Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the event of which Voltaire, two hundred years later, said 'nothing was more well known'. The Ottoman Empire had already driven the Knights Hospitaller from their headquarters in Rhodes, in 1522, after a siege and wanted to do the same in Malta. The siege of 1565, one of the fiercest recorded, ended with a victory for the Knights, raising questions of why the Ottomans failed to press their advantage home. It became one of the most celebrated events of C16th, for Christians in Europe, and changed the perception that the Ottomans were invincible. It also marked a new period of Spanish dominance in the Mediterranean.
The image above is the Death of Dragut at the Siege of Malta (1867), after a painting by Giuseppe Cali. Dragut (1485 1565) was an Ottoman Admiral and privateer, known as The Drawn Sword of Islam and as one of the finest generals of the time.
With
Helen Nicholson
Professor of Medieval History at Cardiff University
Diarmaid MacCulloch
Professor of the History of the Church at the University of Oxford
and
Kate Fleet
Director of the Skilliter Centre for Ottoman Studies and Fellow of Newnham College, Cambridge
Producer: Simon Tillotson.
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