the deepest melancholy, and his sleepless eyes were constantly drowned in
tears. He refused his food, and sat for seven days with untrimmed beard, clad
in mourning, on a mat at the door of his antechamber, extending his hands to
his soldiers, and imploring them to slay him rather than abandon him. His
wives, seeing him in this state, and concluding all was lost, filled the air
with their lamentations. All began to think that grief would bring Ali to the
grave; but his soldiers, to whose protestations he at first refused any credit,
represented to him that their fate was indissolubly linked with his. Pacho Bey
having proclaimed that all taken in arms for Ali would be shot as sharers in
rebellion, it was therefore their interest to support his resistance with all
their power. They also pointed out that the campaign was already advanced, and
that the Turkish army, which had forgotten its siege artillery at
Constantinople, could not possibly procure any before the end of October, by
which time the rains would begin, and the enemy would probably be short of
food. Moreover, in any case, it being impossible to winter in a ruined town,
the foe would be driven to seek shelter at a distance.
These representations, made
with warmth conviction, and supported by evidence, began to soothe the restless
fever which was wasting Ali, and the gentle caresses and persuasions of
Basillisa, the beautiful Christian captive, who had now been his wife for some
time, completed the cure.
At the same time his sister
Chainitza gave him an astonishing example of courage. She had persisted, in
spite of all that could be said, in residing in her castle of Libokovo. The
population, whom she had cruelly oppressed, demanded her death, but no one dared
attack her. Superstition declared that the spirit of her mother, with whom she
kept up a mysterious communication even beyond the portals of the grave,
watched over her safety. The menacing form of Kamco had, it was said, appeared
to several inhabitants of Tepelen, brandishing bones of the wretched
Kardikiotes, and demanding fresh victims with loud cries. The desire of
vengeance had urged some to brave these unknown dangers, and twice, a warrior,
clothed in black, had warned them back, forbidding them to lay hands on a
sacrilegious woman; whose punishment Heaven reserved to itself, and twice they
had returned upon their footsteps.
But soon, ashamed of their
terror, they attempted another attack, and came attired in the colour of the
Prophet. This time no mysterious stranger speared to forbid their passage and
with a cry they climbed the mountain, listening for any supernatural warning. Nothing
disturbed the silence and solitude save the bleating of flocks and the cries of
birds of prey. Arrived on the platform of Libokovo, they prepared in silence to
surprise the guards, believing the castle full of them. They approached
crawling, like hunters who stalk a deer, already they had reached the gate of
the enclosure, and prepared to burst it open, when lo! it opened of itself, and
they beheld Chainitza standing before them, a carabine in her hand, pistols in
her belt, and, for all guard, two large dogs.
"Halt! ye daring
ones," she cried; "neither my life nor my treasure will ever be at
your mercy. Let one of you move a step without my permission, and this place
and the ground beneath your feet' will engulf you. Ten thousand pounds of
powder are in these cellars. I will, however, grant your pardon, unworthy
though you are. I will even allow you to take these sacks filled with gold;
they may recompense you for the losses which my brother's enemies have recently
inflicted on you. But depart this instant without a word, and dare not to
trouble me again; I have other means of destruction at command besides
gunpowder. Life is nothing to me, remember that; but your mountains may yet at
my command become the tomb of your wives and children. Go!"
She ceased, and her
would-be murderers fled terror.
Shortly after the plague
broke out in these mountains, Chainitza had distributed infected garments among
gipsies, who scattered contagion wherever they went.
"We are indeed of the
same blood!" cried Ali with pride, when he heard of his sister's conduct;
and from that hour he appeared to regain all the fire and audacity of his
youth. When, a few days later, he was informed that Mouktar and Veli, seduced
by the brilliant promises of Dacha Bey, had surrendered Prevesa and
Argyro-Castron, "It does not surprise me," he observed coldly. "I
have long known them to be unworthy of being my sons, and henceforth my only
children and heirs are those who defend my cause." And on hearing a report
that both had been beheaded by Dacha Bey's order, he contented himself with
saying, "They betrayed their father, and have only received their deserts;
speak no more of them." And to show how little it discouraged him, he
redoubled his fire upon the Turks.
But the latter, who had at
length obtained some artillery, answered his fire with vigour, and began to
rally to discrown the old pacha's fortress. Feeling that the danger was
pressing, Ali redoubled both his prudence and activity. His immense treasures
were the real reason of the war waged against him, and these might induce his
own soldiers to rebel, in order to become masters of them. He resolved to
protect them from either surprise or conquest. The sum necessary for present
use was deposited in the powder magazine, so that, if driven to extremity, it
might be destroyed in a moment; the remainder was enclosed in strong-boxes, and
sunk in different parts of the lake. This labour lasted a fortnight, when,
finally, Ali put to death the gipsies who had been employed about it, in order
that the secret might remain with himself.
While he thus set his own
affairs in order, he applied himself to the troubling those of his adversary. A
great number of Suliots had joined the Ottoman army in order to assist in the
destruction of him who formerly had ruined their country. Their camp, which for
a long time had enjoyed immunity from the guns of Janina, was one day
overwhelmed with bombs. The Suliots were terrified, until they remarked that
the bombs did not burst. They then, much astonished, proceeded to pick up and
examine these projectiles. Instead of a match, they found rolls of paper
enclosed in a wooden cylinder, on which was engraved these words, "Open
carefully." The paper contained a truly Macchiavellian letter from Ali,
which began by saying that they were quite justified in having taken up arms
against him, and added that he now sent them a part of the pay of which the
traitorous Ismail was defrauding them, and that the bombs thrown into their
cantonment contained six thousand sequins in gold. He begged them to amuse
Ismail by complaints and recriminations, while his gondola should by night
fetch one of them, to whom he would communicate what more he had to say. If
they accepted his proposition, they were to light three fires as a signal.
The signal was not long in
appearing. Ali despatched his barge, which took on board a monk, the spiritual
chief of the Suliots. He was clothed in sackcloth, and repeated the prayers for
the dying, as one going to execution. Ali, however, received him with the
utmost cordiality: He assured the priest of his repentance, his good
intentions, his esteem for the Greek captains, and then gave him a paper which
startled him considerably. It was a despatch, intercepted by Ali, from Khalid
Effendi to the Seraskier Ismail, ordering the latter to exterminate all
Christians capable of bearing arms. All male children were to be circumcised,
and brought up to form a legion drilled in European fashion; and the letter
went on to explain how the Suliots, the Armatolis, the Greek races of the
mainland and those of the Archipelago should be disposed of. Seeing the effect
produced on the monk by the perusal of this paper, Ali hastened to make him the
most advantageous offers, declaring that his own wish was to give Greece a political
existence, and only requiring that the Suliot captains should send him a
certain number of their children as hostages. He then had cloaks and arms
brought which he presented to the monk, dismissing him in haste, in order that
darkness might favour his return.
The next day Ali was
resting, with his head on Basilissa's lap, when he was informed that the enemy
was advancing upon the intrenchments which had been raised in the midst of the
ruins of Janina. Already the outposts had been forced, and the fury of the
assailants threatened to triumph over all obstacles. Ali immediately ordered a
sortie of all his troops, announcing that he himself would conduct it. His
master of the horse brought him the famous Arab charger called the Dervish, his
chief huntsman presented him with his guns, weapons still famous in Epirus,
where they figure in the ballads of the Skipetars. The first was an enormous
gun, of Versailles manufacture, formerly presented by the conqueror of the
Pyramids to Djezzar, the Pacha of St. Jean-d'Arc, who amused himself by
enclosing living victims in the walls of his palace, in order that he might
hear their groans in the midst of his festivities. Next came a carabine given
to the Pacha of Janina in the name of Napoleon in 1806; then the battle musket
of Charles XII of Sweden, and finally-- the much revered sabre of Krim-Guerai. The
signal was given; the draw bridge crossed; the Guegues and other adventurers
uttered a terrific shout; to which the cries of the assailants replied. Ali
placed himself on a height, whence his eagle eye sought to discern the hostile
chiefs; but he called and defied Pacho Bey in vain. Perceiving Hassan-Stamboul,
colonel of the Imperial bombardiers outside his battery, Ali demanded the gun
of Djezzar, and laid him dead on the spot. He then took the carabine of
Napoleon, and shot with it Kekriman, Bey of Sponga, whom he had formerly
appointed Pacha of Lepanto. The enemy now became aware of his presence, and
sent a lively fusillade in his direction; but the balls seemed to diverge from
his person. As soon as the smoke cleared, he perceived Capelan, Pacha of Croie,
who had been his guest, and wounded him mortally in the chest. Capelan uttered
a sharp cry, and his terrified horse caused disorder in the ranks. Ali picked
off a large number of officers, one after another; every shot was mortal, and
his enemies began to regard him in, the light of a destroying angel. Disorder
spread through the forces of the Seraskier, who retreated hastily to his
intrenchments.
The Suliots meanwhile sent
a deputation to Ismail offering their submission, and seeking to regain their
country in a peaceful manner; but, being received by him with the most
humiliating contempt, they resolved to make common cause with Ali. They
hesitated over the demand for hostages, and at length required Ali's grandson,
Hussien Pacha, in exchange. After many difficulties, Ali at length consented,
and the agreement was concluded. The Suliots received five hundred thousand
piastres and a hundred and fifty charges of ammunition, Hussien Pacha was given
up to them, and they left the Ottoman camp at dead of night. Morco Botzaris
remained with three hundred and twenty men, threw down the palisades, and then
ascending Mount Paktoras with his troops, waited for dawn in order to announce
his defection to the Turkish army. As soon as the sun appeared he ordered a
general salvo of artillery and shouted his war-cry. A few Turks in charge of an
outpost were slain, the rest fled. A cry of "To arms" was raised, and
the standard of the Cross floated before the camp of the infidels.
Signs and omens of a coming
general insurrection appeared on all sides; there was no lack of prodigies,
visions, or popular rumours, and the Mohammedans became possessed with the idea
that the last hour of their rule in Greece had struck. Ali Pacha favoured the
general demoralisation; and his agents, scattered throughout the land, fanned
the flame of revolt. Ismail Pacha was deprived of his title of Seraskier, and
superseded by Kursheed Pacha. As soon as Ali heard this, he sent a messenger to
Kursheed, hoping to influence him in his favour. Ismail, distrusting the
Skipetars, who formed part of his troops, demanded hostages from them. The
Skipetars were indignant, and Ali hearing of their discontent, wrote inviting
them to return to him, and endeavouring to dazzle them by the most brilliant
promises. These overtures were received by the offended troops with enthusiasm,
and Alexis Noutza, Ali's former general, who had forsaken him for Ismail, but
who had secretly returned to his allegiance and acted as a spy on the Imperial
army, was deputed to treat with him. As soon as he arrived, Ali began to enact
a comedy in the intention of rebutting the accusation of incest with his
daughter-in-law Zobeide; for this charge, which, since Veli himself had
revealed the secret of their common shame, could only be met by vague denials,
had never ceased to produce a mast unfavourable impression on Noutza's mind. Scarcely
had he entered the castle by the lake, when Ali rushed to meet him, and flung
himself into his arms. In presence of his officers and the garrison, he loaded
him with the most tender names, calling him his son, his beloved Alexis, his
own legitimate child, even as Salik Pacha. He burst into tears, and, with
terrible oaths, called Heaven to witness that Mouktar and Veli, whom he
disavowed on account of their cowardice, were the adulterous offspring of
Emineh's amours. Then, raising his hand against the tomb of her whom he had
loved so much, he drew the stupefied Noutza into the recess of a casemate, and
sending for Basilissa, presented him to her as a beloved son, whom only
political considerations had compelled him to keep at a distance, because,
being born of a Christian mother, he had been brought up in the faith of Jesus.
Having thus softened the
suspicions of his soldiers, Ali resumed his underground intrigues. The Suliots
had informed him that the sultan had made them extremely advantageous offers if
they would return to his service, and they demanded pressingly that Ali should
give up to them the citadel of Kiapha, which was still in his possession, and
which commanded Suli. He replied with the information that he intended, January
26, to attack the camp of Pacho Bey early in the morning, and requested their
assistance. In order to cause a diversion, they were to descend into the valley
of Janina at night, and occupy a position which he pointed out to them, and he
gave their the word "flouri" as password for the night. If
successful, he undertook to grant their request.
Ali's letter was
intercepted, and fell into Ismail's hands, who immediately conceived a plan for
snaring his enemy in his own toils. When the night fixed by Ali arrived, the
Seraskier marched out a strong division under the command of Omar Brionis, who
had been recently appointed Pacha, and who was instructed to proceed along the
western slope of Mount Paktoras as far as the village of Besdoune, where he was
to place an outpost, and then to retire along the other side of the mountain,
so that, being visible in the starlight, the sentinels placed to watch on the
hostile towers might take his men for the Suliots and report to Ali that the
position of Saint-Nicolas, assigned to them, had been occupied as arranged. All
preparations for battle were made, and the two mortal enemies, Ismail and Ali,
retired to rest, each cherishing the darling hope of shortly annihilating his
rival.
At break of day a lively
cannonade, proceeding from the castle of the lake and from Lithoritza,
announced that the besieged intended a sortie. Soon Ali's Skipetars, preceded by
a detachment of French, Italians, and Swiss, rushed through the Ottoman fire
and carried the first redoubt, held by Ibrahim-Aga-Stamboul. They found six
pieces of cannon, which the Turks, notwithstanding their terror, had had time
to spike. This misadventure, for they had hoped to turn the artillery against
the intrenched camp, decided Ali's men on attacking the second redoubt,
commanded by the chief bombardier. The Asiatic troops of Baltadgi Pacha rushed
to its defence. At their head appeared the chief Imaun of the army, mounted on
a richly caparisoned mule and repeating the curse fulminated by the mufti
against Ali, his adherents, his castles, and even his cannons, which it was
supposed might be rendered harmless by these adjurations. Ali's Mohammedan Skipetars
averted their eyes, and spat into their bosoms, hoping thus to escape the evil
influence. A superstitious terror was beginning to spread among them, when a
French adventurer took aim at the Imaun and brought him down, amid the
acclamations of the soldiers; whereupon the Asiatics, imagining that Eblis
himself fought against them, retired within the intrenchments, whither the
Skipetars, no longer fearing the curse, pursued them vigorously.
At the same time, however,
a very different action was proceeding at the northern end of the besiegers'
intrenchments. Ali left his castle of the lake, preceded by twelve
torch-bearers carrying braziers filled with lighted pitch-wood, and advanced
towards the shore of Saint-Nicolas, expecting to unite with the Suliots. He
stopped in the middle of the ruins to wait for sunrise, and while there heard
that his troops had carried the battery of Ibrahim-Aga-Stamboul. Overjoyed, he
ordered them to press on to the second intrenchment, promising that in an hour,
when he should have been joined by the Suliots, he would support them, and he
then pushed forward, preceded by two field-pieces with their waggons, and
followed by fifteen hundred men, as far as a large plateau on which he
perceived at a little distance an encampment which he supposed to be that of
the Suliots. He then ordered the Mirdite prince, Kyr Lekos, to advance with an
escort of twenty-five men, and when within hearing distance to wave a blue flag
and call out the password. An Imperial officer replied with the countersign
"flouri," and Lekos immediately sent back word to Ali to advance. His
orderly hastened back, and the prince entered the camp, where he and his escort
were immediately surrounded and slain.
On receiving the message,
Ali began to advance, but cautiously, being uneasy at seeing no signs of the
Mirdite troop. Suddenly, furious cries, and a lively fusillade, proceeding from
the vineyards and thickets, announced that he had fallen into a trap, and at
the same moment Omar Pacha fell upon his advance guard, which broke, crying
"Treason!".
Ali sabred the fugitives
mercilessly, but fear carried them away, and, forced to follow the crowd, he
perceived the Kersales and Baltadgi Pacha descending the side of Mount
Paktoras, intending to cut off his retreat. He attempted another route,
hastening towards the road to Dgeleva, but found it held by the Tapagetae under
the Bimbashi Aslon of Argyro-Castron. He was surrounded, all seemed lost, and
feeling that his last hour had come, he thought only of selling his life as
dearly as possible. Collecting his bravest soldiers round him, he prepared for
a last rush on Omar Pacha; when, suddenly, with an inspiration born of despair,
he ordered his ammunition waggons to be blown up. The Kersales, who were about
to seize them, vanished in the explosion, which scattered a hail of stones and
debris far and wide. Under cover of the smoke and general confusion, Ali
succeeded in withdrawing his men to the shelter of the guns of his castle of
Litharitza, where he continued the fight in order to give time to the fugitives
to rally, and to give the support he had promised to those fighting on the
other slope; who, in the meantime, had carried the second battery and were
attacking the fortified camp. Here the Seraskier Ismail met them with a
resistance so well managed, that he was able to conceal the attack he was
preparing to make on their rear. Ali, guessing that the object of Ismail's
manoeuvres was to crush those whom he had promised to help, and unable, on
account of the distance, either to support or to warn them, endeavoured to
impede Omar Pasha, hoping still that his Skipetars might either see or hear
him. He encouraged the fugitives, who recognised him from afar by his scarlet
dolman, by the dazzling whiteness of his horse, and by the terrible cries which
he uttered; for, in the heat of battle, this extraordinary man appeared to have
regained the vigour and audacity, of his youth. Twenty times he led his
soldiers to the charge, and as often was forced to recoil towards his castles. He
brought up his reserves, but in vain. Fate had declared against him. His troops
which were attacking the intrenched camp found themselves taken between two
fires, and he could not help them. Foaming with passion, he threatened to rush
singly into the midst of his enemies. His officers besought him to calm
himself, and, receiving only refusals, at last threatened to lay hands upon him
if he persisted in exposing himself like a private soldier. Subdued by this
unaccustomed opposition, Ali allowed himself to be forced back into the castle
by the lake, while his soldiers dispersed in various directions.
But even this defeat did
not discourage the fierce pasha. Reduced to extremity, he yet entertained the
hope of shaking the Ottoman Empire, and from the recesses of his fortress he
agitated the whole of Greece. The insurrection which he had stirred up, without
foreseeing what the results might be, was spreading with the rapidity of a
lighted train of powder, and the Mohammedans were beginning to tremble, when at
length Kursheed Pasha, having crossed the Pindus at the head of an army of
eighty thousand men, arrived before Janina.
His tent had hardly been
pitched, when Ali caused a salute of twenty-one guns to be fired in his honour,
and sent a messenger, bearing a letter of congratulation on his safe arrival. This
letter, artful and insinuating, was calculated to make a deep impression on
Kursheed. Ali wrote that, being driven by the infamous lies of a former
servant, called Pacho Bey, into resisting, not indeed the authority of the
sultan, before whom he humbly bent his head weighed down with years and grief,
but the perfidious plots of His Highness's advisers, he considered himself
happy in his misfortunes to have dealings with a vizier noted for his lofty
qualities. He then added that these rare merits had doubtless been very far
from being estimated at their proper value by a Divan in which men were only
classed in accordance with the sums they laid out in gratifying the rapacity of
the ministers. Otherwise, how came it about that Kursheed Pasha, Viceroy of
Egypt--after the departure of the French, the conqueror of the Mamelukes, was
only rewarded for these services by being recalled without a reason? Having
been twice Romili-Valicy, why, when he should have enjoyed the reward of his
labours, was he relegated to the obscure post of Salonica? And, when appointed
Grand Vizier and sent to pacify Servia, instead of being entrusted with the
government of this kingdom which he had reconquered for the sultan, why was he
hastily despatched to Aleppo to repress a trifling sedition of emirs and
janissaries? Now, scarcely arrived in the Morea, his powerful arm was to be
employed against an aged man.
Ali then plunged into
details, related the pillaging, avarice, and imperious dealing of Pacho Bey, as
well as of the pachas subordinate to him; how they had alienated the public
mind, how they had succeeded in offending the Armatolis, and especially the
Suliots, who might be brought back to their duty with less trouble than these
imprudent chiefs had taken to estrange them. He gave a mass of special
information on this subject, and explained that in advising the Suliots to
retire to their mountains he had really only put them in a false position as
long as he retained possession of the fort of Kiapha, which is the key of the
Selleide.
The Seraskier replied in a
friendly manner, ordered the military salute to be returned in Ali's honour,
shot for shot, and forbade that henceforth a person of the valour and
intrepidity of the Lion of Tepelen should be described by the epithet of
"excommunicated." He also spoke of him by his title of
"vizier," which he declared he had never forfeited the right to use;
and he also stated that he had only entered Epirus as a peace-maker. Kursheed's
emissaries had just seized some letters sent by Prince Alexander Ypsilanti to
the Greek captains at Epirus. Without going into details of the events which
led to the Greek insurrection, the prince advised the Polemarchs, chiefs of the
Selleid, to aid Ali Pacha in his revolt against the Porte, but to so arrange
matters that they could easily detach themselves again, their only aim being to
seize his treasures, which might be used to procure the freedom of Greece.
These letters a messenger
from Kursheed delivered to Ali. They produced such an impression upon his mind
that he secretly resolved only to make use of the Greeks, and to sacrifice them
to his own designs, if he could not inflict a terrible vengeance on their
perfidy. He heard from the messenger at the same time of the agitation in
European Turkey, the hopes of the Christians, and the apprehension of a rupture
between the Porte and Russia. It was necessary to lay aside vain resentment and
to unite against these threatening dangers. Kursheed Pacha was, said his
messenger, ready to consider favourably any propositions likely to lead to a
prompt pacification, and would value such a result far more highly than the
glory of subduing by means of the imposing force at his command, a valiant
prince whom he had always regarded as one of the strongest bulwarks of the
Ottoman Empire. This information produced a different effect upon Ali to that
intended by the Seraskier. Passing suddenly from the depth of despondency to
the height of pride, he imagined that these overtures of reconciliation were
only a proof of the inability of his foes to subdue him, and he sent the
following propositions to Kursheed Pacha:
"If the first duty of
a prince is to do justice, that of his subjects is to remain faithful, and obey
him in all things. From this principle we derive that of rewards and
punishments, and although my services might sufficiently justify my conduct to
all time, I nevertheless acknowledge that I have deserved the wrath of the
sultan, since he has raised the arm of his anger against the head of his slave.
Having humbly implored his pardon, I fear not to invoke his severity towards
those who have abused his confidence. With this object I offer--First, to pay
the expenses of the war and the tribute in arrears due from my Government
without delay. Secondly, as it is important for the sake of example that the
treason of an inferior towards his superior should receive fitting chastisement,
I demand that Pacho Bey, formerly in my service, should be beheaded, he being
the real rebel, and the cause of the public calamities which are afflicting the
faithful of Islam. Thirdly, I require that for the rest of my life I shall
retain, without annual re-investiture, my pachalik of Janina, the coast of
Epirus, Acarnania and its dependencies, subject to the rights, charges and
tribute due now and hereafter to the sultan. Fourthly, I demand amnesty and
oblivion of the past for all those who have served me until now. And if these
conditions are not accepted without modifications, I am prepared to defend
myself to the last.
"Given at the castle
of Janina, March 7, 1821."
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