History of War

MEHMED THE CONQUEROR

hisofwaruk1804_article_056_01_01

“Advance my friends and children!” Sultan Mehmed II shouted to the Ottoman troops preparing to attack the landward walls of Constantinople in the early morning hours of 29 May 1453. “Now is the moment to prove yourself worthy men!”

With parade ground precision, the provincial troops streamed forwards shouting “Allah!” As they tried to scale a makeshift barricade plugging a breach in the walls made by the sultan’s siege guns, they recoiled from the barrage of rocks, buckets of hot pitch and molten streams of Greek fire hurled at them by the Byzantine defenders.

Mehmed rode forward to check the progress of the assault. He screamed, shouted and swore in an effort to will his army into the city. He waved forward fresh units to maintain heavy pressure on the Christian defenders. After a superhuman effort, the Anatolians withdrew, having failed to overwhelm the enemy.

Mehmed had one last chance for victory on 29 May 1453, in what he had decided several days earlier would be his final attack on the city after a 53-day siege. If he combined his elite palace regiments with his janissary brigade, he would have enough men for another assault. Demonstrating the quick thinking that was the mark of a great commander, Mehmed personally led them to their jump-off point. They were eager for battle and welcomed an opportunity to prove themselves in front of their sultan.

As they fought at the stockade, Mehmed rode back and forth behind them yelling encouragement. Despite the auspicious start to their attack, it faltered like the one before it. Then a pair of fortunate incidents gave the Ottomans the advantage they needed to overwhelm the exhausted defenders.

hisofwaruk1804_article_056_01_02

“FROM AN EARLY AGE MEHMED HAD AN EXTREMELY VOLATILE PERSONALITY, WHICH MANIFESTED ITSELF FREQUENTLY THROUGHOUT HIS RULE

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from History of War

History of War2 min read
6th Airborne Division And Operation Mallard
The British Army led a revolution in airborne warfare, using gliders and parachutes on the Normandy battlefield. With technological advances made to aircraft capabilities during the Second World War, it was now possible for personnel and their equipm
History of War6 min read
The Recce Rider Of Ranville
William ‘Bill’ Gladden was just 20 when he dropped into France on the evening of 6 June 1944. Packed into an enormous Hamilcar glider, he had shared the journey across the Channel with a Tetrarch tank and his beloved Matchless motorbike. Men and mach
History of War4 min read
How Would It Be Different?
Gambling on the weather Eisenhower makes one of the boldest decisions of the war, postponing the invasion by a day in the hope that the weather will improve on 6 June. He trusts his meteorologists, but he knows the risks if they have got it wrong. 5

Related Books & Audiobooks