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Battle of Chesma

Battle of Chesma: Encyclopedia - Battle of Chesma

The naval Battle of Chesma took place on 5-7 July 1770 near and in Chesma (Turkish: Çeşme) Bay, in the area between Asia Minor and the island of Chios, the site of a number of past naval battles between Turkey and Venice. It was part of the Orlov Revolt of 1769, a precursor to the later Greek War of Independence (1821-29), and the first of a number of disastrous fleet battles for Turkey against Russia. The Russo-Turkish War had begun in 1768, and Russia sent several squadrons from the Baltic Sea to the Mediterranean Sea to dr ...

Including:

Battle of Chesma, Battle of Chesma - Notes, Battle of Chesma - References, Battle of Chesma - Significance

Battle of Chesma: Encyclopedia - Battle of Chesma



Battle of Chesma

The naval Battle of Chesma took place on 5-7 July 1770 near and in Chesma (Turkish: Çeşme) Bay, in the area between Asia Minor and the island of Chios, the site of a number of past naval battles between Turkey and Venice. It was part of the Orlov Revolt of 1769, a precursor to the later Greek War of Independence (1821-29), and the first of a number of disastrous fleet battles for Turkey against Russia.

The Russo-Turkish War had begun in 1768, and Russia sent several squadrons from the Baltic Sea to the Mediterranean Sea to draw Turkish attention away from their Black Sea fleet, then only 6 battleships strong. Two Russian squadrons, commanded by Admiral Grigory Spiridov and Rear Admiral John Elphinston[1], a British advisor, combined under the overall command of Count Alexey Orlov, Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Fleet and went to look for the Turkish fleet.

On 5 July 1770 they came across it anchored in line just north of Chesma Bay, western Turkey. Details of the Turkish fleet are uncertain but it included 14-16 battleships including Real Mustafa of 84 guns, Rodos of 60 guns and a 100-gun flagship. In addition there were perhaps 6 frigates, 6 xebecs, 13 galleys and 32 small craft, with about 1300 guns in total. 10 of the battleships, of 70-100 guns, were in the Turkish main line with a further 6 or so battleships in the 2nd, arranged so that they could fire through the gaps in the first line. Behind that were the frigates, xebecs etc. The fleet was commanded by Kapudan Pasha Hosameddin, in the 4th ship from the front (north end) of the line, with Hassan Pasha in the first ship, Real Mustafa, and Djaffer Bey in the 7th. Two further battleships had left this fleet for Mytilene the previous evening.

After organizing a plan of attack, the Russian battle line (see Table 1) sailed toward the south end of the Turkish line and then turned north, coming alongside the Turks, with the tail end coming into action last (Elphinston had wanted to approach the northern end first, then follow the wind along the Turkish line, attacking their ships one by one - the method used by Nelson at the Battle of the Nile in 1798). The Turks opened fire at about 11.45am, followed by the Russians slightly later. Three of the Russian battleships had trouble staying in position; Evropa turned around and came back behind Rostislav, Trech Svyatitelai circled the 2nd Turkish vessel before coming back into the Russian line, being attacked in error by Trech Ierarchov as she did so, and Sv. Ianuarii turned around before coming back into the line.

Table 1: Russian ships. Battleships are listed in the order they came into action. Orlov's squadron in pink, Spiridov's in blue and Elphinston's in yellow. Notes: (a) captain Klokatchev; (b) Spiridov's flagship, captain Kruse; (c) Orlov's flagship, captain Greig; (d) Elphinston's flagship (e) One or both of these were present; (f) Hired English ships that were supporting the fleet

Spiridov, in Sv. Evstafii, had a close-range battle with Hassan Pasha in Real Mustafa, before the latter was suddenly seen to be on fire. Her mainmast came down and landed on Sv. Evstafiis deck, causing the Russian ship to immediately blow up. Shortly later Real Mustafa blew up as well.

According to Elphinston, who claimed the Russians were almost useless, Spiridov and Count Feodor Orlov (brother of the commander), had left Sv. Evstafii before the fighting became close-range. Spiridov ended up on Trech Svyatitelai. Sv. Evstafii's captain, Kruse, survived too. At about 2pm the fighting ended, as the Turks cut their cables and moved south into the bay, forming themselves into a defensive line of 8 battleships, a 2nd line, and the rest beyond.

During 6 July the Russians bombarded the Turkish ships and land positions and at about 12:30am on the morning of 7 July Orlov sent Greig (who transferred to Rostislav) to attack with Evropa, Rostislav and Ne tron menya forming a south-north line facing the Turks, and with Saratov in reserve, Nadezhda attacking the batteries at the eastern side of the bay entrance, Afrika attacking the batteries on the western side, and Grom near Afrika. At about 1:30 am or earlier (note: times were about 90 minutes earlier according to Elphinston), fire from Grom and/or Ne tron menya caused 1 Turkish battleship to blow up after her main topsail caught fire, and the fire quickly spread to other battleships. By 2am 2 Turkish battleships had blown up and more were on fire, and Greig sent in 3 fireships (the 4th, seeing the danger, stayed out), which contributed in a small way to the burning of almost the entire Turkish fleet. At about 4am boats were sent in to save 2 battleships which were not burning, but 1 of these caught fire while it was being towed. The other, Rodos 60, survived and was captured along with 5 galleys (or galliots?). Fighting ended at about 8am. Russian casualties on the 5 July were 14 killed, plus 636 killed in Sv. Evstafii, and about 30 wounded, and on the 7 July 11 killed. Turkish casualties were much higher. Hosameddin, Hassan Pasha and Djaffer Bey survived. Hosameddin was removed from his position and it was given to Djaffer Bey. This was the only significant fleet battle during the Russo-Turkish War.

Battle of Chesma - Significance

The battle of Chesma is the greatest naval defeat suffered by Turkey following the Battle of Lepanto. This battle inspired great confidence in the Russian fleet and allowed the Russians to control the Aegean Sea. The utter defeat of the Turkish fleet also sped up rebellions by minorities group in Turkey, which helped the Russian army in defeating Turkey.

Battle of Chesma - Notes

  1. ^  John Elphinston Papers Relating to the Russo-Turkish War

Battle of Chesma - References

  • Naval wars in the Levant 1559-1853 - R. C. Anderson [ISBN 0878397990]

Categories: Naval battles | Battles of Russia | Battles of the Ottoman Empire | 1770




Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Battle of Chesma", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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