Action off Elba (1504)

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DateMid-summer 1504
Result Turkish victory
Action off Elba (1504)
Part of Barbary corsairs

Elba island
DateMid-summer 1504
Location
Result Turkish victory
Belligerents
Papal States Turkish Corsairs
Commanders and leaders
Papal States Paolo Vettori (POW) Aruj Barbarossa
Hayreddin Barbarossa
Strength
2 galleys 1 galiot
Casualties and losses
2 galleys captured
112 men captured
300 Muslim slaves freed
None

The Action of Elba was a naval engagement between the Barbarossa brothers and the Papal galleys near the island of Elba. The corsairs ambushed two Papal ships and captured them. The engagement was the first naval victory achieved by the Barbarossa brothers.

In the midsummer of 1504, two papal galleys were sailing in the Tyrrhenian Sea on a voyage from Genoa to Civitavecchia. The two ships were carrying goods of Pope Julius II. They were under the command of a 27-year-old Church captain, Paolo Vettori. The two ships took the route around the top of Elba to the Piombino Channel. Once entering the channel, the papal flagship, Lanterna, encountered a small galiot of 18 banks. Unknown to them, the galiot was a Turkish ship captained by the Barbarossa brothers.[1][2][3]

The Turkish galiot showed no signs of retreat. Aruj ordered half of his men to throw their oars overboard, ensuring that none of them would escape if they wanted to. The galiot's prow quickly connected to the galley's quarterdeck. The corsairs began swarming into the galley and fired their muskets and arrows into the unprepared crew. Finding themselves overwhelmed, the crew, including the captain, surrendered. Within minutes, the ship was under Aruj's control. The Lanterna oarsmen were Muslim slaves, and Aruj ordered them to turn the ship around to capture the second one.[4][5][6]

Aruj ordered his men to swap clothes with the captured crew to fool the second galley. As the second galley approached, it seemed that the papal flagship had just captured a corsair's ship. As soon as they came next to it, Aruj ordered his men to fire their muskets at them. The papal crew was thrown into confusion, and some of them were killed or wounded. The corsairs then boarded the second ship with little resistance.[7][8][9] A total of 112 men were captured. Most were nobles, churchmen, and wealthy merchants. All the Muslim slaves were liberated in the end, numbering 300.[10]

Aftermath

References

Sources

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