- History of the Turkish Navy
The
Turkish Navy was once the largest sea power in theMediterranean Sea ,Black Sea ,Red Sea ,Persian Gulf and theIndian Ocean ; entering the history books of many countries in distant lands such as theBritish Isles ,Scandinavia ,Iceland ,Labrador ,Gulf of Saint Lawrence , Newfoundland andVirginia in the west, toIndia ,Indonesia andMalaysia in the east, andMadagascar in the south.The Turkish Navy is a part of the historic consciousness of many nations such as the French, Algerians, Tunisians and Libyans as "allies", or the Maltese, Italians, Portuguese and Spaniards as "rivals" (even
Miguel de Cervantes joined the Holy League to fight the Turks at the Third Battle of Lepanto in1571 .) Images and frescoes of the Turkish Navy are depicted on the walls of many famous palaces throughout Europe, such as thePitti Palace inFlorence and theDoge's Palace inVenice .Famous Turkish admirals like
Kemal Reis (who twice defeated the Venetian fleet at the First Battle of Lepanto in1499 and the Second Battle of Lepanto in1500 ); Barbaros Hayreddin Paşa (known as Barbarossa (Redbeard) in the West) who defeated the Holy League of Charles V under the command ofAndrea Doria at the Island of Peñón in1531 ,Battle of Preveza in1538 and Algiers in1541 ;Turgut Reis (known asDragut in the West) who conqueredLibya in 1551 and defeated the fleet of Charles V under the command ofAndrea Doria at the Battle ofPonza in1552 ; Piyale Paşa who defeated the Holy League of Philip II under the command ofGiovanni Andrea Doria at theBattle of Djerba in1560 ;Oruç Reis who established the Turkish presence in North Africa which lasted 4 centuries;Salih Reis who conqueredMorocco in1553 and extended Ottoman territory into theAtlantic Ocean ; Uluç (Kılıç) Ali Reis who restored the Turkish domination of the Mediterranean after Lepanto in 1571 and conqueredTunisia from Spain in 1574; Murat Reis who fought the Portuguese at theIndian Ocean between1552 and1554 and capturedLanzarote of theCanary Islands in theAtlantic Ocean in1585 ;Seydi Ali Reis (known as Sidi Ali Reis in the West) who fought the Portuguese at theIndian Ocean in1554 and is famous for his books of travel which are translated into many languages;Kurtoğlu Muslihiddin Reis (known as Curtogoli in the West) who played an important role in the conquests ofEgypt in 1517 andRhodes in 1522, and established the Ottoman Indian Ocean Fleet based inSuez which was later commanded by his son,Kurtoğlu Hızır Reis , who lead the Turkish naval expedition toAceh (1568–1569) which marked the easternmost territorial expansion of theOttoman Empire , and countless others have all made it to the hall of fame of great mariners in history.The famous Turkish admiral and cartographer
Piri Reis crafted amazing maps and books of navigation, including his first world map in1513 which is one of the oldest surviving maps of America and possibly the oldest surviving map ofAntarctica , despite being drawn more than 3 centuries before the official discovery of that continent. The first world map (1513) and second world map (1528) of Piri Reis are today preserved in the Library ofTopkapı Palace inIstanbul . Other works ofPiri Reis are preserved in the [http://www.dzkk.tsk.mil.tr/muze/English/Ana_Sayfa.htm Turkish Naval Museum] inIstanbul .General history
The first Anatolian Turkish naval fleet, which consisted of 33 sail ships and 17 oar ships, was established at the port of
İzmir byÇaka Bey in1081 , following his conquest of Smyrna (İzmir),Urla ,Çeşme ,Phocaea (Foça ) and Sığacık on the Aegean coast of Anatolia in that same year. Çaka Bey's fleet conqueredLesbos (1089) andChios (1090), before defeating the Byzantine fleet near the Koyun Islands off Chios on May 19,1090 , which marked the first major Anatolian Seljuk naval victory in a sea war. In 1091 Emir Çaka Bey's fleet conquered the islands of Samos andRhodes in theAegean Sea . In 1095 Çaka Bey's fleet conquered the strategic port city and Gulf of Adramyttium (Edremit ) on the Aegean coast of Anatolia and the city of Abydos on theDardanelles Strait.
Anatolian Seljuk emperorAlaeddin Keykubad I conqueredAlanya and established a Turkish naval arsenal there. Alanya became the homeport of the Turkish Mediterranean fleet. Alaeddin Keykubad I later established a TurkishBlack Sea fleet based inSinop , which, under the command of Emir Çoban, conquered parts of the Crimean peninsula and Sugdak on theSea of Azov (1220–1237).The Ottomans began to develop a navy in the early
14th century , and the conquest of İmralı Island in theSea of Marmara in1308 marked the first Ottoman naval victory. In1321 the Ottoman fleet made its first landings onThrace in southeasternEurope . In1351 the Ottoman naval forces built the first Turkish castles in Europe, and in1352 the Anatolian shores of the strategicBosporus Strait nearConstantinople (Istanbul ), and both shores of the equally strategicDardanelles Strait were conquered by the Ottoman fleet.Expansion to the Aegean, Black, Ionian and Adriatic Seas
In
1373 the first landings and conquests on the Aegean shores of Macedonia were made, which was followed by the first Ottoman siege ofThessaloniki in1374 . The conquest of Thessaloniki and Macedonia were completed in1387 . Between 1387 and 1423 the Ottoman fleet contributed to the territorial expansions of the Ottoman Empire on the Balkan peninsula and the Black Sea coasts of Anatolia. Following the first conquests of Venetian territories inMorea , the first Ottoman-Venetian War (1423–1430) started. In the meantime, the Ottoman fleet continued to contribute to the expansion of the Ottoman Empire in the Aegean and Black Seas, with the conquests ofSinop (1424),Izmir (1426) and the reconquest of Thessaloniki from the Venetians (1430).Albania was reconquered by the Ottoman fleet with landings between1448 and1450 . In1453 the Ottoman fleet participated in the historic conquests ofConstantinople (Istanbul ),Gökçeada ,Lemnos andThasos . The conquest of theDuchy of Athens inMorea was completed between 1458 and 1460, followed by the conquest of theEmpire of Trebizond and the Genoese colony ofAmasra in1461 , which brought an end to the final vestiges of theByzantine Empire . In1462 the Ottoman fleet conquered the Genoese islands of the northern Aegean Sea, includingLesbos . This was followed by the Ottoman-Venetian War of 1463–1479. In the following period the Ottoman fleet gained more territory in the Aegean Sea, and in1475 set foot onCrimea on the northern shores of theBlack Sea . Until 1499 this was followed by further expansion on the Black Sea coasts (such as the conquest of Georgia in1479 ) and on the Balkan peninsula (such as the final reconquest of Albania in 1497, and the conquest ofMontenegro in 1499). The loss of Venetian forts in Montenegro, near the strategic Castelnuovo, triggered the Ottoman-Venetian War of 1499–1503, during which the Turkish fleet ofKemal Reis defeated the Venetian forces at theBattle of Zonchio (1499) and the Battle of Modon (1500). By 1503 the Ottoman fleet raided the northeastern Adriatic coasts ofItaly , and completely captured the Venetian lands onMorea , theIonian Sea coast and the southeasternAdriatic Sea coast.Expansion to the Levant and Maghreb, operations in the West Mediterranean
Starting from the conquest of
Syria in1516 , the Ottoman fleet ofSelim I began expanding the Ottoman territories towards theLevant and the Mediterranean coasts ofNorth Africa . Between 1516 and 1517,Algeria was conquered from Spain by the forces ofOruç Reis who declared his allegiance to the Ottoman Empire, which was followed by the conquest ofEgypt and the end of the Mameluke Empire in1517 . In1522 the strategic island ofRhodes , then the seat of theKnights of St. John , was conquered by the naval fleet ofKurtoğlu Muslihiddin Reis ; whileSuleiman I let the Knights leave the island, who relocated their base first to Sicily and later to Malta. In1527 the Ottoman fleet participated in the conquest ofDalmatia ,Croatia ,Slavonia and Bosnia. In1529 the Ottoman fleet underSalih Reis and Aydın Reis destroyed the Spanish fleet under the command of Rodrigo Portundo near the Isle ofFormentera . This was followed by the first conquest ofTunisia from Spain and the reconquest ofMorea from Venice by the fleet of Barbaros Hayreddin Paşa, which later conquered the islands belonging to theDuchy of Naxos in1537 . Afterwards, the Ottoman fleet laid siege on the Venetian island ofCorfu , and landed on the coasts ofCalabria andPuglia , which forced theRepublic of Venice andHabsburg Spain of Charles V to ask for the Pope to create a Holy League; which comprised Spain, the Republic of Venice, theRepublic of Genoa , thePapal States and theKnights of Malta . The joint fleet was to be commanded by Charles V's top admiral,Andrea Doria . The Holy League and the Ottoman fleet under the command of Barbaros Hayreddin Paşa encountered each other in September1538 at theBattle of Preveza , which is generally considered the greatest Turkish naval victory in history. In1541 ,1544 ,1552 and1555 the Spanish-Italian fleet of Charles V under the command of Andrea Doria were defeated inAlgiers ,Naples ,Ponza andPiombino , respectively. The Ottoman naval victory at the Battle of Preveza in 1538 and theBattle of Djerba in1560 ensured them supremacy in the Mediterranean Sea for several decades, until the Ottomans suffered their first ever military defeat against the Europeans at theBattle of Lepanto (1571) . But the defeat at Lepanto, despite being much celebrated in Europe, was only a temporary setback, as the Ottomans built an equally large fleet within a year and took backCyprus from the Republic of Venice in1572 (having originally conquered the island between 1570 and 1571) andTunisia from Spain in1574 , which completed the Ottoman conquest ofNorth Africa ; as the Ottoman fleet underTurgut Reis had earlier conqueredLibya in1551 , while that ofSalih Reis had conquered the coasts ofMorocco beyond theStrait of Gibraltar in1553 .Operations in the Indian Ocean
In the meantime, the Ottoman Indian Ocean Fleet, based in
Suez andBasra , defeated the Portuguese forces on several occasions near the Arabian peninsula, conqueringAden andYemen (1538–1539) which were important Portuguese ports, along withJeddah andHijaz on theRed Sea coast. Between 1547 and 1548, Yemen was reconquered from the Portuguese, while in thePersian Gulf andArabian Sea , other important Portuguese ports such as Oman, Hormuz and Qatar were conquered in1552 . In1565 the Sultanate ofAceh inSumatra (Indonesia ) declared allegiance to the Ottoman Empire, and in1569 the Ottoman fleet ofKurtoğlu Hızır Reis set foot on Aceh, which marked the easternmost Ottoman territorial expansion.Operations in the Atlantic Ocean
Starting from the early 17th century, the Ottoman fleet began to venture into the
Atlantic Ocean (earlier,Kemal Reis had sailed to theCanary Islands in1501 , while the fleet ofMurat Reis the Elder had capturedLanzarote of theCanary Islands in1585 ). In 1617 the Ottoman fleet capturedMadeira in the Atlantic Ocean, before raidingSussex ,Plymouth ,Devon ,Hartland Point ,Cornwall and the other counties of westernEngland in August 1625. In 1627 Ottoman naval ships, accompanied by corsairs from the Barbary Coast, raided theShetland Islands ,Faroe Islands ,Denmark ,Norway andIceland . Between 1627 and 1631 the same Ottoman force also raided the coasts ofIreland andSweden . In 1655 a force of 40 Ottoman ships captured the Isle ofLundy in theBristol Channel , which served as the main base for Ottoman naval and privateering operations in the North Atlantic until 1660, when Ottoman ships appeared off the eastern coasts ofNorth America , particularly being sighted at the British colonies like Newfoundland andVirginia .tagnation in the 17th and 18th centuries
In the rest of the 17th and 18th centuries, however, the operations of the Ottoman fleet were largely limited to the
Mediterranean Sea ,Black Sea ,Red Sea ,Persian Gulf and theArabian Sea . The long lasting Ottoman-Venetian War of 1648–1669 ended with Ottoman victory and the completion of the conquest ofCrete . In1708 another long lasting objective, the conquest ofOran (the final Spanish stronghold in Algeria) was accomplished. The 18th century was a period of stalemate for the Ottoman fleet, with numerous victories matched by equally numerous defeats. The important Ottoman naval victories in this period included the reconquest ofMoldavia andAzov from the Russians in1711 ; the reconquest of Morea from the Venetians between1714 and1715 ; the Ottoman-Venetian War of 1715 and the reconquest of Souda in Crete and theCyclades ; the Ottoman-Russian War (1738); the reconquest of Morea and Lemnos (1770) from Venice; and the defeat of the Russian fleet near Yılan Island (1787). Major defeats of the Ottoman fleet in the 18th century, on the other hand, included theBattle of Chesme (1770 ).Decline in the 19th and 20th centuries
The 19th century saw further decline in Ottoman naval power, despite occasional recovery. Following the defeat against the combined British-French-Russian fleet at the
Battle of Navarino in1827 , SultanMahmud II gave priority to develop a strong and modern Ottoman naval force. The first steam ships of the Ottoman Navy were acquired in1828 . In1829 the world's largest warship for many years, the 62×17×7mship-of-the-line "Mahmudiye", which had 128 cannons on 3 decks, was built for the Ottoman Navy at the Imperial Naval Arsenal on theGolden Horn inIstanbul .In
1875 , during the reign of SultanAbdülaziz , the Ottoman Navy had 21 battleships and 173 other types of warships, ranking as the third largest navy in the world after the British and French navies. But the vast size of the navy was too much of a burden for the collapsing Ottoman economy to sustain.Abdülhamid II 's suspicion of the reformist admirals, who supportedMidhat Pasha , made things even worse, and consequently almost the entire Ottoman fleet was kept locked inside theGolden Horn for more than 3 decades, during which the ships decayed. Even the two Nordenfelt class submarines acquired by Abdülhamid II himself, "Abdülhamid" (1886) and "Abdülmecid" (1887), could seldom leave the Golden Horn due to the sultan's suspicions and distrust for a Navy-based coup against him; which eventually started to take place at the port of Selanik in around1908 .Following the
Young Turk Revolution in1908 , theCommittee of Union and Progress which effectively took control of the country sought to develop a strong Ottoman naval force. The poor condition of the fleet during the Ottoman Naval Parade of 1910 saddened every Turk who saw it, and the "Ottoman Navy Foundation" was established in order to purchase new ships through public donations. Those who made donations received different types of medals according to the size of their contributions. In 1910, the Turkish Navy purchased twopre-dreadnought battleship s from Germany: "Weißenburg", and her sistership "Kurfürst Friedrich Wilhelm". These ships were renamed "Turgut Reis" and "Hayreddin Barbarossa", respectively. With this public money, the Ottoman government also ordered largedreadnought battleship s like "Sultan Osman I" and "Reşadiye", but despite the payment for both ships, theUnited Kingdom confiscated them at the outbreak ofWorld War I and renamed them as "HMS Agincourt" and "HMS Erin". This caused some ill-feeling towards Britain among the Ottoman public, and theGerman Empire took advantage of the situation by sending thebattlecruiser "Yavuz Sultan Selim" andlight cruiser "Midilli" which entered service in the Ottoman fleet. This event significantly contributed to the decision of supporting Germany in theFirst World War , with whom the Ottomans sided.The British, French and ANZAC fleets could not pass through the Dardanelles Strait ("Çanakkale Boğazı") during the
Battle of Gallipoli in1915 thanks to the heavy Turkish fortifications lining the strait and mining by Turkish minelayers like "Nusret", and fierce fighting by the Turkish forces on land, sea and air, who were well aware that they were resisting the capture ofIstanbul and the occupation of their homeland. "Heireddin Barbarossa" was sunk by the British submarine "E11" in August 1915.Following the end of
World War I , the Ottoman Navy was dissolved by the victorious Allies and the large ships of the Ottoman fleet were towed to thePrinces' Islands in theSea of Marmara under the control of Allied warships, or locked inside theGolden Horn . Some of them were scrapped. After the independence of theRepublic of Turkey in1923 , the remaining major warships of the former Ottoman fleet, such as thebattlecruiser TCG "Yavuz", the pre-dreadnoughtbattleship TCG "Turgut Reis",cruiser s TCG "Hamidiye", TCG "Mecidiye", TCG "Berk-i Satvet" and TCG "Peyk-i Şevket",destroyer s TCG "Samsun", TCG "Bafra" and TCG "Taşoz", andtorpedo boat s TCG "Burak Reis", TCG "Kemal Reis", TCG "İsa Reis" and TCG "Sakız" were repaired and modernized, while new ships and submarines were acquired.Famous admirals
*Barbaros Hayreddin Paşa
*Turgut Reis
*Piyale Paşa
*Kemal Reis
*Piri Reis
*Seydi Ali Reis
*Salih Reis
*Kurtoğlu Muslihiddin Reis
*Kurtoğlu Hızır Reis
*Oruç Reis
*Gedik Ahmed Paşa
*Uluç Ali Reis
*Murat Reis
*Çaka Bey Major victories, conquests and territorial acquisitions
* Conquest of Smyrna (İzmir), Urla, Çeşme, Sığacık and Phocaea (Foça) on the Aegean coast of Anatolia by Emir Çaka Bey, construction of the first Anatolian Seljuk naval fleet of 50 vessels (33 sail ships and 17 oar ships) in that same year at the naval arsenal of İzmir, which was established by Emir Çaka Bey (1081)
* First Turkish conquests of Lesbos (1089) and Chios (1090) in the Aegean Sea by the fleet of Emir Çaka Bey
* Emir Çaka Bey's fleet defeats the Byzantine fleet near the Koyun Islands off Chios on May 19, which marks the first major Anatolian Seljuk naval victory in a sea war (1090)
* Emir Çaka Bey's fleet conquers the islands of Samos and Rhodes in the Aegean Sea (1091)
* Emir Çaka Bey's fleet conquers the strategic port city and gulf of Adramyttium (Edremit) on the Aegean coast of Anatolia and the city of Abydos on the Dardanelles Strait (1095)
* Anatolian Seljuk emperor Alaeddin Keykubad I conquers Alanya and establishes a Turkish naval arsenal there. Alanya becomes the homeport of the Turkish Mediterranean fleet. Alaeddin Keykubad I later establishes a Turkish Black Sea fleet based in Sinop, which, under the command of Emir Çoban, conquers parts of the Crimean peninsula and Sugdak on the Sea of Azov (1220–1237)
* Conquest of İmralı Island and the beginning of Ottoman presence in the Sea of Marmara (1308)
* Conquest of Mudanya by the Ottoman Turks and the first Turkish landings in Thrace, southeastern Europe (1321)
* Conquest of the strategic port city and gulf of Gemlik on the Sea of Marmara by the Ottoman Turks (1333)
* Naval victories of Umur Bey against the Byzantine and Genoese fleets off the Aegean coasts of Anatolia, Rhodes, the Dardanelles Strait, Macedonia and Morea (1334–1348)
* Conquest of the strategic port city and gulf of İzmit (Nicomedia) on the Sea of Marmara by the Ottoman Turks (1337)
* Alliance with the Byzantine Empire (1346) following the marriage between Sultan Orhan Gazi and Princess Theodora, daughter of John VI Cantacuzenus (1341). Turkish naval landings in Thrace and the Balkan peninsula for aiding the Byzantine Empire, defeat of the Serbs and Bulgarians, acquisition of the first Turkish castles in Europe (1351)
* Conquest of Üsküdar (Scutari/Chrysopolis) and Kadıköy (Chalcedon) on the Anatolian side of İstanbul, the Marmara Island, Thrace and Gallipoli (1352)
* First conquests and acquisitions in Macedonia (1373)
* First siege of Thessaloniki (1374) and the beginning of Turkish advance towards Serbia (1375), Bulgaria (1376), Albania (1383) and Bosnia-Hercegovina (1384)
* Conquest of Thessaloniki and Macedonia (1387)
* Conquest of northern Bulgaria, southern Romania and most of the Balkan peninsula (1389)
* Conquest of northern Albania and southern Montenegro (1392)
* Conquest of Albania (1396)
* Conquest of several coastal settlements on the Aegean coasts of Greece and of several Turkish beyliks (principalities) on the Black Sea coasts of Anatolia (1397)
* Conquest of several islands in the Aegean Sea (1415–1416)
* Conquest of the strategic port of Samsun in the Black Sea (1417)
* Reconquest of Albania, conquests of several coastal settlements in Morea (1423)
* Turkish-Venetian War (1423–1430)
* Conquest of the strategic port of Sinop in the Black Sea (1424)
* Conquest of İzmir from the Turkish beylik of that city (1426)
* Reconquest of Thessaloniki (1430)
* Reconquest of Albania (1448–1450)
* Conquest of Constantinople (İstanbul), Imvros (Gökçeada), Lemnos, Thasos (1453)
* Conquest of Morea and the Duchy of Athens (1458–1460)
* Conquest of the Empire of Trebizond and the Genoese colony of Amasra (1461)
* Conquest of the Genoese islands in the northern Aegean Sea, including Lesbos (1462)
* Turkish-Venetian War (1463–1479)
* Conquest of castles and forts in Albania (1466)
* Conquest of Euboea (1470)
* Conquest of Crimea (1475)
* Conquest of Venetian forts in Albania (1477–1478)
* Conquest of Georgia on the Black Sea; Kefalonia, Zakynthos (Zante) and Lefkada (Lefkas) in the Ionian Sea (1479)
* Final complete reconquest of Albania (1497)
* Conquest of Montenegro (1499)
* Turkish-Venetian Wars (1499–1503)
* Battle of Zonchio (1499)
* Battle of Modon (1500)
* Reconquest of Morea (1503)
* Conquest of Moldavia (1512)
* Conquest of Syria (1516)
* Conquest of Algeria from Spain (1516–1517)
* Conquest of Egypt and the end of the Mameluke Empire (1517)
* Conquest of Rhodes from the Knights of St. John, who relocate their base first to Sicily and later to Malta (1522)
* Conquest of Dalmatia, Croatia, Slavonia and Bosnia (1527)
* Turkish-Spanish War near the Isle of Formentera (1529)
* First conquest of Tunisia from Spain, reconquest of Morea (1534)
* Conquest of the Duchy of Naxos, Syros, Aegina, Ios, Paros, Tinos, Karpathos, Kasos (1537)
* Battle of Preveza (1538)
* Conquest of Castelnuovo (Herceg Novi) in Dalmatia (1538)
* Conquest of Aden and Yemen from the Portuguese, Jeddah and Hijaz in Arabia (1538–1539)
* Conquest of Risan, Skiathos, Skyros, Andros and Serifos (1539)
* Reconquest of Castelnuovo (1539–1540)
* Defeat of the Spanish-Italian fleet in Algiers (1541)
* Defeat of the Spanish-Italian fleet in the Tyrrhenian Sea, assault on the Kingdom of Naples (1544)
* Reconquest of Yemen from the Portuguese (1547–1548)
* Conquest of Libya from Spain and Malta (1551)
* Defeat of the Spanish-Italian fleet near Ponza (1552)
* Conquest of Oman, Hormuz and Qatar from the Portuguese (1552)
* Conquest of Morocco (1553)
* Defeat of the Spanish-Italian fleet near Piombino (1555)
* Battle of Djerba (1560)
* Annexation of Aceh in Sumatra, Indonesia, upon request by Sultan Alaaddin of Aceh who declares allegiance to the Ottoman Empire and asks for protection against Portuguese aggression (1565)
* Conquest of Chios and the end of Genoese presence in the Aegean (1566)
* First Ottoman naval forces are stationed on Aceh in Sumatra, Indonesia (1569)
* Reconquest of San'a (1568), Aden (1569) and the rest of Yemen (1570)
* Battle of Gozo (1570)
* Conquest of Cyprus from the Republic of Venice (1570–1571)
* Reconquest of Dalmatia from the Republic of Venice (1571)
* Reconquest of Tunisia from Spain (1574)
* Defeat of the Portuguese fleet off the coast of Morocco (1578)
* Reconquest of Crimea and parts of Ukraine (1584)
* Defeat of the French-Maltese fleet in the Levant (1609)
* Reconquest of Azov from the Russians (1642)
* Conquest of Chania in Crete (1645)
* Conquest of Chisamo and Souda in Crete (1646)
* First siege and conquest of Heraklion (Candia) in Crete (1648)
* Turkish-Venetian War (1648–1669)
* Turkish-Venetian War (1654)
* Turkish-Venetian War (1668)
* Fourth siege and final reconquest of Heraklion (Candia) in Crete, conquest of Crete completed (1669)
* Conquest of the castles controlling the Black Sea entrance of the Dnieper River (1679)
* Turkish-Venetian War and the reconquest of Chios (1695)
* Conquest of Oran, the final Spanish stronghold in Algeria (1708)
* Reconquest of Moldavia and Azov from the Russians (1711)
* Reconquest of Morea (1714–1715)
* Turkish-Venetian War and the reconquest of Souda in Crete and the Cyclades (1715)
* Turkish-Russian War (1738)
* Reconquest of Morea and Lemnos (1770)
* Defeat of the Russian fleet near Yılan Island (1787)
* Reconquest of Egypt (1801)
* Reconquest of Medina, Mecca and Hijaz in Arabia (1812–1813)
* Defeat of the Russian forces in theCrimean War , assisted by France, the United Kingdom and the Kingdom of Sardinia (1854-1856)
* Reconquest of the islands controlling the Black Sea entrance of the Danube River (1857)
* Reconquest of Montenegro and Shkoder (1862)
* Battle of Gallipoli (1915)
* Landing operation in northern Cyprus (1974)Major short-term territorial acquisitions
* Capture of Morea (1446)
* First siege and capture of Otranto (1480)
* Capture of Malaga in Spain (1487)
* Capture of the Isle of Pianosa (1501)
* Capture of several towns in Sardinia (1501)
* Capture of Jijel in Algeria and Mahdiya in Tunisia (1514)
* Capture of Capo Passero in Sicily (1526)
* Capture of the Isle of Peñón (1529)
* Capture of the Isle of Cabrera (1530)
* Capture of San Lucido, Cetraro, Capri, Procida, Tunis (1534)
* Recapture of Capri (1535)
* Second siege and capture of Otranto, Castro, Ugento (1537)
* Capture of Diu in India (1538)
* Capture of the Gulf of Preveza, Isle of Lefkada, eastern Adriatic and Aegean islands belonging to the Republic of Venice, Candia in Crete (1538)
* Capture of Gozo, Pantelleria, Capraia (1540)
* Capture of Reggio Calabria, Messina, Nice, Antibes, Île Sainte-Marguerite, Monaco, San Remo, La Turbie (1543)
* Capture of Bonifacio in Corsica, Castiglione della Pescaia, Talamone, Orbetello, Grosseto, Montiano, Porto Ercole, Isle of Giglio, Ischia, Forio, and the Isle of Procida (1544)
* Capture of Capraia, Monterosso, Corniglia, Rapallo, Pegli, Levanto (1545)
* Capture of Mahdiya, Sfax, Sousse, Al Munastir in Tunisia; Laigueglia and Andora in Liguria; Gozo in Malta (1546)
* Recapture of Gozo in Malta (1547)
* Capture of Castellamare di Stabia, Pozzuoli and Procida at the Gulf of Naples (1548)
* Recapture of Mahdiya, Sousse, Al Munastir in Tunisia, Rapallo in Liguria (1550)
* Recapture of Gozo, capture of Taggia and Riva Brigoso in Liguria (1551)
* Capture of Pantelleria, Ponza, Massa Lubrense, Sorrento, Pozzuoli, Minturno, Nola (1552)
* Capture of Crotone and Castello in Calabria; Marciana Marina, Rio and Capoliveri in Elba; Bonifacio, Bastia and Calvi in Corsica; recapture of Pianosa and Capri (1553)
* Capture of Vieste near Foggia; Elba and Corsica (1554)
* Capture of Paola and Santo Noceto in Calabria, Papulonia in Elba; Bastia in Corsica; Ospedaletti in Liguria (1555)
* Capture of Bergeggi and San Lorenzo in Liguria; Gafsa in Tunisia (1556)
* Capture of Cariati in Calabria (1557)
* Capture of Gharyan, Misratah, Tagiora, Djerba, Reggio Calabria, Aeolian Islands, Massa Lubrense, Cantone, Sorrento, Minorca (1558)
* Capture of Granada in Spain; Naples in Italy and the fortresses around the city, Chiaia (1563)
* Capture of Fort St. Elmo and the Bastion of Castiglia on Fort St. Michael in Malta (1565)
* Capture of Lanzarote of the Canary Islands in the Atlantic Ocean (1585)
* Capture of Madeira in the Atlantic Ocean (1617)
* Capture of Vestmannaeyjar near Iceland (1627)
* Capture of Baltimore, County Cork, in Ireland (1631)
* Capture of the Isle of Lundy in the Bristol Channel with a force of 40 ships. Lundy becomes the main base of the Ottoman marine operations in the Atlantic Ocean for the next 5 years (1655)Major inconclusive wars
* Turkish-Portuguese Wars in the Indian Ocean (1538–1566)
Major inconclusive sieges and landings
* First Turkish landings in Attika, Morea and the Adriatic Sea (1372)
* First Turkish siege of Constantinople (1390)
* Landings at Chios, Euboea, Attika, Morea (1390–1391)
* Landings at Morea (1394)
* Second Turkish siege of Constantinople (1395)
* Third Turkish siege of Constantinople (1397)
* Landings at Thessaly, Morea, Albania and Epirus (1397–1399)
* Fourth Turkish siege of Constantinople (1400)
* Fifth Turkish siege of Constantinople (1422)
* Landings at the Dodecanese Islands (1454)
* Landings at Lepanto in Greece and Veneto in Italy (1477–1478)
* First siege of Rhodes (1480–1481)
* Landings at the Balearic Islands, Corsica and Pisa (1487–1490)
* Landings at Elche, Almeria, Malaga (1490–1495)
* Landings at the Gulf of Taranto (1496)
* Landings at Corfu (1500)
* Landings at Piombino (1501)
* Landings at the Balearic Islands and Andalusia (1501)
* Landings at Rhodes, Calabria, Sicily and Andalusia (1505)
* Landings at Sicily (1506)
* Landings at Liguria (1508 and 1509)
* Landings at Capo Passero in Sicily (1510)
* Landings at Bougie, Oran and Algiers (1510)
* Landings at Reggio Calabria (1511)
* Landings at Andalusia and Minorca (1512)
* Landings at Alicante, Malaga, Cherchell (1513–1514)
* Bombardment of Bougie, landings at Ceuta, Balearic Islands, Sardinia, Sicily (1514)
* Landings at Elba and Liguria (1516)
* Landings at Capo Limiti, Capo Rizzuto, Calabria (1517)
* Landings at Provence, Toulon and the Îles d'Hyères in France (1519)
* Landings at the Balearic Islands (1521)
* Landings at Sardinia (1525)
* Landings at Crotone, Reggio Calabria, Castignano, Capo Spartivento, Messina, Tuscany, Campania (1526)
* Landings at Italian and Spanish coastal towns (1527)
* Landings at Andalusia (1529)
* Landings at Sicily, the Balearic Islands, Marseilles, Provence, Liguria, Sardinia, Piombino (1530)
* Landings at the Isle of Favignana, Calabria, Puglia, Tripoli, Spain (1531)
* Landings at Sardinia, Bonifacio, Montecristo, Elba, Lampedusa, Messina, Calabria (1532)
* Landings at Reggio Calabria, Gaeta, Villa Santa Lucia, Sant'Isidoro, Sperlonga, Fondi, Terracina, Ostia, Ponza, Sicily, Sardinia, bombardment of the ports at the Gulf of Naples (1534)
* Landings at Spain, the Balearic Islands, Tlemcen (1535)
* Landings at Calabria and Corfu (1537)
* Landings at Crete in Greece and Gujarat in India (1538)
* Landings at Cattaro and Pesaro, Corfu, Crete (1539)
* Landings at Sicily, Corsica, Spain (1540)
* Landings at Campania, Lazio, venturing into the Tiber River near Rome (1543)
* Landings at San Remo, Borghetto Santo Spirito, Ceriale, Vado Ligure, Piombino, Civitavecchia, Sardinia, Gozo, Pozzuoli, Capo Palinuro, Catona, Fiumara, Calanna, Cariati, Lipari (1544)
* Landings at Spain, the Balearic Islands, Sicily, Liguria, Menarola, Riomaggiore, La Spezia (1545)
* Landings at Liguria, San Lorenzo al Mare (1546)
* Landings at both islands of Malta, Sicily, Aeolian Islands, Salina Island, Puglia, Salve, Calabria, Corsica (1547)
* Landings at Rapallo, San Fruttuoso, Portofino, San Remo, Corsica, Calabria (1549)
* Landings at Sardinia, Spain, Corsica, Gozo, Liguria, Mahdiya, Tunis, Djerba (1550)
* Landings at the Adriatic ports, Sicily, both islands of Malta (1551)
* Landings at Augusta and Licata in Sicily, Taormina, Gulf of Policastro, Palmi, Gulf of Naples, Sardinia, Corsica, Lazio (1552)
* Landings at Sicily, Tavolara, Sardinia, Porto Ercole, Piombino, Portoferraio (1553)
* Landings at Dalmatia, Dubrovnik, Orbetello and Tuscany (1554)
* Landings at Capo Vaticano, Ceramica, San Lucido in Calabria; Piombino in Elba; Calvi in Corsica; Sardinia; San Remo and Liguria (1555)
* Landings at Lampedusa (1556)
* Landings at the Gulf of Taranto and Puglia (1557)
* Landings at the Strait of Messina, Amalfi, Gulf of Salerno, Torre del Greco, Tuscany, Piombino, Spain (1558)
* Landings at Stromboli, Gozo, Gulf of Naples (1561)
* Siege of Oran (1562)
* Landings at Malaga, another siege on Spanish-controlled Oran and Mers-el-Kebir; landings at Liguria, Sardinia, Oristano, Marcellino, Ercolento, Puglia, Abruzzo, San Giovanni near Messina, Capo Passero in Sicily, Gozo in Malta (1563)
*Siege of Malta (1565)
* Landings at Puglia (1566)
* Landings at Sumatra in Indonesia (1569)
* Landings at Corfu (1571)
* Landings at Puglia and Corfu (1573)
* Landings at Morocco (1574)
* Landings at Calabria (1576)
* Landings at Malta and southern Morea (1614)
* Landings at the shoreline between Cadiz and Lisbon (1616)
* Landings at Sussex, Plymouth (27 ships were taken away from its port), Devon, Hartland Point, Cornwall and the other counties of western England in August (1625)
* Landings in the Northern Atlantic including the British Isles, Shetland Islands, Faroe Islands, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Labrador, Gulf of Saint Lawrence, Newfoundland and Virginia (1627–1660)
* Landings at Denmark, Norway and Iceland (1627)
* Landings at England, Ireland, Denmark and Iceland (1631)
* Second siege of Heraklion (Candia) in Crete (1649)
* Landings at England, Iceland, Norway, Sweden and Denmark (1655–1660)
* Third siege of Heraklion (Candia) in Crete (1666)
* Landings at the entrance of the Dniester River and northern Crimea (1769)Major defeats
*
Battle of Lepanto (1571)
* Battle of Chesme (1770)
* Battle of Navarino (1827)Important treaties of naval collaboration for securing maritime trade
* Treaty with the Republic of Genoa signed (1352)
* Treaty with the Republic of Ragusa signed (1365)
* Treaty with the Mameluke Empire signed (1386)
* Treaty with the Republic of Venice signed (1479)
* Treaty with the Republic of Venice signed (1503)
* Treaty with the Republic of Venice signed (1522)
* Treaty with France signed (1536)
* Treaty with the Republic of Venice signed (1540)
* Treaty with France signed (1569)
* Treaty with the Republic of Venice signed (1575)
* Treaty with England signed (1579)
* Treaty with France signed (1581)
* Treaty with The Netherlands signed (1612)
* Treaty with Russia signed (1774)
* Treaty with the United Kingdom signed (1809)
* Treaty with Russia signed (1829)
* Treaty with Russia signed (1833)
* London Straits Convention and the international recognition of Turkey's right to block the Turkish Straits and refuse passage permission to foreign warships in case of a major risk to national security (1841)
* Treaty of Lausanne and the demilitarization of the Turkish Straits (1923)
* Montreux Convention recognizing Turkey's right to remilitarize the Turkish Straits and regulate sea traffic in case of natural hazard risks, or completely block it in case of a military conflict (1936)See also
*
Turkish Navy
*Ottoman Navy
*Turkish military
*Military history of Turkey
*Military of the Ottoman Empire References and sources
* [http://www.theottomans.org/english/chronology/index.asp# The Ottomans: Comprehensive and detailed online chronology of Ottoman history in English.]
* E. Hamilton Currey, "Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean", London, 1910
* Bono, Salvatore: "Corsari nel Mediterraneo" ("Corsairs in the Mediterranean"), Oscar Storia Mondadori. Perugia, 1993.
* Melis, Nicola, “The importance of Hormuz for Luso-Ottoman Gulf-centred policies in the 16th century: Some observations based on contemporary sources", in R. Loureiro-D. Couto (eds.), "Revisiting Hormuz - Portuguese Interactions in the Persian Gulf Region in the Early Modern Period", "Maritime Asia" 19, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian/Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden 2008, pp. 107-120.
* [http://www.corsaridelmediterraneo.it/indice/a.htm Corsari nel Mediterraneo: Condottieri di ventura. Online database in Italian, based on Salvatore Bono's book.]
* Bradford, Ernle, "The Sultan's Admiral: The life of Barbarossa", London, 1968.
* Wolf, John B., "The Barbary Coast: Algeria under the Turks", New York, 1979; ISBN 0-393-01205-0
* [http://ansiklopedi.turkcebilgi.com/Kronoloji_Osmanl%FD_Tarihi Comprehensive and detailed online chronology of Ottoman history in Turkish.]
* [http://www.dzkk.tsk.mil.tr/TURKCE/tarihiMiras.asp?strAnaFrame=TarihiMiras&strIFrame=INDEX Turkish Navy official website: Historic heritage of the Turkish Navy (in Turkish)]
* [http://www.dzkk.tsk.mil.tr/TURKCE/TarihiMiras/AtlantikteTurkDenizciligi.asp Turkish Navy official website: Turkish seamen in the Atlantic Ocean (in Turkish)]
* [http://212.174.234.50/~tarihim/tr/index.php?option=com_content&task=section&id=5&Itemid=29 Tarih Bilgi Bankası: Online history database in Turkish.]
* [http://www.tarihtebugun.gen.tr/Osmanl%FD Tarihte Bugün: Online history database in Turkish.]External links
* [http://www.dzkk.tsk.mil.tr Official Turkish Navy Website]
* [http://www.tsk.mil.tr Official Turkish Armed Forces Website]
* [http://www.dzkk.tsk.mil.tr/muze/English/Ana_Sayfa.htm Turkish Naval Museum]
* [http://www.turkishnavy.net Turkish Navy]
* [http://www.barbaros.biz/DONANMAYI_HUMAYUN.htm Turkish Navy History]
* [http://www.barbaros.biz/Deniz.htm A Sea Empire]
* [http://www.geocities.com/turk_navy Turkish Naval History]
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